Http sys error codes

Код ответа (состояния) HTTP показывает, был ли успешно выполнен определённый HTTP запрос. Коды сгруппированы в 5 классов:
Информационные 100 Continue «Продолжить». Этот промежуточный ответ указывает, что запрос успешно
принят и клиент может продолжать присылать запросы либо проигнорировать
этот ответ, если запрос был завершён. Только HTTP/1.1 101 Switching Protocol «Переключение протокола». Этот код присылается в ответ на запрос
клиента, содержащий заголовок Upgrade:, и указывает, что
сервер переключился на протокол, который был указан в заголовке. Эта
возможность позволяет перейти на несовместимую версию протокола и обычно
не используется. Только HTTP/1.1 102 Processing «В обработке». Этот код указывает, что сервер получил запрос и
обрабатывает его, но обработка ещё не завершена. Только HTTP/1.1 103 Early Hints «Ранние подсказки». В ответе сообщаются ресурсы, которые могут быть
загружены заранее, пока сервер будет подготавливать основной ответ.
RFC 8297 (Experimental). Только HTTP/1.1 Успешные 200

OK

«Успешно». Запрос успешно обработан. Что значит «успешно», зависит от
метода HTTP, который был запрошен:

  • GET: «ПОЛУЧИТЬ». Запрошенный ресурс был найден и передан в теле
    ответа.
  • HEAD: «ЗАГОЛОВОК». Заголовки переданы в ответе.
  • POST: «ПОСЫЛКА». Ресурс, описывающий результат действия сервера на
    запрос, передан в теле ответа.
  • TRACE: «ОТСЛЕЖИВАТЬ». Тело ответа содержит тело запроса полученного
    сервером.
HTTP/0.9 и выше 201 Created «Создано». Запрос успешно выполнен и в результате был создан ресурс.
Этот код обычно присылается в ответ на запрос PUT «ПОМЕСТИТЬ». HTTP/0.9 и выше 202 Accepted «Принято». Запрос принят, но ещё не обработан. Не поддерживаемо, т.е.,
нет способа с помощью HTTP отправить асинхронный ответ позже, который
будет показывать итог обработки запроса. Это предназначено для случаев,
когда запрос обрабатывается другим процессом или сервером, либо для
пакетной обработки. HTTP/0.9 и выше 203 Non-Authoritative Information «Информация не авторитетна». Этот код ответа означает, что информация,
которая возвращена, была предоставлена не от исходного сервера, а из
какого-нибудь другого источника. Во всех остальных ситуациях более
предпочтителен код ответа 200 OK. HTTP/0.9 и 1.1 204 No Content «Нет содержимого». Нет содержимого для ответа на запрос, но заголовки
ответа, которые могут быть полезны, присылаются. Клиент может
использовать их для обновления кешированных заголовков полученных ранее
для этого ресурса. HTTP/0.9 и выше 205 Reset Content «Сбросить содержимое». Этот код присылается, когда запрос обработан,
чтобы сообщить клиенту, что необходимо сбросить отображение документа,
который прислал этот запрос. Только HTTP/1.1 206 Partial Content «Частичное содержимое». Этот код ответа используется, когда клиент
присылает заголовок диапазона, чтобы выполнить загрузку отдельно, в
несколько потоков. Только HTTP/1.1 Сообщения о перенаправлениях 300 Multiple Choice

«Множественный выбор». Этот код ответа присылается, когда запрос имеет
более чем один из возможных ответов. И User-agent или пользователь
должен выбрать один из ответов. Не существует стандартизированного
способа выбора одного из полученных ответов.

HTTP/1.0 и выше 301 Moved Permanently

«Перемещён на постоянной основе». Этот код ответа значит, что URI
запрашиваемого ресурса был изменён. Возможно, новый URI будет
предоставлен в ответе.

HTTP/0.9 и выше 302 Found

«Найдено». Этот код ответа значит, что запрошенный ресурс
временно изменён. Новые изменения в URI могут быть доступны в
будущем. Таким образом, этот URI, должен быть использован клиентом в
будущих запросах.

HTTP/0.9 и выше 303 See Other «Просмотр других ресурсов». Этот код ответа присылается, чтобы
направлять клиента для получения запрашиваемого ресурса в другой URI с
запросом GET. HTTP/0.9 и 1.1 304 Not Modified «Не модифицировано». Используется для кеширования. Это код ответа
значит, что запрошенный ресурс не был изменён. Таким образом, клиент
может продолжать использовать кешированную версию ответа. HTTP/0.9 и выше 305 Use Proxy «Использовать прокси». Это означает, что запрошенный ресурс должен быть
доступен через прокси. Этот код ответа в основном не поддерживается из
соображений безопасности. Только HTTP/1.1 306 Switch Proxy Больше не использовать. Изначально подразумевалось, что » последующие
запросы должны использовать указанный прокси.» Только HTTP/1.1 307 Temporary Redirect «Временное перенаправление». Сервер отправил этот ответ, чтобы клиент
получил запрошенный ресурс на другой URL-адрес с тем же методом, который
использовал предыдущий запрос. Данный код имеет ту же семантику, что код
ответа 302 Found, за исключением того, что агент
пользователя не должен изменять используемый метод HTTP: если в первом
запросе использовался POST, то во втором запросе также
должен использоваться POST. Только HTTP/1.1 308 Permanent Redirect

«Перенаправление на постоянной основе». Это означает, что ресурс
теперь постоянно находится в другом URI, указанном в заголовке
Location: HTTP Response. Данный код ответа имеет ту же
семантику, что и код ответа 301 Moved Permanently, за
исключением того, что агент пользователя не должен изменять
используемый метод HTTP: если POST использовался в первом
запросе, POST должен использоваться и во втором запросе.

Примечание: Это экспериментальный код ответа,
Спецификация которого в настоящее время находится в черновом виде.

draft-reschke-http-status-308 Клиентские 400 Bad Request «Плохой запрос». Этот ответ означает, что сервер не понимает запрос
из-за неверного синтаксиса. HTTP/0.9 и выше 401 Unauthorized «Неавторизованно». Для получения запрашиваемого ответа нужна
аутентификация. Статус похож на статус 403, но,в этом случае,
аутентификация возможна. HTTP/0.9 и выше 402 Payment Required «Необходима оплата». Этот код ответа зарезервирован для будущего
использования. Первоначальная цель для создания этого кода была в
использовании его для цифровых платёжных систем(на данный момент не
используется). HTTP/0.9 и 1.1 403 Forbidden «Запрещено». У клиента нет прав доступа к содержимому, поэтому сервер
отказывается дать надлежащий ответ. HTTP/0.9 и выше 404 Not Found «Не найден». Сервер не может найти запрашиваемый ресурс. Код этого
ответа, наверно, самый известный из-за частоты его появления в вебе. HTTP/0.9 и выше 405 Method Not Allowed «Метод не разрешён». Сервер знает о запрашиваемом методе, но он был
деактивирован и не может быть использован. Два обязательных метода,
GET и HEAD, никогда не должны быть
деактивированы и не должны возвращать этот код ошибки. Только HTTP/1.1 406 Not Acceptable

Этот ответ отсылается, когда веб сервер после выполнения
server-driven content negotiation, не нашёл контента, отвечающего критериям, полученным из user agent.

Только HTTP/1.1 407 Proxy Authentication Required Этот код ответа аналогичен коду 401, только аутентификация требуется для
прокси сервера. Только HTTP/1.1 408 Request Timeout Ответ с таким кодом может прийти, даже без предшествующего запроса. Он
означает, что сервер хотел бы отключить это неиспользуемое соединение.
Этот метод используется все чаще с тех пор, как некоторые браузеры,
вроде Chrome и IE9, стали использовать
HTTP механизмы предварительного соединения
для ускорения сёрфинга (смотрите баг 634278, будущей
реализации этого механизма в Firefox). Также учитывайте, что некоторые
серверы прерывают соединения не отправляя подобных сообщений. Только HTTP/1.1 409 Conflict

Этот ответ отсылается, когда запрос конфликтует с текущим состоянием
сервера.

Только HTTP/1.1 410 Gone

Этот ответ отсылается, когда запрашиваемый контент удалён с сервера.

Только HTTP/1.1 411 Length Required

Запрос отклонён, потому что сервер требует указание заголовка
Content-Length, но он не указан.

Только HTTP/1.1 412 Precondition Failed Клиент указал в своих заголовках условия, которые сервер не может
выполнить Только HTTP/1.1 413 Request Entity Too Large

Размер запроса превышает лимит, объявленный сервером. Сервер может
закрыть соединение, вернув заголовок Retry-After

Только HTTP/1.1 414 Request-URI Too Long URI запрашиваемый клиентом слишком длинный для того, чтобы сервер смог
его обработать Только HTTP/1.1 415 Unsupported Media Type Медиа формат запрашиваемых данных не поддерживается сервером, поэтому
запрос отклонён Только HTTP/1.1 416 Requested Range Not Satisfiable Диапазон указанный заголовком запроса Range не может быть
выполнен; возможно, он выходит за пределы переданного URI Только HTTP/1.1 417 Expectation Failed Этот код ответа означает, что ожидание, полученное из заголовка запроса
Expect, не может быть выполнено сервером. Только HTTP/1.1 Серверные 500 Internal Server Error «Внутренняя ошибка сервера». Сервер столкнулся с ситуацией, которую он
не знает как обработать. HTTP/0.9 и выше 501 Not Implemented «Не реализовано». Метод запроса не поддерживается сервером и не может быть
обработан. Единственные методы, которые сервера должны поддерживать (и,
соответственно, не должны возвращать этот код) — GET и
HEAD. HTTP/0.9 и выше 502 Bad Gateway «Плохой шлюз». Эта ошибка означает что сервер, во время работы в
качестве шлюза для получения ответа, нужного для обработки запроса,
получил недействительный (недопустимый) ответ. HTTP/0.9 и выше 503 Service Unavailable «Сервис недоступен». Сервер не готов обрабатывать запрос. Зачастую
причинами являются отключение сервера или то, что он перегружен.
Обратите внимание, что вместе с этим ответом удобная для
пользователей(user-friendly) страница должна отправлять объяснение
проблемы. Этот ответ должен использоваться для временных условий и
Retry-After: HTTP-заголовок должен, если возможно,
содержать предполагаемое время до восстановления сервиса. Веб-мастер
также должен позаботиться о заголовках, связанных с кешем, которые
отправляются вместе с этим ответом, так как эти ответы, связанные с
временными условиями, обычно не должны кешироваться. HTTP/0.9 и выше 504 Gateway Timeout Этот ответ об ошибке предоставляется, когда сервер действует как шлюз и
не может получить ответ вовремя. Только HTTP/1.1 505 HTTP Version Not Supported «HTTP-версия не поддерживается». HTTP-версия, используемая в запросе, не
поддерживается сервером. Только HTTP/1.1

Page semi-protected

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) response status codes. Status codes are issued by a server in response to a client’s request made to the server. It includes codes from IETF Request for Comments (RFCs), other specifications, and some additional codes used in some common applications of the HTTP. The first digit of the status code specifies one of five standard classes of responses. The optional message phrases shown are typical, but any human-readable alternative may be provided, or none at all.

Unless otherwise stated, the status code is part of the HTTP standard (RFC 9110).

The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) maintains the official registry of HTTP status codes.[1]

All HTTP response status codes are separated into five classes or categories. The first digit of the status code defines the class of response, while the last two digits do not have any classifying or categorization role. There are five classes defined by the standard:

  • 1xx informational response – the request was received, continuing process
  • 2xx successful – the request was successfully received, understood, and accepted
  • 3xx redirection – further action needs to be taken in order to complete the request
  • 4xx client error – the request contains bad syntax or cannot be fulfilled
  • 5xx server error – the server failed to fulfil an apparently valid request

1xx informational response

An informational response indicates that the request was received and understood. It is issued on a provisional basis while request processing continues. It alerts the client to wait for a final response. The message consists only of the status line and optional header fields, and is terminated by an empty line. As the HTTP/1.0 standard did not define any 1xx status codes, servers must not[note 1] send a 1xx response to an HTTP/1.0 compliant client except under experimental conditions.

