This
page
is
part
of
the
FHIR
Specification
(v5.0.0:
R5
-
STU
).
This
is
the
(v3.5.0:
R4
Ballot
#2).
The
current
published
version.
version
which
supercedes
this
version
is
5.0.0
.
For
a
full
list
of
available
versions,
see
the
Directory
of
published
versions
.
Page
versions:
R5
R4B
R4
R3
R2
FHIR
Infrastructure
Work
Group
|
Maturity
Level
:
|
|
Normative Candidate Note: This page is candidate normative content for R4 in the Infrastructure Package . Once normative, it will lose it's Maturity Level, and breaking changes will no longer be made.
The RESTful API defines a set of common interactions (read, update, search, etc.) performed on a repository of typed resources. These interactions follow the RESTful paradigm of managing state by C reate/ R ead/ U pdate/ D elete actions on a set of identified resources. While this approach solves many use cases, there is some specific functionality that can be met more efficiently using an RPC-like paradigm, where named operations are performed with inputs and outputs ( E xecute).
Operations are appropriately used where:
This specification describes a lightweight operation framework that seamlessly extends the RESTful API. The framework covers both how to execute such an operation (this page) and how to define an operation .
Operations have the following general properties:
Operations
are
executed
using
a
URL
derived
from
the
FHIR
endpoint,
where
the
name
of
the
operation
operations
is
prefixed
by
a
"dollar
sign"
('$')
character.
For
example:
POST http://fhir.someserver.org/fhir/Patient/1/$everything
When
an
operation
has
affectsState
=
false,
and
the
parameters
are
all
primitive
datatypes
data
types
with
no
extensions
(as
is
the
case
with
the
example
above),
it
may
be
invoked
using
GET
as
well.
(Note:
A
HEAD
request
can
also
be
used
-
see
Support
for
HEAD
).
Operations
can
be
invoked
on
three
four
types
of
FHIR
endpoints:
The
body
of
the
invocation
contains
a
special
infrastructure
resource
called
Parameters
,
which
represents
a
collection
of
named
parameters
as
<key,value>
pairs,
where
the
value
may
be
any
primitive
or
complex
datatype
or
even
a
full
Resource.
It
may
also
include
strings
formatted
as
search
parameter
types.
A
FHIR
operation
can
take
a
set
of
zero
or
more
input
parameters;
in
the
case
where
there
is
zero
parameters,
the
resource
may
be
omitted,
and
the
body
will
be
empty
(see
below).
Upon
completion,
the
operation
returns
an
HTTP
status
code
indicating
what
the
outcome
of
performing
the
operation,
and
optionally
another
Parameters
resource,
containing
ne
one
or
more
output
parameters.
If
there
is
This
means
that
a
single
output
parameter
named
'return'
with
FHIR
operation
can
take
a
maximum
cardinality
set
of
1,
with
a
type
corresponding
to
a
resource,
then
the
response
SHALL
be
the
resource
that
is
the
return
value,
with
no
wrapping
Parameters
resource.
If
there
is
zero
output
or
more
parameters
(possibly
because
the
operation
failed),
then
the
resource
can
be
omitted,
in
and
the
body
will
be
empty.
return
a
set
of
zero
or
more
result
parameters
out
.
Both
the
body
of
the
POST
and
the
returned
result
are
always
a
Resource
if
any
body
is
present,
except
in
the
case
that
the
server
supports
multi-part/form-data
(see
below).
Resource.
Operations
may
be
invoked
using
a
GET
,
with
parameters
as
HTTP
URL
parameters,
if:
If there is a single output parameter named 'return' then the response MAY be the resource that is the return value, with no Parameters resource. These kinds of usage are discussed further below.
If
the
response
is
a
Bundle
,
the
correct
Bundle.type
will
typically
be
is
'
collection
',
though
unless
it
could
be
one
of
the
other
types.
For
eample,
if
the
operation
has
search
semantics
,
such
as
matching
resource
counts,
and
page
links
(next
etc.)
then
the
Bundle.type
will
typically
be
'
search-set
'
etc)
.
Executing operations without any parameters is a special case. For an operation that doesn't cause any state change, the operation is invoked in a straight forward fashion:
GET [base]/Composition/example/$document
For operations that call state changes, they must be invoked by a POST. There is no parameters resource in this case because a parameters resource cannot be empty. So the operation is invoked with a POST with an empty body:
POST [base]/Claim/example/$submit Content-Length: 0
See the list of defined operations .
Implementations are able to define their own operations in addition to those defined here. Name clashes between operations defined by different implementers can be resolved by the use of the server's Capability Statement .
Also, the definition of these or additional run time operations does not prevent the use of other kinds of operations that are not dependent on and/or not integrated with the RESTful API, provided that their addressing scheme does not clash with the scheme defined here.
