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Validator.nu Web Service Interface: Difference between revisions

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==Output Modes==
==Output Modes==


When using Validator.nu as a Web service back end, the XML and JSON output formats are recommended for forward compatibility. The available JSON tooling probably makes consuming JSON easier. The XML format contains XHTML elaborations that are not available in JSON. Both formats are streaming, but streaming XML parsers are more readily available. XML cannot represent some input strings faithfully.
When using Validator.nu as a Web service back end, the [[Validator.nu XML Output|XML]] [[Validator.nu JSON Output|JSON]] output formats are recommended for forward compatibility. The available JSON tooling probably makes consuming JSON easier. The XML format contains XHTML elaborations that are not available in JSON. Both formats are streaming, but streaming XML parsers are more readily available. XML cannot represent some input strings faithfully.


===Implemented===
===Implemented===

Revision as of 20:24, 26 November 2007

Validator.nu can be called as a Web service. This page documents how.

Input Modes

The schemas are expected to be relatively static. Therefore, I think preloading them into the service or letting the service retrieve them is sufficient. Identification by URI works in both cases.

What needs different input modes is the document that is checked.

I think the following modes would make sense:

  • Document URI as a GET parameter; the service retrieves the

document by URI (already implemented).

  • Document in a data: URI as a GET parameter.
  • Document POSTed as the HTTP entity body (the preferred Web

service mode; already implemented).

  • Document POSTed as an application/x-www-form-urlencoded

form field value.

  • Document POSTed as a multipart/form-data file

upload.

In the first three modes, additional parameters would be communicated in the URI query string. In the last two modes, additional parameters would be communicated like corresponding from fields are communicated as application/x-www-form-urlencoded and multipart/form-data.

I don’t particularly like the last two modes, but they are needed to address feature requests and for parity with other services. Also, unlike the first three modes, the last two modes need companion UI changes, which is not nice. As a further complication, the last two don’t come naturally with a Content-Type for dispatching to an HTML5 parser or to an XML parser.

All these input modes would share the same “service endpoint URI” (and the same servlet class). The different cases can be distinguished from the HTTP method and in the POST cases from the Content-Type request header.

Output Modes

When using Validator.nu as a Web service back end, the XML JSON output formats are recommended for forward compatibility. The available JSON tooling probably makes consuming JSON easier. The XML format contains XHTML elaborations that are not available in JSON. Both formats are streaming, but streaming XML parsers are more readily available. XML cannot represent some input strings faithfully.

Implemented

  • HTML with microformat-style class annotations (default output; should not be assumed to be forward-compatibly stable).
  • XHTML with microformat-style class annotations (append &out=xhtml to URL; should not be assumed to be forward-compatibly stable).
  • XML (append &out=xml to URL).
  • JSON (append &out=json to URL).
  • Human-readably plain text (append &out=text to URL; should not be assumed to be forward-compatibly stable for machine parsing).

Not Implemented

  • GNU error format (needs a better spec)
  • Relaxed-compatible (lacks a spec)
  • Unicorn-compatible (hoping that Unicorn changes instead)
  • W3C Validator-compatible SOAP (legacy)
  • EARL (not implemented; domain modeling mismatch)