docspell/website/site/content/docs/dev/adr/0004_iso8601vsEpoch.md

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2020-07-27 20:13:22 +00:00
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title = "ISO8601 vs Millis as Date-Time transfer"
weight = 50
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# Context and Problem Statement
The question is whether the REST Api should return an ISO8601
formatted string in UTC timezone, or the unix time (number of
milliseconds since 1970-01-01).
There is quite some controversy about it.
- <https://stackoverflow.com/questions/47426786/epoch-or-iso8601-date-format>
- <https://nbsoftsolutions.com/blog/designing-a-rest-api-unix-time-vs-iso-8601>
In my opinion, the ISO8601 format (always UTC) is better. The reason
is the better readability. But elm folks are on the other side:
- <https://package.elm-lang.org/packages/elm/time/1.0.0#iso-8601>
- <https://package.elm-lang.org/packages/rtfeldman/elm-iso8601-date-strings/latest/>
One can convert from an ISO8601 date-time string in UTC time into the
epoch millis and vice versa. So it is the same to me. There is no less
information in a ISO8601 string than in the epoch millis.
To avoid confusion, all date/time values should use the same encoding.
# Decision Outcome
I go with the epoch time. Every timestamp/date-time values is
transfered as Unix timestamp.
Reasons:
- the Elm application needs to frequently calculate with these values
to render the current waiting time etc. This is better if there are
numbers without requiring to parse dates first
- Since the UI is written with Elm, it's probably good to adopt their
style