REST and Hypermedia: Difference between revisions

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===Request Body===
===Request Body===
{{Internal|HTTP_Request#The_HTTP_Request_Body|HTTP Request Body}}


==Response==
==Response==

Revision as of 03:05, 2 April 2019

External

Internal

API

API Concepts

URL

URL

URI

URI

URN

URN

Endpoint

Resource

A resource is a logical entity that an application can access through a resource path. A resource is a top-level constituent of a REST API. Resources are sometimes referred to as the nouns of the API. A resource has a number of methods.

TODO: receive data from client via path, Spring REST Concepts: Spring_REST_Concepts#Via_Path

Resource Path

Path Parameter, Path Variable, Variable Path Part

HTTP Request Path Parameter

Also referred to as "path variable" or "variable path part".

/something/{id}/something-else

Query

Query Parameter

HTTP Request Query Parameter

Method

A method corresponds to a REST API request that is submitted by the user of the API to a resource and to the response returned to the user. Methods belong to resources, and are defined by combinations of resource paths and operations. The API methods represent the programming interface between the client and the API.

Request

A Method Request is part of the API's interface with the API's client.

Request Header

HTTP Request Header

Request Body

HTTP Request Body

Response

A Method Response is part of the API's interface with the API's client.

Response Header

Response Body

Per-Method Authorization

HTTP Protocol Semantics within a REST Application Context

Operations

A resource's operations are defined by HTTP verbs:

GET

Get a representation of a resource.

Also see:

HTTP GET Specification
Spring @GetMapping

POST

Create a new resource underneath the current one, based on the given representation. POST is non-idempotent. POST is an unsafe operation.

Also see:

HTTP POST Specification
Spring @PostMapping

PUT

Replace the state of the given resource with the one described in the given representation. PUT is semantic opposite of GET: whereas GET requests are used to send a resource representation from server to client, PUT is used to send a resource representation from client to server. Semantically, PUT mens "put this data at this URL", replacing any data that is already there. PUT is intended to perform a wholesale replacement of the resource, rather than a partial update operation. The partial update can be performed with PATCH. Put is an idempotent operation. If any of the resource representation part is missing, that state will be overwritten with null.

Also see:

HTTP PUT Specification
Spring @PutMapping

PATCH

Defined in RFC 5789.

Updates a resource by modifying part of the state of the given resource based on the given representation. If some bit of resource state is not mentioned in the representation, it should be left unmodified. PATCH is like PUT, but allows for fine-grained changes in resource state.

Also see:

HTTP PATCH Specification
Spring @PatchMapping

DELETE

Destroy the resource.

Also see:

HTTP DELETE Specification
Spring @DeleteMapping

HEAD

Get the headers that would be sent along with a representation of this resource, but not the representation itself. This method is mostly used when a client explores the API.

Also see:

HTTP HEAD Specification

OPTIONS

Discover which methods this resource responds to. This method is mostly used when a client explores the API.

Also see:

HTTP OPTIONS Specification

LINK

UNLINK

Representation

Universal Resource Locator (URL)

Universal Resource Locator

Universal Resource Identifier (URI)

Universal Resource Identifier

Representational State Transfer (REST)

RWA page 32

Multipurpose Internet Mail Extension (MIME)

MIME is an internet standard that extends the format of e-mail to support text in character sets other then ASCII, non-text attachments, such as audio, video, images, application programs, etc., message bodies with multiple parts and header information in non-ASCII characters sets. MIME is specified in six linked RFCs: RFC 2045, RFC 2046, RFC 2047, RFC 4288, RFC 4289 and RFC 2049.

MIME is relevant to HTTP. The content types define by MIME are used in the definition of HTTP content. HTTP clients use MIME content type headers to indicate the desired application to process the specific type of content they send. HTTP servers insert MIME content type information in all their responses.

MIME defines the following headers:

  • MIME-Version
  • Content-Type
  • Content-Disposition
  • Content-Transfer-Encoding

Media Type

Wikipedia Media Type

A media type, also called media-type, content type or MIME type is a two-part string identifying the format of a document. Usually, knowing a document's format allows us to parse it. IANA (Internet Assigned Numbers Authority) is the official authority for the standardization and publication of media types. Within the context of REST, the media type is a format of a request and response body. Media types are specified by RFC6838 - Media Type Specifications and Registration Procedures.

The media type string consists of a type and a subtype. The subtype can be further be structured into a tree. A media type can optionally define a suffix and parameters:

type "/" [tree "." ] subtype ["+" suffix] *[";" parameter]

The currently registered types are: "application", "audio", "example", "font", "image", "message", "model", "multipart", "text" and "video".

An HTML file may be designated as:

text/html; charset=UTF-8

Media Type Support