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Timezone Conversion
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TimeConversion - Server timestamps are converted into the given timezone. You need to set the other properties for this to work. Default:
FtpDate.ServerTime
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FtpDate.ServerTime
will return the original timestamp. -
FtpDate.LocalTime
will convert the timestamp into your local machine's timezone. -
FtpDate.UTC
will convert the timestamp into UTC format (GMT+0).
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TimeZone - The timezone of the FTP server. If the server is in Tokyo with UTC+9 then set this to 9. If the server returns timestamps in UTC then keep this 0. Default: 0. Range: -14 to 14.
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LocalTimeZone (.NET core only) - The timezone of your machine. If your machine is in Tokyo with UTC+9 then set this to 9. If your machine is synchronized with UTC then keep this 0. Default: 0. Range: -14 to 14.
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ParseFtpDate - Converts the FTP date string into a DateTime object, honoring the timezone conversion configuration. In most cases you will never need to use this directly.
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GenerateFtpDate - Generates an FTP date-string from the DateTime object, reversing the timezone conversion configuration. In most cases you will never need to use this directly.
You need to set it based on your timezone's offset from UTC/GMT. So if you are in Tokyo with UTC+9 then set this to 9.
See the image below for the values you need to set it to: (it will accept any value in the range of -14 to 14)
Set the server's timezone into TimeZone
and then set TimeConversion = FtpDate.UTC
Set the server's timezone into TimeZone
and then set TimeConversion = FtpDate.LocalTime
For .NET Core/.NET Standard users: You need to set LocalTimeZone
with the timezone of your machine.
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