32

I know that status code 418 was defined as a April Fools' joke, and "is not expected to be implemented by actual HTTP servers" as is stated on Wikipedia.

But I would be interested if any of you knew of a language/webserver/IDE that supports it.

I was trying on Apache (via php), and obviously it got me an internal error (500). I just like the humor behind it (am not trying to troll here) and would like to know if more than just Emacs implements this.


More precisely: It could be emulated in php for example by doing something like ...

header("HTTP/1.1 418 Whatever text I'd like");

... but do any of you know any actual server software, or language in particular, that implements it natively, where something like the following would not throw a 500, but actually work:

http_response_code(418);
9
  • 8
    Mine does. It returns 418 if you try to access a feature you haven't unlocked yet, and encourages you to have some tea and relax. Jun 3, 2014 at 14:45
  • Well but it is still a 200 OK there, isn't it?
    – Levite
    Jun 3, 2014 at 14:50
  • 1
    node.js: res.send(418) Jun 3, 2014 at 14:56
  • 6
    Right, it is a manual setting to 418. This is because servers aren't teapots, and therefore cannot correctly implement 418 natively. Now, if one were to have a teapot that could be controlled by HTTP, then you could reasonably implement 418 as an appropriate response to GET /coffee HTCPCP/1.0 or something :p Jun 3, 2014 at 15:06
  • 1
    @Levit no worries, I am happy to bump your answer up Feb 25, 2015 at 9:50

7 Answers 7

37

Google does it.

Try clicking on the teapot, or tilting your mobile device.

www.google.com/teapot

2
  • 7
    Surely google.com/brewcoffee would be more appropriate for them to use?! Dec 16, 2015 at 15:57
  • curl -H "Accept-Additions: Chocolate" -X BREW coffee://google.com/breville Oct 12, 2018 at 18:42
27

Websites that have implemented it

Languages that support it natively

Node.js

res.send(418)

Sends following HTTP header:

HTTP/1.1 418 I'm a teapot
Date: Wed, 25 Feb 2015 07:08:27 GMT
Connection: keep-alive
Transfer-Encoding: chunked

The actual node.js code used to get this response was:

require('http').createServer(function(q,s) {
    s.writeHead(418);
    s.end();
}).listen(80);

Golang

http.Error(w, http.StatusText(418), 418)

Python

Within native libraries, starting from Python 3.9 (Details @Ross)

4

Yes, it is implemented (by a teapot).

This error code is an impotent part of HTCPCP(Hyper Text Coffee Pot Control Protocol).

4

Python 3.9 will support HTTP 418 from its next (fifth) alpha release. I opened a pull request for this to be supported which was merged last weekend.

0
2

Stack overflow implements it:

https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/185426/stack-overflow-returning-http-error-code-418-im-a-teapot

albeit, a little creative, when dealing with CSRF violations.

0
2

Go lang's net/http package codifies HTTP 418 Status as a constant: StatusTeapot.

1
  • Awesome! Thanks ... added to the list.
    – Levite
    Dec 14, 2015 at 10:51
1

My server, www.snarked.org, does it if the pathname begins "/coffee" or "/pot-" followed by a digit, or methods BREW or WHEN, or a scheme equating to "coffee:" (actually, the regex pattern "^[CK][AO]FF?[EIO]E?$" which covers most western-European languages). After 60 seconds, it rolls over to Google's top hit for teapots.

0

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.