299

I'm building a REST API, but I've encountered a problem.

It seems that accepted practice in designing a REST API is that if the resource requested doesn't exist, a 404 is returned.

However, to me, this adds unnecessary ambiguity. HTTP 404 is more traditionally associated with a bad URI. So in effect we're saying "Either you got to the right place, but that specific record does not exist, or there's no such location on the Internets! I'm really not sure which one..."

Consider the following URI:

http://mywebsite/api/user/13

If I get a 404 back, is that because User 13 does not exist? Or is it because my URL should have been:

http://mywebsite/restapi/user/13

In the past, I've just returned a NULL result with an HTTP 200 OK response code if the record doesn't exist. It's simple, and in my opinion very clean, even if it's not necessarily accepted practice. But is there a better way to do this?

4
  • Probably a duplicate. stackoverflow.com/questions/3821663/… Mar 29, 2012 at 17:57
  • 8
    The other question seems to be related to URI Query string formats. The discussion on 404 there is not sufficient to answer my question, which is whether there's a more appropriate or useful way to determine what a 404 actually means. I reviewed that one before posting.
    – Brian Lacy
    Mar 29, 2012 at 19:13
  • Is it normal when browser concole consist the errors 404? When i do regular operations with correct uri but resource not found. Dec 3, 2014 at 13:27
  • 4
    404 does not indicate a bad URI, it indicates a resource Not Found. That might be because there is no user '13', or it might be because there is no resource /mywebsite/api.
    – ChrisV
    Jan 16, 2015 at 11:26

13 Answers 13

142

404 is just the HTTP response code. On top of that, you can provide a response body and/or other headers with a more meaningful error message that developers will see.

7
  • 12
    This makes sense. I have to wonder, though, whether any benefit is actually gained from returning the 404 in the first place, versus returning a 200 with a null response?
    – Brian Lacy
    Mar 29, 2012 at 19:15
  • 22
    If you return a 200 with a null you are going against the HTTP Spec. You can do this, but then your api will not adhere to the "Uniformed Interface" Constraint of REST.
    – suing
    Mar 29, 2012 at 20:20
  • 5
    ...and your response body should include hyperlinks to valid URI's. Barring the root URI, and perhaps a bookmark or two, your clients should always be following links given to them by the server. Then there's no need to invent detailed semantics regarding exactly how they decided to work outside the system.
    – fumanchu
    Mar 30, 2012 at 4:01
  • @DarrylHebbes what do you mean, I can do a request and see the complete contents of the response in the Network tab of the Chrome developer console.
    – jaapz
    Aug 8, 2014 at 11:32
  • 6
    It is incredibly bad to return an error (404 or whatever) for any query that returns empty results. No database will do that and usually you don't want to report an empty result as an unexpected condition to the user. Example: you query your api to check if there is an appointment scheduled for the next 30 minutes. If there is none, you should NOT return a 404. Return a 200 OK and an empty array, please.
    – esmiralha
    Jun 28, 2020 at 13:12
85

Use 404 if the resource does not exist. Don't return 200 with an empty body.

This is akin to undefined vs empty string (e.g. "") in programming. While very similar, there is definitely a difference.

404 means that nothing exists at that URI (like an undefined variable in programming). Returning 200 with an empty body means that something does exist there and that something is just empty right now (like an empty string in programming).

404 doesn't mean it was a "bad URI". There are special HTTP codes that are intended for URI errors (e.g. 414 Request-URI Too Long).

7
  • 1
    Hey, I think you might be onto something. Wouldn't it make more sense to return one of the "41?" errors when there's a problem with the requested resource? For example, 410 Gone means "The requested resource is no longer available at the server and no forwarding address is known." -- (See w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec10.html#sec10.4.11)
    – Brian Lacy
    Apr 5, 2012 at 15:56
  • 2
    I don't think any of the 41x errors are appropriate to your use case. I like the comparison to undefined vs. empty string, which is a more concise version of my point in my answer. There is a difference, but that doesn't imply that an empty string is an error. To stretch the analogy: You could have a method String getName() that has an implementation like this: return this.name == null ? "" : this.name. That's not incorrect unless you want the client to know that this.name is null.
    – jhericks
    Apr 5, 2012 at 16:34
  • 2
    404 is still the most appropriate option. You can (and are encouraged to) use the body of that 404 response to inform the user/client of specific details for receiving the error. See: stackoverflow.com/a/9999335/105484. In your case you might want to use that body to suggest to the user that they reformat their URI to look like /restapi/user/USER_ID
    – nategood
    Apr 5, 2012 at 16:35
  • 1
    Ok, I can see some good points here, but 4XX are error codes, how is that an error situation? How can client prevent 404 from happening? Apr 3, 2020 at 19:14
  • 1
    Indeed, according to google 404 is an error google.com/donotexist Oct 18, 2022 at 12:01
28

As with most things, "it depends". But to me, your practice is not bad and is not going against the HTTP spec per se. However, let's clear some things up.

