HTTP defines the status 401 Unauthorized for missing authentication, but this status only applies to HTTP authentication. What status should I return with a session cookie based system, when an unauthorized request happens?
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Formally, 403 Forbidden is the right response. It's defined as
The confusing part may be "Authorization will not help", but they really mean "HTTP authentication" (WWW-Authenticate) |
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403 I believe is technically correct (and probably most effective if you are implementing a custom API / protocol). 401 is not appropriate as it refers to authorization with a WWW-Authenticate header, which a session cookie is not. If this is a public facing website where you are trying to deny access based on a session cookie, 200 with an appropriate body to indicate that log in is needed or a 302 temporary redirect to a log in page is often best. |
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You can make use of a test condition and pass on the Error code: 401.1-Logon failed. The logon attempt is unsuccessful, probably because of a user name or password that is not valid. Which is specifically used for the incorrect password or mismatched user name and password. Hope this helps you. |
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A 401 is acceptable: If the request already included Authorization credentials, then the 401 response indicates that authorization has been refused for those credentials. |
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