API Guidelines

This section lays out guidelines to be considered by API endpoint authors. What follows are not strictly hard-and-fast rules, but there should be a very convincing argument accompanying endpoints that do not follow them.

Legacy API versions don’t, in general, adhere to these principles. This section is not meant as a proposal for altering them to be compliant, but merely a set of guidelines for future work.

Response Bodies

All valid API responses will be in the form of some serialized object. The main data that represents the result of the client’s request MUST appear in the response property of that object. If a warning, error message, success message, or informational message is to be issued by the server, then they MUST appear in the alerts property of the response. Some endpoints may return ancillary statistics such as the total number of objects when pagination occurs, which should be placed in the summary property of the response.

Response

The response property of a serialized response object MUST only contain object representations as requested by the client. In particular, it MUST NOT contain admonitions, success messages, informative messages, or statistic summaries beyond the scope requested by the client.

Equally unacceptable API responses are shown in Success Message as Response Object and Illegal Top-Level Property.

#88 Success Message as Response Object
{
    "response": "Thing was successfully created."
}
#89 Illegal Top-Level Property
{
    "response": {"foo": "bar"},
    "someOtherField": {"someOtherObject"}
}

When requests are serviced by Traffic Ops that pass data asking that the returned object list be filtered, the response property MUST be a filtered array of those objects (assuming the request may be successfully serviced). This is true even if filtering is being done according to a uniquely identifying property - e.g. a numeric ID. The response field of an object returned in response to a request to create, update, or delete one or more resources may be either a single object representation or an array thereof according to the number of objects created, updated, or deleted. However, if a handler is capable of creating, updating, or deleting more than one object at a time, the response field SHOULD consistently be represented as an array - even if its length would only be 1.

The proper value of an empty collection is an empty collection. If a Foo can have zero or more Bars, then the representation of a Foo with no Bars MUST be an empty array/list/set, and in particular MUST NOT be either missing from the representation or represented as the “Null” value of the representation format. That is, if Foos have no other property than their Bars, then a Foo with no Bars may be represented in JSON encoding as {"bars":[]}, but not as {"bars":null} or {}. Similarly, an empty string field is properly represented as an empty string - e.g. {"bar":""} not {"bar":null} or {} - and the “zero-value” of numbers is zero itself - e.g. {"bar":0} not {"bar":null} or {}. Note that “null” values are allowed when appropriate, but “null” values represent the absence of a value rather than the “zero-value” of a property. If a property is missing from an object representation it indicates the absence of that property, and because of that there must be a very convincing argument if and when that is the case.

As a special case, endpoints that report statistics including minimums, maximums and arithmetic means of data sets MUST use the property names min, max, and mean, respectively, to express those concepts. These SHOULD be properties of response directly whenever that makes sense.

Alerts

Alerts should be presented as an array containing objects which each conform to the object definition laid out by github.com/apache/trafficcontrol/the ATC library's Alert structure <lib/go-tc#Alert>. The allowable levels of an Alert are:

  • error - This level MUST be used to indicate conditions that caused a request to fail. Because of this, this level MUST NOT appear in the alerts array of responses with any HTTP response code less than 400 (except when used for asynchronous tasks as discussed in 202 Accepted). Details of server workings and/or failing components MUST NOT be exposed in this message, which should otherwise be as descriptive as possible.

  • info - This level SHOULD be used to convey supplementary information to a user that is not directly the result of their request. This SHOULD NOT carry information indicating whether or not the request succeeded and why/why not, as that is best left to the error and success levels.

  • success - This level MUST be used to convey success messages to the client. In general, it is expected that the message will be directly displayed to the user by the client, and therefore can be used to add human-friendly details about a request beyond the response payload. This level MUST NOT appear in the alerts array of responses with an HTTP response code that is not between 200 and 399 (inclusive).

  • warning - This level is used to warn clients of potentially dangerous conditions when said conditions have not caused a request to fail. The best example of this is deprecation warnings, which should appear on all API routes that have been deprecated.

