HTTP 207 Multi-Status vs 301 Moved Permanently
HTTP 207 (Multi-Status) is a 2xx Success response, while 301 (Moved Permanently) is a 3xx Redirection response. 207 indicates that the response body contains status information for multiple resources, in situations where multiple status codes might be appropriate (WebDAV). In contrast, 301 means that the resource has been permanently moved to a new URL. All future requests should use the new URL. Search engines will transfer link equity to the new URL.
Description
The response body contains status information for multiple resources, in situations where multiple status codes might be appropriate (WebDAV).
Quand vous le voyez
In WebDAV operations that affect multiple resources simultaneously.
Comment résoudre
Parse the XML body to check the status of each individual resource.
Description
The resource has been permanently moved to a new URL. All future requests should use the new URL. Search engines will transfer link equity to the new URL.
Quand vous le voyez
After domain migrations, URL restructuring, or when consolidating duplicate URLs.
Comment résoudre
Update links and bookmarks to the new URL in the Location header. For SEO, this is the preferred redirect for permanent moves.
Différences clés
207 is a 2xx Success response, while 301 is a 3xx Redirection response.
HTTP 207: The response body contains status information for multiple resources, in situations where multiple status codes might be appropriate (WebDAV).
HTTP 301: The resource has been permanently moved to a new URL. All future requests should use the new URL. Search engines will transfer link equity to the new URL.
You encounter 207 when in WebDAV operations that affect multiple resources simultaneously.
You encounter 301 when after domain migrations, URL restructuring, or when consolidating duplicate URLs.
Quand utiliser lequel
For 207 (Multi-Status): Parse the XML body to check the status of each individual resource. For 301 (Moved Permanently): Update links and bookmarks to the new URL in the Location header. For SEO, this is the preferred redirect for permanent moves.