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532 lines
21 KiB
Markdown
532 lines
21 KiB
Markdown
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REST API
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========
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[Serval Project][], February 2016
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Introduction
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------------
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The [Serval DNA][] daemon that runs on every node in a [Serval Mesh network][]
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gives applications access to the network through two main classes of [API][]:
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* the [MDP API][MDP] and [MSP API][MSP] provide "traditional" packet and
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stream transport, allowing applications to send and receive Serval network
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packets to and from nearby nodes with latencies of up to several seconds;
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* the various [HTTP REST][] APIs provide applications with access to Serval
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services:
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- [Keyring REST API][] -- local identity management by querying and
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modifying the [Keyring][]
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- [Rhizome REST API][] -- store-and-forward (high latency) content
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distribution by extracting and inserting content in the local [Rhizome][]
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store
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- [MeshMS REST API][] -- secure one-to-one messaging by reading and writing
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the local cache of [MeshMS][] messages
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This document describes the features in common to all the [HTTP REST][] APIs.
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### Protocol and port
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The Serval DNA [HTTP REST][] API is an [HTTP 1.0][] server that only accepts
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requests on the loopback interface (IPv4 address 127.0.0.1), TCP port 4110. It
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rejects requests that do not originate on the local host, by replying
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[403 Forbidden](#403-forbidden).
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### Security
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The REST API uses plain HTTP *without* encryption. REST requests and responses
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are not carried over any physical network link, only local (“logical”) links
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between processes, so there is no risk of remote eavesdropping. The only
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potential threat comes from hostile local processes.
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Operating system kernels such as Linux (Android, Ubuntu) and Darwin (Apple)
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prevent normal processes from accessing the traffic on local sockets between
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other processes. To attack Serval DNA and its clients, a local process on the
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local host would have to gain super-user privilege (eg, through a privilege
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escalation vulnerability). A super-user process would have many ways to attack
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Serval DNA and its clients, much more effective than intercepting their
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communications, so encrypting client-server communications would offer no
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protection whatsoever.
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### Authentication
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Clients of the HTTP REST API must authenticate themselves using [Basic
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Authentication][]. This narrows the window for opportunistic attacks on the
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server's HTTP port by malicious applications that scan for open local ports to
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exploit. Any process wishing to use the REST API must supply valid
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authentication credentials (name/password), or will receive a [401
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Unauthorized](#401-unauthorized) response.
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Client applications obtain their REST API credentials via a back channel
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specific to their particular platform. This delegates the exercise of handing
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out credentials to the application layer, where users can (usually) exercise
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their own discretion. For example, on Android, a client app sends an
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[Intent][] to the [Serval Mesh][] app requesting a Serval REST credential, and
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will receive a reply only if it possesses the right Android [Permission][].
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When users install or run the client app, Android informs them that the app
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requests the "Serval Network" permission, and users may allow or deny it.
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As a fall-back mechanism, created primarily to facilitate testing, HTTP REST
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API credentials can be [configured][] using configuration options of the form:
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api.restful.users.USERNAME.password=PASSWORD
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PASSWORD is a cleartext secret, so the Serval DNA configuration file must be
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protected from unauthorised access or modification by other apps. That makes
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this mechanism unsuitable for general use.
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### Request
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An HTTP REST request is a normal [HTTP 1.0][] [GET](#get) or [POST](#post):
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#### GET
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A **GET** request consists of an initial "GET" line containing the *path* and
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*HTTP version*, followed by zero or more header lines, followed by a blank
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line. As usual for HTTP, all lines are terminated by an ASCII CR-LF sequence.
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For example:
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GET /restful/keyring/identities.json?pin=1234 HTTP/1.0
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Authorization: Basic aGFycnk6cG90dGVy
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Accept: */*
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GET requests only accept parameters as [query parameters][] in the *path*.
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[query parameters]: http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986#section-3.4
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#### POST
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A **POST** request is the same as a GET request except that the first word
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of the first line is "POST", the blank line is followed by a request *body*,
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and the following request headers are mandatory:
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* [Content-Length](#request-content-length)
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* [Content-Type](#request-content-type)
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POST requests accept parameters as [query parameters][] in the *path* and also
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as a request body with a [Content-Type](#request-content-type) of
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[multipart/form-data][]. These two kinds of parameters are not exclusive; a
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request may contain a mixture of both.