Summary

The summary object is used to provide summary statistics about object collections. In general the use of summary is left to be defined by API endpoints (subject to some restrictions). However, its use is not appropriate in cases where the user is specifically requesting summary statistics, but should rather be used to provide supporting information - pre-calculated - about a set of objects or data that the client has requested.

Endpoints MUST use the following, reserved properties of summary for their described purposes (when use of summary is appropriate) rather than defining new summary or response properties to suit the same purpose:

  • count - Count contains an unsigned integer that defines the total number of results that could possibly be returned given the non-pagination query parameters supplied by the client.

HTTP Request Methods

RFC 7231#section-4 defines the semantics of HTTP/1.1 request methods. Authors should conform to that set of standards whenever possible, but for convenience the methods recognized by Traffic Ops and their meanings in that context are herein defined.

GET

HTTP GET requests are issued by clients who want some data in response. In the context of Traffic Ops, this generally means a serialized representation of some object. GET requests MUST NOT alter the state of the server. An example of an API endpoint created in API version 1 that violates this restriction is cdns/name/name/dnsseckeys/delete.

This is the standard method to be used by all read-only operations, and as such handlers for this method should generally be accessible to users with the “read-only” Role.

All endpoints dealing with the manipulation or fetching representations of “Traffic Control Objects” MUST support this method.

POST

POST requests ask the server to process some provided data. Most commonly, in Traffic Ops, this means creating an object based on the serialization of said object contained in the request body, but it can also be used virtually whenever no other method is appropriate. When an object is created, the response body MUST contain a representation of the newly created object. POST requests do not need to be idempotent, unlike PUT requests.

PUT

PUT is used to replace existing data with new data that is provided in the request body. RFC 2616#section-9.1.2 lists PUT as an “idempotent” request method, which means that subsequent identical requests should ensure the same state is maintained on the server. What this means is that a client that PUTs an object representation to Traffic Ops expects that if they then GET a representation of that object, do the same PUT again and GET another representation, the two retrieved representations should be identical. Effectively, the lastUpdated field that is common to objects in the Traffic Ops API violates this, but the other properties of objects - which can actually be defined - generally obey this restriction. In general, fulfilling this restriction means that handlers will need to require the entirety of an object be defined in the request body.

When an object is replaced, the response body MUST contain a representation of the object after replacement. While RFC 2616 states that servers MAY create objects for the passed representations if they do not already exist, Traffic Ops API endpoint authors MUST instead use POST handlers for object creation.

All endpoints that support the PUT request method MUST also support the If-Unmodified-Since HTTP header.

PATCH

At the time of this writing, no Traffic Ops API endpoints handle the PATCH request method. PATCH requests that the server’s stored data be mutated in some way using data provided in the request body. Unlike PUT, PATCH is not idempotent, which essentially means that it can be used to change only part of a stored object. When an object is modified, the response body MUST contain a representation of the object after modification, and that representation SHOULD fully describe the modified object, even the parts that were not modified.

Handlers that implement PATCH in the Traffic Ops API MUST use conditional requests to ensure that race conditions are not a problem, specifically they MUST support using ETag and If-Match, and SHOULD also support If-Unmodified-Since.

Clients SHOULD use PATCH requests rather than PUT requests for modifying existing resources whenever it is supported.

DELETE

DELETE destroys an object stored on the server. Typically the request will contain identifying information for the object(s) to be destroyed either in the request URI or in the request’s body. Traffic Ops API endpoint authors MUST use this request method whenever an object identified by the request URI is being destroyed. When such deletion successfully occurs, the response body MUST contain a representation of the destroyed object.

HTTP Response Codes

Proper use of HTTP response codes can significantly improve user interfaces built on top of the API. What follows is a (non-exhaustive) set of response codes and their appropriate use in the context of Traffic Ops. For more complete information, refer to the Mozilla Developer Network’s HTTP Response Code list.

200 OK

This indicates the request succeeded, with no additional semantics. This MUST be the exact response status code of successful GET requests. This is also the default “success” response code for any other request.

