FTP 202 Command Superfluous vs 503 Bad Sequence
FTP 202 (Command Superfluous) is a 2xx Positive Completion response, while 503 (Bad Sequence) is a 5xx Permanent Negative response. 202 indicates that the command is not implemented but is recognized as superfluous. The server acknowledges the command but it has no effect. In contrast, 503 means that bad sequence of commands. The command is valid but was sent in the wrong order relative to other commands.
描述
The command is not implemented but is recognized as superfluous. The server acknowledges the command but it has no effect.
何时出现
When you send a command the server recognizes but considers unnecessary, such as ALLO on a server that does not require pre-allocation.
如何修复
No fix needed — the server is telling you the command is not necessary. You can safely ignore this response and continue.
描述
Bad sequence of commands. The command is valid but was sent in the wrong order relative to other commands.
何时出现
When you skip a required step, like sending PASS before USER, or RNTO without first sending RNFR.
如何修复
Follow the correct command sequence. Common sequences: USER then PASS for login, RNFR then RNTO for rename, PASV then RETR for transfer.
主要区别
202 is a 2xx Positive Completion response, while 503 is a 5xx Permanent Negative response.
FTP 202: The command is not implemented but is recognized as superfluous. The server acknowledges the command but it has no effect.
FTP 503: Bad sequence of commands. The command is valid but was sent in the wrong order relative to other commands.
You encounter 202 when when you send a command the server recognizes but considers unnecessary, such as ALLO on a server that does not require pre-allocation.
You encounter 503 when when you skip a required step, like sending PASS before USER, or RNTO without first sending RNFR.
何时使用哪个
For 202 (Command Superfluous): No fix needed — the server is telling you the command is not necessary. You can safely ignore this response and continue. For 503 (Bad Sequence): Follow the correct command sequence. Common sequences: USER then PASS for login, RNFR then RNTO for rename, PASV then RETR for transfer.