This link has been bookmarked by 144 people . It was first bookmarked on 02 Jul 2008, by Michael C. Harris.
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REST Anti-Patterns
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- Tunneling everything through GET
- Tunneling everything through POST
- Ignoring caching
- Ignoring response codes
- Misusing cookies
- Forgetting hypermedia
- Ignoring MIME types
- Breaking self-descriptiveness
list of anti-patterns I’ve managed to come up with:
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citrinWhen people start trying out REST, they usually start looking around for examples – and not only find a lot of examples that claim to be “RESTful”, or are labeled as a “REST API”, but also dig up a lot of discussions about why a specific service that clai
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rawwell"Let’s start with a quick list of anti-patterns I’ve managed to come up with:
1. Tunneling everything through GET
2. Tunneling everything through POST
3. Ignoring caching
4. Ignoring response codes
5. Misusing cookies
6. Forgetting hype -
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Bryan Labutta8 REST anti-patterns presented by Stefan Tilkov
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24 Nov 08
tvaananenExamines misuse of REST principles and still calling it REST.
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Alan DeanWhen people start trying out REST, they usually start looking around for examples ...
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Brent SordylTo many people, REST simply means using HTTP to expose some application functionality. The fundamental and most important operation is an HTTP GET. A GET should retrieve a representation of a resource identified by a URI.
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04 Jul 08
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03 Jul 08
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Emmanuel HugonnetWhen people start trying out REST, they usually start looking around for examples – and not only find a lot of examples that claim to be “RESTful”, or are labeled as a “REST API”, but also dig up a lot of discussions about why a specific service that clai
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02 Jul 08
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Tristan RivoallanI want to focus on anti-patterns – typical examples of attempted RESTful HTTP usage that create problems and show that someone has attempted, but failed, to adopt REST ideas.
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In this article, Stefan Tilkov explains some of the most common anti-patterns found in applications that claim to follow a "RESTful" design and suggests ways to avoid them. When people start trying out REST, they usually start looking around for examples
blog dev REST webservice WebSphere JavaEE patterns architecture web2.0 soa
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Michael C. HarrisWhen people start trying out REST, they usually start looking around for examples – and not only find a lot of examples that claim to be “RESTful”, or are labeled as a “REST API”, but also dig up a lot of discussions about why a specific service that claims to do REST actually fails to do so.
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01 Jul 08
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