Idempotent
An HTTP method is idempotent if the intended effect on the server of making a single request is the same as the effect of making several identical requests.
This does not necessarily mean that the request does not have any unique side effects: for example, the server may log every request with the time it was received. Idempotency only applies to effects intended by the client: for example, a POST request intends to send data to the server, or a DELETE request intends to delete a resource on the server.
All safe methods are idempotent, as well as PUT
and DELETE
. The POST
method is not idempotent.
To be idempotent, only the state of the server is considered. The response returned by each request may differ: for example, the first call of a DELETE
will likely return a 200
, while successive ones will likely return a 404
. Another implication of DELETE
being idempotent is that developers should not implement RESTful APIs with a delete last entry functionality using the DELETE
method.
Note that the idempotence of a method is not guaranteed by the server and some applications may incorrectly break the idempotence constraint.
GET /pageX HTTP/1.1
is idempotent, because it is a safe (read-only) method. Successive calls may return different data to the client, if the data on the server was updated in the meantime.
POST /add_row HTTP/1.1
is not idempotent; if it is called several times, it adds several rows:
POST /add_row HTTP/1.1
POST /add_row HTTP/1.1 -> Adds a 2nd row
POST /add_row HTTP/1.1 -> Adds a 3rd row
DELETE /idX/delete HTTP/1.1
is idempotent, even if the returned status code may change between requests:
DELETE /idX/delete HTTP/1.1 -> Returns 200 if idX exists
DELETE /idX/delete HTTP/1.1 -> Returns 404 as it just got deleted
DELETE /idX/delete HTTP/1.1 -> Returns 404