gRPC 5 NOT_FOUND vs 15 DATA_LOSS
Both gRPC 5 (NOT_FOUND) and 15 (DATA_LOSS) belong to the gRPC Status Codes category. 5 indicates that some requested entity was not found. For example, a file or directory that the RPC was supposed to operate on does not exist. Meanwhile, 15 means that unrecoverable data loss or corruption has occurred.
Beschreibung
Some requested entity was not found. For example, a file or directory that the RPC was supposed to operate on does not exist.
Wann Sie es sehen
The resource referenced in the request doesn't exist — such as looking up a user by ID that has been deleted or never created.
Wie man es behebt
Verify the resource identifier is correct. Ensure the resource was created before accessing it, or handle the not-found case gracefully in your client.
Beschreibung
Unrecoverable data loss or corruption has occurred.
Wann Sie es sehen
Critical data was lost or corrupted — for example, a checksum mismatch during transmission or an unrecoverable storage failure on the server.
Wie man es behebt
Investigate the data integrity failure immediately. Restore from backups if available, and check for hardware failures or network corruption in the data path.
Wesentliche Unterschiede
gRPC 5: Some requested entity was not found. For example, a file or directory that the RPC was supposed to operate on does not exist.
gRPC 15: Unrecoverable data loss or corruption has occurred.
You encounter 5 when the resource referenced in the request doesn't exist — such as looking up a user by ID that has been deleted or never created.
You encounter 15 when critical data was lost or corrupted — for example, a checksum mismatch during transmission or an unrecoverable storage failure on the server.
Wann welchen verwenden
For 5 (NOT_FOUND): Verify the resource identifier is correct. Ensure the resource was created before accessing it, or handle the not-found case gracefully in your client. For 15 (DATA_LOSS): Investigate the data integrity failure immediately. Restore from backups if available, and check for hardware failures or network corruption in the data path.