If you received the following notice from Olo, you can disregard as these upcoming changes will not have any impact on Punchh's end.
"This September, Olo will require all brands and partners to be able to consume 64-bit Order IDs (19-digit integers) as part of their integration. To date, Olo has only sent 32-bit Order IDs (10-digit integers). Next month, we will be updating the Olo sandbox environment allowing brands to test these changes prior to launch. Testing will run from mid-July until the end of August. We urge everyone to thoroughly test these changes and share any unexpected behavior with your Olo representative. Be on the lookout for more specific information on timing and testing recommendations in the coming weeks.
Note: If your brand uses Order IDs within Javascript applications (either on the web browser or server-side), additional work may be needed to prepare. The biggest number Javascript can accurately represent is 53-bits, or 16-digit integers (source). Order IDs will surpass the 53-bit limit when we switch over to 64-bit Order IDs in September. If handled as a number in Javascript applications, the Order ID will lose accuracy, and unexpected behavior may result. All Javascript code should use Order IDs as strings instead of numbers to avoid this issue."
Disclaimer:
In an effort to supply information as quickly as possible, this article has been published prior to a formal technical review, and is subject to factual, grammatical, and various structural errors. Data may be incomplete, misordered, or incorrect.
This additional disclaimer will be removed upon formal review of this article. The standard Punchh Inc. KB Disclaimer still applies, and can be found at: https://support.punchh.com/hc/en-us/articles/360040100273-Punchh-Inc-Knowledge-Base-Disclaimer
If further assistance is required, submit a ticket to Punchh Support. (For help submitting a ticket, click here)