201 Created

This indicates that a resource was successfully created on the server. This MUST be the response status code of POST requests that create a new object or objects on the server, and in that case the response SHOULD also include a Location header that provides a URI where a representation of the newly created object may be requested.

202 Accepted

202 Accepted MUST be used when the server is performing some task asynchronously (e.g. refreshing DNSSEC keys) but the status of that task cannot be ascertained at the current time. Ideally in this case, when the task completes - either successfully or by failing - the Traffic Ops changelog will be updated to indicate that status, along with information to uniquely identify the task (e.g. username and date/time when the task started).

Endpoints that create asynchronous jobs SHOULD provide a URI to which the client may send GET requests to obtain a representation of the job’s current state in the Location HTTP header. They MAY also provide an info-level Alert that provides the same or similar information in a more human-friendly manner.

The responses to such GET requests are subject to the same restrictions as any other API endpoint, but have the added restriction that the response objects sent MUST have the status property, which is a string limited to one of the following values and having the associated semantics:

PENDING

This means the job has been started but is not yet completed.

SUCCEEDED

This means that the asynchronous job has completed and encountered no errors.

FAILED

The task encountered errors and was unable to continue, and thus has been terminated.

Note that the response code of the response carrying this information MUST NOT depend on the value of status. In particular, a response that successfully reports the status of a FAILED asynchronous task is still successfully servicing a client’s GET request, and therefore MUST have the 200 OK response status code. However, a response encoding a FAILED status MUST be accompanied by one or more error-level Alerts that explain (to the greatest degree of detail allowable securely) why the job failed.

These responses MUST also include the startTime and endTime properties which indicate, respectively, the time at which the asynchronous job started and the time at which it concluded. A job that has not started MUST have a Null-valued startTime and likewise a job that has yet to conclude MUST have a Null-value endTime.

400 Bad Request

In general this is used when there’s something syntactically wrong with the client’s request. For example, Traffic Ops MUST respond with this code when the request body was improperly encoded. In most cases, this is also the proper response code when the client submits data that is not semantically correct. For example, dates/times represented as timestamp strings in an unsupported format should trigger this response code.

This is also the default “client failure” response code for any other request.

The response body MUST include an entry in the alerts array that describes to the client what was wrong with the request.

401 Unauthorized

This MUST be the response code when a client without valid authorization information in the HTTP headers requests a resource which cannot be accessed without first authorizing. Which should be everything except /ping and endpoints that provide authorization.

403 Forbidden

This MUST be used whenever the client is logged-in, but still does not have access to the resource they are requesting. It MUST also be used when they have some access to the resource, but not with the specific request method they used. This can pertain to restricted access on the basis of Role, User Permissions, as well as Tenancy.

The response body MUST NOT disclose any information regarding why the user was denied access.

404 Not Found

This MUST be the returned status code when the client requests a path that does not exist on the server. Note that a path does not include a query string; in the URL http://example.test/some/path?query#frag the path consists of only /some/path.

409 Conflict

This SHOULD be used when the request cannot be completed because the current state of the server is fundamentally incompatible with the request. For example, creating a new user with an email that is already in use should result in this response.

Additionally, this MAY be used instead of 404 Not Found when the client is requesting a link between an object identified by the request URI and some other object (e.g. when assigning a cache server to a Delivery Service) when the other object does not exist. If the request URI identifies an object that does not exist, the response MUST use 404 Not Found instead.

This is also the proper response status code when the conditions of a request cannot be met, e.g. when a client submits a PATCH request for a resource with an If-Match header that does not match the stored object’s ETag.

The response body MUST indicate what the conflict is that prevented the request from being fulfilled via one or more error-level alerts.

500 Internal Server Error

When the Traffic Ops server encounters some error - through no fault of the client or their request - that renders it incapable of servicing the client’s request, it MUST return this status code if no other code is more appropriate. The response body in this case SHOULD indicate that an error occurred, but MUST NOT divulge details about what data was being processed, what (if any) other components are not functioning properly, or what process failed. Generally it is advisable that the resultant alerts array entry just say “Internal Server Error” and nothing else.

