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Home/ Questions/Q 8247843
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 7, 20262026-06-07T22:59:36+00:00 2026-06-07T22:59:36+00:00

I’ve been convinced by a fellow developer (now left) that the proper way to

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I’ve been convinced by a fellow developer (now left) that the proper way to evolve RESTful web services is by creating custom media types for your services.

For example application/vnd.acme.payroll.v1+json

This way, you can tell your client to specify the encoding to use without changing the URI.

Is this technique a good one? Usually services embed the version into the url:

eg /acme/1.0/payroll/

I’ve had a lot of difficulty enforcing clients to use this scheme, especially as it seems DELETE does not enforce a media type

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-07T22:59:39+00:00Added an answer on June 7, 2026 at 10:59 pm

    There are a few main signaling mechanisms you can use in a RESTful service:

    • The media type
    • The rel of a resource you are linking to.
    • Custom headers, like Accept-Version/Api-Version.

    Each of these has distinct uses, and I will outline the ways in which we have come to understand them while designing our API.


    Media Types

    To signal what operations are possible on a given resource, and what the semantics of these operations are, many use custom media types. In my opinion, this is not quite correct, and a rel is more accurate.

    A custom media type should tell you about the type of the data, e.g. its format or the way certain information is embodied or embedded. Having a custom media type means consumers of your API are tightly coupled to that specific representation. Whereas, using something more generic like application/json says "this is just JSON data."

    Usually JSON alone is not enough for a RESTful service, since it has no built-in linking or resource-embedding functionality. That is where something like HAL (application/hal+json) comes in. It is a specialization of JSON that is still a generic format, and not application-specific. But it gives just enough to overlay the linking and embedding semantics on top of JSON that is necessary for coherently expressing a RESTful API.

    Link Relation Types (rels)

    This brings us to rels. To me, a custom rel is a perfect way to signal what type of resource is being dealt with or linked to. For example, a custom rel for a user resource might be http://rel.myapi.com/user, which serves two purposes:

    • Clients of your API must know this key ahead of time, as it is API-specific knowledge. For example, if it was available on your initial resource and you were using HAL to link to the user resource, clients might find the user link via initialResource._links["http://rel.myapi.com/user"].href.
    • Developers writing API clients can visit that URI in their web browser, and get an explanation of what that resource represents in your API, including what methods are applicable and what they do. This is a very convenient way to communicate that API-specific knowledge I mentioned. For examples of this, see http://rel.nkstdy.co.

    If you combine rels with a standard or semi-standard media type like application/hal+json, you get resources which follow a uniform format specified by their media type, with API-specific semantics defined by their rels. This gets you almost all the way there.

    Custom Headers

    The remaining question is versioning. How do you allow clients to negotiate different versions of the resource, while not invalidating old URIs?

    Our solution, inspired by the Restify Node.js framework, is two custom headers: Accept-Version from the client, which much match X-Api-Version from the server (or Api-Version in the upcoming Restify 2.0 release, as per the new RFC 6648). If they don’t match, a 400 Bad Request is the result.

    I admit that custom media types are a fairly popular solution here. In my opinion they don’t fit very well conceptually, in light of the above considerations, but you would not be doing something weird if you chose them as your versioning mechanism. It has some semantic issues when used with methods other than GET though, as you note.

    One thing to keep in mind is that in a truly RESTful system, versioning should not be such an issue. It should only matter in one very specific situation: when the representations of your resources change in backward-incompatible ways, but you still want to keep the same rels. So if the http://rel.myapi.com/friend resource suddenly loses its username field and gains an id field, that would qualify. But if it suddenly gains a nickname field, that’s not backward-incompatible, so no versioning is needed. And if the concept of "friends" is completely replaced in your API with the concept of, say, "connection", this is not actually backward-incompatible, because API consumers will simply no longer find http://rel.myapi.com/friend links anywhere in the API for them to follow.

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