Reference
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Status
- Informational responses (
100
–199
) - Successful responses (
200
–299
) - Redirection messages (
300
–399
) - Client error responses (
400
–499
) - Server error responses (
500
–599
)
Successful responses
200 OK:
The request succeeded
201 Created
The request succeeded and a new resource was created as a result.
(POST or PUT request)
204 No Content
Just headers are returned
206 Partial content
Client Error Responses
400 Bad Request
-
The server cannot or will not process the request due to something that is perceived to be a client error (e.g., malformed request syntax, invalid request message framing, or deceptive request routing).
401 Unauthorised
-
Although the HTTP standard specifies "unauthorized", semantically this response means "unauthenticated". That is, the client must authenticate itself to get the requested response.
403 Forbidden
-
The client does not have access rights to the content; that is, it is unauthorized, so the server is refusing to give the requested resource. Unlike
401 Unauthorized
, the client's identity is known to the server.
404 Not Found
The server cannot find the requested resource. In the browser, this means the URL is not recognized. In an API, this can also mean that the endpoint is valid but the resource itself does not exist. Servers may also send this response instead of 403 Forbidden to hide the existence of a resource from an unauthorized client. This response code is probably the most well known due to its frequent occurrence on the web.
405 Method Not Allowed
The request method is known by the server but is not supported by the target resource. For example, an API may not allow calling DELETE
to remove a resource.
Server error responses
500 Internal Server Error
The server has encountered a situation it does not know how to handle.
503 Service Unavailable
The server is not ready to handle the request. Common causes are a server that is down for maintenance or that is overloaded. Note that together with this response, a user-friendly page explaining the problem should be sent. This response should be used for temporary conditions and the Retry-After
HTTP header should, if possible, contain the estimated time before the recovery of the service. The webmaster must also take care about the caching-related headers that are sent along with this response, as these temporary condition responses should usually not be cached.
511 Network Authentication Required
Indicates that the client needs to authenticate to gain network access.