I REST my case
January 21st, 2008 | Published in Architecture, General, REST, SOA | Add to del.icio.us
Mark Baker has hung up his boots on the REST vs SOAP debate. I appreciate his effort in building awareness about the value of REST and convincing people that it provides a solid basis for designing distributed systems. In the same post, Mark also says that, “The war really has been won”. Other REST folks including Stefan Tilkov says more or less the same thing too. I don’t know. In my humble opinion, a few years from now when the systems we design/build today using a RESTful, WS-* (or whatever) approach will show us which approach yields the better result in terms of scalability, extensibility, reliability, interoperability, flexibility, versioning, reusability ..etc. Sure the REST folks would say the web has being there for a while now and it works. But usually there is a human on the other side that drives the interaction. So it remains to be seen whether it will be the same with application-to-application interactions as well.
After all the hype surrounding REST,WS-* etc.. dies out and when people have enough experience building real world applications using both approaches and realizes the advantages and disadvantages of each approach there will be less debate as to which is better, or whether we need both approaches ..etc. The answers to these questions will become more clear to the ordinary folks in time. I for one will have an open mind and is very interested to see the outcome of all of this.
The REST vs SOAP debate has been more emotional/religious and less technical as of late. Several folks burned bridges due to insidious remarks, inflammatory comments and even personal attacks. Irrespective of the technical merits one should be able to tolerate/appreciate differences of opinions and debate in a more disciplined manner than resorting to personal attacks or inflammatory comments. Even if you are the most intelligent person in the world it doesn’t matter if you can’t put forward your technical arguments without degrading your own self by making inflammatory comments or personal attacks.