I prefer simplicity and using the first example but I’d be happy to hear other options. Here’s a few examples:

HTTP/1.1 403 POST /endpoint
{ "message": "Unauthorized access" }
HTTP/1.1 403 POST /endpoint
Unauthorized access (no json)
HTTP/1.1 403 POST /endpoint
{ "error": "Unauthorized access" }
HTTP/1.1 403 POST /endpoint
{
  "code": "UNAUTHORIZED",
  "message": "Unauthorized access",
}
HTTP/1.1 200 (🤡) POST /endpoint
{
  "error": true,
  "message": "Unauthorized access",
}
HTTP/1.1 403 POST /endpoint
{
  "status": 403,
  "code": "UNAUTHORIZED",
  "message": "Unauthorized access",
}

Or your own example.

96 points

Respect the Accept header from the client. If they need JSON, send JSON, otherwise don’t.

Repeating an HTTP status code in the body is redundant and error prone. Never do it.

Error codes are great. Ensure to prefix yours and keep them unique.

Error messages can be helpful, but often lead developers to just display them in the frontend, breaking i18n. Some people supply error messages in multiple languages, depending on the Accept-Language header.

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32 points

This guy backends ☝️

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7 points

but often lead developers to just display them in the frontend

Oh boy I feel this one.
My API is meant for scripting (i.e. it’s for developers and the errors are for developers), but the UI team uses it and they just straight display the error from their HTTP request for none technical people which might also not get to know all the parameters actually needed for the request.
And even when the error is in fact in my code, and I sent all the data I need to debug and replicate the error, the users can’t tell me because the UI truncates the response, so the user only sees something like Error in pe1uca's API: {"error":"bad request","message":"Your request has an error, please check th... (truncated). So the message gets truncated and the link to the documentation is also never shown .-.

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5 points

To be fair if it’s an exceptional error message (i.e. database timeout; not incorrect password) I don’t think i18n matters that much. Most people will just be googling the error message anyway, and if not it should be rare enough that using Google translate isn’t an issue.

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8 points

If anything i18n makes things way worse for everyone. Ever tried to diagnose a semi-obscure Windows or Android error on a non-English locale? Pretty sure that’s one of the activities in the inner circles of Hell. Bonus points if the error message is obviously machine-translated and therefore semantically meaningless.

Unique error codes fix this if they remain visible to the user, which they usually don’t because Mr Project Manager thinks it looks untidy.

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2 points

Depends on the product. It’s just something to think about when signaling errors. There is information for the API client developer, there is information for the client code, and there’s information for the user of the client. Remembering these distinct concerns, and providing distinct solutions, helps. I don’t think there is a single approach that is always correct.

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67 points

Giving back a 200 for an error always makes me bristle. Return correct codes people. “But the request to the web server was successful!”

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16 points

I use this big expensive simulator called Questa, and if there’s an error during the simulation it prints Errors: 1, Warnings: 0 and then exits with EXIT_SUCCESS (0)! I tried to convince them that this is wrong but they’re like “but it successfully simulated the error”. 🤦🏻‍♂️

We end up parsing the output which is very dumb but also seems to be industry standard in the silicon industry unfortunately (hardware people are not very good at software engineering).

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11 points
*

That’s when you use different exit codes. 1 for failure during simulation, 2 for simulation failed.

Shame they wouldn’t listen.

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1 point

I generally agree, but with robocopy they went too far with this, because the status code doesn’t work the way you expect, and you’ve got to script around it.

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4 points

I worked on a product that was only allowed to return 200 OK, no matter what.

Apparently some early and wealthy customer was too lazy to check error codes in the response, so we had to return 200 or else their site broke. Then we’d get emails from other customers complaining that our response codes were wrong.

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2 points

I don’t necessarily disagree, but I have spent considerable time on this subject and can see merit in decoupling your own error signaling from the HTTP layer.

No matter how you design your API, if you’re passing through additional layers, like load balancers and CDNs, you no longer have full control over all responses your clients receive. At this point it may be viable to always signal a successful backend connection with a 200, even if the process resulted in a failure.

Going further, your API may include partial success scenarios, think batch processing, then the result could be a mix of success and failure that doesn’t translate to HTTP status.

You could even argue that there is really no reason to couple your API so tightly with a concept of the transport layer it uses.

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1 point

You should consider if you really want to integrate your application super tightly with the HTTP protocol.

Will it always be used exclusively over a REST-ful HTTP API that you control, and it has exactly one hop to the client, or passes through hops that can be trusted to never alter the HTTP metadata significantly? In that case you can afford to make HTTP codes semantically relevant for your app.

