gRPC 10 ABORTED vs 12 UNIMPLEMENTED
Both gRPC 10 (ABORTED) and 12 (UNIMPLEMENTED) belong to the gRPC Status Codes category. 10 indicates that the operation was aborted, typically due to a concurrency issue such as a sequencer check failure or transaction abort. Meanwhile, 12 means that the operation is not implemented or is not supported/enabled in this service.
Description
The operation was aborted, typically due to a concurrency issue such as a sequencer check failure or transaction abort.
When You See It
A transaction or optimistic concurrency check failed — for example, a read-modify-write cycle detected a conflict with another concurrent operation.
How to Fix
Retry the entire read-modify-write sequence from the beginning. Implement proper optimistic concurrency control with version tokens or ETags.
Description
The operation is not implemented or is not supported/enabled in this service.
When You See It
The client called an RPC method that the server does not implement. This often happens when the client uses a newer proto definition than the server supports.
How to Fix
Verify the server version supports the method you're calling. Update the server to implement the missing method, or use an alternative endpoint.
Key Differences
gRPC 10: The operation was aborted, typically due to a concurrency issue such as a sequencer check failure or transaction abort.
gRPC 12: The operation is not implemented or is not supported/enabled in this service.
You encounter 10 when a transaction or optimistic concurrency check failed — for example, a read-modify-write cycle detected a conflict with another concurrent operation.
You encounter 12 when the client called an RPC method that the server does not implement. This often happens when the client uses a newer proto definition than the server supports.
When to Use Which
For 10 (ABORTED): Retry the entire read-modify-write sequence from the beginning. Implement proper optimistic concurrency control with version tokens or ETags. For 12 (UNIMPLEMENTED): Verify the server version supports the method you're calling. Update the server to implement the missing method, or use an alternative endpoint.