I'm trying to pass a UTC date as a query string parameter to a Web API method. The URL looks like
/api/order?endDate=2014-04-01T00:00:00Z&zoneId=4
The signature of the method looks like
[HttpGet]
public object Index(int zoneId, DateTime? endDate = null)
The date is coming in as 31/03/2014 8:00:00 PM
but I'd like it to come in as 01/04/2014 12:00:00 AM
My JsonFormatter.SerializerSettings
looks like this
new JsonSerializerSettings
{
ContractResolver = new CamelCasePropertyNamesContractResolver(),
DateTimeZoneHandling = DateTimeZoneHandling.Utc,
DateFormatHandling = DateFormatHandling.IsoDateFormat
};
EDIT #1:
I've noticed when I POST 2014-04-01T00:00:00Z
it will serialize to the UTC DateTime kind in C#. However I've found a work around of doing endDate.Value.ToUniversalTime()
to convert it although I find it odd how it works for a POST but not a GET.
The query string parameter value you are sending 2014-04-01T00:00:00Z
is UTC time. So, the same gets translated to a time based on your local clock and if you call ToUniversalTime()
, it gets converted back to UTC.
So, what exactly is the question? If the question is why is this happening if sent in as query string but not when posted in request body, the answer to that question is that ASP.NET Web API binds the URI path, query string, etc using model binding and the body using parameter binding. For latter, it uses a media formatter. If you send JSON, the JSON media formatter is used and it is based on JSON.NET.
Since you have specified DateTimeZoneHandling.Utc
, it uses that setting and you get the date time kind you want. BTW, if you change this setting to DateTimeZoneHandling.Local
, then you will see the same behavior as model binding.