FTP 212 Directory Status vs 350 File Action Pending
FTP 212 (Directory Status) is a 2xx Positive Completion response, while 350 (File Action Pending) is a 3xx Positive Intermediate response. 212 indicates that directory status reply. The server provides information about the current directory or a specified directory. In contrast, 350 means that requested file action pending further information. The server has accepted the first part of a two-step command and is waiting for the follow-up.
説明
Directory status reply. The server provides information about the current directory or a specified directory.
このコードが表示される場合
After issuing the STAT command on a directory, the server returns the directory listing or status information.
解決方法
No fix needed — this is an informational response showing directory contents or status.
説明
Requested file action pending further information. The server has accepted the first part of a two-step command and is waiting for the follow-up.
このコードが表示される場合
After issuing RNFR (rename from) to specify which file to rename. The server is waiting for the RNTO (rename to) command.
解決方法
Send the follow-up command immediately — typically RNTO after RNFR, or REST followed by RETR for resumed transfers.
主な違い
212 is a 2xx Positive Completion response, while 350 is a 3xx Positive Intermediate response.
FTP 212: Directory status reply. The server provides information about the current directory or a specified directory.
FTP 350: Requested file action pending further information. The server has accepted the first part of a two-step command and is waiting for the follow-up.
You encounter 212 when after issuing the STAT command on a directory, the server returns the directory listing or status information.
You encounter 350 when after issuing RNFR (rename from) to specify which file to rename. The server is waiting for the RNTO (rename to) command.
どちらをいつ使うか
For 212 (Directory Status): No fix needed — this is an informational response showing directory contents or status. For 350 (File Action Pending): Send the follow-up command immediately — typically RNTO after RNFR, or REST followed by RETR for resumed transfers.