100 Continue
The server has received the request headers and the client should proceed to send the request body (in the case of a request for which a body needs to be sent; for example, a POST request). Sending a large request body to a server after a request has been rejected for inappropriate headers would be inefficient. To have a server check the request’s headers, a client must send Expect: 100-continue as a header in its initial request and receive a 100 Continue status code in response before sending the body. If the client receives an error code such as 403 (Forbidden) or 405 (Method Not Allowed) then it should not send the request’s body. The response 417 Expectation Failed indicates that the request should be repeated without the Expect header as it indicates that the server does not support expectations (this is the case, for example, of HTTP/1.0 servers).[2]
101 Switching Protocols
The requester has asked the server to switch protocols and the server has agreed to do so.
102 Processing (WebDAV; RFC 2518)
A WebDAV request may contain many sub-requests involving file operations, requiring a long time to complete the request. This code indicates that the server has received and is processing the request, but no response is available yet.[3] This prevents the client from timing out and assuming the request was lost.
103 Early Hints (RFC 8297)
Used to return some response headers before final HTTP message.[4]

2xx success

This class of status codes indicates the action requested by the client was received, understood, and accepted.[1]

200 OK
Standard response for successful HTTP requests. The actual response will depend on the request method used. In a GET request, the response will contain an entity corresponding to the requested resource. In a POST request, the response will contain an entity describing or containing the result of the action.
201 Created
The request has been fulfilled, resulting in the creation of a new resource.[5]
202 Accepted
The request has been accepted for processing, but the processing has not been completed. The request might or might not be eventually acted upon, and may be disallowed when processing occurs.
203 Non-Authoritative Information (since HTTP/1.1)
The server is a transforming proxy (e.g. a Web accelerator) that received a 200 OK from its origin, but is returning a modified version of the origin’s response.[6][7]
204 No Content
The server successfully processed the request, and is not returning any content.
205 Reset Content
The server successfully processed the request, asks that the requester reset its document view, and is not returning any content.
206 Partial Content
The server is delivering only part of the resource (byte serving) due to a range header sent by the client. The range header is used by HTTP clients to enable resuming of interrupted downloads, or split a download into multiple simultaneous streams.
207 Multi-Status (WebDAV; RFC 4918)
The message body that follows is by default an XML message and can contain a number of separate response codes, depending on how many sub-requests were made.[8]
208 Already Reported (WebDAV; RFC 5842)
The members of a DAV binding have already been enumerated in a preceding part of the (multistatus) response, and are not being included again.
226 IM Used (RFC 3229)
The server has fulfilled a request for the resource, and the response is a representation of the result of one or more instance-manipulations applied to the current instance.[9]

3xx redirection

This class of status code indicates the client must take additional action to complete the request. Many of these status codes are used in URL redirection.[1]

A user agent may carry out the additional action with no user interaction only if the method used in the second request is GET or HEAD. A user agent may automatically redirect a request. A user agent should detect and intervene to prevent cyclical redirects.[10]

300 Multiple Choices
Indicates multiple options for the resource from which the client may choose (via agent-driven content negotiation). For example, this code could be used to present multiple video format options, to list files with different filename extensions, or to suggest word-sense disambiguation.
301 Moved Permanently
This and all future requests should be directed to the given URI.
302 Found (Previously «Moved temporarily»)
Tells the client to look at (browse to) another URL. The HTTP/1.0 specification (RFC 1945) required the client to perform a temporary redirect with the same method (the original describing phrase was «Moved Temporarily»),[11] but popular browsers implemented 302 redirects by changing the method to GET. Therefore, HTTP/1.1 added status codes 303 and 307 to distinguish between the two behaviours.[10]
303 See Other (since HTTP/1.1)
The response to the request can be found under another URI using the GET method. When received in response to a POST (or PUT/DELETE), the client should presume that the server has received the data and should issue a new GET request to the given URI.
304 Not Modified
Indicates that the resource has not been modified since the version specified by the request headers If-Modified-Since or If-None-Match. In such case, there is no need to retransmit the resource since the client still has a previously-downloaded copy.
305 Use Proxy (since HTTP/1.1)
The requested resource is available only through a proxy, the address for which is provided in the response. For security reasons, many HTTP clients (such as Mozilla Firefox and Internet Explorer) do not obey this status code.
306 Switch Proxy
No longer used. Originally meant «Subsequent requests should use the specified proxy.»
307 Temporary Redirect (since HTTP/1.1)
In this case, the request should be repeated with another URI; however, future requests should still use the original URI. In contrast to how 302 was historically implemented, the request method is not allowed to be changed when reissuing the original request. For example, a POST request should be repeated using another POST request.
308 Permanent Redirect
This and all future requests should be directed to the given URI. 308 parallel the behaviour of 301, but does not allow the HTTP method to change. So, for example, submitting a form to a permanently redirected resource may continue smoothly.

4xx client errors

A The Wikimedia 404 message

This class of status code is intended for situations in which the error seems to have been caused by the client. Except when responding to a HEAD request, the server should include an entity containing an explanation of the error situation, and whether it is a temporary or permanent condition. These status codes are applicable to any request method. User agents should display any included entity to the user.

400 Bad Request
The server cannot or will not process the request due to an apparent client error (e.g., malformed request syntax, size too large, invalid request message framing, or deceptive request routing).
401 Unauthorized
Similar to 403 Forbidden, but specifically for use when authentication is required and has failed or has not yet been provided. The response must include a WWW-Authenticate header field containing a challenge applicable to the requested resource. See Basic access authentication and Digest access authentication. 401 semantically means «unauthorised», the user does not have valid authentication credentials for the target resource.
Some sites incorrectly issue HTTP 401 when an IP address is banned from the website (usually the website domain) and that specific address is refused permission to access a website.[citation needed]
402 Payment Required
Reserved for future use. The original intention was that this code might be used as part of some form of digital cash or micropayment scheme, as proposed, for example, by GNU Taler,[13] but that has not yet happened, and this code is not widely used. Google Developers API uses this status if a particular developer has exceeded the daily limit on requests.[14] Sipgate uses this code if an account does not have sufficient funds to start a call.[15] Shopify uses this code when the store has not paid their fees and is temporarily disabled.[16] Stripe uses this code for failed payments where parameters were correct, for example blocked fraudulent payments.[17]
403 Forbidden
The request contained valid data and was understood by the server, but the server is refusing action. This may be due to the user not having the necessary permissions for a resource or needing an account of some sort, or attempting a prohibited action (e.g. creating a duplicate record where only one is allowed). This code is also typically used if the request provided authentication by answering the WWW-Authenticate header field challenge, but the server did not accept that authentication. The request should not be repeated.
404 Not Found
The requested resource could not be found but may be available in the future. Subsequent requests by the client are permissible.
405 Method Not Allowed
A request method is not supported for the requested resource; for example, a GET request on a form that requires data to be presented via POST, or a PUT request on a read-only resource.
406 Not Acceptable
The requested resource is capable of generating only content not acceptable according to the Accept headers sent in the request. See Content negotiation.
407 Proxy Authentication Required
The client must first authenticate itself with the proxy.
408 Request Timeout
The server timed out waiting for the request. According to HTTP specifications: «The client did not produce a request within the time that the server was prepared to wait. The client MAY repeat the request without modifications at any later time.»
409 Conflict
Indicates that the request could not be processed because of conflict in the current state of the resource, such as an edit conflict between multiple simultaneous updates.
410 Gone
Indicates that the resource requested was previously in use but is no longer available and will not be available again. This should be used when a resource has been intentionally removed and the resource should be purged. Upon receiving a 410 status code, the client should not request the resource in the future. Clients such as search engines should remove the resource from their indices. Most use cases do not require clients and search engines to purge the resource, and a «404 Not Found» may be used instead.
411 Length Required
The request did not specify the length of its content, which is required by the requested resource.
412 Precondition Failed
The server does not meet one of the preconditions that the requester put on the request header fields.
413 Payload Too Large
The request is larger than the server is willing or able to process. Previously called «Request Entity Too Large» in RFC 2616.[18]
414 URI Too Long
The URI provided was too long for the server to process. Often the result of too much data being encoded as a query-string of a GET request, in which case it should be converted to a POST request. Called «Request-URI Too Long» previously in RFC 2616.[19]
415 Unsupported Media Type
The request entity has a media type which the server or resource does not support. For example, the client uploads an image as image/svg+xml, but the server requires that images use a different format.
416 Range Not Satisfiable
The client has asked for a portion of the file (byte serving), but the server cannot supply that portion. For example, if the client asked for a part of the file that lies beyond the end of the file. Called «Requested Range Not Satisfiable» previously RFC 2616.[20]
417 Expectation Failed
The server cannot meet the requirements of the Expect request-header field.[21]
418 I’m a teapot (RFC 2324, RFC 7168)
This code was defined in 1998 as one of the traditional IETF April Fools’ jokes, in RFC 2324, Hyper Text Coffee Pot Control Protocol, and is not expected to be implemented by actual HTTP servers. The RFC specifies this code should be returned by teapots requested to brew coffee.[22] This HTTP status is used as an Easter egg in some websites, such as Google.com’s «I’m a teapot» easter egg.[23][24][25] Sometimes, this status code is also used as a response to a blocked request, instead of the more appropriate 403 Forbidden.[26][27]
421 Misdirected Request
The request was directed at a server that is not able to produce a response (for example because of connection reuse).
422 Unprocessable Entity
The request was well-formed but was unable to be followed due to semantic errors.[8]
423 Locked (WebDAV; RFC 4918)
The resource that is being accessed is locked.[8]
424 Failed Dependency (WebDAV; RFC 4918)
The request failed because it depended on another request and that request failed (e.g., a PROPPATCH).[8]
425 Too Early (RFC 8470)
Indicates that the server is unwilling to risk processing a request that might be replayed.
426 Upgrade Required
The client should switch to a different protocol such as TLS/1.3, given in the Upgrade header field.
428 Precondition Required (RFC 6585)
The origin server requires the request to be conditional. Intended to prevent the ‘lost update’ problem, where a client GETs a resource’s state, modifies it, and PUTs it back to the server, when meanwhile a third party has modified the state on the server, leading to a conflict.[28]
429 Too Many Requests (RFC 6585)
The user has sent too many requests in a given amount of time. Intended for use with rate-limiting schemes.[28]
431 Request Header Fields Too Large (RFC 6585)
The server is unwilling to process the request because either an individual header field, or all the header fields collectively, are too large.[28]
451 Unavailable For Legal Reasons (RFC 7725)
A server operator has received a legal demand to deny access to a resource or to a set of resources that includes the requested resource.[29] The code 451 was chosen as a reference to the novel Fahrenheit 451 (see the Acknowledgements in the RFC).

5xx server errors

The server failed to fulfil a request.

Response status codes beginning with the digit «5» indicate cases in which the server is aware that it has encountered an error or is otherwise incapable of performing the request. Except when responding to a HEAD request, the server should include an entity containing an explanation of the error situation, and indicate whether it is a temporary or permanent condition. Likewise, user agents should display any included entity to the user. These response codes are applicable to any request method.

500 Internal Server Error
A generic error message, given when an unexpected condition was encountered and no more specific message is suitable.
501 Not Implemented
The server either does not recognize the request method, or it lacks the ability to fulfil the request. Usually this implies future availability (e.g., a new feature of a web-service API).
502 Bad Gateway
The server was acting as a gateway or proxy and received an invalid response from the upstream server.
503 Service Unavailable
The server cannot handle the request (because it is overloaded or down for maintenance). Generally, this is a temporary state.[30]
504 Gateway Timeout
The server was acting as a gateway or proxy and did not receive a timely response from the upstream server.
505 HTTP Version Not Supported
The server does not support the HTTP version used in the request.
506 Variant Also Negotiates (RFC 2295)
Transparent content negotiation for the request results in a circular reference.[31]
507 Insufficient Storage (WebDAV; RFC 4918)
The server is unable to store the representation needed to complete the request.[8]
508 Loop Detected (WebDAV; RFC 5842)
The server detected an infinite loop while processing the request (sent instead of 208 Already Reported).
510 Not Extended (RFC 2774)
Further extensions to the request are required for the server to fulfill it.[32]
511 Network Authentication Required (RFC 6585)
The client needs to authenticate to gain network access. Intended for use by intercepting proxies used to control access to the network (e.g., «captive portals» used to require agreement to Terms of Service before granting full Internet access via a Wi-Fi hotspot).[28]

Unofficial codes

The following codes are not specified by any standard.

