Network Working Group | L. Dusseault |
Internet-Draft | Messaging Architects |
Intended status: Standards Track | J. Snell |
Expires: July 23, 2009 | January 19, 2009 |
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Several applications extending HTTP require a feature to do partial resource modification. Existing HTTP functionality only allows a complete replacement of a document. This proposal adds a new HTTP method, PATCH, to modify an existing HTTP resource.¶
This specification defines the new HTTP 1.1 [RFC2616] method PATCH that is used to apply partial modifications to a resource.¶
A new method is necessary to improve interoperability and prevent errors. The PUT method is already defined to overwrite a resource with a complete new body, and can not be reused to do partial changes. Otherwise, proxies and caches and even clients and servers may get confused as to the result of the operation.¶
The PATCH method requests that a set of changes described in the request entity be applied to the resource identified by the Request-URI. The set of changes is represented in a format called a "patch document" identified by a media type. PATCH is neither safe or idempotent as defined by [RFC2616], Section 9.1. If the Request-URI does not point to an existing resource, and that URI is capable of being defined as a new resource by the requesting user agent, the origin server can create the resource with that URI.¶
The difference between the PUT and PATCH requests is reflected in the way the server processes the enclosed entity to modify the resource identified by the Request-URI. In a PUT request, the enclosed entity is considered to be a modified version of the resource stored on the origin server and the client is requesting that the stored version be replaced. With PATCH, however, the enclosed entity contains a set of instructions describing how a resource currently residing on the origin server should be modified to produce a new version. The changes described by the entity MAY result in the creation of one or more new resources on the server, however it is not intended that the body of the PATCH request be used as the content of such resources.¶
The server MUST apply the entire set of changes atomically and never provide (e.g. in response to a GET during this operation) a partially-modified representation. If the entire patch document cannot be successfully applied then the server MUST fail the entire request, applying none of the changes. The determination of what constitutes a successful PATCH can vary depending on the patch document and the type of resource being modified. The actual method for determining how to apply the patch document to the resource is defined entirely by the origin server. See Error Handling in Section 2.2 for details on status codes and possible error conditions.¶
If the request passes through a cache and the Request-URI identifies one or more currently cached entities, those entries SHOULD be treated as stale. Responses to this method are not cacheable, unless the response includes appropriate Cache-Control or Expires header fields or the response uses the 209 Content Returned status code as defined in Section 4. The 303 (See Other) response can be used to direct the user agent to retrieve a cacheable resource.¶
Collisions from multiple requests are more dangerous than PUT collisions, because a patch document that is not operating from a known base point may corrupt the resource. Clients wishing to apply a patch document to a known entity can first acquire the strong ETag of the resource to be modified, and use that Etag in the If-Match header on the PATCH request to verify that the resource is still unchanged. If a strong ETag is not available for a given resource, the client can use If-Unmodified-Since as a less-reliable safeguard.¶
Note that entity-headers contained in the request apply only to the contained patch document and MUST NOT be applied to the resource being modified. Thus, a Content-Language header could be present on the request but it would only mean (for whatever that's worth) that the patch document had a language. Servers SHOULD NOT store such headers except as trace information, and SHOULD NOT use such header values the same way they might be used on PUT requests. Therefore, this document does not specify a way to modify a document's Content-Type or Content-Language value through headers, though a mechanism could well be designed to achieve this goal through a patch document.¶
There is no guarantee that a resource can be modified with PATCH. Further, it is expected that different patch document formats will be appropriate for different types of resources and that no single format will be appropriate for all types of resources. Therefore, there is no single default patch document format that implementations are required to support. Servers MUST ensure that a received patch document is appropriate for the type of resource identified by the Request-URI.¶
PATCH /file.txt HTTP/1.1 Host: www.example.com Content-Type: application/example If-Match: "e0023aa4e" Content-Length: 100 [description of changes]
This example illustrates use of a hypothetical patch document on an existing resource.¶
Successful PATCH response to existing text file
HTTP/1.1 204 No Content ETag: "e0023aa4f" Content-MD5: Q2hlY2sgSW50ZWdyaXR5IQ==
There are several known conditions under which a PATCH request can fail.¶
Other HTTP status codes can also be used under the appropriate circumstances.¶
The entity body of error responses SHOULD contain enough information to communicate the nature of the error to the client. The content-type of the response entity can vary across implementations.¶
A server can advertise its support for the PATCH method by adding it to the listing of allowed methods in the "Allow" OPTIONS response header defined in HTTP/1.1.¶
Clients also need to know whether the server supports specific patch document formats, so this specification introduces a new response header "Accept-Patch" used to specify the patch document formats accepted by the server. "Accept-Patch" MUST appear in the OPTIONS response for any resource that supports the use of the PATCH method. The presence of the "Accept-Patch" header in response to any method is an implicit indication that PATCH is allowed on the resource identified by the Request-URI.¶
Accept-Patch = "Accept-Patch" ":" ( "*" | #media-type )
[request]
OPTIONS /example/buddies.xml HTTP/1.1 Host: www.example.com
[response]
HTTP/1.1 200 OK Allow: GET, PUT, POST, OPTIONS, HEAD, DELETE, PATCH Accept-Patch: application/example, text/example
