Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Unless otherwise stated, the status code is part of the HTTP standard. [1] The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) maintains the official registry of HTTP status codes. [2] 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 ...
A specific flow to a user agent has failed, although other flows may succeed. This response is intended for use between proxy devices, and should not be seen by an endpoint (and if it is seen by one, should be treated as a 400 Bad Request response). [16]: §11.5 433 Anonymity Disallowed The request has been rejected because it was anonymous. [17]
It should only contain pages that are Hypertext Transfer Protocol status codes or lists of Hypertext Transfer Protocol status codes, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Hypertext Transfer Protocol status codes in general should be placed in relevant topic categories
From a code: This is a redirect from a code that has no distinctive category to which it may be sorted. Examples are DOCTYPE , and redirects from HTML and hexadecimal codes. To an embedded anchor : This is a redirect from a topic that does not have its own page to an embedded anchor on the redirect's target page.
This is a list of Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) response status codes. Status codes are issued by a server in response to a client's request made to the server. Unless otherwise stated, all status codes described here is part of the current SMTP standard, RFC 5321. The message phrases shown are typical, but any human-readable alternative ...
HTTP 403 is an HTTP status code meaning access to the requested resource is forbidden. The server understood the request, but will not fulfill it, if it was correct ...
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.
HTTP Status Code 402, also known as "Payment Required," is a standard response code in the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP). It is part of the HTTP/1.1 protocol defined by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) in the RFC 7231 [ 1 ] specification.