230
FTP
230 User Logged In
User logged in, proceed. The authentication was successful and the user has full access to the FTP server.
When You See This Code
After providing valid credentials with USER and PASS commands, or after anonymous login on servers that allow it.
How to Fix
No fix needed — you are authenticated. Proceed with CWD, LIST, RETR, STOR, or other file operations.
Specification
Compare With
Guides
FTP Reply Codes: Understanding File Transfer Responses
DNS & Networking
TCP Three-Way Handshake and Connection Lifecycle
DNS & Networking
Essential Network Debugging Tools: ping, traceroute, mtr, and tcpdump
DNS & Networking
RFC 959: FTP Protocol Deep Dive
Protocol Deep Dives
TLS 1.3: Faster, Simpler, More Secure
Protocol Deep Dives
Migrating from FTP to SFTP: A Complete Transition Guide
Migration & Upgrades
HTTP Access Log Management: Rotation, Parsing, and Analysis
Production Infrastructure
Specifications
Glossary
Status Code
TLS Handshake
TCP/IP
Three-Way Handshake
Port Number
Firewall
Proxy Server (Forward Proxy)
Socket
Request-Response Model
RFC (Request for Comments)
Connection-Oriented
Half-Duplex
Text vs Binary Protocol
FTP Active Mode
FTP Passive Mode
FTP Control Channel
FTP Data Channel
SFTP (SSH File Transfer Protocol)
FTPS (FTP Secure)
FTP Reply Code
FTP Anonymous Access
FTP Transfer Mode (ASCII vs Binary)
FTP Resume (REST Command)
SCP (Secure Copy Protocol)
FTP Chroot Jail
WebDAV (Web Distributed Authoring and Versioning)
rsync
FTP MLSD (Machine-Readable Listing)
FTP NAT Traversal
Transfer Integrity
FTP over TLS (RFC 4217)
File Locking
Bandwidth Throttling
TLS Versions