FTP

FTP 215 System Type vs 230 User Logged In

Both FTP 215 (System Type) and 230 (User Logged In) belong to the 2xx Positive Completion category. 215 indicates that the NAME system type, where NAME is an official system name from the list in the Assigned Numbers document. Reports the operating system of the server. Meanwhile, 230 means that user logged in, proceed. The authentication was successful and the user has full access to the FTP server.

Description

The NAME system type, where NAME is an official system name from the list in the Assigned Numbers document. Reports the operating system of the server.

Quand vous le voyez

After issuing the SYST command. The server reports its operating system type, commonly 'UNIX Type: L8' or 'Windows_NT'.

Comment résoudre

No fix needed — use this information to adjust path separators and line endings for the server's OS type.

Description

User logged in, proceed. The authentication was successful and the user has full access to the FTP server.

Quand vous le voyez

After providing valid credentials with USER and PASS commands, or after anonymous login on servers that allow it.

Comment résoudre

No fix needed — you are authenticated. Proceed with CWD, LIST, RETR, STOR, or other file operations.

Différences clés

1.

FTP 215: The NAME system type, where NAME is an official system name from the list in the Assigned Numbers document. Reports the operating system of the server.

2.

FTP 230: User logged in, proceed. The authentication was successful and the user has full access to the FTP server.

3.

You encounter 215 when after issuing the SYST command. The server reports its operating system type, commonly 'UNIX Type: L8' or 'Windows_NT'.

4.

You encounter 230 when after providing valid credentials with USER and PASS commands, or after anonymous login on servers that allow it.

Quand utiliser lequel

For 215 (System Type): No fix needed — use this information to adjust path separators and line endings for the server's OS type. For 230 (User Logged In): No fix needed — you are authenticated. Proceed with CWD, LIST, RETR, STOR, or other file operations.

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