876
votes

Are there any known how-tos or best practices for web service REST API versioning?

I have noticed that AWS does versioning by the URL of the endpoint. Is this the only way or are there other ways to accomplish the same goal? If there are multiple ways, what are the merits of each way?

0

7 Answers 7

682
votes

This is a good and a tricky question. The topic of URI design is at the same time the most prominent part of a REST API and, therefore, a potentially long-term commitment towards the users of that API.

Since evolution of an application and, to a lesser extent, its API is a fact of life and that it's even similar to the evolution of a seemingly complex product like a programming language, the URI design should have less natural constraints and it should be preserved over time. The longer the application's and API's lifespan, the greater the commitment to the users of the application and API.

On the other hand, another fact of life is that it is hard to foresee all the resources and their aspects that would be consumed through the API. Luckily, it is not necessary to design the entire API which will be used until Apocalypse. It is sufficient to correctly define all the resource end-points and the addressing scheme of every resource and resource instance.

Over time you may need to add new resources and new attributes to each particular resource, but the method that API users follow to access a particular resources should not change once a resource addressing scheme becomes public and therefore final.

This method applies to HTTP verb semantics (e.g. PUT should always update/replace) and HTTP status codes that are supported in earlier API versions (they should continue to work so that API clients that have worked without human intervention should be able to continue to work like that).

Furthermore, since embedding of API version into the URI would disrupt the concept of hypermedia as the engine of application state (stated in Roy T. Fieldings PhD dissertation) by having a resource address/URI that would change over time, I would conclude that API versions should not be kept in resource URIs for a long time meaning that resource URIs that API users can depend on should be permalinks.

Sure, it is possible to embed API version in base URI but only for reasonable and restricted uses like debugging a API client that works with the the new API version. Such versioned APIs should be time-limited and available to limited groups of API users (like during closed betas) only. Otherwise, you commit yourself where you shouldn't.

A couple of thoughts regarding maintenance of API versions that have expiration date on them. All programming platforms/languages commonly used to implement web services (Java, .NET, PHP, Perl, Rails, etc.) allow easy binding of web service end-point(s) to a base URI. This way it's easy to gather and keep a collection of files/classes/methods separate across different API versions.

From the API users POV, it's also easier to work with and bind to a particular API version when it's this obvious but only for limited time, i.e. during development.

From the API maintainer's POV, it's easier to maintain different API versions in parallel by using source control systems that predominantly work on files as the smallest unit of (source code) versioning.

However, with API versions clearly visible in URI there's a caveat: one might also object this approach since API history becomes visible/aparent in the URI design and therefore is prone to changes over time which goes against the guidelines of REST. I agree!

The way to go around this reasonable objection, is to implement the latest API version under versionless API base URI. In this case, API client developers can choose to either:

  • develop against the latest one (committing themselves to maintain the application protecting it from eventual API changes that might break their badly designed API client).

  • bind to a specific version of the API (which becomes apparent) but only for a limited time

For example, if API v3.0 is the latest API version, the following two should be aliases (i.e. behave identically to all API requests):

http://shonzilla/api/customers/1234
http://shonzilla/api/v3.0/customers/1234
http://shonzilla/api/v3/customers/1234

In addition, API clients that still try to point to the old API should be informed to use the latest previous API version, if the API version they're using is obsolete or not supported anymore. So accessing any of the obsolete URIs like these:

http://shonzilla/api/v2.2/customers/1234
http://shonzilla/api/v2.0/customers/1234
http://shonzilla/api/v2/customers/1234
http://shonzilla/api/v1.1/customers/1234
http://shonzilla/api/v1/customers/1234

should return any of the 30x HTTP status codes that indicate redirection that are used in conjunction with Location HTTP header that redirects to the appropriate version of resource URI which remain to be this one:

http://shonzilla/api/customers/1234

There are at least two redirection HTTP status codes that are appropriate for API versioning scenarios:

  • 301 Moved permanently indicating that the resource with a requested URI is moved permanently to another URI (which should be a resource instance permalink that does not contain API version info). This status code can be used to indicate an obsolete/unsupported API version, informing API client that a versioned resource URI been replaced by a resource permalink.

  • 302 Found indicating that the requested resource temporarily is located at another location, while requested URI may still supported. This status code may be useful when the version-less URIs are temporarily unavailable and that a request should be repeated using the redirection address (e.g. pointing to the URI with APi version embedded) and we want to tell clients to keep using it (i.e. the permalinks).