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#### Request Content-Length
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In a request, the **Content-Length** header gives the exact number of bytes
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(octets) in the request's body, which must be correct. Serval DNA will not
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process a request until it receives Content-Length bytes, so if Content-Length
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is too large, the request will suspend and eventually time out. Serval DNA
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will ignore any bytes received after it has read Content-Length bytes, so if
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Content-Length is too small, the request body will be malformed.
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#### Request Content-Type
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In a request, the **Content-Type** header gives the [Internet Media Type][] of
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the body. Serval DNA currently supports the following media types in requests:
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* **[multipart/form-data][]** is used to send parameters in [POST](#post)
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requests. The **boundary** parameter must specify a string that does not
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occur anywhere within the content of any form part.
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* **text/plain; charset=utf-8** is used for [MeshMS][] message form parts.
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The only supported charset is utf-8; a missing or different charset will
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cause a [415 Unsupported Media Type](#415-unsupported-media-type) response.
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* **rhizome/manifest; format=text+binarysig** is used for [Rhizome
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manifest][]s in [text+binarysig format][].
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A missing Content-Type header in a `POST` request will cause a [400 Bad
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Request](#400-bad-request) response. An unsupported content type will cause a
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[415 Unsupported Media Type](#415-unsupported-media-type) response.
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The following media types are *not supported*:
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* [application/x-www-form-urlencoded][] is commonly used to send parameters in
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[POST](#post) requests, and is the predecessor web standard to
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[multipart/form-data][]. It has the benefit of being simpler than
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[multipart/form-data][] for requests that take short, mainly textual
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parameters, but is very inefficient for encoding large binary values and
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does not provide any means to associate metadata such as content-type and
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encoding with individual parameters. In future, some REST API requests may
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support [application/x-www-form-urlencoded][].
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[multipart/form-data]: https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2388.txt
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[application/x-www-form-urlencoded]: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1866#section-8.2.1
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#### Request Range
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[HTTP 1.1 Range][] retrieval is partially supported. In a request, the
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**Range** header gives the start and end, in byte offsets, of the resource to
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be returned. The server may respond with exactly the range requested, in which
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case the response status code will be [206 Partial Content](#206-partial-content),
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or it may ignore the Range header and respond with the entire requested
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resource.
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For example, the following header asks that the server omit the first 64 bytes
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and send only the next 64 bytes (note that ranges are inclusive of their end
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byte number):
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Range: bytes=64-127
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The [specification][HTTP 1.1 Range] allows for more than one start-end range to
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be supplied, separated by commas, however not all REST API operations support
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multi ranges. If a multi-range header is used in such a request, then the
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response may be the entire content or [501 Not Implemented](#501-not-implemented).
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[HTTP 1.1 Range]: http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html#sec14.35
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### Responses
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An HTTP REST response is a normal [HTTP 1.0][] response consisting of a header
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block, a blank line, and an optional body, for example: As usual, all lines are
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terminated by an ASCII CR-LF sequence. For example:
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HTTP/1.0 200 OK
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Content-Type: application/json
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Content-Length: 78
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{
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"http_status_code": 200,
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"http_status_message": "OK"
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}
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The lingua franca of the HTTP REST API is [JSON][] in [UTF-8][] encoding. All
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Serval DNA HTTP REST responses have a Content-Type of **[application/json][]**
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unless otherwise documented.
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Some responses contain non-standard HTTP headers as part of the result they
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return to the client; for example, [Rhizome response headers](#rhizome-response-headers).
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[application/json]: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4627
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### Response status code
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The HTTP REST API response uses the [HTTP status code][] to indicate the
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outcome of the request as follows:
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[HTTP status code]: http://www.w3.org/Protocols/HTTP/1.0/spec.html#Status-Codes
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#### 200 OK
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The operation was successful and no new entity was created. Most requests
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return this code to indicate success. Requests that create a new entity only
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return this code if the entity already existed, meaning that the creation was
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not performed but the request can be considered a success since the desired
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outcome was achieved: namely, the existence of the entity. (If the entity was
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created, then these requests return [201 Created](#201-created) instead.)
