Learning:429 Too Many Requests error: Difference between revisions

From Learning
(Created page with "This content is copied from Ref:Ref:429 Too Many Request error. If you get a 429 Too Many Requests error when browsing this site, read on. You're probably seeing this error because a large number of requests have been made from your IP address over a short period of time. That's probably a lot of requests from you or others who share your IP address (such as your home wi-fi network). Waiting a minute and then retrying should generally work. If you are an actual hu...")
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
This content is copied from [[Ref:Ref:429 Too Many Request error]].
This content is copied from [[Ref:Ref:429 Too Many Requests error]].


If you get a 429 Too Many Requests error when browsing this site, read on.
If you get a 429 Too Many Requests error when browsing this site, read on.
Line 5: Line 5:
You're probably seeing this error because a large number of requests have been made from your IP address over a short period of time. That's probably a lot of requests from you or others who share your IP address (such as your home wi-fi network). Waiting a minute and then retrying should generally work.
You're probably seeing this error because a large number of requests have been made from your IP address over a short period of time. That's probably a lot of requests from you or others who share your IP address (such as your home wi-fi network). Waiting a minute and then retrying should generally work.


If you are an actual human being with a legitimate reason to be browsing the site heavily, first, thank you and sorry about this! We set rate limits to prevent bots, spiders, spammers, and malicious actors from consuming too much of our server's resources so that our server's resources can be devoted to real humans like you. Consider writing to vipulnaik1@gmail.com with your IP address to have the IP address whitelisted. You can get your IP address by [https://www.google.com/search?q=my+ip+address Googling "my IP address"] (scroll down a little bit to where Google includes the IP address in a box). NOTE: If you have both an IPv4 address and an IPv6 address, you may need to send both; the server uses IPv6 if your client has both addresses. To check if you have an IPv6 address, try visiting [https://ipv6.google.com/ ipv6.google.com].
If you are an actual human being with a legitimate reason to be browsing the site heavily, first, thank you and sorry about this! We set rate limits to prevent bots, spiders, spammers, and malicious actors from consuming too much of our server's resources so that our server's resources can be devoted to real humans like you. Consider writing to vipulnaik1@gmail.com with your IP address to have the IP address whitelisted. You can get your IP address by [https://www.google.com/search?q=my+ip+address Googling "my IP address"] (scroll down a little bit to where Google includes the IP address in a box). NOTE: If you have both an IPv4 address and an IPv6 address, you should send both; the server supports both IPv4 and IPv6, so either may end up getting used. To check if you have an IPv6 address, try visiting [https://ipv6.google.com/ ipv6.google.com].


If your IP address changes, or you are away from your home network, then you'll get rate-limited again. So if you find yourself getting rate-limited after already having been whitelisted, check if you are on a different IP address than the one for which you requested whitelisting.
If your IP address changes, or you are away from your home network, then you'll get rate-limited again. So if you find yourself getting rate-limited after already having been whitelisted, check if you are on a different IP address than the one for which you requested whitelisting.

Revision as of 20:36, 7 August 2024

This content is copied from Ref:Ref:429 Too Many Requests error.

If you get a 429 Too Many Requests error when browsing this site, read on.

You're probably seeing this error because a large number of requests have been made from your IP address over a short period of time. That's probably a lot of requests from you or others who share your IP address (such as your home wi-fi network). Waiting a minute and then retrying should generally work.

If you are an actual human being with a legitimate reason to be browsing the site heavily, first, thank you and sorry about this! We set rate limits to prevent bots, spiders, spammers, and malicious actors from consuming too much of our server's resources so that our server's resources can be devoted to real humans like you. Consider writing to vipulnaik1@gmail.com with your IP address to have the IP address whitelisted. You can get your IP address by Googling "my IP address" (scroll down a little bit to where Google includes the IP address in a box). NOTE: If you have both an IPv4 address and an IPv6 address, you should send both; the server supports both IPv4 and IPv6, so either may end up getting used. To check if you have an IPv6 address, try visiting ipv6.google.com.

If your IP address changes, or you are away from your home network, then you'll get rate-limited again. So if you find yourself getting rate-limited after already having been whitelisted, check if you are on a different IP address than the one for which you requested whitelisting.