  • other scenarios can be found in Redirection 3xx chapter of HTTP 1.1 specification

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  • 142
    Using a version number in the URL should not be considered a bad practice when the underlying implementation changes. "When the interface to a service changes in a non-backwards-compatible way, in reality an entirely new service has been created...From the client's perspective, a service is no more than an interface and some non-functional qualities...if the interface to a service changes in a non-backwards-compatible way, it no longer represents an instance of the original service, but is rather a completely new service." ibm.com/developerworks/webservices/library/ws-version
    – benvolioT
    Jul 22, 2010 at 16:09
  • 7
    Do you have any thoughts on adding a header with the version number so it can be checked by clients or developers ?
    – webclimber
    Oct 18, 2010 at 17:48
  • 11
    See also the use of an Accept header to indicate the version that the client expects: blog.steveklabnik.com/2011/07/03/… Jul 5, 2011 at 7:23
  • 52
    For the last part: I would say that an API that is obsolete and not supported anymore should return 410 Gone, as a redirect might indicate that the new location is compatible when it isn't. If the API is merely obsolete but still exists, a Warning HTTP Header on the Response might be an option. Oct 29, 2011 at 6:13
  • 22
    How do you deal with clients that are already using the stable URL like shonzilla/api/customers/1234 and you want to upgrade to a new version? how can you force them add the V2 (the old one) to the URL?
    – Dejell
    Apr 11, 2013 at 7:47
273
votes

The URL should NOT contain the versions. The version has nothing to do with "idea" of the resource you are requesting. You should try to think of the URL as being a path to the concept you would like - not how you want the item returned. The version dictates the representation of the object, not the concept of the object. As other posters have said, you should be specifying the format (including version) in the request header.

If you look at the full HTTP request for the URLs which have versions, it looks like this:

(BAD WAY TO DO IT):

http://company.com/api/v3.0/customer/123
====>
GET v3.0/customer/123 HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/xml

<====
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/xml
<customer version="3.0">
  <name>Neil Armstrong</name>
</customer>

The header contains the line which contains the representation you are asking for ("Accept: application/xml"). That is where the version should go. Everyone seems to gloss over the fact that you may want the same thing in different formats and that the client should be able ask for what it wants. In the above example, the client is asking for ANY XML representation of the resource - not really the true representation of what it wants. The server could, in theory, return something completely unrelated to the request as long as it was XML and it would have to be parsed to realize it is wrong.

A better way is:

(GOOD WAY TO DO IT)

http://company.com/api/customer/123
===>
GET /customer/123 HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/vnd.company.myapp.customer-v3+xml

<===
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/vnd.company.myapp-v3+xml
<customer>
  <name>Neil Armstrong</name>
</customer>

Further, lets say the clients think the XML is too verbose and now they want JSON instead. In the other examples you would have to have a new URL for the same customer, so you would end up with:

(BAD)
http://company.com/api/JSONv3.0/customers/123
  or
http://company.com/api/v3.0/customers/123?format="JSON"

(or something similar). When in fact, every HTTP requests contains the format you are looking for:

(GOOD WAY TO DO IT)
===>
GET /customer/123 HTTP/1.1
Accept: application/vnd.company.myapp.customer-v3+json

<===
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/vnd.company.myapp-v3+json

{"customer":
  {"name":"Neil Armstrong"}
}

Using this method, you have much more freedom in design and are actually adhering to the original idea of REST. You can change versions without disrupting clients, or incrementally change clients as the APIs are changed. If you choose to stop supporting a representation, you can respond to the requests with HTTP status code or custom codes. The client can also verify the response is in the correct format, and validate the XML.

There are many other advantages and I discuss some of them here on my blog: http://thereisnorightway.blogspot.com/2011/02/versioning-and-types-in-resthttp-api.html

One last example to show how putting the version in the URL is bad. Lets say you want some piece of information inside the object, and you have versioned your various objects (customers are v3.0, orders are v2.0, and shipto object is v4.2). Here is the nasty URL you must supply in the client:

(Another reason why version in the URL sucks)
http://company.com/api/v3.0/customer/123/v2.0/orders/4321/
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  • 10
    Handling independent data contract version and service contract versions in Accept header seems a messy as much as it is messy in the URL. Are there any other options ? Also if I have multiple endpoints (soap, rest), should this also be indicated in Accepts and let the routing service at the server end decide the direction to the correct endpoint OR is it acceptable to have the endpoint coded in the URL ? Dec 13, 2011 at 22:48
  • 117
    I can't agree with this, at least to the point of your last reason. This seems to be saying the different parts of the URI have different versions. But that's not the point of an API version. The point is to have ONE version for the ENTIRE resource. If you change versions, it's a different API resource. That's why it doesn't make sense to see company.com/api/v3.0/customer/123/v2.0/orders/4321 but rather company.com/api/v3.0/customer/123/orders/4321 You're not versioning any given part of the resource, you're versioning the resource as a whole.
    – fool4jesus
    Jan 3, 2013 at 22:09
  • 90
    Semmantically using version number in header seems better. But its far much more practical using the URL: less error prone, best debuged, readily seen by developers, easily modifiable in rest testing clients. May 23, 2013 at 22:59
  • 7
    I think the BAD/GOOD over simplifies the question. API stands for "Application programming interface" and versioning interfaces seems to be a very good idea. APIs are not really just about serving resources. What needs to be seperated is that some people are talking about interfaces and other people are talking about resources. If you look at the google maps api closely in the network tab, you will see that they include the api version number in the url. For example: maps.google.com/maps/api/jsv2 during authentication. The jsv2 is the api number.
    – Tom Gruner
    Jul 22, 2013 at 18:12
  • 6
    @Gili: Actually, you should no longer use -x as it's deprecated by RFC6648.
    – Jonathan W
    Oct 1, 2013 at 16:10
98
votes