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(Serval APIs are all [idempotent][] with respect to creation: creating the same
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entity twice yields the same state as creating it once. This is an important
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property for a purely distributed network that has no central arbiter to
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enforce sequencing of operations.)
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#### 201 Created
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The operation was successful and the entity was created. This code is only
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returned by requests that create new entities, in the case that the entity did
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not exist beforehand and has been created successfully.
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#### 202 Accepted
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The operation was successful but the entity was not created. This code is only
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returned by requests that create new entities, in the case that the request was
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valid but the entity was not created because other existing entities take
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precedence. For example, the [Rhizome REST API](#rhizome-rest-api) returns
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this code when inserting a bundle to a full Rhizome store if the new bundle's
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rank falls below all other bundles, so the new bundle itself would be evicted
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to make room.
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#### 206 Partial Content
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The operation was successful and the response contains part of the requested
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content. This code is only returned by requests that fetch an entity (the
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fetched entity forms the body of the response) if the request supplied a
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[Range](#request-range) header that specified less than the entire entity.
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#### 400 Bad Request
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The HTTP request was malformed, and should not be repeated without
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modifications. This could be for several reasons:
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- invalid syntax in the request header block
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- a `POST` request MIME part is missing, duplicated or out of order
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- a `POST` request was given an unsupported MIME part
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- a `POST` request MIME part has missing or malformed content
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#### 401 Unauthorized
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The request did not supply an "Authorization" header with a recognised
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credential. This response contains a "WWW-Authenticate" header that describes
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the missing credential:
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HTTP/1.0 401 Unauthorized
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Content-Type: application/json
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Content-Length: 88
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WWW-Authenticate: Basic "Serval RESTful API"
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{
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"http_status_code": 401
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"http_status_message": "Unauthorized"
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}
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#### 403 Forbidden
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The request failed because the server does not accept requests from the
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originating host.
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#### 404 Not Found
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The request failed because the [HTTP request URI][] does not exist. This could
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be for several reasons:
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- the request specified an incorrect path (typographic mistake)
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- the path is unavailable because the API in question is unavailable (eg, the
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[Rhizome REST API](#rhizome-rest-api)) is currently [configured][] as
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disabled
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- the path contains a reference to an entity (eg, [SID][], [Bundle ID][]) that
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does not exist
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[HTTP request URI]: http://www.w3.org/Protocols/HTTP/1.0/spec.html#Request-URI
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#### 405 Method Not Allowed
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The request failed because the [HTTP request method][] is not supported for the
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given path. Usually this means that a [GET](#get) request was attempted on a
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path that only supports [POST](#post), or vice versa.
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[HTTP request method]: http://www.w3.org/Protocols/HTTP/1.0/spec.html#Method
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#### 411 Length Required
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A `POST` request did not supply a [Content-Length](#request-content-length)
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header.
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#### 414 Request-URI Too Long
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The request failed because the [HTTP request URI][] was too long. The server
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persists the path and a few other pieces of the request in a fixed size request
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buffer, and this response is triggered if the collective size of these does not
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leave enough buffer for receiving the remainder of the request.
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#### 415 Unsupported Media Type
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A `POST` request failed because of an unsupported content type, which could be
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for several reasons:
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- the request's [Content-Type](#request-content-type) header specified an
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unsupported media type
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- a part of a [multipart/form-data][] request body has:
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- a missing `Content-Disposition` header, or
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- a `Content-Disposition` header that is not of type `form-data`, or
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- a missing or unsupported `Content-Type` header (including a missing or
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unsupported `charset` parameter)
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#### 416 Requested Range Not Satisfiable
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The [Range](#request-range) header specified a range whose start position falls
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outside the size of the requested entity.
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#### 419 Authentication Timeout
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The request failed because the server does not possess and cannot derive the
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necessary cryptographic secret or credential. For example, updating a [Rhizome
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bundle][] without providing the [bundle secret][]. This code is not part of
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the HTTP standard.
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#### 422 Unprocessable Entity
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A `POST` request supplied data that was inconsistent or violates semantic
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constraints, so cannot be processed. For example, the [Rhizome
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insert](./REST-API-Rhizome.md#post-restfulrhizomeinsert) operation responds
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with 422 if the manifest *filesize* and *filehash* fields do not match the
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supplied payload.