First, URI's should be opaque. Even if they're not opaque to people, they are opaque to machines. In other words, the difference between http://mywebsite/api/user/13, http://mywebsite/restapi/user/13 is the same as the difference between http://mywebsite/api/user/13 and http://mywebsite/api/user/14 i.e. not the same is not the same period. So a 404 would be completely appropriate for http://mywebsite/api/user/14 (if there is no such user) but not necessarily the only appropriate response.

You could also return an empty 200 response or more explicitly a 204 (No Content) response. This would convey something else to the client. It would imply that the resource identified by http://mywebsite/api/user/14 has no content or is essentially nothing. It does mean that there is such a resource. However, it does not necessarily mean that you are claiming there is some user persisted in a data store with id 14. That's your private concern, not the concern of the client making the request. So, if it makes sense to model your resources that way, go ahead.

There are some security implications to giving your clients information that would make it easier for them to guess legitimate URI's. Returning a 200 on misses instead of a 404 may give the client a clue that at least the http://mywebsite/api/user part is correct. A malicious client could just keep trying different integers. But to me, a malicious client would be able to guess the http://mywebsite/api/user part anyway. A better remedy would be to use UUID's. i.e. http://mywebsite/api/user/3dd5b770-79ea-11e1-b0c4-0800200c9a66 is better than http://mywebsite/api/user/14. Doing that, you could use your technique of returning 200's without giving much away.

1
  • 8
    This is the solution I chose and went with using a 204 instead of a 404. To me 204 means "I found your code, but didn't find results" and 404 means "I couldn't find any code to execute, is this the wrong path?" Feb 25, 2016 at 17:05
16

That is an very old post but I faced to a similar problem and I would like to share my experience with you guys.

I am building microservice architecture with rest APIs. I have some rest GET services, they collect data from back-end system based on the request parameters.

I followed the rest API design documents and I sent back HTTP 404 with a perfect JSON error message to client when there was no data which align to the query conditions (for example zero record was selected).

When there was no data to sent back to the client I prepared an perfect JSON message with internal error code, etc. to inform the client about the reason of the "Not Found" and it was sent back to the client with HTTP 404. That works fine.

Later I have created a rest API client class which is an easy helper to hide the HTTP communication related code and I used this helper all the time when I called my rest APIs from my code.

BUT I needed to write confusing extra code just because HTTP 404 had two different functions:

  • the real HTTP 404 when the rest API is not available in the given url, it is thrown by the application server or web-server where the rest API application runs
  • client get back HTTP 404 as well when there is no data in database based on the where condition of the query.

Important: My rest API error handler catches all the exceptions appears in the back-end service which means in case of any error my rest API always returns with a perfect JSON message with the message details.

This is the 1st version of my client helper method which handles the two different HTTP 404 response:

public static String getSomething(final String uuid) {
    String serviceUrl = getServiceUrl();
    String path = "user/" + , uuid);
    String requestUrl = serviceUrl + path;
    String httpMethod = "GET";

    Response response = client
            .target(serviceUrl)
            .path(path)
            .request(ExtendedMediaType.APPLICATION_UTF8)
            .get();

    if (response.getStatus() == Response.Status.OK.getStatusCode()) {
        // HTTP 200
        return response.readEntity(String.class);
    } else {
        // confusing code comes here just because
        // I need to decide the type of HTTP 404...

        // trying to parse response body
        try {
            String responseBody = response.readEntity(String.class);
            ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
            ErrorInfo errorInfo = mapper.readValue(responseBody, ErrorInfo.class);

            // re-throw the original exception
            throw new MyException(errorInfo);

        } catch (IOException e) {
            // this is a real HTTP 404
            throw new ServiceUnavailableError(response, requestUrl, httpMethod);
        }

    // this exception will never be thrown
    throw new Exception("UNEXPECTED ERRORS, BETTER IF YOU DO NOT SEE IT IN THE LOG");
}

BUT, because my Java or JavaScript client can receive two kind of HTTP 404 somehow I need to check the body of the response in case of HTTP 404. If I can parse the response body then I am sure I got back a response where there was no data to send back to the client.

If I am not able to parse the response that means I got back a real HTTP 404 from the web server (not from the rest API application).

It is so confusing and the client application always needs to do extra parsing to check the real reason of HTTP 404.

Honestly I do not like this solution. It is confusing, needs to add extra bullshit code to clients all the time.

So instead of using HTTP 404 in this two different scenarios I decided that I will do the following:

  • I am not using HTTP 404 as a response HTTP code in my rest application anymore.
  • I am going to use HTTP 204 (No Content) instead of HTTP 404.

