HTTP request methods - HTTP | MDN (original) (raw)
HTTP defines a set of request methods to indicate the purpose of the request and what is expected if the request is successful. Although they can also be nouns, these request methods are sometimes referred to as HTTP verbs. Each request method has its own semantics, but some characteristics are shared across multiple methods, specifically request methods can be safe, idempotent, or cacheable.
The GET
method requests a representation of the specified resource. Requests using GET
should only retrieve data and should not contain a request content.
The HEAD
method asks for a response identical to a GET
request, but without a response body.
The POST
method submits an entity to the specified resource, often causing a change in state or side effects on the server.
The PUT
method replaces all current representations of the target resource with the request content.
The DELETE
method deletes the specified resource.
The CONNECT
method establishes a tunnel to the server identified by the target resource.
The OPTIONS
method describes the communication options for the target resource.
The TRACE
method performs a message loop-back test along the path to the target resource.
The PATCH
method applies partial modifications to a resource.
Safe, idempotent, and cacheable request methods
The following table lists HTTP request methods and their categorization in terms of safety, cacheability, and idempotency.
Method | Safe | Idempotent | Cacheable |
---|---|---|---|
GET | Yes | Yes | Yes |
HEAD | Yes | Yes | Yes |
OPTIONS | Yes | Yes | No |
TRACE | Yes | Yes | No |
PUT | No | Yes | No |
DELETE | No | Yes | No |
POST | No | No | Conditional* |
PATCH | No | No | Conditional* |
CONNECT | No | No | No |
* POST
and PATCH
are cacheable when responses explicitly include freshness information and a matching Content-Location header.
Specifications
Specification |
---|
HTTP Semantics # PUT |
HTTP Semantics # CONNECT |
HTTP Semantics # DELETE |
HTTP Semantics # OPTIONS |
HTTP Semantics # GET |
HTTP Semantics # HEAD |
HTTP Semantics # POST |