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#### 423 Locked
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The request cannot be performed because a necessary resource is busy for
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reasons outside the control of the requester and server.
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This code is returned by Rhizome requests if the Rhizome store database is
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currently locked by another process. The architecture of [Serval DNA][] is
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being improved to prevent any process other than the Serval DNA daemon itself
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from directly accessing the Rhizome database. Once these improvements are
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done, this code should no longer occur except during unusual testing and
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development situations.
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#### 429 Too Many Requests
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The request cannot be performed because a necessary resource is temporarily
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unavailable due to a high volume of concurrent requests.
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The original use of this code was for Rhizome operations if the server's
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manifest table ran out of free manifests, which would only happen if there were
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many concurrent Rhizome requests holding manifest structures open in server
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memory.
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This code may also be used to indicate temporary exhaustion of other finite
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resources. For example, if [Serval DNA][] is ever limited to service only a
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few HTTP requests at a time, then this code will be returned to new requests
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that would exceed the limit.
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#### 431 Request Header Fields Too Large
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The request header block was too long.
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Initial implementations of [Serval DNA][] allocated approximately 8 KiB of
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buffer memory for each [request](#request), and the HTTP server read each
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header line entirely into that buffer before parsing it. If a single header
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exceeded the size of this buffer, then the 431 response was returned.
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#### 500 Internal Server Error
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The request failed because of an internal error in [Serval DNA][], not an error
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in the request itself. This could be for several reasons:
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- software defect (bug)
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- unavailable system resource (eg, memory, disk space)
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- corrupted environment (eg, bad configuration, database inconsistency)
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Internal errors of this kind may persist or may resolve if the request is
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re-tried, but in general they will persist because the cause is not transient.
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Temporary failures that can be resolved by re-trying the request are generally
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indicated by other status codes, such as [423 Locked](#423-locked).
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#### 501 Not Implemented
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The requested operation is valid but not yet implemented. This is used for the
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following cases:
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- a request [Range](#request-range) header specifies a multi range
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#### Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS)
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To support client-side JavaScript applications, Serval DNA has a limited
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implementation of [Cross-Origin Resource Sharing][CORS]. If a request contains
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an **Origin** header with either “null” or a single URI with scheme “http” or
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“https” or “file”, hostname “localhost” or “127.0.0.1” (or empty in the case of
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a “file” scheme), and optionally any port number, then the response will
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contain three **Access-Control** headers granting permission for other pages on
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the same site to access resources in the returned response.
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For example, given the request:
|
||
|
|
||
|
GET /restful/keyring/identities.json HTTP/1.0
|
||
|
Origin: http://localhost:8080/
|
||
|
...
|
||
|
|
||
|
Serval DNA will respond:
|
||
|
|
||
|
HTTP/1.0 200 OK
|
||
|
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: http://localhost:8080
|
||
|
Access-Control-Allow-Methods: GET, POST, OPTIONS
|
||
|
Access-Control-Allow-Headers: Authorization
|
||
|
...
|
||
|
|
||
|
[CORS]: http://www.w3.org/TR/cors/
|
||
|
|
||
|
#### JSON result
|
||
|
|
||
|
All responses that convey no special content return the following *JSON result*
|
||
|
object:
|
||
|
|
||
|
{
|
||
|
"http_status_code": ...,
|
||
|
"http_status_message": "..."
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
The `http_status_code` field is an integer equal to the [status
|
||
|
code](#response-status-code) that follows the `HTTP/1.0` token in the first
|
||
|
line of the response.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The `http_status_message` field is usually the same as the *reason phrase* text
|
||
|
that follows the code in the first line of the HTTP response. This reason
|
||
|
phrase may be a [standard phrase][status code], or it may be more explanatory;
|
||
|
for example, some *404* responses from Rhizome have phrases like, “Bundle not
|
||
|
found”, “Payload not found”, etc.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some responses augment the *JSON result* object with extra fields; for example,
|
||
|
[Rhizome JSON result](#rhizome-json-result).