501 Not Implemented

This is the response code used when the client requests an API version not implemented by the server. It SHOULD NOT be used in any other case.

502 Bad Gateway

This code indicates that some other service on which the endpoint’s processes depend has given back improper data or an error response. It MAY be used (with caution) by plugin developers, but SHOULD NOT be used by authors of proper API endpoints, as that divulges information about failing connected systems and potentially gives an attacker information about Traffic Control’s weak points. API endpoint authors should instead use 500 Internal Server Error.

504 Gateway Timeout

This code indicates that a connection timeout occurred when attempting to contact some other service on which the endpoint’s processes depend. It MAY be used (with caution) by plugin developers, but SHOULD NOT be used by authors of proper API endpoints, as that divulges information about failing connected systems and potentially gives an attacker information about Traffic Control’s weak points. API endpoint authors should instead use 500 Internal Server Error.

Documentation

All endpoints MUST be properly documented. For guidelines for writing API documentation, refer to Documenting API Routes.

Passing Request Data

Request data may be passed in the request body or as a application/x-www-form-urlencoded-encoded query string in the request URI, or as a part of the request path. Request data MUST NOT be passed through a portion of the request path unless it uniquely identifies a resource with which the client may interact. For example, /foos/ID is an acceptable path for dealing with the particular “Foo” object that has some identifier ID, but logs/Number of Days/days is unacceptable because reasonable default behavior can be provided if no number of days is given in the query string parameters, and that doesn’t help uniquely identify a resource. Request path parameters should use double “curly-braces” ({ and }) to call out variable components of the request path in documentation and references. Request path parameters MUST NOT be used for data that is optional to the request (somewhat obviously). Note that all endpoints dealing with the manipulation of “Traffic Control Objects” MUST support the GET HTTP request method.

When accepting data in the request body of requests, the endpoint MUST properly document the object representations (properties and their types) it accepts and MUST reject semantically invalid data with a 400 Bad Request response code. For example, if an endpoint specifies it accepts a representation of a Foo object, assuming Foo objects possess only the Bar property which is an arbitrary string, then the endpoint MUST accept {"bar": "testquest"} as semantically valid (The data may be rejected for other reasons, e.g. if a Foo with such a Bar property already exists and Bars must be unique among all Foos) and MUST reject {"bar": "testquest", "someOtherProperty": 10} as semantically invalid. This is in contrast to the API’s behavior at the time of this writing, which silently ignores unrecognized properties of request body objects.

The decision to pass data in the request body or query string is mainly up to the author, but some helpful tips:

  • GET and DELETE requests do not typically provide request bodies.

  • Query parameters should nearly always be optional. If data is required by an endpoint, consider requiring it in the request body. If the data identifies a resource, it ought to be a path parameter.

  • Request body data often represents objects that are being created or updated. If an object is being created or updated, it ought to be defined in the request body, and if any additional data is (possibly optionally) required then it ought to be passed in the query string to separate it from the object definition.

  • The following query parameters are reserved for special use by Traffic Ops endpoint handlers, and may not be used for any purpose other than their prescribed functions.

    • limit

    • newerThan

    • offset

    • olderThan

    • orderby

    • page

    • sortOrder

Duplicate Endpoints

No two endpoints should serve the same purpose. While it’s fine to overlap a bit, an endpoint like /foo_bars should not exist solely to edit the Bars property of Foo objects (which can ostensibly be edited just fine on the object itself), for example. Ideally, there should be exactly one way to accomplish something through the API.

A caveat, though, is object relationships. For example, a Delivery Service has zero or more cache servers assigned to it, and in turn cache servers may be assigned to zero or more Delivery Services (a “has-and-belongs-to-many” relationship). Thus it is permissible to be able to edit the Delivery Services property of a cache server using the /cache_servers API endpoint as well as to be able to edit the cache servers property of a Delivery Service using the /delivery_services API endpoint - though they arguably provide equivalent functionality in that way (although at the time of this writing the former endpoint doesn’t exist and the latter doesn’t offer that functionality - this is just an example).

