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I'm looking for a reasonable way to represent searches as a RESTful URLs.

The setup: I have two models, Cars and Garages, where Cars can be in Garages. So my urls look like:

/car/xxxx
  xxx == car id
  returns car with given id

/garage/yyy
  yyy = garage id
  returns garage with given id

A Car can exist on its own (hence the /car), or it can exist in a garage. What's the right way to represent, say, all the cars in a given garage? Something like:

/garage/yyy/cars     ?

How about the union of cars in garage yyy and zzz?

What's the right way to represent a search for cars with certain attributes? Say: show me all blue sedans with 4 doors :

/car/search?color=blue&type=sedan&doors=4

or should it be /cars instead?

The use of "search" seems inappropriate there - what's a better way / term? Should it just be:

/cars/?color=blue&type=sedan&doors=4

Should the search parameters be part of the PATHINFO or QUERYSTRING?

In short, I'm looking for a good guide/tutorial for cross-model REST url design, and for search.

[Update] I like Justin's answer, but he doesn't cover the multi-field search case:

/cars/color:blue/type:sedan/doors:4

or something like that. How do we go from

/cars/color/blue

to the multiple field case?

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62% accept rate
I updated. Let me know what you think. – Justin Bozonier Oct 16 '08 at 18:33

7 Answers

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My advice would be this:

/garages
  Returns list of garages (think JSON array here)
/garages/yyy
  Returns specific garage
/garage/yyy/cars
  Returns list of cars in garage
/garages/cars
  Returns list of all cars in all garages (may not be practical of course)
/cars
  Returns list of all cars
/cars/xxx
  Returns specific car
/cars/colors
  Returns lists of all posible colors for cars
/cars/colors/red,blue,green
  Returns list of cars of the specific colors (yes commas are allowed :) )

Edit:

/cars/colors/red,blue,green/doors/2
  Returns list of all red,blue, and green cars with 2 doors.
/cars/type/hatchback,coupe/colors/red,blue,green/
  Same idea as the above but a lil more intuitive.
/cars/colors/red,blue,green/doors/two-door,four-door
  All cars that are red, blue, green and have either two or four doors.

Hopefully that gives you the idea. Essentially your Rest API should be easily discoverable and should enable you to browse through your data. Another advantage with using URLs and not query strings is that you are able to take advantage of the native caching mechanisms that exist on the web server for HTTP traffic.

Here's a link to a page describing the evils of query strings in REST: http://209.85.173.104/search?q=cache:SQSlLYecB0gJ:rest.blueoxen.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl%3FQueryStringsConsideredHarmful+rest+with+query+strings&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us&client=safari

I used Google's cache because the normal page wasn't working for me here's that link as well: http://rest.blueoxen.net/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?QueryStringsConsideredHarmful

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Thanks for the detailed answer. On the last one, what if I want to search by both color and number of doors? /cars/colors/red,blue,green/doors/4 That doesn't seem right. – Parand Oct 16 '08 at 5:17
Commas in the URL don't feel right to me, but still valid rest. I think it is just a paradigm shift. – Justin Bozonier Oct 16 '08 at 5:43
I don't like this suggestion. How would you know the difference between /cars/colors/red,blue,green and /cars/colors/green,blue,red ? The path element of the URI should be hierarchical, and I don't really see that being the case here. I think this is a situation where the query-string is the most appropriate choice. – troelskn May 7 at 12:18
This is RPC, not REST. – Wahnfrieden Jul 20 at 19:41
vote up 3 vote down

Justin's answer is probably the way to go, although in some applications it might make sense to consider a particular search as a resource in its own right, such as if you want to support named saved searches:

/search/{searchQuery}

or

/search/{savedSearchName}
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vote up 0 vote down

Though I like Justin's response, I feel it more accurately represents a filter rather than a search. What if I want to know about cars with names that start with cam?

The way I see it, you could build it into the way you handle specific resources:
/cars/cam*

Or, you could simply add it into the filter:
/cars/doors/4/name/cam*/colors/red,blue,green

Personally, I prefer the latter, however I am by no means an expert on REST (having first heard of it only 2 or so weeks ago...)

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vote up 5 vote down

Although have the parameters in the path has some advantages, there are, IMO, some outweighing factors.

  • Not all characters needed for a search query are permitted in a URL. Most punctuation and Unicode characters would need to be URL encoded as a query string parameter. I'm wrestling with the same problem. I would like to use XPath in the URL, but not all XPath syntax is compatible with a URI path. So for simple paths, /cars/doors/driver/lock/combination would be appropriate to locate the 'combination' element in the driver's door XML document. But /car/doors[id='driver' and lock/combination='1234'] is not so friendly.

  • I think there is a difference between filtering a resource based on one of its attributes and specifying a resource.

    For example, since

    /cars/colors returns a list of all colors for all cars (the resource returned is a collection of color objects)

    /cars/colors/red,blue,green would return a list of color objects that are red, blue or green, not a collection of cars.

    To return cars, the path would be

    /cars?color=red,blue,green or /cars/search?color=red,blue,green

  • It is more difficult to read because name/value pairs are not isolated from the rest of the path, which is not name/value pairs.

One last comment. I prefer '/garages/yyy/cars' (always plural) to '/garage/yyy/cars' (perhaps it was a typo in the original answer) because it avoid changing the path between singular and plural. For words with an added 's', it's not so bad, but changing /person/yyy/friends to /people/yyy seems cumbersome.

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yes, I agree... besides I thing urls path structure should reflect the natural relations between entities, some sort of a map of my resources, like a garage has many cars, a car belongs to a garage and so... and let the filter parameters, cause that's what we are talking about, to que querystring... what do you think? – opensas May 30 at 17:50
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To expand on Peter's answer - you could make Search a first-class resource:

POST    /searches          # create a new search
GET     /searches          # list all searches (admin)
GET     /searches/{id}     # show the results of a previously-run search
DELETE  /searches/{id}     # delete a search (admin)

The Search resource would have fields for color, make model, garaged status, etc and could be specified in XML, JSON, or any other format. Like the Car and Garage resource, you could restrict access to Searches based on authentication. Users who frequently run the same Searches can store them in their profiles so that they don't need to be re-created. The URLs will be short enough that in many cases they can be easily traded via email. These stored Searches can be the basis of custom RSS feeds, and so on.

There are many possibilities for using Searches when you think of them as resources.

The idea is explained in more detail in this Railscast.

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doesn't this approach goes against the idea of working with a restless protocol? I mean, persisting a search to a db is sort of having a stateful connection... isn't it? – opensas May 30 at 17:48
It's more like having a stateful service. We're also changing the state of the service every time we add a new Car or Garage. A Search is just another resource that can be used with the full range of HTTP verbs. – Rich Apodaca May 31 at 14:46
Defining URI conventions as part of your API violates a constraint of REST. – Wahnfrieden Jul 20 at 19:34
How does the above define a URI convention? – Rich Apodaca Jul 21 at 1:59
That is, how does the above define a convention inconsistent with REST? – Rich Apodaca Jul 21 at 2:00
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vote up 1 vote down

For the searching, go ahead and use a regular old search:

/car-search?color=blue&type=sedan&doors=4

An advantage to regular querystrings is that they are standard and widely understood and that they can be generated from form-get.

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This is correct. The whole point of query strings is for doing things like search. – Wahnfrieden Jul 20 at 19:35
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This is not REST. You cannot define URIs for resources inside your API. Resource navigation must be hypertext-driven. It's fine if you want pretty URIs and heavy amounts of coupling, but just do not call it REST, because it directly violates the constraints of RESTful architecture.

See this article by the inventor of REST.

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