In that case client code can be more elegant:

public static String getString(final String processId, final String key) {
    String serviceUrl = getServiceUrl();
    String path = String.format("key/%s", key);
    String requestUrl = serviceUrl + path;
    String httpMethod = "GET";

    log(requestUrl);

    Response response = client
            .target(serviceUrl)
            .path(path)
            .request(ExtendedMediaType.APPLICATION_JSON_UTF8)
            .header(CustomHttpHeader.PROCESS_ID, processId)
            .get();

    if (response.getStatus() == Response.Status.OK.getStatusCode()) {
        return response.readEntity(String.class);
    } else {
        String body = response.readEntity(String.class);
        ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
        ErrorInfo errorInfo = mapper.readValue(body, ErrorInfo.class);
        throw new MyException(errorInfo);
    }

    throw new AnyServerError(response, requestUrl, httpMethod);
}

I think this handles that issue better.

If you have any better solution please share it with us.

3
  • 1
    Apache HttpClient methods don't throw exception on a 204 response. If your client just answers business objects (models), then that will return null. Works, but difficult for end users to detect the 204 situation. Jan 9, 2018 at 13:57
  • It's all good, but a question is: how often do you write if statements for the 404? And what would it be? On the other hand, if you make a call to the api, that defines possible 404 with the error json inside, you can handle it just for this case.
    – Max
    May 24, 2018 at 20:53
  • zappee I agree with you. I have a service which returns data. But there's situations where the data is broken. The request URL is correct (so not a 404), but it's not really a logic error (500), so 204 seems the most suitable. It's really annoying about the lack of a message body thing. Although arguably I could insert a reason into a Header.
    – cs94njw
    Jun 27, 2018 at 11:46
13

404 Not Found technically means that uri does not currently map to a resource. In your example, I interpret a request to http://mywebsite/api/user/13 that returns a 404 to imply that this url was never mapped to a resource. To the client, that should be the end of conversation.

To address concerns with ambiguity, you can enhance your API by providing other response codes. For example, suppose you want to allow clients to issue GET requests the url http://mywebsite/api/user/13, you want to communicate that clients should use the canonical url http://mywebsite/restapi/user/13. In that case, you may want to consider issuing a permanent redirect by returning a 301 Moved Permanently and supply the canonical url in the Location header of the response. This tells the client that for future requests they should use the canonical url.

12

So in essence, it sounds like the answer could depend on how the request is formed.

If the requested resource forms part of the URI as per a request to http://mywebsite/restapi/user/13 and user 13 does not exist, then a 404 is probably appropriate and intuitive because the URI is representative of a non-existent user/entity/document/etc. The same would hold for the more secure technique using a GUID http://mywebsite/api/user/3dd5b770-79ea-11e1-b0c4-0800200c9a66 and the api/restapi argument above.

However, if the requested resource ID was included in the request header [include your own example], or indeed, in the URI as a parameter, eg http://mywebsite/restapi/user/?UID=13 then the URI would still be correct (because the concept of a USER does exits at http://mywebsite/restapi/user/); and therefore the response could reasonable be expected to be a 200 (with an appropriately verbose message) because the specific user known as 13 does not exist but the URI does. This way we are saying the URI is good, but the request for data has no content.

Personally a 200 still doesn't feel right (though I have previously argued it does). A 200 response code (without a verbose response) could cause an issue not to be investigated when an incorrect ID is sent for example.

A better approach would be to send a 204 - No Contentresponse. This is compliant with w3c's description *The server has fulfilled the request but does not need to return an entity-body, and might want to return updated metainformation.*1 The confusion, in my opinion is caused by the Wikipedia entry stating 204 No Content - The server successfully processed the request, but is not returning any content. Usually used as a response to a successful delete request. The last sentence is highly debateable. Consider the situation without that sentence and the solution is easy - just send a 204 if the entity does not exist. There is even an argument for returning a 204 instead of a 404, the request has been processed and no content has been returned! Please be aware though, 204's do not allow content in the response body

Sources

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_HTTP_status_codes 1. http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec10.html

11

This recently came up with our team. We use both 404 Not found with a message body and 204 No Content based on the following rational.

If the request URI indicates the location of a single resource, we use 404 Not found. When the request queries a URI, we use 204 No Content

  • http://mywebsite/api/user/13 would return 404 when user 13 does not exist
  • http://mywebsite/api/users?id=13 would return 204 no content
  • http://mywebsite/api/users?firstname=test would return 204 no content

The idea here being, 'query routes' are expected to be able to return 1, many or no content.

Whatever pattern you choose, the most important things is to be consistent - so get buy in from your team.

