SMTP 334 Server Challenge vs 502 Command Not Implemented
SMTP 334 (Server Challenge) is a 3xx Positive Intermediate response, while 502 (Command Not Implemented) is a 5xx Permanent Negative response. 334 indicates that the server is issuing an authentication challenge as part of the SASL authentication exchange. The response contains a Base64-encoded challenge that the client must decode and respond to. In contrast, 502 means that the command is recognized by the SMTP specification but is not implemented on this server. The server understands the command but has chosen not to support it.
描述
The server is issuing an authentication challenge as part of the SASL authentication exchange. The response contains a Base64-encoded challenge that the client must decode and respond to.
何时出现
During the AUTH command handshake. The server is prompting you for your username or password (Base64-encoded) as part of the multi-step authentication process.
如何修复
Respond with the appropriate Base64-encoded credentials. If authentication keeps failing after responding, verify your credentials and ensure you are using the correct SASL mechanism.
描述
The command is recognized by the SMTP specification but is not implemented on this server. The server understands the command but has chosen not to support it.
何时出现
When using optional SMTP commands like VRFY, EXPN, or TURN that the server administrator has disabled, often for security or anti-spam reasons.
如何修复
Use an alternative approach — for example, if VRFY is disabled, send a test email instead of verifying the address. Check the server's EHLO response for supported extensions.
主要区别
334 is a 3xx Positive Intermediate response, while 502 is a 5xx Permanent Negative response.
SMTP 334: The server is issuing an authentication challenge as part of the SASL authentication exchange. The response contains a Base64-encoded challenge that the client must decode and respond to.
SMTP 502: The command is recognized by the SMTP specification but is not implemented on this server. The server understands the command but has chosen not to support it.
You encounter 334 when during the AUTH command handshake. The server is prompting you for your username or password (Base64-encoded) as part of the multi-step authentication process.
You encounter 502 when when using optional SMTP commands like VRFY, EXPN, or TURN that the server administrator has disabled, often for security or anti-spam reasons.
何时使用哪个
For 334 (Server Challenge): Respond with the appropriate Base64-encoded credentials. If authentication keeps failing after responding, verify your credentials and ensure you are using the correct SASL mechanism. For 502 (Command Not Implemented): Use an alternative approach — for example, if VRFY is disabled, send a test email instead of verifying the address. Check the server's EHLO response for supported extensions.