Date/Time Format

Dates MUST be represented in either RFC 3339 (with or without nanosecond precision) or as integers indicating the number of nanoseconds past the Unix epoch at which the date/time occurs. In either case, Dates included in responses from Traffic Ops MUST be in UTC. Wherever date/times are accepted as input, Traffic Ops API endpoints MUST accept either format and SHOULD NOT accept anything else.

Traffic Ops endpoints MUST return dates and times in RFC 3339 format with nanosecond precision. Endpoints MAY provide ways for the client to specify alternate representations, but these SHOULD be restricted to only Unix epoch timestamps in nanoseconds.

Age Filtering

Whenever object age is a property of that object (which is quite often in the form of lastUpdated), Traffic Ops endpoint handlers that respond to requests for object representations (i.e. GET requests) SHOULD support filtering by age. If age filtering is implemented, it MUST be made available using the query parameters in the table below.

Table 73 Age Filtering Query Parameters

Parameter

Meaning

newerThan

A timestamp to be used as the lower limit on an object’s age. Objects older than this MUST NOT appear in the response body. That is, the response will be the set of all objects in the collection with a modification date that is greater than or equal to this value.

olderThan

A timestamp to be used as the upper limit an object’s age. Objects newer than this MUST NOT appear in the response body. That is, the response will be the set of all objects in the collection with a modification date that is less than or equal to this value.

The format of these timestamps - in accordance with the Date/Time Format section - MUST be accepted as Unix epoch timestamps in nanoseconds, and in the form of RFC 3339 date/time strings.

Endpoints MAY return errors when a client request gives these parameters improper or invalid values, but MUST at least provide a warning. When ambiguity or errors in age filtering controls render age filtering impossible, the handler MUST NOT perform age filtering.

Tenancy

When a client requests access to a set of stored objects that are “tenantable” inevitably some of them will be inaccessible to the user on the basis of their Tenant. Traffic Ops endpoint handlers that respond to requests for such object representations (i.e. GET requests) MUST filter their results implicitly according to the requesting Tenant’s access. Any request that would modify, create, or destroy an object to which the requesting Tenant does not have access MUST NOT be fulfilled by the server (obviously) and in that case the response status code MUST be 403 Forbidden. Furthermore, if a request for a representation of a Tenant-inaccessible object is made explicitly for said object (e.g. GET /foos/ID rather than GET /foos?id=ID) the response status code MUST be 403 Forbidden.

Naming Conventions

The names of properties of objects as they appear in said objects’ serializations ought to conform to “camelCase” naming. Initialisms, abbreviations, and acronyms that appear in property names should be capitalized unless they are at the very beginning of the name. For example, myIPAddress and someProperty are both well-formed property names, while IPAddress, someproperty and SomeProperty are not.

Query string parameters MUST also follow “camelCase” naming.

API endpoints themselves should have a name that conveys their purpose. For example, /cdns is an endpoint that deals with manipulating, creating, destroying, or retrieving representations of CDNs. Request paths MUST use “snake_case” to separate words whenever necessary, and MUST never include the action being performed by the handler; instead that is decided by the request method. For example, /myObject/delete is a poor request path name for both of those reasons. Furthermore, when an endpoint deals with an object type of which there are typically multiple, the request path should be plural, e.g. /cdns is better than /cdn.

API endpoints MAY support trailing slashes (/) in the request path, but MUST NOT include suffixes that indicate a particular encoding (“file extensions”); that’s what the Content-Type header is for. For example, in API version 1.x, /foos and /foos.json are both equally valid ways to access the /foos endpoint handlers - this is no longer allowed!

Relationships as Objects

Relationships SHOULD NOT be represented through the API as objects in their own right. For example, instead of an endpoint like /delivery_service_servers used to manipulate assignments of cache servers to Delivery Services, a Delivery Service itself should have Servers as a property. Thus assignments are manipulated by manipulating that property. So the only endpoints necessary for fully defining and dealing with such relationships are /delivery_services and /servers.

Change Logging

All manipulations of objects (i.e. any operation that is not merely “reading” data) MUST add a Change Log entry indicating what was changed.