Title :
Principled design of the modern Web architecture
Author :
Fielding, Roy T. ; Taylor, Richard N.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Inf. & Comput. Sci., California Univ., Irvine, CA, USA
Abstract :
The World Wide Web has succeeded in the large part because its software architecture has been designed to meet the needs of an Internet-scale distributed hypermedia system. The modern Web architecture emphasizes scalability of component interactions, generality of interfaces, independent deployment of components, and intermediary components to reduce interaction latency, enforce security, and encapsulate legacy systems. We introduce the Representational State Transfer (REST) architectural style, developed as an abstract model of the Web architecture to guide our redesign and definition of the Hypertext Transfer Protocol and Uniform Resource Identifiers. We describe the software engineering principles guiding REST and the interaction constraints chosen to retain those principles, contrasting them to the constraints of other architectural styles. We then compare the abstract model to the currently deployed Web architecture in order to elicit mismatches between the existing protocols and the applications they are intended to support
Keywords :
Internet; hypermedia; information resources; software architecture; transport protocols; Hypertext Transfer Protocol; Internet; Representational State Transfer; Uniform Resource Identifiers; World Wide Web; component interactions; distributed hypermedia system; legacy systems; scalability; security; software architecture; software engineering; Computer architecture; Delay; Internet; Protocols; Representational state transfer; Scalability; Security; Service oriented architecture; Software architecture; Web sites;
Conference_Titel :
Software Engineering, 2000. Proceedings of the 2000 International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Limerick
Print_ISBN :
1-58113-206-9
DOI :
10.1109/ICSE.2000.870431