rest/description
REST Service Description Conventions (RSDC)
The general consensus (as articulated by Roy and Mark, though disputed by others) is that REST does not need a WSDL-style description language. After all, we use the web without requiring directions, right?
At the same time, there is still confusion about what actually works, and how.
Brainstorming
In at least the Microformats case ("REX") where you're assuming a browser, we can presumably get by with the following constraints (in addition to REST itself, of course; e.g., properly-formed URIs):
- information is provided via HTML
- inputs are always key-value pairs of strings (except for file uploads)
- only hyperlinks that share the same root are part of the REST service
- there must be a way to discover all valid queries starting from the first link
- forms MUST specify correct actions (e.g., PUT, DELETE), even if the actual implementation uses JavaScript
Implementations (Twill)
twill is a web app testing language by Titus Brown that functions like a smart REST client!
"Twill is especially good at retrieving and submitting web forms. The form-related feature uses the [following] commands:"
- showforms
- shows the forms contained in a web page. Unnamed forms get an ordinal number to use as a form ID
- formvalue <form_id> <name> <value>
- fills a field of the specified form with a given value
- submit <button_id>
- lets you press a Submit button, thus submitting the form
- formclear <form_id>
- resets all the fields in a form
In particular, Twill information in the following format:
>> showforms Form #1 ## __Name______ __Type___ __ID________ __Value__________________ name text (None) password password (None) confirm checkbox (None) [] of ['yes'] colour radio (None) [] of ['green', 'blue', 'brown', 'ot ... size select (None) ['Medium (10")'] of ['Tiny (4")', 'S ... toppings select (None) ['cheese'] of ['cheese', 'pepperoni' ... time hidden (None) 1118768019.17 1 submit (None) Submit
Those comment were extracted from ONLamp's web testing article, which also discusses:
- Python Browser Poseur (PBP)
- by Cory Dodt (came first)
- Beautiful Soup
- a third-party HTML parsing tool
- Quixote
- a nice, small Pythonic web framework
- John J. Lee's websearch tools
- mechanize (inspired by Perl), ClientForm, and ClientCookie
- pyparsing
- object-oriented text processing
- Selenium
- JavaScript framework for browser/Plone testing
- Agile Testing blog
- by Grig Gheorghiu.