7

I have a Backbone model:

var User = Backbone.Model.extend({
  idAttribute: '_id',

  url: '/api/user',

  defaults:
    { username: ''
    }
});

I fetch it:

var user = new User();

user.fetch();

Now, as an click event in one of my views, I have this:

toggleSubscription: function () {
  user.set('subscriptions', true);
  user.save();
}

This causes a POST request. However, the record already exists on the server, and since I fetched it (and the model instance has an id property), I thought that Backbone should do a PUT instead of a POST. Why might it be doing a POST instead?

1
  • Put this inside toggleSubscriptions: console.log( user.toJSON() ); and console.log( user.isNew() ); and paste here results please Jul 20, 2012 at 23:18

5 Answers 5

7

Try checking user.isNew().

Looks like you created a new model which does not have an ID, that's why it's trying to add it during Backbone.sync.

UPDATE:

Above is exactly true. It does POST because it's a new model (which means, it does not have an id). Before you fetch a model, you need to give it an id. In your example:

var user = new User();
user.fetch();
user.save(); // in XHR console you see POST

var user = new User({ id: 123 });
user.fetch();
user.save(); // in XHR console you see PUT
10
  • Okay, but the ID is being fetched from the server. I don't know the ID of the user until I've fetched it. So what am I supposed to put as ID? I've checked and once it's fetched, id is an attribute and a property of user. isNew is equal to false. Can you explain that?
    – user1082754
    Jul 20, 2012 at 22:01
  • 1
    @OliverJosephAsh no, id is NOT fetched from the server when you try to fetch a new model. Only when you fetch a collection your models will load with ids.
    – mvbl fst
    Jul 20, 2012 at 22:06
  • I don't understand that :( What's the difference between assigning an ID when instantiating User and fetching the user and getting an ID then?
    – user1082754
    Jul 20, 2012 at 22:07
  • 1
    If you have user id, and do user = new User({ id: 123 }) fetch will work - without id it's always a new model. Like I said, when you fetch collection, it loads models with ids. But when you use new User() - it creates a new user model, and now you can only save it (via POST) - in which case it will get an id server side and be returned id POST is successful, and will update this new user model. After that you can do user.save() and it will do a PUT.
    – mvbl fst
    Jul 20, 2012 at 22:10
  • 1
    Well when you fetch, how do you want Backbone to know which model to load? Read this backbonejs.org/#Sync - you fetch always using GET, so you always need an ID: read → GET /collection[/id] (same for models). Think about this - on the server side, when you read a specific record from database, you need primary key. Same here.
    – mvbl fst
    Jul 20, 2012 at 22:22
4

if the model does not yet have an id, it is considered to be new. --http://backbonejs.org/#Model-isNew

if the model does not yet have an id, it is considered to be new... AND therefore backbone will do a PUT request rather than a POST.

This behavior can be overridden simply by adding type: 'POST' to your save block:

var fooModel = new Backbone.Model({ id: 1});

fooModel.save(null, {
  type: 'POST'
});
1
  • i guess it should be "will do a POST request rather a PUT" because we use POST method to add new objects and PUT method to update or modify them Jan 27, 2019 at 7:03
2

Use urlRoot property to set base URL /api/user. Then

  1. it will POST to /api/user when you save a model which doesn't have _id property set and
  2. it will PUT to /api/user/{_id} when you save a model which has _id property set. Notice that it automatically appends _id value to the base URL.

It will look for value of _id property because you have set that value to idAttribute.

1

The server response must be in this way:

{
  _id : 111
}

Because you set _id as the primary key. When model is fetched verify the value of _id it must have a value: console.log( model.get('_id') );

My thought is that you set in your backbone model '_id' as primary key, but service is returning you 'id'

Update: Adding sample code of normal behavior:

var UserModel = Backbone.Model.extend({
  idAttribute: '_id',

  url: '/api/user',

  defaults:
    { username: ''
    }
});
user = new UserModel({_id : 20});
user.save();
user = new UserModel();
user.save();

Output: PUT /api/user 405 (Method Not Allowed) POST /api/user 404 (Not Found)

Check how the first instance of the Model has an id and it tries to do the PUT but the other POST. I cannot reproduce your issue, so my thought is that the problem is on your server response.

2
  • I've set it to use _id by choice. model.get('_id') returns the ID, as does model.id.
    – user1082754
    Jul 20, 2012 at 22:43
  • I updated my answer, I tried your use case, using your model and I cannot reproduce your issue. Could you paste here your RAW server response? I think that there is the issue. Jul 24, 2012 at 19:11
0

It may be worth checking if maybe emulateHTTP is true. This will change all your PUT into POST with an added _method header (you may also want to check that this exists to confirm the idea).

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