In today's market, where rival web services compete for attention, a well-designed REST API is a must-have feature. This concise book presents a set of API design rules, drawn primarily from best practices that stick close to the Web's REST architectural style. Along with rules for URI design and HTTP use, you'll learn guidelines for media types and representational forms. REST APIs are ubiquitous, but few of them follow a consistent design methodology. Using these simple rules, you will design web service APIs that adhere to recognized web standards. To assist you, author Mark Massé…mehr
In today's market, where rival web services compete for attention, a well-designed REST API is a must-have feature. This concise book presents a set of API design rules, drawn primarily from best practices that stick close to the Web's REST architectural style. Along with rules for URI design and HTTP use, you'll learn guidelines for media types and representational forms. REST APIs are ubiquitous, but few of them follow a consistent design methodology. Using these simple rules, you will design web service APIs that adhere to recognized web standards. To assist you, author Mark Massé introduces the Web Resource Modeling Language (WRML), a conceptual framework he created for the design and implementation of REST APIs. * Learn design rules for addressing resources with URIs * Apply design principles to HTTP's request methods and response status codes * Work with guidelines for conveying metadata through HTTP headers and media types * Get design tips to address the needs of client programs, including the special needs of browser-based JavaScript clients * Understand why REST APIs should be designed and configured, not codedHinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Mark Masse resides in Seattle, where he is a Senior Director of Engineering at ESPN. Mark has fourteen years of engineering, management, and architecture experience with The Walt Disney Company. He began his career with Starwave creating rich, interactive Java applets for ESPN Sportszone, NFL.com, and NASCAR Online. Mark architected and developed the content management system (CMS) that powers all of the Disney web sites including ESPN.com, ABC.com and Disney.com. In 2008, he received a "Disney Inventor Award" for creating a "System and Method for Determining the Data Model Used to Create a Web Page."
Inhaltsangabe
Dedication Preface Greetings Program! Conventions Used in This Book Using Code Examples Safari® Books Online How to Contact Us Acknowledgments Chapter 1: Introduction 1.1 Hello World Wide Web 1.2 Web Architecture 1.3 Web Standards 1.4 REST 1.5 REST APIs 1.6 REST API Design 1.7 Recap Chapter 2: Identifier Design with URIs 2.1 URIs 2.2 URI Format 2.3 URI Authority Design 2.4 Resource Modeling 2.5 Resource Archetypes 2.6 URI Path Design 2.7 URI Query Design 2.8 Recap Chapter 3: Interaction Design with HTTP 3.1 HTTP/1.1 3.2 Request Methods 3.3 Response Status Codes 3.4 Recap Chapter 4: Metadata Design 4.1 HTTP Headers 4.2 Media Types 4.3 Media Type Design 4.4 Recap Chapter 5: Representation Design 5.1 Message Body Format 5.2 Hypermedia Representation 5.3 Media Type Representation 5.4 Error Representation 5.5 Recap Chapter 6: Client Concerns 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Versioning 6.3 Security 6.4 Response Representation Composition 6.5 Processing Hypermedia 6.6 JavaScript Clients 6.7 Recap Chapter 7: Final Thoughts 7.1 State of the Art 7.2 Uniform Implementation 7.3 Recap My First REST API
Dedication Preface Greetings Program! Conventions Used in This Book Using Code Examples Safari® Books Online How to Contact Us Acknowledgments Chapter 1: Introduction 1.1 Hello World Wide Web 1.2 Web Architecture 1.3 Web Standards 1.4 REST 1.5 REST APIs 1.6 REST API Design 1.7 Recap Chapter 2: Identifier Design with URIs 2.1 URIs 2.2 URI Format 2.3 URI Authority Design 2.4 Resource Modeling 2.5 Resource Archetypes 2.6 URI Path Design 2.7 URI Query Design 2.8 Recap Chapter 3: Interaction Design with HTTP 3.1 HTTP/1.1 3.2 Request Methods 3.3 Response Status Codes 3.4 Recap Chapter 4: Metadata Design 4.1 HTTP Headers 4.2 Media Types 4.3 Media Type Design 4.4 Recap Chapter 5: Representation Design 5.1 Message Body Format 5.2 Hypermedia Representation 5.3 Media Type Representation 5.4 Error Representation 5.5 Recap Chapter 6: Client Concerns 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Versioning 6.3 Security 6.4 Response Representation Composition 6.5 Processing Hypermedia 6.6 JavaScript Clients 6.7 Recap Chapter 7: Final Thoughts 7.1 State of the Art 7.2 Uniform Implementation 7.3 Recap My First REST API
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