Patch verb


In computing, the PATCH method is a request method supported by the Hypertext Transfer Protocol protocol for making partial changes to an existing resource. The PATCH method provides an entity containing a list of changes to be applied to the resource requested using the HTTP Uniform Resource Identifier. The list of changes are supplied in the form of a PATCH document. If the requested resource does not exist then the server may create the resource depending on the PATCH document media type and permissions. The changes described in the PATCH document must be semantically well defined but can have a different media type than the resource being patched. Frameworks such as XML, JSON can be used in describing the changes in the PATCH document.

History of PATCH

As per the semantics defined in the HTTP protocol, the GET, PUT, and POST methods need to use a full representation of the resource. The PUT method which can be used for resource creation or replacement is idempotent and can be used only for full updates. The edit forms used in conventional Ruby on Rails application need to create new resources by applying partial updates to a parent resource. Due to this requirement, the PATCH method was added to the HTTP protocol in 2010.

PUT vs PATCH vs POST

is the foundation of data communication for the World Wide Web. It is a request-response protocol which helps users communicate with the server to perform CRUD operations. HTTP supports a number of request methods such as PUT, POST and PATCH to create or update resources.
The main difference between the PUT and PATCH method is that the PUT method uses the request URI to supply a modified version of the requested resource which replaces the original version of the resource, whereas the PATCH method supplies a set of instructions to modify the resource. If the PATCH document is larger than the size of the new version of the resource sent by the method then the method is preferred.
The POST method can be used for sending partial updates to a resource. The main difference between the POST and PATCH methods is that the POST method can only be used when it is written to support the applications or the applications support its semantics whereas the PATCH method can be used in a generic way and does not require application support. If the outcome of using the PATCH method is not known then the POST method is preferred.

Patching resources

The PATCH method is atomic. Either all the changes specified by the PATCH method are applied or none of the changes are applied by the server. There are many ways of checking whether a patch was applied successfully. For example, the 'diff' utility can be applied to the older version and newer version of a file to find the differences between them.
A cached PATCH response is considered stale. It can only be used for the GET and HEAD requests that may follow the PATCH request.
The entity headers in the PATCH document are only applicable to the PATCH document and cannot be applied to the requested resource.
There is no standard format for the PATCH document and it is different for different types of resources. The server has to check whether the PATCH document received is appropriate for the requested resource.
A JSON Patch document would look like


"op" represents the operation performed on the resource. "count" represents the resource being modified. "value" represents the amount being added to the existing resource. Before applying the changes in the PATCH document, the server has to check whether the PATCH document received is appropriate for the requested resource. If the PATCH request succeeds then it returns a 204 response.
A XML PATCH document would look like


ABC Road


The element is located using the 'email' attribute. A new attribute 'address' with the value "ABC Road" is added to the element.

Example

A simple PATCH request example

PATCH /example.txt HTTP/1.1
Host: www.example.com
Content-Type: application/example
: "c0b42b66e"
Content-Length: 120


is the patch document containing all the changes that need to be made on the resource example.txt
Successful PATCH response to existing text file:
HTTP/1.1 204 No Content
Content-Location: /example.txt
ETag: "c0b42b66f"
The response 204 means that the request was processed successfully.

PATCH method for Ruby

The PATCH method is used in Rails 4.0+ in the form of update_attributes method. Apache and Phusion Passenger are some of the web servers that support the PATCH method. The PATCH requests to '/users/:id' route in config/routes.rb are directed to the update action in UserController in Rails 4.0.

Trade-offs between PUT and PATCH

Using the PUT method consumes more bandwidth as compared to the PATCH method when only a few changes need to be applied to a resource. But when the PATCH method is used, it usually involves fetching the resource from the server, comparing the original and new files, creating and sending a diff file. On the server side, the server has to read the diff file and make the modifications. This involves a lot of overhead compared to the PUT method.
On the other hand, the method requires a to be performed before the and it is difficult to ensure that the resource is not modified between the and requests.

Caution

The PATCH method is not "safe" in the sense of RFC 2616: it may modify resources, not necessarily limited to those mentioned in the URI.
The PATCH method is not idempotent. It can be made idempotent by using a conditional request. When a client makes a conditional request to a resource, the request succeeds only if the resource has not been updated since the client last accessed that resource. This also helps in preventing corruption of the resource since some updates to a resource can only be performed starting from a certain base point.

Error handling

A PATCH request can fail if any of the following errors occur:

Malformed patch document

The server returns a 400 response if the PATCH document is not formatted as required.

Unsupported patch document

The server returns a 415 response with an Accept-Patch response header containing supported media types when the client sends an unsupported patch document. This informs the client that the PATCH document sent by the client cannot be applied to the requested resource.

Unprocessable request

The server returns a 422 response when the server understands the PATCH document but is unable to modify the requested resource either because it causes the resource to become invalid or it results in some other error state.

Resource not found

The server returns a 404 response when the PATCH document cannot be applied to a non-existent resource.

Conflicting state

The server returns a 409 response when the server cannot apply a patch for the current state of the resource.

Conflicting modification

The server returns a 412 response when the precondition supplied by the client using the or If-Unmodified-Since header fails. If no precondition is supplied and there is a conflicting modification then the server returns a 409 response.

Concurrent modification

The server returns a 409 response if the PATCH requests to a certain resource need to be applied in a certain order and the server is not able to handle concurrent PATCH requests.

Security considerations

The PATCH request needs to use mechanisms such as conditional requests using Etags and the request header to ensure that data is not corrupted while patching. In case of a failure of a PATCH request or failure of the channel or a timeout, the client can use a request to check the state of the resource. The server has to ensure that malicious clients do not use the PATCH method for consuming excessive server resources.