419 Page Expired (Laravel Framework)
Used by the Laravel Framework when a CSRF Token is missing or expired.
420 Method Failure (Spring Framework)
A deprecated response used by the Spring Framework when a method has failed.[33]
420 Enhance Your Calm (Twitter)
Returned by version 1 of the Twitter Search and Trends API when the client is being rate limited; versions 1.1 and later use the 429 Too Many Requests response code instead.[34] The phrase «Enhance your calm» comes from the 1993 movie Demolition Man, and its association with this number is likely a reference to cannabis.[citation needed]
430 Request Header Fields Too Large (Shopify)
Used by Shopify, instead of the 429 Too Many Requests response code, when too many URLs are requested within a certain time frame.[35]
450 Blocked by Windows Parental Controls (Microsoft)
The Microsoft extension code indicated when Windows Parental Controls are turned on and are blocking access to the requested webpage.[36]
498 Invalid Token (Esri)
Returned by ArcGIS for Server. Code 498 indicates an expired or otherwise invalid token.[37]
499 Token Required (Esri)
Returned by ArcGIS for Server. Code 499 indicates that a token is required but was not submitted.[37]
509 Bandwidth Limit Exceeded (Apache Web Server/cPanel)
The server has exceeded the bandwidth specified by the server administrator; this is often used by shared hosting providers to limit the bandwidth of customers.[38]
529 Site is overloaded
Used by Qualys in the SSLLabs server testing API to signal that the site can’t process the request.[39]
530 Site is frozen
Used by the Pantheon Systems web platform to indicate a site that has been frozen due to inactivity.[40]
598 (Informal convention) Network read timeout error
Used by some HTTP proxies to signal a network read timeout behind the proxy to a client in front of the proxy.[41]
599 Network Connect Timeout Error
An error used by some HTTP proxies to signal a network connect timeout behind the proxy to a client in front of the proxy.

Internet Information Services

Microsoft’s Internet Information Services (IIS) web server expands the 4xx error space to signal errors with the client’s request.

440 Login Time-out
The client’s session has expired and must log in again.[42]
449 Retry With
The server cannot honour the request because the user has not provided the required information.[43]
451 Redirect
Used in Exchange ActiveSync when either a more efficient server is available or the server cannot access the users’ mailbox.[44] The client is expected to re-run the HTTP AutoDiscover operation to find a more appropriate server.[45]

IIS sometimes uses additional decimal sub-codes for more specific information,[46] however these sub-codes only appear in the response payload and in documentation, not in the place of an actual HTTP status code.

nginx

The nginx web server software expands the 4xx error space to signal issues with the client’s request.[47][48]

444 No Response
Used internally[49] to instruct the server to return no information to the client and close the connection immediately.
494 Request header too large
Client sent too large request or too long header line.
495 SSL Certificate Error
An expansion of the 400 Bad Request response code, used when the client has provided an invalid client certificate.
496 SSL Certificate Required
An expansion of the 400 Bad Request response code, used when a client certificate is required but not provided.
497 HTTP Request Sent to HTTPS Port
An expansion of the 400 Bad Request response code, used when the client has made a HTTP request to a port listening for HTTPS requests.
499 Client Closed Request
Used when the client has closed the request before the server could send a response.

Cloudflare

Cloudflare’s reverse proxy service expands the 5xx series of errors space to signal issues with the origin server.[50]

520 Web Server Returned an Unknown Error
The origin server returned an empty, unknown, or unexpected response to Cloudflare.[51]
521 Web Server Is Down
The origin server refused connections from Cloudflare. Security solutions at the origin may be blocking legitimate connections from certain Cloudflare IP addresses.
522 Connection Timed Out
Cloudflare timed out contacting the origin server.
523 Origin Is Unreachable
Cloudflare could not reach the origin server; for example, if the DNS records for the origin server are incorrect or missing.
524 A Timeout Occurred
Cloudflare was able to complete a TCP connection to the origin server, but did not receive a timely HTTP response.
525 SSL Handshake Failed
Cloudflare could not negotiate a SSL/TLS handshake with the origin server.
526 Invalid SSL Certificate
Cloudflare could not validate the SSL certificate on the origin web server. Also used by Cloud Foundry’s gorouter.
527 Railgun Error
Error 527 indicates an interrupted connection between Cloudflare and the origin server’s Railgun server.[52]
530
Error 530 is returned along with a 1xxx error.[53]

AWS Elastic Load Balancer

Amazon’s Elastic Load Balancing adds a few custom return codes

460
Client closed the connection with the load balancer before the idle timeout period elapsed. Typically when client timeout is sooner than the Elastic Load Balancer’s timeout.[54]
463
The load balancer received an X-Forwarded-For request header with more than 30 IP addresses.[54]
561 Unauthorized
An error around authentication returned by a server registered with a load balancer. You configured a listener rule to authenticate users, but the identity provider (IdP) returned an error code when authenticating the user.[55]

Caching warning codes (obsoleted)

The following caching related warning codes were specified under RFC 7234. Unlike the other status codes above, these were not sent as the response status in the HTTP protocol, but as part of the «Warning» HTTP header.[56][57]

Since this «Warning» header is often neither sent by servers nor acknowledged by clients, this header and its codes were obsoleted by the HTTP Working Group in 2022 with RFC 9111.[58]

110 Response is Stale
The response provided by a cache is stale (the content’s age exceeds a maximum age set by a Cache-Control header or heuristically chosen lifetime).
111 Revalidation Failed
The cache was unable to validate the response, due to an inability to reach the origin server.
112 Disconnected Operation
The cache is intentionally disconnected from the rest of the network.
113 Heuristic Expiration
The cache heuristically chose a freshness lifetime greater than 24 hours and the response’s age is greater than 24 hours.
199 Miscellaneous Warning
Arbitrary, non-specific warning. The warning text may be logged or presented to the user.
214 Transformation Applied
Added by a proxy if it applies any transformation to the representation, such as changing the content encoding, media type or the like.
299 Miscellaneous Persistent Warning
Same as 199, but indicating a persistent warning.

See also

  • Custom error pages
  • List of FTP server return codes
  • List of HTTP header fields
  • List of SMTP server return codes
  • Common Log Format

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ Emphasised words and phrases such as must and should represent interpretation guidelines as given by RFC 2119

References

  1. ^ a b c «Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) Status Code Registry». Iana.org. Archived from the original on December 11, 2011. Retrieved January 8, 2015.
  2. ^ «RFC 9110: HTTP Semantics and Content, Section 10.1.1 «Expect»«.
  3. ^ Goland, Yaronn; Whitehead, Jim; Faizi, Asad; Carter, Steve R.; Jensen, Del (February 1999). HTTP Extensions for Distributed Authoring – WEBDAV. IETF. doi:10.17487/RFC2518. RFC 2518. Retrieved October 24, 2009.
  4. ^ Oku, Kazuho (December 2017). An HTTP Status Code for Indicating Hints. IETF. doi:10.17487/RFC8297. RFC 8297. Retrieved December 20, 2017.
  5. ^ Stewart, Mark; djna. «Create request with POST, which response codes 200 or 201 and content». Stack Overflow. Archived from the original on October 11, 2016. Retrieved October 16, 2015.
  6. ^ «RFC 9110: HTTP Semantics and Content, Section 15.3.4».
  7. ^ «RFC 9110: HTTP Semantics and Content, Section 7.7».
  8. ^ a b c d e Dusseault, Lisa, ed. (June 2007). HTTP Extensions for Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning (WebDAV). IETF. doi:10.17487/RFC4918. RFC 4918. Retrieved October 24, 2009.
  9. ^ Delta encoding in HTTP. IETF. January 2002. doi:10.17487/RFC3229. RFC 3229. Retrieved February 25, 2011.
  10. ^ a b «RFC 9110: HTTP Semantics and Content, Section 15.4 «Redirection 3xx»«.
  11. ^ Berners-Lee, Tim; Fielding, Roy T.; Nielsen, Henrik Frystyk (May 1996). Hypertext Transfer Protocol – HTTP/1.0. IETF. doi:10.17487/RFC1945. RFC 1945. Retrieved October 24, 2009.
  12. ^ «The GNU Taler tutorial for PHP Web shop developers 0.4.0». docs.taler.net. Archived from the original on November 8, 2017. Retrieved October 29, 2017.
  13. ^ «Google API Standard Error Responses». 2016. Archived from the original on May 25, 2017. Retrieved June 21, 2017.
  14. ^ «Sipgate API Documentation». Archived from the original on July 10, 2018. Retrieved July 10, 2018.
  15. ^ «Shopify Documentation». Archived from the original on July 25, 2018. Retrieved July 25, 2018.
  16. ^ «Stripe API Reference – Errors». stripe.com. Retrieved October 28, 2019.
  17. ^ «RFC2616 on status 413». Tools.ietf.org. Archived from the original on March 7, 2011. Retrieved November 11, 2015.
  18. ^ «RFC2616 on status 414». Tools.ietf.org. Archived from the original on March 7, 2011. Retrieved November 11, 2015.
  19. ^ «RFC2616 on status 416». Tools.ietf.org. Archived from the original on March 7, 2011. Retrieved November 11, 2015.
  20. ^ TheDeadLike. «HTTP/1.1 Status Codes 400 and 417, cannot choose which». serverFault. Archived from the original on October 10, 2015. Retrieved October 16, 2015.
  21. ^ Larry Masinter (April 1, 1998). Hyper Text Coffee Pot Control Protocol (HTCPCP/1.0). doi:10.17487/RFC2324. RFC 2324. Any attempt to brew coffee with a teapot should result in the error code «418 I’m a teapot». The resulting entity body MAY be short and stout.
  22. ^ I’m a teapot
  23. ^ Barry Schwartz (August 26, 2014). «New Google Easter Egg For SEO Geeks: Server Status 418, I’m A Teapot». Search Engine Land. Archived from the original on November 15, 2015. Retrieved November 4, 2015.
  24. ^ «Google’s Teapot». Retrieved October 23, 2017.[dead link]
  25. ^ «Enable extra web security on a website». DreamHost. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
  26. ^ «I Went to a Russian Website and All I Got Was This Lousy Teapot». PCMag. Retrieved December 18, 2022.
  27. ^ a b c d Nottingham, M.; Fielding, R. (April 2012). «RFC 6585 – Additional HTTP Status Codes». Request for Comments. Internet Engineering Task Force. Archived from the original on May 4, 2012. Retrieved May 1, 2012.
  28. ^ Bray, T. (February 2016). «An HTTP Status Code to Report Legal Obstacles». ietf.org. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved March 7, 2015.
  29. ^ alex. «What is the correct HTTP status code to send when a site is down for maintenance?». Stack Overflow. Archived from the original on October 11, 2016. Retrieved October 16, 2015.
  30. ^ Holtman, Koen; Mutz, Andrew H. (March 1998). Transparent Content Negotiation in HTTP. IETF. doi:10.17487/RFC2295. RFC 2295. Retrieved October 24, 2009.
  31. ^ Nielsen, Henrik Frystyk; Leach, Paul; Lawrence, Scott (February 2000). An HTTP Extension Framework. IETF. doi:10.17487/RFC2774. RFC 2774. Retrieved October 24, 2009.
  32. ^ «Enum HttpStatus». Spring Framework. org.springframework.http. Archived from the original on October 25, 2015. Retrieved October 16, 2015.
  33. ^ «Twitter Error Codes & Responses». Twitter. 2014. Archived from the original on September 27, 2017. Retrieved January 20, 2014.
  34. ^ «HTTP Status Codes and SEO: what you need to know». ContentKing. Retrieved August 9, 2019.
  35. ^ «Screenshot of error page». Archived from the original (bmp) on May 11, 2013. Retrieved October 11, 2009.
  36. ^ a b «Using token-based authentication». ArcGIS Server SOAP SDK. Archived from the original on September 26, 2014. Retrieved September 8, 2014.
  37. ^ «HTTP Error Codes and Quick Fixes». Docs.cpanel.net. Archived from the original on November 23, 2015. Retrieved October 15, 2015.
  38. ^ «SSL Labs API v3 Documentation». github.com.
  39. ^ «Platform Considerations | Pantheon Docs». pantheon.io. Archived from the original on January 6, 2017. Retrieved January 5, 2017.
  40. ^ «HTTP status codes — ascii-code.com». www.ascii-code.com. Archived from the original on January 7, 2017. Retrieved December 23, 2016.
  41. ^
    «Error message when you try to log on to Exchange 2007 by using Outlook Web Access: «440 Login Time-out»«. Microsoft. 2010. Retrieved November 13, 2013.
  42. ^ «2.2.6 449 Retry With Status Code». Microsoft. 2009. Archived from the original on October 5, 2009. Retrieved October 26, 2009.
  43. ^ «MS-ASCMD, Section 3.1.5.2.2». Msdn.microsoft.com. Archived from the original on March 26, 2015. Retrieved January 8, 2015.
  44. ^ «Ms-oxdisco». Msdn.microsoft.com. Archived from the original on July 31, 2014. Retrieved January 8, 2015.
  45. ^ «The HTTP status codes in IIS 7.0». Microsoft. July 14, 2009. Archived from the original on April 9, 2009. Retrieved April 1, 2009.
  46. ^ «ngx_http_request.h». nginx 1.9.5 source code. nginx inc. Archived from the original on September 19, 2017. Retrieved January 9, 2016.
  47. ^ «ngx_http_special_response.c». nginx 1.9.5 source code. nginx inc. Archived from the original on May 8, 2018. Retrieved January 9, 2016.
  48. ^ «return» directive Archived March 1, 2018, at the Wayback Machine (http_rewrite module) documentation.
  49. ^ «Troubleshooting: Error Pages». Cloudflare. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved January 9, 2016.
  50. ^ «Error 520: web server returns an unknown error». Cloudflare. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
  51. ^ «527 Error: Railgun Listener to origin error». Cloudflare. Archived from the original on October 13, 2016. Retrieved October 12, 2016.
  52. ^ «Error 530». Cloudflare. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
  53. ^ a b «Troubleshoot Your Application Load Balancers – Elastic Load Balancing». docs.aws.amazon.com. Retrieved August 27, 2019.
  54. ^ «Troubleshoot your Application Load Balancers — Elastic Load Balancing». docs.aws.amazon.com. Retrieved January 24, 2021.
  55. ^ «Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Caching». datatracker.ietf.org. Retrieved September 25, 2021.
  56. ^ «Warning — HTTP | MDN». developer.mozilla.org. Retrieved August 15, 2021. CC BY-SA icon.svg Some text was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5 Generic (CC BY-SA 2.5) license.
  57. ^ «RFC 9111: HTTP Caching, Section 5.5 «Warning»«. June 2022.

