HATEOAS
Hypermedia as the engine of application state (HATEOAS) is a constraint of the REST application architecture that distinguishes it from other network application architectures.
With HATEOAS, a client interacts with a network application whose application servers provide information dynamically through hypermedia. A REST client needs little to no prior knowledge about how to interact with an application or server beyond a generic understanding of hypermedia.
By contrast, clients and servers in Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) interact through a fixed interface shared through documentation or an interface description language (IDL).
The restrictions imposed by HATEOAS decouple client and server. This enables server functionality to evolve independently.
The term was coined in 2000 by Roy Fielding in his doctoral dissertation.[1]
Example
A user-agent makes an HTTP request to a REST API through an entry point URL. All subsequent requests the user-agent may make are discovered inside the response to each request. The media types used for these representations, and the link relations they may contain, are part of the API. The client transitions through application states by selecting from the links within a representation or by manipulating the representation in other ways afforded by its media type. In this way, RESTful interaction is driven by hypermedia, rather than out-of-band information.[2]
For example, this GET request fetches an account resource, requesting details in a JSON representation:[3]
GET /accounts/12345 HTTP/1.1 Host: bank.example.com
The response is:
HTTP/1.1 200 OK { "account": { "account_number": 12345, "balance": { "currency": "usd", "value": 100.00 }, "links": { "deposits": "/accounts/12345/deposits", "withdrawals": "/accounts/12345/withdrawals", "transfers": "/accounts/12345/transfers", "close-requests": "/accounts/12345/close-requests" } } }
The response contains these possible follow-up links: POST a deposit, withdrawal, transfer, or close request (to close the account).
As an example, later, after the account has been overdrawn, there is a different set of available links, because the account is overdrawn.
HTTP/1.1 200 OK { "account": { "account_number": 12345, "balance": { "currency": "usd", "value": -25.00 }, "links": { "deposits": "/accounts/12345/deposits" } } }
Now only one link is available: to deposit more money (by POSTing to deposits). In its current state, the other links are not available. Hence the term Engine of Application State. What actions are possible varies as the state of the resource varies.
A client does not need to understand every media type and communication mechanism offered by the server. The ability to understand new media types may be acquired at run-time through "code-on-demand" provided to the client by the server.[1]
Origins
The HATEOAS constraint is an essential part of the "uniform interface" feature of REST, as defined in Roy Fielding's doctoral dissertation.[1] Fielding has further described the concept on his blog.[2]
The purpose of some of the strictness of this and other REST constraints, Fielding explains, is "software design on the scale of decades: every detail is intended to promote software longevity and independent evolution. Many of the constraints are directly opposed to short-term efficiency. Unfortunately, people are fairly good at short-term design, and usually awful at long-term design".[2]
Implementations
- HTML itself is hypermedia, with the
<form>...</form>
element in control of HTTP requests to links.[2][4] - HAL, hypermedia built on top of JSON or XML. Defines links, but not actions (HTTP requests).
- JSON-LD, standard for hyperlinks in JSON. Does not address actions.
- Siren, hypermedia built on top of JSON. Defines links and actions.[5]
- Collection+JSON, hypermedia built on top of JSON. Defines links and actions.[6]
- JSON:API, defines links and actions.[7]
- Hydra. Builds on top of JSON-LD to add definition of actions.[8]
See also
- Hypertext Application Language
- Universal Description Discovery and Integration is the equivalent for the Web Services Description Language
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Fielding, Roy Thomas (2000). "Representational State Transfer (REST)". Architectural Styles and the Design of Network-based Software Architectures (PhD). University of California, Irvine. p. 82. ISBN 0599871180.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Fielding, Roy T. (20 Oct 2008). "REST APIs must be hypertext-driven". https://roy.gbiv.com/untangled/2008/rest-apis-must-be-hypertext-driven.
- ↑ Thijssen, Joshua (2016-10-29). "What is HATEOAS and why is it important for my REST API?". REST CookBook. http://restcookbook.com/Basics/hateoas/.
- ↑ Gross, Carson. "HATEOAS". https://htmx.org/essays/hateoas/. "This, despite the fact that neither XML nor JSON was a natural hypermedia in the same manner as HTML."
- ↑ on GitHub
- ↑ "Collection+JSON - Hypermedia Type". http://amundsen.com/media-types/collection/.
- ↑ "JSON API: Latest Specification". https://jsonapi.org/format.
- ↑ "Hydra: Hypermedia-Driven Web APIs". http://www.markus-lanthaler.com/hydra.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HATEOAS.
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