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Introduction to REST
(Learning REST by Example)
What is REST?
REST is a design pattern. It is a certain approach to creating Web Services. To understand the REST design pattern, let's look at an example (learn by example).
Example: Airline Reservation Service
Suppose that an airline wants to create a telephone reservation system for customers to call in and make flight reservations. The airline wants to ensure that its premier members get immediate service, its frequent flyer members get expedited service and all others get regular service. There are two main approaches to implementing the reservation service...
Approach 1 "Press 1 for Premier, Press 2 for"
The airline provides a single telephone number. Upon entry into the system a customer encounters an automated message, "Press 1 if you are a premier member, press 2 if you are a frequent flyer, press 3 for all others."
Premier Customer Representative
Premier Members Airline Reservations Frequent Flyer Members
Regular Customer Representative
Answering Machine
F.F. Customer Representative
Regular Members
Approach 2
Telephone Numbers are Cheap! Use Them!
The airline provides several telephone numbers - one number for premier members, a different number for frequent flyers, and still another for regular customers.
1-800-Premier
Premier Members
Premier Customer Representative
1-800-Frequent
Frequent Flyer Members 1-800-Reservation Regular Members
F.F. Customer Representative
Regular Customer Representative
Discussion
In Approach 1 the answering machine introduces an extra delay, which is particularly annoying to premier members. (Doesn't everyone hate those answering systems) With Approach 2 there is no intermediate step. Premier members get instant pickup from a customer service representative. Others may have to wait for an operator.
Web-Based Reservation Service
Suppose now the airline wants to provide a Web reservation service for customers to make flight reservations through the Web. Just as with the telephone service, the airline wants to ensure that its premier members get immediate service, its frequent flyer members get expedited service, all others get regular service. There are two main approaches to implementing the Web reservation service. The approaches are analogous to the telephone service...
Approach 1 One-Stop Shopping
The airline provides a single URL. The Web service is responsible for examining incoming client requests to determine their priority and process them accordingly.
client Premier Members Web Reservation Service
Determine Priority
Premier Customer F.F. Customer Regular Customer
client
Frequent Flyer Members
client Regular Members
Approach 1 Disadvantages
There is currently no industry accepted practice (rules) for expressing priorities, so rules would need to be made. The clients must learn the rule, and the Web service application must be written to understand the rule. This approach is based upon the incorrect assumption that a URL is "expensive" and that their use must be rationed.
The Web service is a central point of failure. It is a bottleneck. Load balancing is a challenge. It violates Tim Berners-Lee Web Design, Axiom 0 (see next slide).
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Web Design, Axiom 0
(Tim Berners-Lee, director of W3C)
Axiom 0: all resources on the Web must be uniquely identified with a URI.
URL1
resource1
URL2
resource2
URL3
resource3
Approach 2: URLs are Cheap! Use Them!
The airline provides several URLs - one URL for premier members, a different URL for frequent flyers, and still another for regular customers.
http://www.kings-air/reservations/premier
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client Premier Members
Premier Member Reservation Service
http://www.kings-air/reservations/frequent-flyer
client Frequent Flyer Members
Frequent Flyer Reservation Service
Regular Member Reservation Service
http://www.kings-air/reservations/regular
client Regular Members
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Approach 2 Advantages
The different URLs are discoverable by search engines and UDDI registries. It's easy to understand what each service does simply by examining the URL, i.e., it exploits the Principle of Least Surprise. There is no need to introduce rules. Priorities are elevated to the level of a URL. "What you see is what you get." It's easy to implement high priority - simply assign a fast machine at the premier member URL. There is no bottleneck. There is no central point of failure. Consistent with Axiom 0.
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Recap
We have looked at a reservation service. We have seen a telephone-based version and a Web-based version of the reservation service. With each version we have seen two main approaches to implementing the service. Which approach is the REST design pattern and which isn't? See the following slides.
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This Ain't the REST Design Pattern
Premier Customer Representative
Premier Members Airline Reservation Frequent Flyer Members
Regular Customer Representative
Answering Machine
F.F. Customer Representative
Regular Members
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This is the REST Design Pattern
1-800-Premier Premier Members 1-800-Frequent Frequent Flyer Members 1-800-Reservation Regular Members
Regular Customer Representative F.F. Customer Representative Premier Customer Representative
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This ain't the REST Design Pattern
client
Premier Members
Reservation Web Service
Determine Priority
Premier Customer F.F. Customer Regular Customer
client Frequent Flyer Members
client
Regular Members
This is the REST Design Pattern
http://www.kings-air/reservations/premier
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client Premier Members
Premier Member Reservation Service
http://www.kings-air/reservations/frequent-flyer
client Frequent Flyer Members
Frequent Flyer Reservation Service Regular Member Reservation Service
http://www.kings-air/reservations/regular
client Regular Members
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Two Fundamental Aspects of the REST Design Pattern
Resources
Every distinguishable entity is a resource. A resource may be a Web site, an HTML page, an XML document, a Web service, a physical device, etc.
URLs Identify Resources
Every resource is uniquely identified by a URL. This is Tim Berners-Lee Web Design, Axiom 0.
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The Three Fundamental Aspects of the REST Design Pattern
Resources
URLs
Simple Operations
In this tutorial we discussed how Resources and URLs are fundamental to REST. In a follow up tutorial we will discuss how Simple Operations are also fundamental to REST.