External links

  • «RFC 9110: HTTP Semantics and Content, Section 15 «Status Codes»«.
  • Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) Status Code Registry

HTTP status codes are three-digit responses from the server to the browser-side request. Everyone has probably gotten the classic 404 page-not-found error. That is an HTTP client error status code and there are a lot more of them.

These status codes (also called response status codes) serve as a means of communication between the server and the internet browser and there are multiple code classes based on the type of information they are communicating. The differences in classes are indicated through the first digit of the error code, for example: just like a 404, any other 4xx will mean that in some way the page or website could not be reached, while a 2xx means that your request was successfully completed.

Table of content

  • What are HTTP status codes?
  • How are HTTP status codes categorized?
  • Complete list of HTTP Status Codes
  • What does this HTTP status code mean?
  • HTTP Status codes to know for SEO
  • How to check the HTTP status code
  • How to fix 404 errors
  • How to fix 503 errors

How are HTTP status codes categorized?

HTTP status codes are split into 5 different categories. Each category will give you hints as to what the response was, even if you don’t know the specific response code.

For an explanation of each category — and each individual status code — click on the corresponding link below or go to our complete list of HTTP status codes.

  • 1xx — Informational: The server has received the request and is continuing the process 
  • 2xx — Successful: The request was successful and the browser has received the expected information 
  • 3xx (Redirection): You have been redirected and the completion of the request requires further action
  • 4xx (Client Error): The website or the page could not be reached, either the page is unavailable or the request contains bad syntax 
  • 5xx (Server Error): While the request appears to be valid, the server could not complete the request

Woman with a thought bubble

Complete list of HTTP Status Codes

Status code Meaning
1xx Informational  
100 Continue
101 Switching protocols
102 Processing
103 Early Hints
   
2xx Succesful  
200 OK
201 Created
202 Accepted
203  Non-Authoritative Information
204 No Content
205 Reset Content
206 Partial Content
207 Multi-Status
208 Already Reported
226 IM Used
   
3xx Redirection  
300 Multiple Choices
301 Moved Permanently
302 Found (Previously «Moved Temporarily»)
303 See Other
304 Not Modified
305 Use Proxy
306 Switch Proxy
307 Temporary Redirect
308 Permanent Redirect
   
4xx Client Error  
400 Bad Request
401 Unauthorized
402 Payment Required
403 Forbidden
404 Not Found
405 Method Not Allowed
406 Not Acceptable
407 Proxy Authentication Required
408 Request Timeout
409 Conflict
410 Gone
411 Length Required
412 Precondition Failed
413 Payload Too Large
414 URI Too Long
415 Unsupported Media Type
416 Range Not Satisfiable
417 Expectation Failed
418 I’m a Teapot
421 Misdirected Request
422 Unprocessable Entity
423 Locked
424 Failed Dependency
425 Too Early
426 Upgrade Required
428 Precondition Required
429 Too Many Requests
431 Request Header Fields Too Large
451 Unavailable For Legal Reasons
   
5xx Server Error  
500 Internal Server Error
501 Not Implemented
502 Bad Gateway
503 Service Unavailable
504 Gateway Timeout
505 HTTP Version Not Supported
506 Variant Also Negotiates
507 Insufficient Storage
508 Loop Detected
510 Not Extended
511 Network Authentication Required

HTTP Status Codes explained individually

In some cases a HTTP response code might be descriptive enough to understand its meaning. 200 OK probably means that everything went okay. But what about a 103 Early Hints, 205 Reset Content and 305 Use Proxy?

Below is an explanation for all 63 status codes, sorted in the 5 overall categories.

What does a 1xx Informational status code mean?

A 1xx Informational status code means that the server has received the request and is continuing the process. A 1xx status code is purely temporary and is given while the request processing continues. For most tasks you won’t encounter these much, as it’s not the final response to the request.

  • 100 Continue
  • 101 Switching protocols
  • 102 Processing
  • 103 Early Hints

What does 100 Continue mean?

The 100 Continue status code means that the initial part of the request has been received by the server and that the client should proceed with the request or ignore the response if the request has already finished.

What does 101 Switching protocols mean?

The 101 Switching protocols status code means that the server understands the Upgrade header field request and indicates which protocol it is switching to.

What does 102 Processing mean?

The 102 Processing status code means that the server has accepted the full request but has not yet completed it and no response is available as of yet.

What does 103 Early Hints mean?

The 103 Early hints status code is intended to be used to allow the user agent to preload resources, while the server prepares a response. It is intended to be primarily used with the Link Header.

What does a 2xx Succesful status code mean?

A 2xx Succesful status code means that the request was successful and the browser has received the expected information. This is generally the one you want to see, as it means that the request was a success and has been received, understood and accepted it. As a website owner you should make sure that all pages and resources (images, videos, etc.) all return a 2xx status code. This means that browsers can reach it successfully and that your website visitors can see and use your website.

  • 200 OK
  • 201 Created
  • 202 Accepted
  • 203 Non-Authoritative Information
  • 204 No Content
  • 205 Reset Content
  • 206 Partial Content
  • 207 Multi-Status
  • 208 Already Reported
  • 226 IM Used

What does 200 OK mean?

The 200 OK status code means that the request was successful, but the meaning of success depends on the request method used:

  • GET: The requested resource has been fetched and transmitted to the message body.
  • HEAD: The header fields from the requested resource are sent in without the message body. 
  • POST or PUT: A description of the result of the action is transmitted to the message body.
  • TRACE: The request messages, as received by the server, will be included in the message body

When looking at things SEO-wise the 200 OK response code is the perfect status code for a functioning page, all the linked pages are working as they should. A 200 will mean that search engine crawlers can successfully crawl the page and it will be put into their search index.

What does 201 Created mean?

The 201 Created status code means that the request was successfully fulfilled and resulted in one or possibly multiple new resources being created.

What does 202 Accepted mean?

The 202 Accepted status code means that the request has been accepted for processing, but the processing has not been finished yet. The request may or may not be completed when the processing eventually takes place.

The 203 Non-Authoritative Information status code means that the request was successful. However, the meta-information that has been received is different from the one on the origin server and has instead been collected from a 3rd party or local copy. When not used for backups or mirrors of another resource a 200 OK response is preferable.

What does 204 No Content mean?

The 204 No Content status code means that while the server has successfully fulfilled the request, there is no available content for this request. But the user agent might want to update its currently cached headers for this resource, for the new one. 

What does 205 Reset Content mean?

The 205 Reset Content status code means that the user should reset the document that sent this request.

What does 206 Partial Content mean?

The 206 Partial Content response code is a response to a Range header sent from the client when requesting only a part of the resource.

What does 207 Multi-Status mean?

The 207 Multi-Status status code conveys information about multiple resources, in situation when multiple status codes are appropriate.

What does 208 Already Reported mean?

The 208 Already Reported status code is used inside the response element DAV: propstat, in order to avoid enumerating the internal members of multiple bindings to the same collection repeatedly.

What does 226 IM Used mean?

The 226 IM response code means that the server has successfully fulfilled a GET request for the resource, and the response is a representation of the result of one or multiple instance-manipulations applied to the current instance.

What does a 3xx Redirection code mean?

A 3xx Redirection status code means that you have been redirected and the completion of the request requires further action. Redirects are a natural part of the internet and you shouldn’t be scared to have 3xx redirect status codes on your website. A redirect means that the request was received successfully, but that the resource was found elsewhere. If a webpage has changed path and you try to access it through the old path, your CMS will often redirect the user to the new path. Ultimately the request will end in a 2xx success, but first it must go through the 3xx redirection.

  • 300 Multiple Choices
  • 301 Moved Permanently
  • 302 Found (Previously «Moved temporarily»)
  • 303 See Other
  • 304 Not Modified
  • 305 Use Proxy
  • 306 Switch Proxy
  • 307 Temporary Redirect
  • 308 Permanent Redirect

What does 300 Multiple Choices mean?

The 300 Multiple Choices status code means that the request has multiple possible responses and the user/user agent should choose one.

What does 301 Moved Permanently mean?

The 301 Moved Permanently response code means that the target resource has been assigned a new permanent URL and any references to this resources in the future should use one of the URLs included in the response.

When looking at things SEO-wise the 301 Permanent Redirect should be used every time a URL is moved permanently. This redirect passes your current link equity from your content to the new URL. Links that result in a status code 301 does give slightly less link equity than 200. So if you have a lot of links going through a 301 Permanent Redirect it is advised to fix these, if possible.

What does 302 Found (Previously “Moved temporarily”) mean?

The 302 Found status code, previously known as “Moved temporarily”, means that the URI of the request has been changed temporarily, and since changes can be made to the URI in the future, the effective request URI should be used for future requests.

When looking at things SEO-wise the 302 Found should only be used when making temporary changes as it does not pass the link equity the same way as a 301. If the page is not going to come back you should always use 301.

What does 303 See Other mean?

The 303 See Other response code is sent by the server in order to direct the client to get the requested resource at another URI with a GET request.

What does 304 Not Modified mean?

The 304 Not Modified response code informs the client that the response has not been modified. This means that the client can continue to use the already present, cached version of the response.

What does 305 Use Proxy mean?

The 305 Use Proxy status code instructs a client that it should connect to a proxy and then repeat the same request there. This response code is deprecated due to security concerns.

What does 306 Switch Proxy mean?

The 306 Switch proxy status code is no longer in use. It was used to inform the client that the subsequent requests should use the specified proxy.

What does 307 Temporary Redirect mean?

The 307 Temporary Redirect status code gets sent by the server in order to direct the client to the requested resource at another URI. The request method, however, must not be changed.

What does 308 Permanent Redirect mean?

The 308 Permanent Redirect status code means that the requested resource has been permanently assigned a new URI and future references to the resource should be made by using one of the enclosed URIs.

What does a 4xx Client Error mean?

A 4xx Client Error status code means that the website or the page could not be reached and either the page is unavailable or the request contains bad syntax. As a website owner you should do your best to avoid these, as it means your users will not find what they’re looking for. This can be either pages that are no longer found and are either temporarily or permanently gone. Besides giving a bad user experience, it can also hurt your SEO efforts.

  • 400 Bad Request
  • 401 Unauthorized
  • 402 Payment Required
  • 403 Forbidden
  • 404 Not Found
  • 405 Method Not Allowed
  • 406 Not Acceptable
  • 407 Proxy Authentication Required
  • 408 Request Timeout
  • 409 Conflict
  • 410 Gone
  • 411 Length Required
  • 412 Precondition Failed
  • 413 Payload Too Large
  • 414 URI Too Long
  • 415 Unsupported Media Type
  • 416 Range Not Satisfiable
  • 417 Expectation Failed
  • 418 I’m a Teapot
  • 421 Misdirected Request
  • 422 Unprocessable Entity
  • 423 Locked
  • 424 Failed Dependency
  • 425 Too Early
  • 426 Upgrade Required
  • 428 Precondition Required
  • 429 Too Many Requests
  • 431 Request Header Fields Too Large
  • 451 Unavailable For Legal Reasons

What does 400 Bad Request mean?

