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Quick environment overview:

I have an ASP.NET MVC/AngularJS application that is ultimately being hosted as an Azure Webrole. The data is stored in MongoDB hosted in the same Azure data center (via MongoLab). Development environment and staging environment (Azure) point to same MongoDB database and thus see the exact same data.

Issue:

Individual users of the application are stored with their preferred timezone as a string (TimezoneID). All dates in the app are stored as UTC times. Conversion to and from UTC times to a users specific timezone is done on the server via an extension method which ultimately calls:

return TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTimeFromUtc(UtcDate, _lookup[TimeZoneID]);

Nowhere in the entire app is there a DateTime.Now or any other date conversion I would expect to use the server time settings.

In a particular area of the application a date is being stored in Mongo (UTC). I can confirm that the date is correctly stored as UTC (based on the offset from my local time). When I retrieve that date from the data store and convert it back to my local time (Central Standard Time) I step over the above line of code and the conversion works fine and the local time is set. The result is sent to the client's browser as part of a Json result of an API call and displayed to the user correctly. During transport the MVC Json serializer parses the datetime into a format similar to:

EventDate: "/Date(1399407153971)/"

I parse this in Javascript and display accordingly and all is good.

When I deploy the exact same code to Azure (which points to the exact same data store in Mongo) the result that comes down via the API call appears to have applied the UTC transformation twice (meaning the regular 6 hour UTC offset is applied twice and the displayed date is 12 hours earlier than UTC...6 hours off of what I want).

I've updated the stored time in Mongo by a minute or two to make sure both sides update and they do (verifying the same data). I've modified the date/time settings of my local machine to see if it has any effect on my local results and it does not. I've changed the timezone for the selected user in the app and both my local result AND the Azure returned result adjust by the UTC offset difference between Central Standard Time and the new time zone (meaning if I switch to Mountain Time the result of both the local result and the Azure result adjust by 1 hour...but are still 6 hours off). I've confirmed via Chrome Dev Tools that the date in question that is retrieved at the client (via Json) is different based on whether the site hit was the remove (Azure) environment or local environment (meaning it isn't being modified incorrectly anywhere on the client after-the-fact)

Here is the most telling thing:

If I convert the date to a string prior to returning it to the client the string sent down appears correct in the Json response. If I leave it as a .NET DateTime type (as a property of a complex object) the Json serializer appears to translate it again but ONLY when hosted in Azure. This has pointed me to the issue being somehow related to the DateTimeKind of the date I'm returning. Although, at this point, I'm too lost in the weeks to see why the difference between my local environment and the Azure host environment in serialization and why one things a time is correct and the other converts it twice. If the DateKindTime was wrong wouldn't both environments perform the same conversion?

Thanks for reading through this and I'd appreciate any ideas to address anyone has.

2 Answers 2

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It's difficult to say for sure without seeing more code, but could it be that the problem is with conversion on the way in, rather than on the way out? You said that you're using TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTimeFromUtc for the output. Are you also using TimeZoneInfo.ConvertTimeToUtc on the other side? If so, that's likely the source of picking up your local time zone.

You might also somewhere have a call to DateTime.ToUniversalTime, which again - uses the local time zone.

Another area which might be the culprit - when you retrieve your value from Mongo, check the Kind of the values coming back. If they're Unspecified, then when they are serialized to JSON, they will be treated as if they were Local. basically, there's a ToUniversalTime call going on under the hood. So you may need to explicitly call DateTime.SpecifyKind to set the value to Utc before it goes out the door.

With specific regards to Azure, it follows best practices of setting the server time zone to UTC. You could try that on your own machine and see if you get similar results.

Of course, you really don't want the server's time zone to influence the result at all.

You may want to consider creating a new project with a minimal, complete, and verifiable example. That will help you verify your assumptions, and will likely track down the source of the problem. If it still fails, well then you'll be in much better shape for asking for help.

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That was a long post :) If I were you I would transfer all dateTimes in UTC format. The server basically must work with UTC time as far as I'm concerned. Transformation to client time must be applied at clients side. You can use momentjs library that proved to be very fine library for working with dates and times.

On client side do something like this

var date = {
      utc: '/Date(1399407153971)/', //time that you have recieved 
      offset: 240
            }

var localTime = moment.utc(date.utc).zone(date.offset).format('DD/MM/YYYY hh:mm');

I hope this helps

UPD As Matt Johnson pointed out you can make it even shorter for current time zone.

var localTime = moment('/Date(1399407153971)/').format('DD/MM/YYYY hh:mm');
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  • Careful, this will get the current time zone offset - not necessarily the offset that applies to the value in question. Also, it's not necessary to specify the zone at all, as moment will automatically handle that. Just call the moment constructor and pass the value. See these docs. Jun 11, 2014 at 5:33
  • Yes, you are right no need to specify zone. I'll update my answer
    – nomail
    Jun 11, 2014 at 5:53
  • fixed that for ya. If you use moment.utc, the result will be in utc also unless you call .local(). Since this particular input format is implicitly UTC, then you can just parse it directly. Same if you used the ISO format with the Z specifier, or some specific offset. It's only when you have no context in the input that you might want to explicitly use moment.utc(...). But we're getting off-topic here! :) Jun 11, 2014 at 6:02
  • @MattJohnson the documentation link says that By default, moment parses and displays in local time. So it will be parsed as local time
    – nomail
    Jun 11, 2014 at 6:03

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