Weak use-case.
Wrong solution (IMHO).
If one must use a header for this, how Zapier or Clearbit do it, as mentioned in appendix A.2, is the way to go.
Bloating HTTP and its implementations for REST-specific use-cases shouldn’t be generally accepted.
Bloating HTTP and its implementations for REST-specific use-cases
I have no idea what are you talking about. Setting a request/response header is not bloating HTTP. That’s like claiming that setting a field in a response body is bloating JSON.
Proper HTTP implementations in proper languages utilize header-name enums for strict checking/matching, and for performance by e.g. skipping unnecessary string allocations, not keeping known strings around, …etc. Every standard header name will have to added as a variant to such enums, and its string representation as a constant/static.
Not sure how you thought that shares equivalency with random JSON field names.
Proper HTTP implementations in proper languages utilize header-name enums for strict checking/matching (…)
I don’t know what you are talking about.
Java provides java.lang.Object.HttpHeaders
, which is a constants class that provides static final String fields for the popular request and response headers.
.NET does the exact same thing with it’s class Microsoft.Net.Http.Headers.HeaderNames
.
I can go on and on.
You’re saying wrong solution but point to the right solution in the same standard?
- Description: Zapier uses two custom HTTP header fields named X- API-Deprecation-Date and X-API-Deprecation-Info
Is your issue with the field name only? Why do you say wrong solution then?
Yeah, sorry. My comment was maybe too curt.
My thoughts are similar to those shared by @Domi in a top comment. If an API user is expected to be wary enough to check for such a header, then they would also be wary enough to check the response of an endpoint dedicated to communicating such deprecation info, or wary enough to notice API requests being redirected to a path indicating deprecation.
I mentioned Zapier or Clearbit as examples of doing it in what I humbly consider the wrong way, but still a way that doesn’t bloat the HTTP standard.
I don’t really get the purpose of a header like this, who is supposed to check it? It’s not like developers casually check the headers returned by an API every week.
Write them a mail if you see deprecated functions being used by a certain API key, probably much more likely to reach somebody that way.
Also, TIL that the IETF deprecated the X-
prefix more than 10 years ago. Seems like that one didn’t pan out.
Also, TIL that the IETF deprecated the X- prefix more than 10 years ago. Seems like that one didn’t pan out.
Can you elaborate on that? The X- prefix is supposedly only a recommendation, and intended to be used in non-standard, custom, ah-hoc request headers to avoid naming conflicts.
Taken from https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc6648
In short, although in theory the “X-” convention was a good way to avoid collisions (and attendant interoperability problems) between standardized parameters and unstandardized parameters, in practice the benefits have been outweighed by the costs associated with the leakage of unstandardized parameters into the standards space.
I still work on software that extendively uses X- headers.
The RFC you linked recommends that no new X-
prefixed headers should be used.
The paragraph you quoted does not say you should use the X-
prefix, only comments on how it was used.
See section 3 for the creation of new parameters: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc6648#section-3
I still work on software that extendively uses X- headers.
I wouldn’t worry too much about it. The reason they give is mostly that it is annoying if a X-
header suddenly becomes standardized and you end up having to support X-Something
and Something
. Most likely a non-issue with real custom headers.
It makes sense to include so it’s obvious in the readable HTTP request response. We use readable URLs and header names for the same purpose: So it is inspectable and understandable from that text format. You may leave deprecation information out, but then you’re missing part of the resource description that you’re addressing with the URL/URI.
Given a defined header it also allows you to add tooling and automation. There’s no need for manual reading.
You can simply log this response. Then developers know to replace that call in the next version. If you have unit tests that look for this then you can be sure that your next version is not using any deprecated API calls.
We don’t have many unit tests that test against live APIs, most use mock APIs for testing.
The only use for this header would be if somebody sees it during development, at which point it would already be in the documentation or if you explicitly add a feature to look if the header is present. Which I don’t see happening any time soon since we get mailed about deprecations as well.