The 400 Bad Request status code means that the server could not understand the request because of invalid syntax.

What does 401 Unauthorized mean?

The 401 Unauthorized status code means that the request has not been applied because the server requires user authentication.

What does 402 Payment Required mean?

The 402 Payment Required status code is a response reserved for future use. It was originally created to be implemented in digital payment systems, however, it is rarely used and a standard convention of using it does not exist.

What does 403 Forbidden mean?

The 403 Forbidden status code means that the client request has been rejected because the client does not have rights to access the content. Unlike a 401 error, the client’s identity is known to the server, but since they are not authorized to view the content, giving the proper response is rejected by the server.

What does error 404 mean?

The 404 Not Found status code means that the server either did not find a current representation for the requested resource or is trying to hide its existence from an unauthorized client.

When looking at things SEO-wise the 404 Not Found status code pages with a high volume of traffic should be redirected using a 301 to the most relevant page possible. For some pages, however, a 404 might be necessary, for example, if the product is out of stock for an extended period of time. If you have external links pointing to a page that returns 404, you will lose the link equity those links would otherwise give.

If you need to fix 404 errors, jump to this section.

What does 405 Method Not Allowed mean?

The 405 Method Not Allowed status code means that while the server knows the request method, the method has been disabled and can not be used.

What does 406 Not Acceptable mean?

The 406 Not Acceptable status code is sent by the server when it does not find any content following the criteria given by the user agent.

What does 407 Proxy Authentication Required mean?

The 407 Proxy Authentication Required status code means that the client must first be authenticated by a proxy (similar to a 401).

What does 408 Request Timeout mean?

The 408 Request Timeout status code means that the server did not receive a complete request in the time that it prepared to wait.

What does 409 Conflict mean?

The 409 Conflict status code means that the request could not be fulfilled due to a conflict with the current state of the target resource and is used in situations where the user might be able to resubmit the request after resolving the conflict.

What does 410 Gone mean?

The 410 Gone status code means that the target resource has been deleted and the condition seems to be permanent. 

When looking at things SEO-wise the 410 Gone status code is a more permanent version a 404. The page will no longer be available from the server and has no forwarding address available. If you want to completely remove a page from Googles search index, then using 410 on a page is the proper way of doing it (instead of simply 404). 

What does 411 Length Required mean?

The 411 Length Required status code means that the server has rejected the request because it requires the Content-Length header field to be defined.

What does 412 Precondition Failed mean?

The 412 Precondition Failed status code means the server does not meet one or multiple preconditions that were indicated in the request header fields.

What does 413 Payload Too Large mean?

The 413 Payload Too Large status code means the server refuses to process the request because the request payload is larger than the server is able or willing to process. While the server may close the connection to prevent the client from continuing the request, it should generate a Retry-After header field and after how long can the client retry.

What does 414 URI Too Long mean?

The 414 URI Too Long status code means that the server is refusing to service the request because the request-target was longer than the server was willing to interpret.

What does 415 Unsupported Media Type mean?

The 415 Unsupported Media Type status code means that the server is rejecting the request because it does not support the media format of the requested data.

What does 416 Range Not Satisfiable mean?

The 416 Range Not Satisfiable status code means that the range specified in the Range header field of the request can’t be fulfilled. The reason might be that the given range is outside the size of the target URI’s data.

What does 417 Expectation Failed mean?

The 417 Expectation Failed status code means that the Expectation indicated by the Expect request-header field could not be met by the server.

What does 418 I’m a Teapot mean?

The 418 I’m a Teapot status code means that the server refuses to brew coffee because it is, in fact, a teapot. (It is a reference to a 1998 April Fools’ joke called »Hyper Text Coffee Pot Control Protocol»).

What does 421 Misdirected Request mean?

The 421 Misdirected Request status code means that the client request was directed at a server that is not configured to produce a response.

What does 422 Unprocessable Entity mean?

The 422 Unprocessable Entity status code means that while the request was well-formed, the server was unable to follow it, due to semantic errors.

What does 423 Locked mean?

The 423 Locked status code means that the resource that is being accessed is locked.

What does 424 Failed Dependency mean?

The 424 Failed Dependency status code means that the request failed due to the failure of a previous request.

What does 425 Too Early mean?

The 425 Too Early status code means that the server is not willing to risk processing a request that might be replayed.

What does 426 Upgrade Required mean?

The 426 Upgrade Required status code means that while the server refuses to perform the given request using the current protocol, it might be willing to do so after the client has been upgraded to a different protocol.

What does 428 Precondition Required mean?

The 428 Precondition Required status code means that the origin server requires the request to be conditional.

What does 429 Too Many Requests mean?

The 429 Too Many Requests response code means that in the given time, the user has sent too many requests.

The 431 Request Header Fields Too Large means that the server is not willing to process the request because its header fields are indeed too large, however, the request may be submitted again once the size of the request header fields is reduced.

What does 451 Unavailable For Legal Reasons mean?

The 451 Unavailable For Legal Reasons response code means that the user has requested an illegal resource (such as pages and sites blocked by the government).

What does a 5xx Server error mean?

A 5xx Server error status code means that while the request appears to be valid, the server could not complete the request. If you’re experiencing 5xx server errors for your website, you should immediately look at your server. If you’re hosting your own server you’ll need to start debugging to figure out why it is not responding properly. If you’re using an external hosting provider you’ll need to reach out to them, so they can look at it.

  • 500 Internal Server Error
  • 501 Not Implemented
  • 502 Bad Gateway
  • 503 Service Unavailable
  • 504 Gateway Timeout
  • 505 HTTP Version Not Supported
  • 506 Variant Also Negotiates
  • 507 Insufficient Storage
  • 508 Loop Detected
  • 510 Not Extended
  • 511 Network Authentication Required

What does 500 Internal Server Error mean?

The 500 Internal Server Error status code means that the server has encountered a situation that it does not know how to handle.

When looking at things SEO-wise the 500 Internal Server Error indicates a problem with the server, not the actual availability of the content. Since bots and users will both be lost, the link equity will go down fast.

What does 501 Not Implemented mean?

The 501 Not Implemented response code means that the request can not be handled because it is not supported by the server.

What does 502 Bad Gateway mean?

The 502 Bad Gateway response code means that the server received an invalid response while working as a gateway to handle the response.

What does 503 Service Unavailable mean?

The 503 Service Unavailable response code means that the server is currently not ready to handle the request. This is a common occurrence when the server is down for maintenance or is overloaded.

When looking at things SEO-wise the 503 Service Unavailable status code means that the server is unavailable and the visitor, bot or human, is asked to return again at a later time. This could be because of either server maintenance or server overload and search engines know to come back and check the availability later.

If you want to fix 503 errors, jump to this section.

What does 504 Gateway Timeout mean?

The 504 Gateway Timeout response code means that the server acting as a gateway could not get a response time.

What does 505 HTTP Version Not Supported mean?

The 505 HTTP Version Not Supported response code means that the version of HTTP used in the request is not supported by the server.

What does 506 Variant Also Negotiates mean?

The 506 Variant Also Negotiates response code means that the server has the following internal configuration error: The chosen variant resource is configured to engage in transparent negotiation itself, therefore it cannot be a proper endpoint in the negotiation process.

What does 507 Insufficient Storage mean?

The 507 Insufficient Storage status code means that the method could not be performed on the resource because the server is not able to store the representation that would be needed to complete the request successfully.

What does 508 Loop Detected mean?

The 508 Loop Detected response code means that the server has detected an infinite loop while processing the request.

What does 510 Not Extended mean?

The 510 Not Extended response code means that further extensions are required for the server to be able to fulfil the request.

What does 511 Network Authentication Required mean?

The 511 Network Authentication Required response code indicates that the client needs to authenticate to gain network access. 

HTTP Status Codes & SEO: Here are the ones you need to know

If you want great results with your SEO it’s important to work with technical SEO. A big part of that is handling response codes on your website to ensure that the website is properly crawled by Googlebot and that your content returns the proper response code when it is requested.

Below are the 5 status codes that you need to know as an SEO.

Browser with Umbraco logo icon

200 OK & SEO

This is the goal for 99 % of your content (pages, media, etc.): a successful status code that means everything works like it should. This is critical to a well-functioning website and for a great user experience.

It also gives you the reassurance that all external pointing to your website will give you link value. If all of your content returns a 200 OK status code you can rest assured that your website is working and is properly accessible for crawlers and visitors alike.

301 Moved Permanently & SEO

In a perfect world all of your content will stay on the same URL and always respond with a 200 OK. But that’s rarely how it works in the real world when managing a website.

If a page has changed its URL you will need to set up a redirect to send users and bots from the old URL to the new URL. Otherwise they will be met by a 404 page (see explanation below). In some content management systems, automatic redirect is a built-in SEO feature, while in others you’ll have to manually set it up.

You should use 301 redirects if the page is permanently gone and will not come back. This is the case for pages that have changed their URL or content that has been deleted.

If something is gone, instead of simply moved, you can either let it become a 404 or choose to redirect it to something similar on your website. This could be a product that you’re no longer going to sell, where it can make sense to redirect that page to the category page instead.

302 Found & SEO

What if the page is only gone temporarily, but will come back again later? To give a good user experience you don’t want it to become a 404 page and you also don’t want to make a permanent 301 redirect.

The solution is to use 302 Found instead of a 301. To the user it will be the same, but to search engine crawlers and bots, it will tell them to check back later on, as this redirect is only temporary. That means the old URL will keep its value while it’s gone.

This is perfect for pages that will only be unavailable temporarily. An example could be a sold-out product which is removed from the website until it is back in stock. In that case you want to make use of a 302 Found temporary redirect. Once the product is back online, you remove the redirect and the page will have kept its value (and good rankings in search engines).

Note that if the 302 redirect is there for too long, Google will consider it a 301 permanent redirect instead.

404 Not Found & SEO

If a page is no longer found it will result in a 404 page (psst, here’s some tips on how to make a great 404 page). This means, that the server tells users, crawlers and bots that the page they were looking for is not found. 

These are important to keep an eye on, as they can hurt your SEO a lot if not monitored and fixed.

Firstly, if a page returns a 404 it won’t be shown in Google’s search results. While it won’t get removed instantly, it will be after a short period of time, if not fixed. So if any of the pages that give you organic traffic end up returning a 404 error, you need to fix it quickly. See some tips on how to fix 404 errors here.

Secondly, if the page had any external links pointing to it, they will no longer give any value to your website. So even if the page does not receive any organic traffic, it can hurt your SEO performance.

The easiest way to fix this problem is to set up a 301 redirect. This will give a better user experience and will pass most of the link value from external links to the new page you’re redirecting to.

410 Gone & SEO

What if you actually want a page to completely disappear from Google’s search engine index? It might be intuitive to simply let it return a 404 error, but there’s one caveat with that:

404 does not tell crawlers and bots why the page was not found. For that reason, Google still might keep thinking that the page is there, even if it encounters a 404 error. In most cases this is fine, but there’s one case where you want to make it crystal clear that the content is gone. And that’s if you have been hacked and malicious content has been added to your website.

After doing cleanup it’s not enough to let the URLs return 404. Instead you should make sure that they return the 410 Gone status code. This clearly tells crawlers and bots that the page is gone for good and that they should remove it from their index.

5xx Server errors & SEO

The last one is not directly SEO-related, but more of a good tip for troubleshooting your website.

If you see any response code that start with 5xx, you should instantly know that it is a server error. This will help you greatly when it comes to troubleshooting and fixing it. 

Instead of wasting time trying to fix the problem through your CMS backend or elsewhere, you can go straight to fixing the server. No matter if you do your own hosting or if you use a hosting provider, it is helpful to know that it’s related to the server, not your website.

How to check the HTTP status code of a page

Finding the server response code for a page can be done manually in your browser or by using various tools and website crawlers.

Depending on the browser you’re using it is slightly different. Below is how to do it in Chrome (most steps will be similar in other browsers).

