gRPC 6 ALREADY_EXISTS vs 15 DATA_LOSS
Both gRPC 6 (ALREADY_EXISTS) and 15 (DATA_LOSS) belong to the gRPC Status Codes category. 6 indicates that the entity that a client attempted to create already exists. For example, a file or directory that the RPC was supposed to create already exists. Meanwhile, 15 means that unrecoverable data loss or corruption has occurred.
Beschreibung
The entity that a client attempted to create already exists. For example, a file or directory that the RPC was supposed to create already exists.
Wann Sie es sehen
A create operation failed because a resource with the same unique identifier or name already exists in the system.
Wie man es behebt
Use a different identifier, or switch to an upsert/update operation if overwriting is acceptable. Check for existing resources before creating.
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 6: The entity that a client attempted to create already exists. For example, a file or directory that the RPC was supposed to create already exists.
gRPC 15: Unrecoverable data loss or corruption has occurred.
You encounter 6 when a create operation failed because a resource with the same unique identifier or name already exists in the system.
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 6 (ALREADY_EXISTS): Use a different identifier, or switch to an upsert/update operation if overwriting is acceptable. Check for existing resources before creating. 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.