We found it practical and useful to put the version in the URL. It makes it easy to tell what you're using at a glance. We do alias /foo to /foo/(latest versions) for ease of use, shorter / cleaner URLs, etc, as the accepted answer suggests.

Keeping backwards compatibility forever is often cost-prohibitive and/or very difficult. We prefer to give advanced notice of deprecation, redirects like suggested here, docs, and other mechanisms.

1
  • 5
    The accepted answer may be the correct and most pure. However, for the developer and day to day user of API's this is surely the easiest to use and set up. The most pragmatic approach. As indicated by other Google and Amazon also use this approach. Aug 20, 2014 at 7:51
46
votes

I agree that versioning the resource representation better follows the REST approach...but, one big problem with custom MIME types (or MIME types that append a version parameter) is the poor support to write to Accept and Content-Type headers in HTML and JavaScript.

For example, it is not possible IMO to POST with the following headers in HTML5 forms, in order to create a resource:

Accept: application/vnd.company.myapp-v3+json
Content-Type: application/vnd.company.myapp-v3+json 

This is because the HTML5 enctype attribute is an enumeration, therefore anything other than the usual application/x-www-formurlencoded, multipart/form-data and text/plain are invalid.

...nor am I sure it is supported across all browsers in HTML4 (which has a more lax encytpe attribute, but would be a browser implementation issue as to whether the MIME type was forwarded)

Because of this I now feel the most appropriate way to version is via the URI, but I accept that it is not the 'correct' way.

6
  • 14
    Assuming the route where the versioning was defined in the headers, one could say that HTML forms that use native form submission would always use the latest version of the API since they would not be passing the specific version they want to adhere to. However, XHR requests do indeed allow you to change the accepts and read the content-type headers. So basic forms are really the only problem.
    – Kyle Hayes
    May 10, 2013 at 23:04
  • I'm not sure I agree that URI is most appropriate, but the fact that Content-Type doesn't work with forms is very important indeed.
    – wprl
    Dec 20, 2013 at 4:00
  • 2
    @Kyle, i saw a blog somewhere said that if you don't specific a version in the request header, it is best to return with the first api version not the latest one for the best compatiable.
    – andy
    Mar 25, 2014 at 5:00
  • That actually makes a lot of sense to me now that I think about.
    – Kyle Hayes
    Mar 26, 2014 at 3:04
  • @KyleHayes don't forget iframes, video/embed and other "src/href" type tags.
    – pllee
    Mar 27, 2015 at 22:23
21
votes

Put your version in the URI. One version of an API will not always support the types from another, so the argument that resources are merely migrated from one version to another is just plain wrong. It's not the same as switching format from XML to JSON. The types may not exist, or they may have changed semantically.

Versions are part of the resource address. You're routing from one API to another. It's not RESTful to hide addressing in the header.

13
votes

There are a few places you can do versioning in a REST API:

  1. As noted, in the URI. This can be tractable and even esthetically pleasing if redirects and the like are used well.

  2. In the Accepts: header, so the version is in the filetype. Like 'mp3' vs 'mp4'. This will also work, though IMO it works a bit less nicely than...

  3. In the resource itself. Many file formats have their version numbers embedded in them, typically in the header; this allows newer software to 'just work' by understanding all existing versions of the filetype while older software can punt if an unsupported (newer) version is specified. In the context of a REST API, it means that your URIs never have to change, just your response to the particular version of data you were handed.

I can see reasons to use all three approaches:

  1. if you like doing 'clean sweep' new APIs, or for major version changes where you want such an approach.
  2. if you want the client to know before it does a PUT/POST whether it's going to work or not.
  3. if it's okay if the client has to do its PUT/POST to find out if it's going to work.
8
votes

Versioning your REST API is analogous to the versioning of any other API. Minor changes can be done in place, major changes might require a whole new API. The easiest for you is to start from scratch every time, which is when putting the version in the URL makes most sense. If you want to make life easier for the client you try to maintain backwards compatibility, which you can do with deprecation (permanent redirect), resources in several versions etc. This is more fiddly and requires more effort. But it's also what REST encourages in "Cool URIs don't change".

In the end it's just like any other API design. Weigh effort against client convenience. Consider adopting semantic versioning for your API, which makes it clear for your clients how backwards compatible your new version is.

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