According to RFC 2616, § 9.5, POST
is used to create a resource:
The POST method is used to request that the origin server accept the entity enclosed in the request as a new subordinate of the resource identified by the Request-URI in the Request-Line.
According to RFC 2616, § 9.6, PUT
is used to create or replace a resource:
The PUT method requests that the enclosed entity be stored under the supplied Request-URI. If the Request-URI refers to an already existing resource, the enclosed entity SHOULD be considered as a modified version of the one residing on the origin server. If the Request-URI does not point to an existing resource, and that URI is capable of being defined as a new resource by the requesting user agent, the origin server can create the resource with that URI.
So which HTTP method should be used to create a resource? Or should both be supported?
PUT method is call when you have to modify a single resource, which is already a part of resource collection. POST method is call when you have to add a child resource under resources collection.
POST is always for creating a resource ( does not matter if it was duplicated ) PUT is for checking if resource exists then update, else create new resource. PATCH is always for updating a resource.
Another important difference between the methods is that PUT is an idempotent method while POST is not. For instance, calling the PUT method multiple times will either create or update the same resource. On the contrary, multiple POST requests will lead to the creation of the same resource multiple times.
In general the HTTP PUT method replaces the resource at the current URL with the resource contained within the request. PUT is used to both create and update the state of a resource on the server.
Overall:
Both PUT and POST can be used for creating.
You have to ask, "what are you performing the action upon?", to distinguish what you should be using. Let's assume you're designing an API for asking questions. If you want to use POST, then you would do that to a list of questions. If you want to use PUT, then you would do that to a particular question.
Great, both can be used, so which one should I use in my RESTful design:
You do not need to support both PUT and POST.
Which you use is up to you. But just remember to use the right one depending on what object you are referencing in the request.
Some considerations:
An example:
I wrote the following as part of another answer on SO regarding this:
POST:
Used to modify and update a resource
POST /questions/<existing_question> HTTP/1.1 Host: www.example.com/
Note that the following is an error:
POST /questions/<new_question> HTTP/1.1 Host: www.example.com/
If the URL is not yet created, you should not be using POST to create it while specifying the name. This should result in a 'resource not found' error because
<new_question>
does not exist yet. You should PUT the<new_question>
resource on the server first.You could though do something like this to create a resources using POST:
POST /questions HTTP/1.1 Host: www.example.com/
Note that in this case the resource name is not specified, the new objects URL path would be returned to you.
PUT:
Used to create a resource, or overwrite it. While you specify the resources new URL.
For a new resource:
PUT /questions/<new_question> HTTP/1.1 Host: www.example.com/
To overwrite an existing resource:
PUT /questions/<existing_question> HTTP/1.1 Host: www.example.com/
Additionally, and a bit more concisely, RFC 7231 Section 4.3.4 PUT states (emphasis added),
4.3.4. PUT
The PUT method requests that the state of the target resource be
created
orreplaced
with the state defined by the representation enclosed in the request message payload.
You can find assertions on the web that say
Neither is quite right.
Better is to choose between PUT and POST based on idempotence of the action.
PUT implies putting a resource - completely replacing whatever is available at the given URL with a different thing. By definition, a PUT is idempotent. Do it as many times as you like, and the result is the same. x=5
is idempotent. You can PUT a resource whether it previously exists, or not (eg, to Create, or to Update)!
POST updates a resource, adds a subsidiary resource, or causes a change. A POST is not idempotent, in the way that x++
is not idempotent.
By this argument, PUT is for creating when you know the URL of the thing you will create. POST can be used to create when you know the URL of the "factory" or manager for the category of things you want to create.
so:
POST /expense-report
or:
PUT /expense-report/10929
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