Abstract
The World Wide Web has succeeded in large part because its software architecture has been designed to meet the needs of an Internet-scale distributed hypermedia application. The modern Web architecture emphasizes scalability of component interactions, generality of interfaces, independent deployment of components, and intermediary components to reduce interaction latency, enforce security, and encapsulate legacy systems. In this article we introduce the Representational State Transfer (REST) architectural style, developed as an abstract model of the Web architecture and used to guide our redesign and definition of the Hypertext Transfer Protocol and Uniform Resource Identifiers. We describe the software…
Citation impact
1,678
total citations
- FWCI
- 20.14
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
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Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Representational state transfer
- Computer science
- Resource-oriented architecture
- Architectural style
- Software engineering
- World Wide Web
- Architecture
- Applications architecture
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