HTTP Status Codes and Error Messages
The integrations API returns HTTP status codes, error codes, and messages in JSON format.
GET error
The table below provides the HTTP code, the error code, an example message, and troubleshooting guidance for the error.
Code | Text | Description |
---|---|---|
404 | Not found | Example: "No Integration found with ID 5." The request failed because the integration with the given ID was not found. Use the GET /integrations endpoint to list all integration configurations to find the correct ID. |
DELETE errors
The table below provides the HTTP code, the error code, an example message, and troubleshooting guidance for each error.
Code | Text | Description |
---|---|---|
400 | Bad request | Example: "Credentials are not required for disable unless the integration was configured automatically. If you need to update your integration credentials, use PUT to update the integration before disabling." The request failed because the payload provided authentication credentials for a manually bootstrapped integration. Remove the authentication credentials from the payload. |
400 | Bad request | Example: "Integrations that are automatically configured require privileged credentials to disable. Please provide them in your payload." The request failed because the integration was created with autoBootstrap set to true, and privileged credentials were not provided in the request payload to delete the integration. Provide the credentials you used to configure your Azure Synapse Analytics, Redshift, or Snowflake integration. |
400 | Bad request | Example: "Credentials are not required to disable a Databricks integration. If you need to update your integration credentials, use PUT to update the integration before disabling." The request failed because the payload provided authentication credentials for a Databricks integration. Remove the authentication credentials from the payload. |
404 | Not found | Example: "No integration found with ID 5." The request failed because the integration with the given ID was not found. Use the GET /integrations endpoint to list all integration configurations to find the correct ID. |
409 | Conflict | Example: "Unable to edit integration with ID 10 in current state editing." The request failed because the integration is currently being modified or deleted. Use the GET /integrations/{id}/status endpoint to determine when the integration has finished updating. Then, delete the integration. |
422 | Unprocessable entity | Example: "Unable to delete integration with ID 7, validation failed." The request failed because a validation test failed. See the validation results object documentation for a list of validation test messages and errors to address the issue. |
POST errors
The table below provides the HTTP code, the error code, an example message, and troubleshooting guidance for each error.
Code | Text | Description |
---|---|---|
400 | Bad Request | Example: "Use PUT /integrations/1 endpoint to update connection information for Snowflake integration on host test-account.snowflakecomputing.com (id = 1) that previously failed to create." The request failed because the integration previously failed to create. The message you receive includes the ID and host of the integration that failed. Use the PUT /integrations/{id} endpoint to update the connection information for that integration to create it. |
409 | Conflict | Example: "Snowflake integration already exists on test-account.snowflakecomputing.com (id = 1)." The request failed because an integration already exists on the host. Use the integration ID provided in the error message to delete or modify the existing integration. Ensure that the name and config parameters in the new configuration do not conflict with your existing integration. |
422 | Unprocessable entity | Example: "Validation of prerequisite setup failed. Unable to create integration." The request failed because a validation test failed. See the validation results object documentation for a list of validation test messages and errors to address the issue. |
422 | Unprocessable entity | Example: "Processing Error: Error trying to get the current metastore info." The request failed because Immuta could not find the Databricks metastore information. |
PUT errors
The table below provides the HTTP code, the error code, an example message, and troubleshooting guidance for each error.
Code | Text | Description |
---|---|---|
400 | Bad request | Example: "Unable to edit integration due to changes of non-editable attribute(s)." The request failed because an attribute was changed that cannot be edited. The error message includes a list of the attributes that the request attempted to change. |
404 | Not found | Example: "No integration found with ID 5." The request failed because the integration with the given ID was not found. Use the GET /integrations endpoint to list all integration configurations to find the correct ID. |
409 | Conflict | Example: "Unable to edit integration with ID 10 in current state editing." The request failed because the integration is currently being modified or deleted. Use the GET /integrations/{id}/status endpoint to determine when the integration has finished updating. Then, modify the integration. If the integration has been deleted, use the POST /integrations endpoint to re-create the integration. |
422 | Unprocessable entity | Example: "Unable to edit integration with ID 7, validation failed." The request failed because a validation test failed. See the validation results object documentation for a list of validation test messages and errors to address the issue. |
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