Status code when deleting a resource using HTTP DELETE for the second time
Solution 1:
As HTTP requests in a stateless system should be independent, the results of one request should not be dependent on a previous request. Consider what should happen if two users did a DELETE on the same resource simultaneously. It makes sense for the second request to get a 404. The same should be true if one user makes two requests.
I am guessing that having DELETE return two different responses does not feel idempotent to you. I find it useful to think of idempotent requests as leaving the system in the same state, not necessarily having the same response. So regardless of whether you DELETE an existing resource, or attempt to DELETE a resource that does not exist, the server resource state is the same.
Solution 2:
I agree with what the current chosen answer has said, that the 2nd (and 3rd, 4th, ...) DELETE should get a 404. And, I noticed that answer has 143 up votes but also has an opposite comment which has 54 up votes, so the community is divided into 2 camps in roughly 3:1 ratio. Here comes more information to settle this long time debate.
- First of all, let's NOT start with what "I" think, what "you" think, or what yet another book author thinks. Let's start with the HTTP specs i.e. RFC 7231.
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RFC 7231, section 4.3.5 DELETE happened to only mention a successful response should be 2xx, but it did not call out what a subsequent DELETE would get. So let's dig deeper.
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RFC 7231, section 6.5.4 404 Not Found says 404 response is for a resource does not exist. Since no specific http method (in particular, not DELETE) being called out to be treated otherwise, we can intuitively get an impression (and rightfully so), that my request
DELETE /some/resource/which/does/not/exist
should result in a 404. Then,DELETE /some/resource/which/happened/to/be/removed/by/someone/else/five/days/ago
might as well also return a 404. Then, why shouldDELETE /some/resource/i/deleted/five/seconds/ago
be any different? "But how about idempotency?!", I can hear you are screaming that. Hang on, we are about to get into that. -
Historically, RFC 2616, published at 1999, was the most-referenced HTTP 1.1 specs. Unfortunately its description on idempotency was vague, that leaves room for all these debates. But that specs has been superseded by RFC 7231. Quoted from RFC 7231, section 4.2.2 Idempotent Methods, emphasis mine:
A request method is considered "idempotent" if the intended EFFECT ON THE SERVER of multiple identical requests with that method is the same as the effect for a single such request. Of the request methods defined by this specification, PUT, DELETE, and safe request methods are idempotent.
So, it is written in the specs, idempotency is all about the effect on the server. The first DELETE returning a 204 and then subsequent DELETE returning 404, such different status code does NOT make the DELETE non-idempotent. Using this argument to justify a subsequent 204 return, is simply irrelevant.
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OK so it is not about idempotency. But then a follow-up question may be, what if we still choose to use 204 in subsequent DELETE? Is it OK?
Good question. The motivation is understandable: to allow the client to still reach its intended outcome, without worrying about error handling. I would say, returning 204 in subsequent DELETE, is a largely harmless server-side "white lie", which the client-side won't immediately tell a difference. That's why there are ~25% people doing that in the wild and it seemingly still works. Just keep in mind that, such lie can be considered semantically weird, because
GET /non-exist
returns 404 butDELETE /non-exist
gives 204, at that point the client would figure out your service does not fully comply with section 6.5.4 404 Not Found.But I want to point out that, the intended way hinted by RFC 7231, i.e. returning 404 on subsequent DELETE, shouldn't be an issue in the first place. 3x more developers chose to do that, and did you ever hear a major incident or complain caused by a client not being able to handle 404? Presumably, nope, and that is because, any decent client which implements HTTP DELETE (or any HTTP method, for that matter), would not blindly assume the result would always be successful 2xx. And then, once the developer starts to consider the error handling, 404 Not Found would be one of the first errors that comes into mind. At that point, he/she would probably draw a conclusion that, it is semantically safe for an HTTP DELETE operation to ignore a 404 error. And they did so.
Problem solved.
Solution 3:
The RESTful web services cookbook is a great resource for this. By chance, its google preview show the page about DELETE (page 11):
The DELETE method is idempotent. This implies that the server must return response code 200 (OK) even if the server deleted the resource in a previous request. But in practice, implementing DELETE as an idempotent operation requires the server to keep track of all deleted resources. Otherwise, it can return a 404 (Not Found).