Checking HTTP status code in Chrome

  1. Open the URL your want to check with your browser
  2. Open the Developer tab (F12) and go to the «Network» tab
  3. Refresh the page
  4. Scroll to the top of the list of requests and find the first of type «document»
  5. In «Status» you can now find the HTTP response code

Find HTTP status code in Chrome

How to fix 404 errors

If you have seen the status code 404 Page Not found you might have been thinking «What does error 404 mean?»

HTTP status code 404 means «Page Not Found». This means that the request you sent was received by the server, but it could not find the page you were looking for.

So to fix the 404 error you first need to find the cause for it, which can be due to many things. But since you know that the server is reachable (otherwise it would have returned a 5xx error), you know that the error is client-side. Basically that means it’s your fault (not as harsh as it sounds).

Luckily it means that you can also fix the error on your end without having to debugging your server or reaching out to your hosting provider.

Fix 404 errors

Run through this checklist to fix the 404 error:

  1. Refresh the page. It might seem simple, but a 404 error could have just been a temporary issue that is fixed simply by trying again.
  2. Check the URL you typed in. Did you make a mistake somewhere? If the URL you typed is not exactly right a 404 is to be expected (unless a 3xx redirect is set up)
  3. If no mistake was made, try again from a different device like your mobile phone or tablet. If it works from a different device it’s most likely due to browser cache and cookies. Clear the browser cache and delete cookies, then try to access the page again.

If none of the above tricks worked, it’s likely that the piece of content was deleted or some other way moved. If the content was moved, which caused it to change URL, then you should make sure to set up a redirect that points from the old URL to the new one. That way you’re sure that anyone looking for the page can still find it.

If it was deleted, then a 404 error is the right response as the page truly was not found on your website and everything is working as it should.

If you see a lot of your visitors ending up on this page, then it’s most likely due to one of 3 things:

  1. You have an internal link on your website pointing to the page. If that’s the case, you should remove (or change) this link so it no longer points to a page that is not found.
  2. External websites link to the page. This is trickier as you can’t simply change it (although you can reach out to the websites and ask them to change it). A more simple thing for you to do would be to add a 301 redirect and point from the page to a different page on your website. That way you lead people to a page that is working, while also being a SEO-friendly option.
  3. The page is still showing up in Google’s search results and sending traffic to your website. While this is usually short-lived, it is possible that a 404 page can stay in the search results for a while, as a 404 does not tell Googlebot whether the page is temporarily or permanently missing. If this is happening, you’ll need to get the page back quickly or redirect it to a different page, so you won’t lose your rankings in Google.

Find 404 pages in Google Analytics

Have you ever wondered if there’s a way to find 404 pages in Google Analytics?

Well, the good news is, there are ways to find them within your analytics setup. Now this can sometimes come down to how your website is configured. One way to find them is to check by page title — Your 404 page will very likely have “404” or “Page not found” in the title. It’s very easy to find the 404 page this way:

  • Within your analytics tool, go to behavior → Site Content → All Pages.
  • Now you can set your primary dimension to Page title and search for  “404” or “Page not Found”.
  • And now — you should hopefully have your 404 report.

Now this is not the only way to set it up, but there is a very good chance that you can find the pages this way. 

Fix 503 errors

How to fix 503 errors

The 503 response code means «Service Unavailable» and happens when a server is currently not ready to handle the request. This can be either due to the server being down for maintenance or if it is overloaded.

If this error occurs on your own website, you need to have a look at your server, as something is making it unable to process the requests made.

Unfortunately it’s not always easy and simple to fix. A 503 response code can be due to many things, but at least you know it’s server-related and not client-side like with a 404 error.

Here’s a list of steps you can go through to identify and fix a 503 error:

  1. Is your website still running and receiving traffic? Check your Analytics tools or server logs to see if other visitors are getting through to your website.
  2. If it’s no longer receiving traffic your server might be under maintenance or have crashed. If it’s under maintenance then a 503 is to be expected and everything will work fine once it’s done. If it crashed you should try restarting it.
  3. If you’re receiving huge amounts of website traffic, the server is most likely overloaded and returning 503 errors because it doesn’t have the resources to keep up. Before fixing such an issue you need to identify it the traffic is from real visitors or if you’re the victim of a DoS or DDoS attack.
  4. Identifying a DoS or DDoS attack can be hard, but the most effective ways are:
    1. Checking if one or more IP addresses make a lot of requests
    2. The TTL (time to live) on a ping request times out
    3. Analyzing the server logs and seeing huge spikes in traffic
  5. If it looks to be a DoS or DDoS attack, you’ll need to apply one or more defense techniques to stop the attack. 
  6. If it is not a DoS or DDoS attack, then your website has most likely become more popular than your server can handle. The best way to fix such an issue is to look at connection limits, bandwidth throttling, system resources, fail-safes that might have triggered or anything that might be limiting server performance. Essentially you’ll need to upgrade your server so it has the proper resources to handle the traffic.

The above list is great for troubleshooting one-off 503 errors. But if it happens on a regular basis, then it might be a more permanent problem with your server that you should dive deeper into fixing. This can be inefficient processes using up all of your resources or your server simply not having enough allocated resources to handle the traffic your website is receiving.

What status code is returned by a website when the browser request is successful?

With all these HTTP status codes — It can be a bit daunting to figure if any of them are good. But some of them are.
A browser will return a 2xx status code if the browser request was successful. So a 2xx code is the one you want to see. The 200 status code means that the browser’s request was successful and received, understood, and accepted.

Содержание

  • Что такое код ответа HTTP
  • Как проверить код состояния страницы
  • В браузере
  • В Яндекс.Вебмастере
  • В Google Search Console
  • 1* класс кодов (информационные сообщения)
  • 100 Continue
  • 101 Switching Protocols
  • 102 Processing
  • 103 Checkpoint
  • 105 Name Not Resolved
  • 2* класс кодов (успешно обработанные запросы)
  • 200 ОК
  • 201 Created
  • 202 Accepted
  • 203 Non‑Authoritative Information
  • 204 No Content
  • 205 Reset Content
  • 206 Partial Content
  • 207 Multi‑Status
  • 226 IM Used
  • 3* класс кодов (перенаправление на другой адрес)
  • 300 Multiple Choices
  • 301 Moved Permanently
  • 302 Found/Moved 
  • 303 See Other
  • 304 Not Modified
  • 305 Use Proxy
  • 306 Unused
  • 307 Temporary Redirect
  • 308 Resume Incomplete
  • 4* класс кодов (ошибки на стороне клиента)
  • 400 Bad Request
  • 401 Unauthorized
  • 402 Payment Required
  • 403 Forbidden
  • 404 Not Found
  • 405 Method Not Allowed
  • 406 Not Acceptable
  • 407 Proxy Authentication Required
  • 408 Request Timeout
  • 409 Conflict
  • 410 Gone
  • 411 Length Required
  • 412 Precondition Failed
  • 413 Request Entity Too Large
  • 414 Request‑URI Too Long
  • 415 Unsupported Media Type
  • 416 Requested Range Not Satisfiable
  • 417 Expectation Failed
  • 418 I’m a teapot
  • 422 Unprocessable Entity
  • 423 Locked
  • 424 Failed Dependency
  • 425 Unordered Collection
  • 426 Upgrade Required
  • 428 Precondition Required
  • 429 Too Many Requests
  • 431 Request Header Fields Too Large
  • 434 Requested Host Unavailable
  • 444 No Response
  • 449 Retry With
  • 450 Blocked by Windows Parental Controls
  • 451 Unavailable For Legal Reasons
  • 456 Unrecoverable Error
  • 499 Client Closed Request
  • 5* класс кодов (ошибки на стороне сервера)
  • 500 Internal Server Error
  • 501 Not Implemented
  • 502 Bad Gateway
  • 503 Service Unavailable
  • 504 Gateway Timeout
  • 505 HTTP Version Not Supported
  • 506 Variant Also Negotiates
  • 507 Insufficient Storage
  • 508 Loop Detected
  • 509 Bandwidth Limit Exceeded
  • 510 Not Extended
  • 511 Network Authentication Required
  • Составили подробный классификатор кодов состояния HTTP. Добавляйте в закладки, чтобы был под рукой, когда понадобится.

    Что такое код ответа HTTP

    Когда посетитель переходит по ссылке на сайт или вбивает её в поисковую строку вручную, отправляется запрос на сервер. Сервер обрабатывает этот запрос и выдаёт ответ — трехзначный цифровой код HTTP от 100 до 510. По коду ответа можно понять реакцию сервера на запрос. 

    Первая цифра в ответе обозначает класс состояния, другие две — причину, по которой мог появиться такой ответ.

    Как проверить код состояния страницы

    Проверить коды ответа сервера можно вручную с помощью браузера и в панелях веб‑мастеров: Яндекс.Вебмастер и Google Search Console.

    В браузере

    Для примера возьмём Google Chrome.

    1. Откройте панель разработчика в браузере клавишей F12, комбинацией клавиш Ctrl + Shift + I или в меню браузера → «Дополнительные инструменты» → «Инструменты разработчика». Подробнее об этом рассказывали в статье «Как открыть исходный код страницы». 

    2. Переключитесь на вкладку «Сеть» в Инструментах разработчика и обновите страницу: 

    Как посмотреть код ответа сервера в инструментах разработчика в браузере

    Как посмотреть код ответа сервера в инструментах разработчика в браузере

    В Яндекс.Вебмастере

    Откройте инструмент «Проверка ответа сервера» в Вебмастере. Введите URL в специальное поле и нажмите кнопку «Проверить»:

    Как посмотреть код состояния в Вебмастере

    Как посмотреть код состояния в Вебмастере

    Как добавить сайт в Яндекс.Вебмастер и другие сервисы Яндекса

    В Google Search Console

    Чтобы посмотреть код ответа сервера в GSC, перейдите в инструмент проверки URL — он находится в самом верху панели:

    Проверка URL в инструменте GSC

    Проверка URL в инструменте GSC

    Введите ссылку на страницу, которую хотите проверить, и нажмите Enter. В результатах проверки нажмите на «Изучить просканированную страницу» в блоке «URL есть в индексе Google».

    Изучить просканированную страницу в GSC

    Изучить просканированную страницу в GSC

    А затем в открывшемся окне перейдите на вкладку «Подробнее»:

    HTTP код страницы в GSC

    HTTP код страницы в GSC

    Теперь расскажем подробнее про все классы кодов состояния HTTP.

    1* класс кодов (информационные сообщения)

    Это системный класс кодов, который только информирует о процессе передачи запроса. Такие ответы не являются ошибкой, хотя и могут отображаться в браузере как Error Code.

    100 Continue

    Этот ответ сообщает, что полученные сведения о запросе устраивают сервер и клиент может продолжать отправлять данные. Такой ответ может требоваться клиенту, если на сервер отправляется большой объём данных.

    101 Switching Protocols

    Сервер одобрил переключение типа протокола, которое запросил пользователь, и в настоящий момент выполняет действие.

    102 Processing

    Запрос принят — он находится в обработке, и на это понадобится чуть больше времени.

    103 Checkpoint

    Контрольная точка — используется в запросах для возобновления после прерывания запросов POST или PUT.

    POST отправляет данные на сервер, PUT создает новый ресурс или заменяет существующий данными, представленными в теле запроса. 

    Разница между ними в том, что PUT работает без изменений: повторное его применение даёт такой же результат, что и в первый раз, а вот повторный вызов одного и того же метода POST часто меняет данные. 

    Пример — оформленный несколько раз интернет‑заказ. Такое часто происходит как раз по причине неоднократного использования запроса PUT.

    105 Name Not Resolved

    Не удается преобразовать DNS‑адрес сервера — это  означает ошибку в службе DNS. Эта служба преобразует IP‑адреса в знакомые нам доменные имена.

    2* класс кодов (успешно обработанные запросы)

    Эти коды информируют об успешности принятия и обработки запроса. Также сервер может передать заголовки или тело сообщений. 

    200 ОК

    Все хорошо — HTTP‑запрос успешно обработан (не ошибка).

    201 Created

    Создано — транзакция успешна, сформирован новый ресурс или документ.

    202 Accepted

    Принято — запрос принят, но ещё не обработан.

    203 Non‑Authoritative Information

    Информация не авторитетна — запрос успешно обработан, но передаваемая информация была взята не из первичного источника (данные могут быть устаревшими).

    204 No Content

    Нет содержимого — запрос успешно обработан, однако в ответе только заголовки без контента сообщения. Не нужно обновлять содержимое документа, но можно применить к нему полученные метаданные.

