What are HTTP Status Codes ?

HTTP Status Codes:
HTTP status codes are returned by web servers to indicate the status of a request. Codes 200 and 304 are used to tell the browser the page can be viewed. All other codes generates hits and traffic 'not seen' by the visitor. For example a return code 301 or 302 will tell the browser to ask another page. The browser will do another hit and should finally receive the page with a return code 200 and 304. All codes that are 'unseen' traffic are isolated by Logstats in the HTTP Status report chart, enabled by the directives
ShowHTTPErrorsStats. in config file. You can also change value for 'not error' hits (set by default to 200 and 304 with the ValidHTTPcodes directive. The following table outlines all status codes defined for the HTTP/1.1 draft specification outlined in IETF rfc 2068.
They are 3-digit codes where the first digit of this code identifies the class of the status code and the remaining 2 digits correspond to the specific condition within the response class. They are classified in 5 categories:

1xx class - Informational
Informational status codes are provisional responses from the web server... they give the client a heads-up on what the server is doing. Informational codes do not indicate an error condition. 
100100 Continue
The continue status code tells the browser to continue sending a request to the server. 
101101 Switching Protocols
The server sends this response when the client asks to switch from HTTP/1.0 to HTTP/1.1 

2xx class - Successful
This class of status code indicates that the client's request was received, understood, and successful. 

200200 Successful
201201 Created
202202 Accepted
203203 Non-Authorative Information
204204 No Content
205205 Reset Content
206206 Partial Content
The partial content success code is issued when the server fulfills a partial GET request. This happens when the client is downloading a multi-part document or part of a larger file. 
3xx class - Redirection
This code tells the client that the browser should be redirected to another URL in order to complete the request. This is not an error condition. 
300300 Multiple Choices
301301 Moved Permanently
302302 Moved Temporarily
303303 See Other
304304 Not Modified
305305 Use Proxy
4xx class - Client Error
This status code indicates that the client has sent bad data or a malformed request to the server. Client errors are generally issued by the webserver when a client tries to gain access to a protected area using a bad username and password. 
400400 Bad Request
401401 Unauthorized
402402 Payment Required
403403 Forbidden
404404 Not Found
405400 Method Not Allowed
406400 Not Acceptable
407400 Proxy Authentication Required
408400 Request Timeout
409409 Conflict
410410 Gone
411411 Length Required
412412 Precondition Failed
413413 Request Entity Too Long
414414 Request-URI Too Long
415415 Unsupported Media Type
5xx class - Server Error
This status code indicates that the client's request couldn't be succesfully processed due to some internal error in the web server. These error codes may indicate something is seriously wrong with the web server. 
500500 Internal Server Error
An internal server error has caused the server to abort your request. This is an error condition that may also indicate a misconfiguration with the web server. However, the most common reason for 500 server errors is when you try to execute a script that has syntax errors. 
501501 Not Implemented
This code is generated by a webserver when the client requests a service that is not implemented on the server. Typically, not implemented codes are returned when a client attempts to POST data to a non-CGI (ie, the form action tag refers to a non-executable file). 
502502 Bad Gateway
The server, when acting as a proxy, issues this response when it receives a bad response from an upstream or support server. 
503503 Service Unavailable
The web server is too busy processing current requests to listen to a new client. This error represents a serious problem with the webserver (normally solved with a reboot). 
504504 Gateway Timeout
Gateway timeouts are normally issued by proxy servers when an upstream or support server doesn't respond to a request in a timely fashion. 
505505 HTTP Version Not Supported
The server issues this status code when a client tries to talk using an HTTP protocol that the server doesn't support or is configured to ignore.


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