2
  • 1
    What if one of your router/services is down/misbehaving and sends 404's? Will you clients assume that the resource doesn't exist and therefore allow for the creation of it? Also, i found some router circuit breaker implementations that dont go along very well with constant 404's and - after some repeated 404s - will open the circuit.
    – Gonçalo
    Mar 24, 2022 at 14:46
  • This is the pattern I have used for single hosts OR single server apis. Have never ran into routing issues as you described. Concurrency being the only real example i can think of; Where the resource was deleted by one user and another user wanted to fetch or mutate that same resource. We did hard deletes in that system, so we could not respond with 410 Gone. Aug 22, 2022 at 13:31
8

This old but excellent article... http://www.infoq.com/articles/webber-rest-workflow says this about it...

404 Not Found - The service is far too lazy (or secure) to give us a real reason why our request failed, but whatever the reason, we need to deal with it.

2

The Uniform Resource Identifier is a unique pointer to the resource. A poorly form URI doesn't point to the resource and therefore performing a GET on it will not return a resource. 404 means The server has not found anything matching the Request-URI. If you put in the wrong URI or bad URI that is your problem and the reason you didn't get to a resource whether a HTML page or IMG.

0
0

Since this discussion seems to be able to survive the end of time I'll throw in the JSON:API Specifications

404 Not Found A server MUST respond with 404 Not Found when processing a request to fetch a single resource that does not exist, except when the request warrants a 200 OK response with null as the primary data (as described above).

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/vnd.api+json

{
  "links": {
    "self": "http://example.com/articles/1/author"
  },
  "data": null
}

Also please see this Stackoverflow question

0

Paradigms

My guess to what has fueled the discussion here is that different programmers approach problems differently.

In the database paradigm selecting from a relation with a key that does not exist won't get an error but an empty result (zero tupels). Likewise if attempting to delete from a relation with no matching records. A valid request with a likewise valid response no records affected.

In the service realm a client might get more information and an error if a resource is non existant. It boils down to this: if a client requests a very specific url (/user/9) and 9 was not assigned it is just as not found as /usr/9 the resource does not exist and should yield a 404.

If however I allow the service to find resources based on something of a wildcard an empty result is not an error situation but a clear 204 Empty Result situation. So /user?Firstname=John will never be a 404 if both user exist and these Things have Firstnames but a 200 or a 204. But /user?FName=John is a malformed and should get a 400 Bad Request (not a 404 Not Found) probably with body explaining what is going on rfc7807.

Carying this thought further it would mean that /user/9 could be an 404 but /user?ID=9 would be a 204 if user are Things and have IDs but ID 9 does not gel. This would help client development considerably as the first case clearly has a logic problem (the url was created based on for instance a list provided in another request) or a user problem (the user got hold of a user number 9 and attempts to search for it) which should get an empty result of some sort, not an error.

TLDR;

If user is a valid target but user 9 does not exist

  • /usr/10 => 400 Bad request usr is not a Thing
  • /user/8 => 200 if a user with ID 8 exist, that is
  • /user/9 => 404 this resource does not exist
  • /user?ID=9 => 204 valid request but no results, if IDs are Thingies
  • /user?Number=9 => 400 Bad request the Thing user does not have Number
  • /user?ID=.gte.9 => 200 or 204 # whether users with usernr >= 9 exist
0

Consider the following URI:

http://mywebsite/api/user/13

If I get a 404 back, is that because User 13 does not exist? Or is it because my URL should have been:

http://mywebsite/restapi/user/13

Unless you're designing with the intention that your users be manually typing out every URL, I'd say this is a non-issue. The client program shouldn't be making the user do this (unless it's curl), and if it does then the client developer is doing it wrong.

If the URL points to a specific resource and that resource cannot be found, 404 is the correct response.

This is different from a query, eg. GET /user/13 vs GET /user?id=13. The latter should return a 200 and an empty list because it asked for all matches and there were none as opposed to asking for one specific thing that should be findable. GET /uzer?id=13 should 404 because uzer isn't a thing that can be found.

Either way, the back-end behaved correctly and returned a correct and valid answer. If the client (API client, that is, i.e. a program) is hitting wrong paths, the client is misconfigured.

And, if you're doing REST and not just JSON API, then the client should have been given valid paths on GET / so there's no chance of a typo in the first place. With that out of the way, every reason to use something other than 404 disappears.

-1

For this scenario HTTP 404 is response code for the response from the REST API Like 400, 401, 404 , 422 unprocessable entity

use the Exception handling to check the full exception message.

try{
  // call the rest api
} catch(RestClientException e) {
     //process exception
     if(e instanceof HttpStatusCodeException){
        String responseText=((HttpStatusCodeException)e).getResponseBodyAsString();
         //now you have the response, construct json from it, and extract the errors
         System.out.println("Exception :" +responseText);
     }

}

This exception block give you the proper message thrown by the REST API

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