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59 changes: 50 additions & 9 deletions chapters/compatibility.adoc
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -41,25 +41,66 @@ expected that code changes are necessary.
== {SHOULD} prefer compatible extensions

API designers should apply the following rules to evolve RESTful APIs for
services in a backward-compatible way:
services in a backward-compatible way.

In general:

* Add only optional, never mandatory fields.
* Never change the semantic of fields (e.g. changing the semantic from
customer-number to customer-id, as both are different unique customer keys)
* Consider <<251>> in case a URL has to change.
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@ePaul ePaul Oct 7, 2025

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This pointed wrongly to rule 250 before. (251 was originally added as 250 in #762 to a feature branch, but then #759 adding 250 was merged first to main before #781 renamed it and merged it into main.)

I also have a separate PR #852 to fix just this (already merged).


For schemas used in input only:

* Add only optional, never mandatory fields (and don't make optional
fields mandatory).
* Don't remove fields.
* While removing fields by itself doesn't break compatibility (if the
server would still accept it, possibly ignoring it, if sent by the client),
it then would allow later to add a same-named field with different type
or semantic (which is harder to catch). Therefore, this is also considered
a non-compatible change.
* Input fields may have (complex) constraints being validated via server-side
business logic. Never change the validation logic to be more restrictive and
make sure that all constraints are clearly defined in description.
* `enum` ranges can be reduced when used as input parameters, only if the server
is ready to accept and handle old range values too. The range can be reduced
when used as output parameters.
* `enum` ranges cannot be extended when used for output parameters — clients may
not be prepared to handle it. However, enum ranges can be extended when used
for input parameters.
* `enum` ranges can be reduced when used as input, only if the server
is ready to accept and handle old range values too.
* `enum` ranges can be extended when used for input.

For schemas used in output only:

* New mandatory fields can be added, or existing optional ones be made mandatory.
* Don't remove a mandatory field, or make it optional (clients might depend
on it being filled).
* Don't remove optional fields either.
* While removing optional fields by itself doesn't break compatibility,
it then would allow later to add a same-named field with different type
or semantic (which is harder to catch). Therefore, this is also considered a non-compatible change.
* `enum` ranges can be reduced when used as output.
* `enum` ranges **cannot** be extended when used for output — clients may
not be prepared to handle it.
* You <<112>> that are used for output parameters and likely to
be extended with growing functionality. The API definition should be updated
first before returning new values.

For schemas used in both input and output (which is common and recommended in
many cases), both of these rule sets combine, i.e. you can only do changes which
are allowed in both input and output.

* Add only optional, never mandatory fields.
* Don't remove any fields.
* Don't make mandatory fields optional or make optional fields mandatory.
* Input fields may have (complex) constraints being validated via server-side
business logic. Never change the validation logic to be more restrictive and
make sure that all constraints are clearly defined in description.
* `enum` ranges can be reduced only if the server is ready to still accept and
handle old values. They **cannot** be extended.
* You <<112>> that are used for output parameters and likely to
be extended with growing functionality. The API definition should be updated
first before returning new values.
* Consider <<251>> in case a URL has to change.

Input/Output here is from the perspective of a service implementing and
owning the API. For the rare case of APIs implemented by other services
(and consumed by the owning service), this turns around.

[#109]
== {SHOULD} design APIs conservatively
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