Iis 6.0 Error Codes
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codes provide a continuous feed of up-to-the-moment information about the activity and health of the
Iis Error Codes List
server. Most HTTP status codes have three digits, for example, 401. iis code 302 Some status codes have three digits followed by a decimal point, and one or two more
Iis Sc-win32-status
digits (for example, 300.12). In such a case, the number that follows the decimal point is called the substatus code. Codes within each hundred-number range provide specific iis status code 304 types of information, as summarized in Table 11.2 HTTP Status Codes.Table 11.2 HTTP Status CodesStatus Code RangeType of Code100Informational200Successful300Redirection 400Client Error500Server ErrorAs an administrator, at some point you will inevitably need to determine which HTTP status codes are being returned by IIS. There are a number of ways to do this. Your choice of method depends 401.2 - logon failed due to server configuration. on the amount of information that you need and the type of problem that you are troubleshooting. If you have a problem that is limited to one or a few clients, viewing the status codes from the clients Web browser or issuing a reproduced HTTP request with WFetch might best serve your needs. However, if you need to look for an individual request or for a collection of multiple requests over a period of time, you should examine the IIS logs. Viewing IIS logs allows you to see not only the main HTTP status code, but the Win32 error code and the HTTP substatus code (if logging is configured to do so). The Win32 error codes and the HTTP substatus codes often contain information that is critical to your troubleshooting effort.The following sections describe the HTTP status codes and provide troubleshooting suggestions.Top of pageManage Your Profile© 2016 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.Contact Us |Terms of Use |Trademarks |Privacy & Cookies
here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting http://stackoverflow.com/questions/607314/ftp-response-codes ads with us Stack Overflow Questions Jobs Documentation Tags Users Badges Ask Question x Dismiss Join the Stack Overflow Community Stack Overflow is a community of 4.7 million programmers, just like you, helping each other. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up FTP response codes up vote 1 down vote favorite I am troubleshooting Microsoft's FTP server (IIS 6.0) at a client site. In the FTP log, there's a few response codes that I'd like to know the meaning error codes of. For instance, in the line: 12:01:15 10.4.152.122 [194326]created x.jpg 550 1450 I'd like to know the meaning of 1450. There's other ones as well, like 550 2, and 550 32. Anyone know of a site or reference that has the meaning of these sub-codes (not sure what the correct term is)? iis-6 ftp share|improve this question edited Mar 3 '09 at 17:30 GEOCHET 16.4k156085 asked Mar 3 '09 at 17:23 David Hodgson 3,531154374 add a comment| 2 Answers 2 active oldest iis status code votes up vote 4 down vote accepted The 450 / 550 values are both from RFC 959. As 450 and 550 are both FTP errors, the second values might correspond to Windows error codes. The page here is consistent with that, with values 2, 32, and 1450 all relating to file I/O errors. 2 = ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND - The system cannot find the file specified. 32 = ERROR_SHARING_VIOLATION - The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process. 1450 = ERROR_NO_SYSTEM_RESOURCES - Insufficient system resources exist to complete the requested service. share|improve this answer edited Mar 3 '09 at 17:34 answered Mar 3 '09 at 17:27 Alnitak 214k42278351 Just what I'm looking for, thanks. –David Hodgson Mar 3 '09 at 17:47 and yet someone decided to down-vote it? –Alnitak Mar 3 '09 at 17:56 add a comment| up vote 1 down vote According to this, 550 is: Requested action not taken. File unavailable (e.g., file not found, no access). share|improve this answer answered Mar 3 '09 at 17:27 tsilb 5,018115484 add a comment| Your Answer draft saved draft discarded Sign up or log in Sign up using Google Sign up using Facebook Sign up using Email and Password Post as a guest Name Email Post as a guest Name Email discard By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service. Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other que