The examples show a server that supports PATCH generally using two hypothetical patch document formats.¶
The 209 "Content Returned" status code can be used to indicate that a response is equivalent to what would have been returned with a 200 status code response to a GET sent to the URI immediately following the successful completion of the request.¶
This specification defines the 209 (Content Returned) status code (Section 4) to be updated in the registry at <http://www.iana.org/assignments/http-status-codes>.¶
The security considerations for PATCH are nearly identical to the security considerations for PUT ([RFC2616], Section 9.6). These include authorizing requests (possibly through access control and/or authentication) and ensuring that data is not corrupted through transport errors or through accidental overwrites. Whatever mechanisms are used for PUT can be used for PATCH as well. The following considerations apply specially to PATCH.¶
A document that is patched might be more likely to be corrupted than a document that is overridden in entirety, but that concern can be addressed through the use of mechanisms such as conditional requests using ETags and the If-Match request header.¶
Sometimes an HTTP intermediary might try to detect viruses being sent via HTTP by checking the body of the PUT/POST request or GET response. The PATCH method complicates such watch-keeping because neither the source document nor the patch document might be a virus, yet the result could be. This security consideration is not materially different from those already introduced by byte-range downloads, downloading patch documents, uploading zipped (compressed) files and so on.¶
Individual patch documents will have their own specific security considerations that will likely vary depending on the types of resources being patched. The considerations for patched binary resources, for instance, will be different than those for patched XML documents.¶
PATCH is not a new concept, it first appeared in HTTP in drafts of version 1.1 written by Roy Fielding and Henrik Frystyk and also appears in RFC 2068.¶
Thanks to Adam Roach, Chris Sharp, Julian Reschke, Geoff Clemm, Scott Lawrence, Jeffrey Mogul, Roy Fielding, Greg Stein, Jim Luther, Alex Rousskov, Jamie Lokier, Joe Hildebrand, Mark Nottingham and Michael Balloni for review and advice on this document.¶
OPTIONS support: removed "Patch" header definition and used Allow and new "Accept-Patch" headers instead.¶
Supported delta encodings: removed vcdiff and diffe as these do not have defined MIME types and did not seem to be strongly desired.¶
PATCH method definition: Clarified cache behavior.¶
Removed references to XCAP - not yet a RFC.¶
Fixed use of MIME types (this "fix" now obsolete)¶
Explained how to use MOVE or COPY in conjunction with PATCH, to create a new resource based on an existing resource in a different location.¶
Clarified that MOVE and COPY are really independent of PATCH.¶
Clarified when an ETag must change, and when Last-Modified must be used.¶
Clarified what server should do if both Content-Type and IM headers appear in PATCH request.¶
Filled in missing reference to DeltaV and ACL RFCs.¶
Stopped using 501 Unsupported for unsupported delta encodings.¶
Clarified what a static resource is.¶
Refixed use of MIME types for patch formats.¶
Limited the scope of some restrictions to apply only to usage of required diff format.¶
Various typographical, terminology consistency, and other minor clarifications or fixes.¶
Moved paragraphs on ACL and RFC3229 interoperability to new section.¶
Added security considerations.¶
Added IANA considerations, registration of new namespace, and discontinued use of "DAV:" namespace for new elements.¶
Added example of error response.¶
Due to various concerns it didn't seem likely the application/gdiff registration could go through so switching to vcdiff as required diff format, and to RFC3229's approach to specifying diff formats, including use of the IM header.¶
Clarified what header server MUST use to return MD5 hash.¶
Reverted to using 501 Unsupported for unsupported delta encodings.¶
The reliance on RFC 3229 defined patch documents has been factored out in favor of delta encodings identified by MIME media type.¶
The required use of DeltaV-based error reporting has been removed in favor of using basic HTTP status codes to report error conditions.¶
The Accept-Patch response header has been redefined as a listing of media-ranges, similar to the Accept request header.¶
Added James Snell as a co-author.¶
Terminology change from "delta encoding" to "patch document"¶
Added clarification on the safety and idempotency of PATCH¶
Updated the caching rules of PATCH responses¶
200 responses MUST include a representation of the modified resource. 204 responses are used to indicate successful response without returning a representation.¶
Suggest using 422 Unprocessable Entity to indicate that a properly formatted patch document cannot be processed¶
Clarify the use of 412 and 409 to indicate concurrent and conflicting resource modifications.¶
Added registration for the Accept-Patch header.¶
Relaxed the requirements for the use of If-Match and If-Unmodified-Since.¶
Add language that clarifies the difference between PUT and PATCH.¶
Add language that clarifies the issues with PATCH and Content Negotiation.¶
Use of Accept-Patch on any response implies that PATCH is supported.¶
Add language advising caution when pipelining PATCH requests.¶
Addition of the 209 Content Returned status code¶
Addition of the Prefer header field mechanism¶
Removed the paragraph discussing the use of 200+Content-Location. This is replaced by the 209 Content Returned status code.¶
Move the prefer header to a separate document¶
Restructure the document sections.¶
Remove paragraph about pipelined requests. This is covered adequately by RFC2616.¶
Remove paragraph about content negotiation. This is covered adequately by RFC2616.¶
Explicitly indicate that PATCH can be used to create new resources.¶
Remove recommendation for servers to provide strong etags. This is recommendation is implied and does not need to be explicitly.¶
Change Allow-Patch to a listing of media-type and not media-range.¶
Fix section links.¶
State that this uses RFC2616-style ABNF.¶
Fix grammar for Accept-Patch.¶
Remove requirements for handling entity-headers on PATCH and replace with general discussion of issues and consequences of having no handling requirements.¶
Update Security Considerations to make it clear what security considerations for PUT are, for comparison.¶
The RFC Editor should remove this section and the Changes section.¶