Each Operation is defined by:
For each parameter, the following information is needed:
Parameters may be nested into multi-part parameters. Each part has the same information as a parameter, except for use, which is taken from the parameter it is part of.
The resource Operation Definition is used to provide a computable definition of the Operation.
Implementations
are
able
to
extend
an
operation
by
defining
new
named
parameters.
Implementations
can
publish
their
own
extended
definitions
using
the
Operation
Definition
resource,
and
this
variant
definition
can
use
OperationDefinition.base
to
refer
to
the
underlying
definition.
See
additional
discussion
in
Derived
OperationDefinitions
Note that the FHIR specification will never define any parameter names starting with "x-".
Operations are typically executed synchronously: a client sends a request to a server that includes the operation's in parameters and the server replies with the operation's out parameters.
The URL for an operation end-point depends on its context:
An
operation
is
generally
invoked
by
performing
an
HTTP
POST
to
the
operation's
end-point.
The
submitted
content
is
the
special
Parameters
format
(the
"in"
parameters)
-
a
list
of
named
parameters.
For
an
example,
see
the
value
set
expansion
request
example
.
Note
that
when
parameters
have
a
search
type,
the
search
modifiers
are
available
available,
and
are
used
on
the
parameter
name
in
the
Parameters
resource
(e.g.
"code:in").
Note that the same arrangement as for the RESTful interface applies with respect to content types .
If
all
the
parameters
for
the
operation
are
primitive
types
,
and
the
operation
has
affectsState
=
false
(see
HTTP
specification
definition
of
idempotent
=
false,
),
the
operation
may
be
invoked
by
performing
an
HTTP
GET
operation
where
all
of
the
values
of
the
parameters
are
appended
to
the
URL
in
the
search
portion
of
the
URL
(e.g.
after
the
'?'
character).
Servers
SHALL
support
this
method
of
invocation.
E.g.
GET [base]/ValueSet/$expand?url=http://hl7.org/fhir/ValueSet/body-sit&filter=abdo
When using the HTTP GET operation, if there is a repeating parameter for the extended operation the values for that parameter are repeated by repeating the named parameter. E.g. Observation $stats statistic parameter
GET [base]/Observation/$stats?subject=Patient/123&code=55284-4&system=http://loinc.org&duration=1&statistic=average&statistic=min&statistic=max&statistic=count
If
an
operation
has
If,
when
invoking
the
operation,
there
is
exactly
one
input
parameter
whose
of
type
is
a
FHIR
Resource
and
all
(irrespective
of
whether
other
possible
parameters
a
client
intends
to
submit
are
simple
parameters
,
then
the
client
MAY
invoke
defined),
that
the
operation
via
can
also
be
executed
by
a
POST
with
the
input
that
resource
as
the
request
body
and
additional
parameters
as
query
parameters.
Servers
SHALL
support
this
means
of
invocation
of
the
operation.
request
(and
no
parameters
on
the
url).
Servers
MAY
choose
to
support
submission
of
the
parameters
represented
in
multi-part/form-data
format
as
well,
which
can
be
useful
when
testing
an
operation
using
HTML
forms.
If
an
operation
succeeds,
an
HTTP
Status
success
code
is
returned.
Servers
SHALL
return
the
appropriate
status
code.
This
will
usually
be
a
2xx
code,
though
it
may
also
be
a
303
See
Other.
Other
kinds
of
3xx
codes
should
be
understood
to
indicate
that
the
operation
did
not
proceed,
and
the
client
will
need
to
re-issue
the
operation
if
it
can
perform
the
redirection
(e.g.
may
get
redirected
to
an
authentication
step).
User
agents
should
note
that
servers
may
issue
redirects,
etc.
to
authenticate
the
client
in
response
to
an
operation
request.
An
HTTP
status
code
of
4xx
or
5xx
indicates
an
error,
and
an
OperationOutcome
SHOULD
be
returned
with
details.
In general, an operation response uses the same Parameters format whether there is only one or there are multiple named out parameters.
If
there
is
only
one
out
parameter,
which
is
a
single
Resource
with
the
parameter
name
"return"
then
the
parameter
format
is
not
used,
and
the
response
is
simply
the
resource
itself.
The result of an operation is subject to content negotiation like any other interaction . Specifically, if the returned resource is a Binary, the response SHALL behave in the same manner as if a 'read' operation had been performed on the resource. I.e. The content will be returned as either a FHIR resourse with base64-encoded content or as a raw binary, depending on the Accept header specified when invoking the operation (see Serving Binary Resources using the RESTful API ).
The
resources
that
are
returned
by
the
operation
may
be
retained
and
made
available
in
the
resource
repository
on
the
operation
server.
In
that
case,
the
server
will
provide
the
identity
of
the
resource
in
the
returned
resources.
When
resources
that
are
not
persisted
are
returned
in
the
response,
they
will
have
no
id
property.
Use the standard RESTful API Asynchronous pattern to execute operations asynchronously.