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HTTP 404

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Mozilla Firefox displaying an Apache HTTP Server 404 error page.
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Mozilla Firefox displaying an Apache HTTP Server 404 error page.
Netscape Navigator displaying the 404 error page at eBay.
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Netscape Navigator displaying the 404 error page at eBay.
Internet Explorer 7 comes configured to "Show friendly HTTP error messages" which replace the server's normal error messages.
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Internet Explorer 7 comes configured to "Show friendly HTTP error messages" which replace the server's normal error messages.
Safari showing a 404 error from Wikipedia.
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Safari showing a 404 error from Wikipedia.


This article is about File Not Found, computer. For the webcomic, see File Not Found (webcomic).

The 404 or Not Found error message is an HTTP standard response code indicating that the client was able to communicate with the server, but the server either could not find the file that was requested, or it was configured not to fulfill the request and not reveal the reason why.

When communicating via HTTP, a server is required to respond to a request, such as a web browser's request for an HTML document (web page), with a numeric response code, sometimes followed by an email-like MIME message. Each response code has an associated string of English text that must also be present. Response code 404's associated string is "Not Found". When sending a 404 response, web servers usually include in the response message a short HTML document that mentions both the numeric code and this string. Many browsers opt to show this message to the user, while some browsers instead display a "friendlier" error message.

HTTP response codes have a specific interpretation. In code 404, the first "4" indicates a client error, such as a mistyped URL. The following two digits indicate the specific error encountered. HTTP's use of three-digit codes is similar to the use of such codes in earlier protocols such as FTP and NNTP.

These errors can be customized on a large number of such servers to display a page that could be of more help than a default. For example, this can be achieved in Apache by placing a .htaccess file on the Web server. Internet Explorer will not display these pages, however, unless they are larger than 512 bytes. Creating humorous 404 pages has become popular and websites (see external links below) have been created for the sole purpose of linking to numerous amusing 404 error pages.

A 404 error is often returned when pages have been moved or deleted. In the first case, a better response is to return a 301 Moved Permanently response, which can be configured in most server configuration files; in the second case, a 410 Gone should be returned. Because these two options require special server configuration, most websites do not make use of them.

A soft 404 is the reporting of a "not found" page via a 200 response code. Soft 404s are problematic for automated methods of discovering if a link is broken or not. An algorithm for identifying soft 404s was given by Bar-Yossef, et al.[1]

404 is also a neologism denoting when a thing or person is not found.

Contents

Trivia

  • Ontario's Highway 404 is commonly made fun of since people going from the Toronto area are heading to the "middle of nowhere" on that freeway.

References

  1. ^ Sic Transit Gloria Telae: Towards an Understanding of the Web’s Decay, §3, submitted to the 13th World Wide Web Conference in New York City, 17–22 May 2004 (WWW2004).

See also

External links

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