But maybe you need to pass data through multiple different types of layers and different mechanisms (socket protocols, pub-sub, file storage etc.) In that case you want all your semantics to be independent from any form of transport.

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1 point

It’s usually such an easy thing to do as well, in all the web frameworks I’ve used it’s literally a case of changing Ok to Forbidden, 200 to 403 or something very similar

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27 points
4 points

This one looks nice. Very detailed.

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4 points

This is the right answer imo. While it might be an overkill for sth like 404s, it’s amazing for describing different bad requests.

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3 points

I don’t get why the RFC show an example returning 403 with body “You do not have enough credit.” although there is a dedicated status code " 402 Payment Required". Isn’t more correct to use 402 in this situation?

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2 points

Don’t know what are the changes since 7807 (which this one obsoletes) but this article helped me quickly understand the first one, hopefully it’s still somewhat relevant.
https://lakitna.medium.com/understanding-problem-json-adf68e5cf1f8

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23 points
*

I’m a data engineer, and have seen an ungodly ammount of 200-but-actually-no-stuff-is-broken errors and it’s the bane of my life!

We have generic code to handle pulling in api data, and transforming it. It’s obviously check the status code, but any time an API implements this we have to choose between:

  • having code fail wierdly further down the line because can’t parse the status
  • adding in some kind of insane if not response.ok or "actually no there's an error really" in response.content logic

Every time you ignore protocols and invent your own, you are making everyone sad.

Will take recommendations of support groups I can join for victims of terrible apis.

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22 points

I think the general rule of thumb is: Keep it Simple, Stupid.

Don’t include fields “just in case”. If you don’t have a use for a field right now, then don’t include it. It’s often easier to add fields than removing.

Avoid having fields that can be derived from other fields. Code “UNAUTHORIZED” can be derived from 403. Having both adds confusion. It adds the question whether the code field be something other than “UNAUTHORIZED” when the response is 403.

Just 403 with empty body is fine. Add message in a JSON in case it’s useful for the user. If the user needs more fields in the future, then it’s easy to expand the JSON.

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15 points

403 is a category, not a code. Yes I know they’re called http codes but REST calls are more complex than they were in 2001. There are hundreds of reasons you might not be authorized.

Is it insufficient permissions? Authentication required? Blocked by security? Too many users concurrently active?

I’d argue the minimum for modern services is:

403 category
Code for front end error displays
Message as default front end code interpretation

As json usually but if you’re all using protobuf, go off King.

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1 point

Yes, the more information and standards in an api response the better. There should be front end messages and developer messages. URL links to documentation are great too. Standards assist automation and testing.

I understand other viewpoints about maintenance and redundancy, this can cause errors. And the above is too much work for some projects .

But most api start as a temporary or one person project. It’s tempting to be terse and cool with responses . Even more tempting is this is a great cost cutter to not have overly detailed responses.

However

It’s much easier to add in more data to responses now than later. And a future you years later, or strangers who use it , will be grateful. It may be the thing that allows an api to be popular, rather than people use it despite the api

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0 points

I’ve never heard of using protobuf in an HTTP API… But, I guess that should be fine.

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1 point

The thing is, it does exists a way to convert grpc protobuf to json one

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-2 points
*

REST calls are same as in 2001. There is no REST 2.0 or REST 2024. Because REST is architecture guideline. It’s just more data sent over it today. HTTP code IS code. Why your system issued it is implementation detail and have nothing to do with resource representation. Examples you provided are not 403. “Too many users active” does not exist in REST because REST is stateless, closest you can get is “too many requests” - 429. Insufficient permissions is 401. I don’t even know what is “blocked by security” but sounds like 401 too. Regardless, you should not provide any details on 401 or 403 to client as it is security concern. No serious app will tell you “password is wrong” or “user does not exist”. Maximum what client should hope for is input validation errors in 400.

For those with “internal tool, I don’t care” argument - you either do not know what security in depth is or you don’t have 403 or 401 scenario in the system in the first place.

Now hear me out, you all can do whatever you want or need with your API. Have state, respond with images instead of error codes, whatever, but calling it REST is wrong by definition

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2 points

Theory is fine but in the real world I’ve never used a REST API that adhered to the stateless standard, but everyone will still call it REST. Regardless of if you want it or not REST is no longer the same as it’s original definition, the same way nobody pronounces gif as “jif” unless they’re being deliberately transgressive.

403 can be thrown for all of those reasons - I just grabbed that from Wikipedia because I was too lazy to dig into our prod code to actually map out specifics.

Looking at production code I see 13 different variations on 422, 2 different variations of 429…

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