Two additional ways to change the date format:
Get-Node
Using this Get-Node
which is quiet similar to mklement0 recursive function:
$Data = ConvertFrom-Json $Json
$Data |Get-Node -Where { $_.Value -is [DateTime] } | ForEach-Object {
$_.Value = GetDate($_.Value) -Format 'yyyy-MM-ddTHH\:mm\:ss.fffzzz' -AsUTC
}
$Data
DIY
Or do-it-yourself and build your own Json deserializer:
function ConvertFrom-Json {
[CmdletBinding()][OutputType([Object[]])] param(
[Parameter(ValueFromPipeLine = $True, Mandatory = $True)][String]$InputObject,
[String]$DateFormat = 'yyyy-MM-ddTHH\:mm\:ss.fffffffzzz', # Default: ISO 8601, https://www.newtonsoft.com/json/help/html/datesinjson.htm
[Switch]$AsLocalTime,
[Switch]$AsOrdered
)
function GetObject($JObject) {
switch ($JObject.GetType().Name) {
'JValue' {
switch ($JObject.Type) {
'Boolean' { $JObject.Value }
'Integer' { 0 + $JObject.Value } # https://github.com/PowerShell/PowerShell/issues/14264
'Date' { Get-Date $JObject.Value -Format $DateFormat -AsUTC:(!$AsLocalTime) } # https://github.com/PowerShell/PowerShell/issues/13598
Default { "$($JObject.Value)" }
}
}
'JArray' {
,@( $JObject.ForEach{ GetObject $_ } )
}
'JObject' {
$Properties = [Ordered]@{}
$JObject.ForEach{ $Properties[$_.Name] = GetObject $_.Value }
if ($AsOrdered) { $Properties } else { [PSCustomObject]$Properties } # https://github.com/PowerShell/PowerShell/pull/17405
}
}
}
GetObject ([Newtonsoft.Json.Linq.JObject]::Parse($InputObject))
}
Usage:
ConvertFrom-Json $Json -DateFormat 'yyyy-MM-ddTHH\:mm\:ss.fffzzz' |ConvertTo-Json -Depth 9