    205 Reset Content

    Сбросить содержимое. Запрос успешно обработан — но нужно сбросить введенные данные. Страницу можно не обновлять.

    206 Partial Content

    Частичное содержимое. Сервер успешно обработал часть GET‑запроса, а другую часть вернул.

    GET — метод для чтения данных с сайта. Он говорит серверу, что клиент хочет прочитать какой‑то документ. 

    Представим интернет‑магазин и страницы каталога. Фильтры, которые выбирает пользователь, передаются благодаря методу GET. GET‑запрос работает с  получением данных, а POST‑запрос нужен для отправки данных.

    При работе с подобными ответами следует уделить внимание кэшированию.

    207 Multi‑Status

    Успешно выполнено несколько операций — сервер передал результаты выполнения нескольких независимых операций. Они появятся в виде XML‑документа с объектом multistatus. 

    226 IM Used

    Успешно обработан IM‑заголовок (специальный заголовок, который отправляется клиентом и используется для передачи состояния HTTP).

    3* класс кодов (перенаправление на другой адрес)

    Эти коды информируют, что для достижения успешной операции нужно будет сделать другой запрос, возможно, по другому URL.

    300 Multiple Choices

    Множественный выбор — сервер выдает список нескольких возможных вариантов перенаправления (максимум — 5). Можно выбрать один из них.

    301 Moved Permanently

    Окончательно перемещено — страница перемещена на другой URL, который указан в поле Location.

    302 Found/Moved 

    Временно перемещено — страница временно перенесена на другой URL,  который указан в поле Location.

    303 See Other

    Ищите другую страницу — страница не найдена по данному URL, поэтому смотрите страницу по другому URL, используя метод GET.

    304 Not Modified

    Модификаций не было — с момента последнего визита клиента изменений не было.

    305 Use Proxy

    Используйте прокси — запрос к нужному ресурсу можно сделать только через прокси‑сервер, URL которого указан в поле Location заголовка.

    306 Unused

    Зарезервировано. Код в настоящий момент не используется.

    307 Temporary Redirect

    Временное перенаправление — запрашиваемый ресурс временно доступен по другому URL.

    Этот код имеет ту же семантику, что код ответа 302 Found, за исключением того, что агент пользователя не должен изменять используемый метод HTTP: если в первом запросе использовался POST, то во втором запросе также должен использоваться POST.

    308 Resume Incomplete

    Перемещено полностью (навсегда) — запрашиваемая страница была перенесена на новый URL, указанный в поле Location заголовка. Метод запроса (GET/POST) менять не разрешается.

    4* класс кодов (ошибки на стороне клиента)

    Эти коды указывают на ошибки со стороны клиентов. 

    Скриншот страницы с ошибкой 404 с сайта modcloth.com

    Скриншот страницы с ошибкой 404 с сайта modcloth.com

    400 Bad Request

    Неверный запрос — запрос клиента не может быть обработан, так как есть синтаксическая ошибка (возможно, опечатка).

    401 Unauthorized

    Не пройдена авторизация — запрос ещё в обработке, но доступа нет, так как пользователь не авторизован.

    Для доступа к запрашиваемому ресурсу клиент должен представиться, послав запрос, включив при этом в заголовок сообщения поле Authorization.

    402 Payment Required

    Требуется оплата — зарезервировано для использования в будущем. Код предусмотрен для платных пользовательских сервисов, а не для хостинговых компаний.

    403 Forbidden

    Запрещено — запрос принят, но не будет обработан, так как у клиента недостаточно прав. Может возникнуть, когда пользователь хочет открыть системные файлы (robots, htaccess) или не прошёл авторизацию.

    404 Not Found

    Не найдено — запрашиваемая страница не обнаружена. Сервер принял запрос, но не нашёл ресурса по указанному URL (возможно, была ошибка в URL или страница была перемещена).

    405 Method Not Allowed

    Метод не разрешён — запрос был сделан методом, который не поддерживается данным ресурсом. Сервер должен предложить доступные методы решения в заголовке Allow.

    406 Not Acceptable

    Некорректный запрос — неподдерживаемый поисковиком формат запроса (поисковый робот не поддерживает кодировку или язык).

    407 Proxy Authentication Required

    Нужно пройти аутентификацию прокси — ответ аналогичен коду 401, только нужно аутентифицировать прокси‑сервер.

    408 Request Timeout

    Тайм‑аут запроса — запрос клиента занял слишком много времени. На каждом сайте существует свое время тайм‑аута — проверьте интернет‑соединение  и просто обновите страницу.

    409 Conflict

    Конфликт (что‑то пошло не так) — запрос не может быть выполнен из‑за конфликтного обращения к ресурсу (несовместимость двух запросов).

    410 Gone

    Недоступно — ресурс раньше был размещён по указанному URL, но сейчас удалён и  недоступен (серверу неизвестно месторасположение).

    411 Length Required

    Добавьте длины — сервер отклоняет отправляемый запрос, так как длина заголовка не определена, и он не находит значение Content‑Length. 

    Нужно исправить заголовки на сервере, и в следующий раз робот сможет проиндексировать страницу.

    412 Precondition Failed

    Предварительное условие не выполнено — стоит проверить правильность HTTP‑заголовков данного запроса.

    413 Request Entity Too Large

    Превышен размер запроса — перелимит максимального размера запроса, принимаемого сервером. Браузеры поддерживают запросы от 2 до 8 килобайт.

    414 Request‑URI Too Long

    Превышена длина запроса — сервер не может обработать запрос из‑за длинного URL. Такая ошибка может возникнуть, например, когда клиент пытается передать чересчур длинные параметры через метод GET, а не POST.

    415 Unsupported Media Type

    Формат не поддерживается —  сервер не может принять запрос, так как  данные подгружаются в некорректном формате, и сервер разрывает соединение.

    416 Requested Range Not Satisfiable

    Диапазон не поддерживается — ошибка возникает в случаях, когда в самом HTTP‑заголовке прописывается некорректный байтовый диапазон.

    Корректного диапазона в необходимом документе может просто не быть, или есть опечатка в синтаксисе.

    417 Expectation Failed

    Ожидания не оправдались — прокси некорректно идентифицировал содержимое поля «Expect: 100‑Continue».

    418 I’m a teapot

    Первоапрельская шутка разработчиков в 1998 году. В расшифровке звучит как «я не приготовлю вам кофе, потому что я чайник». Не используется в работе.

    422 Unprocessable Entity

    Объект не обработан — сервер принял запрос, но в нём  есть логическая ошибка. Стоит посмотреть в сторону семантики сайта.

    423 Locked

    Закрыто — ресурс заблокирован для выбранного HTTP‑метода. Можно перезагрузить роутер и компьютер. А также использовать только статистический IP.

    424 Failed Dependency

    Неуспешная зависимость — сервер не может обработать запрос, так как  один из зависимых ресурсов заблокирован.

    Выполнение запроса напрямую зависит от успешности выполнения другой операции, и если она не будет успешно завершена, то вся обработка запроса будет прервана.

    425 Unordered Collection

    Неверный порядок в коллекции — ошибка возникает, если клиент указал номер элемента в неупорядоченном списке или запросил несколько элементов в порядке, отличном от серверного.

    426 Upgrade Required

    Нужно обновление — в заголовке ответа нужно корректно сформировать поля Upgrade и Connection. 

    Этот ответ возникает, когда серверу требуется обновление до SSL‑протокола, но клиент не имеет его поддержки.

    428 Precondition Required

    Нужно предварительное условие — сервер просит внести в запрос информацию о предварительных условиях обработки данных, чтобы выдавать корректную информацию по итогу.

    429 Too Many Requests

    Слишком много запросов — отправлено слишком много запросов за короткое время. Это может указывать, например, на попытку DDoS‑атаки, для защиты от которой запросы блокируются.

    431 Request Header Fields Too Large

    Превышена длина заголовков — сервер может и не отвечать этим кодом, вместо этого он может просто сбросить соединение.

    Исправляется это с помощью сокращения заголовков и повторной отправки запроса.

    434 Requested Host Unavailable

    Адрес запрашиваемой страницы недоступен.

    444 No Response

    Нет ответа — код отображается в лог‑файлах, чтобы подтвердить, что сервер никак не отреагировал на запрос пользователя и прервал соединение. Возвращается только сервером nginx.

    Nginx — программное обеспечение с открытым исходным кодом. Его используют для создания веб‑серверов, а также  в качестве почтового или обратного прокси‑сервера. Nginx решает проблему падения производительности из‑за роста трафика. 

    449 Retry With

    Повторите попытку — ошибка говорит о необходимости скорректировать запрос и повторить его снова. Причиной становятся неверно указанные параметры (возможно, недостаточно данных).

    450 Blocked by Windows Parental Controls

    Заблокировано родительским контролем — говорит о том, что с компьютера попытались зайти на заблокированный ресурс. Избежать этой ошибки можно изменением параметров системы родительского контроля.

    451 Unavailable For Legal Reasons

    Недоступно по юридическим причинам — доступ к ресурсу закрыт, например, по требованию органов государственной власти или по требованию правообладателя в случае нарушения авторских прав. 

    456 Unrecoverable Error

    Неустранимая ошибка — при обработке запроса возникла ошибка, которая вызывает некорректируемые сбои в таблицах баз данных.

    499 Client Closed Request

    Запрос закрыт клиентом — нестандартный код, используемый nginx в ситуациях, когда клиент закрыл соединение, пока nginx обрабатывал запрос.

    5* класс кодов (ошибки на стороне сервера)

    Эти коды указывают на ошибки со стороны серверов. 

    При использовании всех методов, кроме HEAD, сервер должен вернуть в теле сообщения гипертекстовое пояснение для пользователя. И его можно использовать в работе.

    Изображение страницы с ошибкой сайта REG.RU

    Изображение страницы с ошибкой сайта REG.RU

    500 Internal Server Error

    Внутренняя ошибка сервера — сервер столкнулся с неким условием, из‑за которого не может выполнить запрос. 

    Проверяйте, корректно ли указаны директивы в системных файлах (особенно htaccess) и нет ли ошибки прав доступа к файлам. Обратите внимание на ошибки внутри скриптов и их медленную работу.

    501 Not Implemented

    Не выполнено —  код отдается, когда сам сервер не может идентифицировать метод запроса. 

    Сами вы эту ошибку не исправите. Устранить её может только сервер.

    502 Bad Gateway

    Ошибка шлюза — появляется, когда сервер, выступая в роли шлюза или прокси‑сервера, получил ответное сообщение от вышестоящего сервера о несоответствии протоколов.

    Актуально исключительно для прокси и шлюзовых конфигураций.

    503 Service Unavailable

    Временно не доступен — сервер временно не имеет возможности обрабатывать запросы по техническим причинам (обслуживание, перегрузка и прочее). 

    В поле Retry‑After заголовка сервер укажет время, через которое  можно повторить запрос.

    504 Gateway Timeout

    Тайм‑аут шлюза —  сервер, выступая в роли шлюза или прокси‑сервера, не получил ответа от вышестоящего сервера в нужное время.

    Исправить эту ошибку самостоятельно не получится. Здесь дело в прокси, часто — в веб‑сервере. 

    Первым делом просто обновите веб‑страницу. Если это не помогло, нужно почистить DNS‑кэш. Для этого  нажмите горячие клавиши Windows+R и введите команду cmd (Control+пробел). В открывшемся окне укажите команду ipconfig / flushdns и подтвердите её нажатием Enter.

    505 HTTP Version Not Supported

    Сервер не поддерживает версию протокола — отсутствует поддержка текущей версии HTTP‑протокола. Нужно обеспечить клиента и сервер одинаковой версией.

    506 Variant Also Negotiates

    Неуспешные переговоры — с такой ошибкой сталкиваются, если сервер изначально настроен неправильно. По причине ошибочной конфигурации выбранный вариант указывает сам на себя, из‑за чего процесс и прерывается.

    507 Insufficient Storage

    Не хватает места для хранения — серверу недостаточно места в хранилище. Нужно либо расчистить место, либо увеличить доступное пространство.

    508 Loop Detected

    Обнаружен цикл — ошибка означает провал запроса и выполняемой операции в целом.

    509 Bandwidth Limit Exceeded

    Превышена пропускная способность —  используется при чрезмерном потреблении трафика. Владельцу площадки следует обратиться к своему хостинг‑провайдеру. 

    510 Not Extended

    Не продлён — ошибка говорит, что на сервере отсутствует нужное для клиента расширение. Чтобы исправить проблему, надо убрать часть неподдерживаемого расширения из запроса или добавить поддержку на сервер.

