--- title: 'REST API design principles' linkTitle: 'REST API design principles' weight: 100 description: 'Information on using the REST API scheme and principles of its design.' --- ## REST API scheme Common scheme for our REST API is ` [namespace] `. - `VERB` can be `POST`, `GET`, `PATCH`, `PUT`, `DELETE`. - `namespace` should scope some specific functionality like `auth`, `lambda`. It is optional in the scheme. - Typical `objects` are `tasks`, `projects`, `jobs`. - When you want to extract a specific object from a collection, just specify its `id`. - An `action` can be used to simplify REST API or provide an endpoint for entities without `objects` endpoint like `annotations`, `data`, `data/meta`. Note: action should not duplicate other endpoints without a reason. ## Design principles - Use nouns instead of verbs in endpoint paths. For example, `POST /api/v1/tasks` instead of `POST /api/v1/tasks/create`. - Accept and respond with JSON whenever it is possible - Name collections with plural nouns (e.g. `/tasks`, `/projects`) - Try to keep the API structure flat. Prefer two separate endpoints for `/projects` and `/tasks` instead of `/projects/:id1/tasks/:id2`. Use filters to extract necessary information like `/tasks/:id2?project=:id1`. In some cases it is useful to get all `tasks`. If the structure is hierarchical, it cannot be done easily. Also you have to know both `:id1` and `:id2` to get information about the task. _Note: for now we accept `GET /tasks/:id2/jobs` but it should be replaced by `/jobs?task=:id2` in the future_. - Handle errors gracefully and return standard error codes (e.g. `201`, `400`) - Allow filtering, sorting, and pagination - Maintain good security practices - Cache data to improve performance - Versioning our APIs (e.g. `/api/v1`, `/api/v2`). It should be done when you delete an endpoint or modify its behaviors. ## Links - [Best practices for REST API design](https://stackoverflow.blog/2020/03/02/best-practices-for-rest-api-design/) - [Flat vs. nested resources](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/20951419/what-are-best-practices-for-rest-nested-resources)