|
||
|
|
||
|
### JSON table
|
||
|
|
||
|
Many HTTP REST responses that return a list of regular objects (eg, [GET
|
||
|
/restful/rhizome/bundlelist.json](./REST-API-Rhizome.md#get-restfulrhizomebundlelistjson))
|
||
|
use the following *JSON table* format:
|
||
|
|
||
|
{
|
||
|
"header":["fieldname1","fieldname2","fieldname3", ... ],
|
||
|
"rows":[
|
||
|
[field1, field2, field3, ... ],
|
||
|
[field1, field2, field3, ... ],
|
||
|
...
|
||
|
]
|
||
|
}
|
||
|
|
||
|
The JSON table format is more compact than the most straightforward JSON
|
||
|
representation, an array of JSON objects, which has the overhead of redundantly
|
||
|
repeating all field labels in every single object:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[
|
||
|
{
|
||
|
"fieldname1: field1,
|
||
|
"fieldname2: field2,
|
||
|
"fieldname3: field3,
|
||
|
...
|
||
|
},
|
||
|
{
|
||
|
"fieldname1: field1,
|
||
|
"fieldname2: field2,
|
||
|
"fieldname3: field3,
|
||
|
...
|
||
|
},
|
||
|
...
|
||
|
]
|
||
|
|
||
|
A JSON table can easily be transformed into its equivalent array of JSON
|
||
|
objects. The [test scripts](../testdefs_json.sh) use the following [jq(1)][]
|
||
|
expression to perform the transformation:
|
||
|
|
||
|
[
|
||
|
.header as $header |
|
||
|
.rows as $rows |
|
||
|
$rows | keys | .[] as $index |
|
||
|
[ $rows[$index] as $d | $d | keys | .[] as $i | {key:$header[$i], value:$d[$i]} ] |
|
||
|
from_entries |
|
||
|
.["__index"] = $index
|
||
|
]
|
||
|
|
||
|
-----
|
||
|
**Copyright 2015 Serval Project Inc.**
|
||
|
![CC-BY-4.0](./cc-by-4.0.png)
|
||
|
Available under the [Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International licence][CC BY 4.0].
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
[Serval Project]: http://www.servalproject.org/
|
||
|
[CC BY 4.0]: ../LICENSE-DOCUMENTATION.md
|
||
|
[API]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Application_programming_interface
|
||
|
[Serval DNA]: ../README.md
|
||
|
[Serval Mesh network]: http://developer.servalproject.org/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=content:tech:mesh_network
|
||
|
[HTTP REST]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Representational_state_transfer
|
||
|
[HTTP 1.0]: http://www.w3.org/Protocols/HTTP/1.0/spec.html
|
||
|
[MDP]: ./Mesh-Datagram-Protocol.md
|
||
|
[MSP]: ./Mesh-Stream-Protocol.md
|
||
|
[Keyring REST API]: ./REST-API-Keyring.md
|
||
|
[Keyring]: http://developer.servalproject.org/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=content:tech:keyring
|
||
|
[Rhizome REST API]: ./REST-API-Rhizome.md
|
||
|
[Rhizome]: http://developer.servalproject.org/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=content:tech:rhizome
|
||
|
[MeshMS REST API]: ./REST-API-MeshMS.md
|
||
|
[MeshMS]: http://developer.servalproject.org/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=content:tech:meshms
|
||
|
[Basic Authentication]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_access_authentication
|
||
|
[Serval Mesh]: http://developer.servalproject.org/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=content:servalmesh:development
|
||
|
[Intent]: http://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/Intent.html
|
||
|
[Permission]: https://developer.android.com/preview/features/runtime-permissions.html
|
||
|
[configured]: ./Servald-Configuration.md
|
||
|
[Internet Media Type]: https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/media-types.xhtml
|
||
|
[Rhizome bundle]: ./REST-API-Rhizome.md#bundle
|
||
|
[Rhizome manifest]: ./REST-API-Rhizome.md#manifest
|
||
|
[bundle secret]: ./REST-API-Rhizome.md#bundle-secret
|
||
|
[text+binarysig format]: ./REST-API-Rhizome.md#textbinarysig-manifest-format
|
||
|
[JSON]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JSON
|
||
|
[UTF-8]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-8
|
||
|
[jq(1)]: https://stedolan.github.io/jq/
|
||
|
[idempotent]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Idempotence
|
||
|
[SID]: ./REST-API-Keyring.md#serval-id
|
||
|
[Bundle ID]: ./REST-API-Rhizome.md#bundle-id
|