    511 Network Authentication Required

    Требуется аутентификация — ошибка генерируется сервером‑посредником, к примеру, сервером интернет‑провайдера, если нужно ввести пароль для получения доступа к сети через платную точку доступа.

    HTTP status codes are three-digit response codes or messages sent by a server or search engine to a browser or user at the other end of the server. These codes or responses enable servers to communicate with users on the internet. When a request is placed to view a specific website or Web page, these codes inform the user whether the server is working or not. There is an entire list of HTTP status codes that inform a user whether a Web page is accessible or not, and if not, what steps need to be taken next.  

    What are HTTP status codes?

    Status code is a response received by the server to a browser’s request. When you key in a web address on the browser, the browser sends a request to that particular site’s server. The server then responds to the browser with a three-digit HTTP status code

    In layman’s terms, these HTTP response codes are the internet conversations between the browser and the respective server. Identifying the HTTP Protocol helps us determine site errors and minimize downtime and bounce rate, which in turn improves search engine ranking.

    John Mueller explained that HTTP status codes are the first thing Google checks when crawling the content.

    He was posed with the question:

    Wondering if Google checks status codes before anything else, like before rendering content?’

    In response, Mueller confirmed that Google does check the status codes before rendering or indexing content. Google checks for a ‘200’ status code before proceeding with crawling any further. A 200 status code indicates to Google that it is crawling a valid page and there might be content worth indexing on it. Here is the video on different errors that Google may find & report while crawling your website

    Why do HTTP Status Codes Matter for SEO? 

    If you can access a Web page, the HTTP status code is not visible to you on-screen, but it certainly is visible to your browser. 

    If you are not able to find a Web page, you’re most likely to receive an HTTP status code letting you know what the exact issue or status is. 

    HTTP status codes do more than inform users about the status of a Web page. They also influence search engine optimisation (SEO). Status codes help search engines check site errors on websites and reduce downtime, lags, and bounce rates to improve ranking. Search engines consider only servers that send a 200-status code as crawlable and indexable because this status code indicates that the page is functioning well. 

    List of HTTP Response Status Codes

    Http status codes are broadly divided into five groups which are:

    1. 1xx HTTP response code group
    2. 2xx HTTP response code group
    3. 3xx HTTP response code group
    4. 4xx HTTP response code group
    5. 5xx HTTP response code group

    Here is an interesting and detailed image which would help you to understand different types of HTTP response code you may get for a webpage.

    List of HTTP Status Codes

    Here is a list of HTTP status codes and what each one means:

     1xx HTTP response code group 

    •  100 Status Code: Continue

    The 100 HTTP status code ‘Continue’ is an informational status code which indicates that the server has received the initial request to access the link from the browser and that the user should continue with the request. 

    • 101 Status Code: Switching Protocol

    The 101 HTTP status code indicates that the server has received the browser’s request to change protocol. The server complies by switching protocol and responding with an upgrade response header. 

    • 102 Status Code: Processing

    This 102 HTTP status code means that the server has received and accepted the request sent by the browser but has sent an interim response to the browser because it has not completed the request yet.

    • 103 Status Code: Early Hints

    The 103 HTTP status code indicates that the preloaded resources are visible to the user while the server sends early hints that it is likely to prepare a final response that includes the appropriate link header. 

     2xx HTTP response code group 

    • 201 Status Code: Created

    The 201 HTTP status code is one of the foremost success status codes in the list of HTTP status codes. The ‘Created’ code indicates to the user that their request has succeeded and multiple new resources have been created. 

    • 202 Status Code: Accepted

    The 202 HTTP status code lets users know that their request has been accepted but is still in processing. This does not mean that the request will definitely be processed as it can get cancelled later on too. This status code, therefore, is noncommittal. 

    • 203 Status Code: Non-Authoritative Information

    The 203 status code informs users that the request submitted to the server was successful, but the meta-information, is collected from a third-party or a local copy instead of from the origin server. 

    •  204 Status Code: No Content

    The 204 status code informs the user that while their request has been accepted and processed, there is no content or information available on the server, except for the headers.

    •  205 Status Code: Reset Content

    The 205 status code tells the user at the browser end to reset the content in the document that sent the request. Consider the example of filling a form online. In case of error, the server asks for the form to be cleared and reset so that the information can be entered again. 

    •  206 Status Code: Partial Content

    The 206 status code indicates that the request has been accepted, but only part of the data or resources available are sent to the user.

    •  207 Status Code: Multi-Status

    The 207 HTTP status code displays data and information from multiple resources in response to several operations and multiple HTTP status codes at once. 

    •  208 Status Code: Already Reported

    The 208 HTTP status code is for those users who use DAV to create and manage files collaboratively with others. It is used in the DAV:propstat response to prevent internal members from repetitive enumeration of multiple bindings in the same collection. 

    •  226 Status Code: IM Used

    The 226 status code means the server has completed the user request, or Get request, for a given resource. The response represents the result of one or multiple instance manipulations, which is applied to the current instance.

     3xx HTTP response code group 

    • 300 Status Code: Multiple Choice

    The 300 status code is the first in the redirection HTTP codes list. It indicates to the user that the request has many response options, and they can choose any one resource. 

    • 301 Status Code: Permanent Redirection

    This code shows that a web page has been permanently replaced with a different resource. Redirect allows you to direct traffic from one location to another. Ensure proper SEO while making the changes and routing visitors to the correct location of your site. Typically, this is the one you will want to use for SEO purposes for preventing 404 errors. Here is what Google’s John Mueller has to say on how long will it take to rank a new URL after doing a 301 redirect to the old URL:

    • 302 Status Code: Temporary Redirection

    This code indicates that the request sent by the browser for a web page was found, but the URL or content has been moved temporarily.

    •  303 Status Code: See Other

    The 303 See Other HTTP status code directs the user to get the source requested at another URI with a Get request to the server. 

    • 304 Status Code: Not Modified

    This message is an HTTP response code that prompts implicit redirection to a cached version of the requested resource. This code tells the browser that the resources stored in the browser cache haven’t changed. Also, the HTTP status code 304 is used to speed up web page delivery by utilizing the downloaded resources. 

     4xx HTTP response code group 

    •  400 Status Code: Bad Request

    The 400 status code indicates an error at the client or user end and lets them know that the server could not understand the request due to bad syntax (spelling, punctuation, and other errors). 

    •  401 Status Code: Unauthorized Error

    This indicates that the request sent by the browser could not be authenticated. The authentication may have been provided by the client, but the client is not permitted to access the requested resource. 

    • 402 Status Code: Payment Required

    The 402 status code was created for directing the user to complete digital payments. After the payment, the server was supposed to display the requested content. However, this status code is reserved for future use. 

    • 403 Status Code: Forbidden Error

    The server understood the request however, it refuses to authorize it. This code is returned when the user attempts to access something that they do not have permission to access.

    • 404 Status Code: Page Not Found

    Say someone tries to access example.com/news-events but the news-events page doesn’t have any content. The user will then see status code 404 because even if the webserver is functioning, the request for that particular page doesn’t exist. It’s not just the page, any asset missing can generate a 404 error code on the server e.g. Incorrect URL, Missing image file, missing JavaScript or CSS, etc. Here is what Google’s John Mueller has to say on what you need to do with old 404 errors

    • 405 Status Code: Method Not Allowed

    This response code shows that the request is recognized by the server, but it is rejecting that particular target resource. 405 error code confirms that the requested resource is valid and exists, but the client had used an unacceptable HTTP method during the request. 

    • 406 Status Code: Not Acceptable

    The 406 status code informs the user that the server could not find any resource or data following the user’s request even after performing server-driven content negotiation. 

    •  407 Status Code: Proxy Authentication Required

    The 407 status code is very much like the 401 unauthorized status code because the server requires user authentication before submitting the request using a proxy. 

    •  408 Status Code: Request Timeout

    The 408 request timeout status code is sent by servers with an idle connection wanting to shut down browsers with unused connections. Sometimes, the server shuts the idle connection down without sending this status code

    •  409 Status Code: Conflict

    The 409 Conflict status code is sent to users to let them know that their request conflicts with the current state of the target server or resource and will be available only after the conflict is resolved. 

    •  410 Status Code: Gone

    The 410 Gone status code is sent to the user when the requested resource or content has been permanently deleted from the server, with no forwarding address or new URL. 

    •  411 Status Code: Length Required

    The 411 Length required HTTP status code is to inform users that their request was rejected because the content length in the header field was undefined.  

    •  412 Status Code: Precondition Failed

    The 412 status code tells the user that the request has one or more preconditions in its headers that the server is not able to meet. 

    •  413 Status Code: Payload Too Large

    The 413 status code indicates that the server refuses to process the user request because the request payload is larger than the server can process. The server then closes the connection or generates a retry-after header field for the user. 

    •  414 Status Code: URL Too Long

    The 414 HTTP status code means just that—the URL requested is too long for the server to understand and load. 

    •  415 Status Code: Unsupported Media Type

    The 415 status code is also self-explanatory. It means that the media format used in the user’s request is not recognized by the server and hence, is rejected. 

    •  416 Status Code: Range Not Satisfiable

    The 416 status code lets the user know that the range specified in the range header field of the user’s request is outside the size of the target URL’s data or information. 

    •  417 Status Code: Expectation Failed

    The 417 expectation failed status code means that the server could not meet the expectation indicated in the expect request header.   

    •  418 Status Code: I’m a teapot

    The 418 I’m a teapot HTTP status code was released in 1998 as an April Fools joke and quoted the text, “Any attempt to brew coffee with a teapot should result in the error code 418. I’m a teapot”.

     5xx HTTP response code group

    • 500 Status Code: Internal Server Error

    The 500 Internal server error code indicates that the server has failed to understand and handle a situation or request. Reasons are not mentioned. 

    •  501 Status Code: Not Implemented

    This status code is received when the web server does not recognize the request method and is incapable of supporting it.

    • 502 Status Code: Bad Gateway

    This error is a status code which means that one server on the internet received an invalid response from another server. Different webservers and operating systems represent the 502 bad gateway errors in various ways. But they all have the same meaning. 

    • 503 Status Code: Service unavailable

    The server is temporarily unable to handle the request due to the server overload or it being down for maintenance.

    •  504 Status Code: Gateway Timeout

    When one server fails to receive a timely response from another server that it was accessing while loading a web page or fulfilling a request by the browser.

    •  505 Status Code: HTTP Version Not Supported

    The 505 HTTP Version Not Supported status code informs the user that the server does not support the HTTP version used in the request by the user.

    •  506 Status Code: Variant Also Negotiates

    The 506 status code is when the server has another internal configuration error. The chosen variant resource is configured to engage in transparent negotiation itself; therefore it cannot be a proper endpoint in the negotiation process.

    •  507 Status Code: Insufficient Storage

    The 507 status code is another WEBDAV response code. It indicates to users that the server cannot store the representation needed to complete the request and process the resource.

    •  508 Status Code: Loop Detected

    The 508 Loop detected status code informs users that the server has detected an infinite loop while processing the data request. 

    •  510 Status Code: Not Extended

    The 510 Not Extended status code lets users know that the server needs further extensions to the request to be able to process it. Sometimes, the server sends back all the information necessary for the user to submit an extended request.

    •  511 Status Code: Network Authentication Required

    The 511 Network Authentication Required status code indicates to users that they have to complete network authentication to gain network access to the server. 

    Now that you are familiar with the most common HTTP errors, you should have a good basis for troubleshooting issues with your web servers or applications.

    If you come across any error codes that were not mentioned above, feel free to discuss them in the comments section. 

    Popular Searches

    SEO Company  | SEO Services |  Link Building Services  |  Local SEO Services  |  Ecommerce SEO Services  | Enterprise SEO Service | Professional SEO Services | Conversion Rate Optimization Service | PPC Services | SEO Audit Services  |  What is a Blog | Mobile Marketing | What is Sitemap | On Page SEO  |  What is Digital Marketing  |  Types of Digital Marketing | Google Reverse Image Search | What are Breadcrumbs | SERP |  Top Youtube Searches | SEO Tools | Landing Pages |What is Cloaking  |  Types of SEO  |  Off Page SEO Techniques  |  Importance of Digital Marketing | What are Backlinks | Pogo Sticking  | Social Bookmarking | Benefits of SEO

    Понравилась статья? Поделить с друзьями:
  • Http status error 401
  • Http status error 400
  • Http status error 200
  • Http status code 404 ps3 hen как исправить
  • Http status client error