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Previously called "Request Entity Too Large". [16]: §10.4.14 414 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. [16]: §10.4.15 415 ...
For example, when building an HTTP-based web API that needs to respond to the caller immediately but continue executing asynchronously (such as a long-lived image conversion), the web API can provide a status check URI that allows the original client who requested the conversion to check on the conversion's status.
A server uses "Alt-Svc" header (meaning Alternative Services) to indicate that its resources can also be accessed at a different network location (host or port) or using a different protocol When using HTTP/2, servers should instead send an ALTSVC frame. [50] Alt-Svc: http/1.1="http2.example.com:8001"; ma=7200: Permanent Cache-Control
404.5 – Denied by request filtering configuration. 404.6 – Verb denied. 404.7 – File extension denied. 404.8 – Hidden namespace. 404.9 – File attribute hidden. 404.10 – Request header too long. 404.11 – Request contains double escape sequence. 404.12 – Request contains high-bit characters. 404.13 – Content length too large.
A query string is a part of a uniform resource locator that assigns values to specified parameters.A query string commonly includes fields added to a base URL by a Web browser or other client application, for example as part of an HTML document, choosing the appearance of a page, or jumping to positions in multimedia content.
a request line, consisting of the case-sensitive request method, a space, the requested URI, another space, the protocol version, a carriage return, and a line feed, e.g.: GET /images/logo.png HTTP / 1.1
A server SHOULD return 414 (Request-URI Too Long) status if a URI is longer than the server can handle (see section 10.4.15). Note: Servers ought to be cautious about depending on URI lengths above 255 bytes, because some older client or proxy implementations might not properly support these lengths.
ASCII code points that are invalid URI characters may be encoded the same way, depending on implementation. [6] This conversion is easily reversible; by definition, converting an IRI to an URI and back again will yield an IRI that is semantically equivalent to the original IRI, even though it may differ in exact representation. [7]