gRPC 1 CANCELLED vs 7 PERMISSION_DENIED
Both gRPC 1 (CANCELLED) and 7 (PERMISSION_DENIED) belong to the gRPC Status Codes category. 1 indicates that the operation was cancelled, typically by the caller. Meanwhile, 7 means that the caller does not have permission to execute the specified operation. This is not for unauthenticated callers — use UNAUTHENTICATED instead.
Deskripsi
The operation was cancelled, typically by the caller.
Ketika Anda Melihatnya
The client explicitly cancelled the RPC, or a deadline or context cancellation propagated to the server before it could finish processing.
Cara Memperbaiki
If unexpected, check whether the client is setting too-short deadlines or if cancellation is being triggered inadvertently in your call chain.
Deskripsi
The caller does not have permission to execute the specified operation. This is not for unauthenticated callers — use UNAUTHENTICATED instead.
Ketika Anda Melihatnya
The authenticated user lacks the required role, scope, or policy to perform this action. Different from UNAUTHENTICATED (code 16), which means no credentials at all.
Cara Memperbaiki
Verify the caller has the correct IAM role, API scope, or access policy. Check RBAC configuration on the server side.
Perbedaan Utama
gRPC 1: The operation was cancelled, typically by the caller.
gRPC 7: The caller does not have permission to execute the specified operation. This is not for unauthenticated callers — use UNAUTHENTICATED instead.
You encounter 1 when the client explicitly cancelled the RPC, or a deadline or context cancellation propagated to the server before it could finish processing.
You encounter 7 when the authenticated user lacks the required role, scope, or policy to perform this action. Different from UNAUTHENTICATED (code 16), which means no credentials at all.
Kapan Menggunakan Yang Mana
For 1 (CANCELLED): If unexpected, check whether the client is setting too-short deadlines or if cancellation is being triggered inadvertently in your call chain. For 7 (PERMISSION_DENIED): Verify the caller has the correct IAM role, API scope, or access policy. Check RBAC configuration on the server side.