| ---------------------- |
| HAProxy how-to |
| ---------------------- |
| version 1.5-dev17 |
| willy tarreau |
| 2012/12/28 |
| |
| |
| 1) How to build it |
| ------------------ |
| |
| To build haproxy, you will need : |
| - GNU make. Neither Solaris nor OpenBSD's make work with the GNU Makefile. |
| However, specific Makefiles for BSD and OSX are provided. |
| - GCC between 2.91 and 4.7. Others may work, but not tested. |
| - GNU ld |
| |
| Also, you might want to build with libpcre support, which will provide a very |
| efficient regex implementation and will also fix some badness on Solaris' one. |
| |
| To build haproxy, you have to choose your target OS amongst the following ones |
| and assign it to the TARGET variable : |
| |
| - linux22 for Linux 2.2 |
| - linux24 for Linux 2.4 and above (default) |
| - linux24e for Linux 2.4 with support for a working epoll (> 0.21) |
| - linux26 for Linux 2.6 and above |
| - linux2628 for Linux 2.6.28 and above (enables splice and tproxy) |
| - solaris for Solaris 8 or 10 (others untested) |
| - freebsd for FreeBSD 5 to 8.0 (others untested) |
| - openbsd for OpenBSD 3.1 to 5.2 (others untested) |
| - aix52 for AIX 5.2 |
| - cygwin for Cygwin |
| - generic for any other OS. |
| - custom to manually adjust every setting |
| |
| You may also choose your CPU to benefit from some optimizations. This is |
| particularly important on UltraSparc machines. For this, you can assign |
| one of the following choices to the CPU variable : |
| |
| - i686 for intel PentiumPro, Pentium 2 and above, AMD Athlon |
| - i586 for intel Pentium, AMD K6, VIA C3. |
| - ultrasparc : Sun UltraSparc I/II/III/IV processor |
| - native : use the build machine's specific processor optimizations |
| - generic : any other processor or no specific optimization. (default) |
| |
| Alternatively, you may just set the CPU_CFLAGS value to the optimal GCC options |
| for your platform. |
| |
| You may want to build specific target binaries which do not match your native |
| compiler's target. This is particularly true on 64-bit systems when you want |
| to build a 32-bit binary. Use the ARCH variable for this purpose. Right now |
| it only knows about a few x86 variants (i386,i486,i586,i686,x86_64), two |
| generic ones (32,64) and sets -m32/-m64 as well as -march=<arch> accordingly. |
| |
| If your system supports PCRE (Perl Compatible Regular Expressions), then you |
| really should build with libpcre which is between 2 and 10 times faster than |
| other libc implementations. Regex are used for header processing (deletion, |
| rewriting, allow, deny). The only inconvenient of libpcre is that it is not |
| yet widely spread, so if you build for other systems, you might get into |
| trouble if they don't have the dynamic library. In this situation, you should |
| statically link libpcre into haproxy so that it will not be necessary to |
| install it on target systems. Available build options for PCRE are : |
| |
| - USE_PCRE=1 to use libpcre, in whatever form is available on your system |
| (shared or static) |
| |
| - USE_STATIC_PCRE=1 to use a static version of libpcre even if the dynamic |
| one is available. This will enhance portability. |
| |
| - with no option, use your OS libc's standard regex implementation (default). |
| Warning! group references on Solaris seem broken. Use static-pcre whenever |
| possible. |
| |
| Recent systems can resolve IPv6 host names using getaddrinfo(). This primitive |
| is not present in all libcs and does not work in all of them either. Support in |
| glibc was broken before 2.3. Some embedded libs may not properly work either, |
| thus, support is disabled by default, meaning that some host names which only |
| resolve as IPv6 addresses will not resolve and configs might emit an error |
| during parsing. If you know that your OS libc has reliable support for |
| getaddrinfo(), you can add USE_GETADDRINFO=1 on the make command line to enable |
| it. This is the recommended option for most Linux distro packagers since it's |
| working fine on all recent mainstream distros. It is automatically enabled on |
| Solaris 8 and above, as it's known to work. |
| |
| It is possible to add native support for SSL using the GNU makefile only, and |
| by passing "USE_OPENSSL=1" on the make commande line. The libssl and libcrypto |
| will automatically be linked with haproxy. Some systems also require libz, so |
| if the build fails due to missing symbols such as deflateInit(), then try again |
| with "ADDLIB=-lz". |
| |
| It is also possible to include native support for ZLIB to benefit from HTTP |
| compression. For this, pass "USE_ZLIB=1" on the "make" command line and ensure |
| that zlib is present on the system. |
| |
| By default, the DEBUG variable is set to '-g' to enable debug symbols. It is |
| not wise to disable it on uncommon systems, because it's often the only way to |
| get a complete core when you need one. Otherwise, you can set DEBUG to '-s' to |
| strip the binary. |
| |
| For example, I use this to build for Solaris 8 : |
| |
| $ make TARGET=solaris CPU=ultrasparc USE_STATIC_PCRE=1 |
| |
| And I build it this way on OpenBSD or FreeBSD : |
| |
| $ make -f Makefile.bsd REGEX=pcre DEBUG= COPTS.generic="-Os -fomit-frame-pointer -mgnu" |
| |
| And on a classic Linux with SSL and ZLIB support (eg: Red Hat 5.x) : |
| |
| $ make TARGET=linux26 CPU=native USE_PCRE=1 USE_OPENSSL=1 USE_ZLIB=1 |
| |
| And on a recent Linux >= 2.6.28 with SSL and ZLIB support : |
| |
| $ make TARGET=linux2628 CPU=native USE_PCRE=1 USE_OPENSSL=1 USE_ZLIB=1 |
| |
| In order to build a 32-bit binary on an x86_64 Linux system with SSL support |
| without support for compression but when OpenSSL requires ZLIB anyway : |
| |
| $ make TARGET=linux26 ARCH=i386 USE_OPENSSL=1 ADDLIB=-lz |
| |
| The BSD and OSX makefiles do not support build options for OpenSSL nor zlib. |
| Also, at least on OpenBSD, pthread_mutexattr_setpshared() does not exist so |
| the SSL session cache cannot be shared between multiple processes. If you want |
| to enable these options, you need to use GNU make with the default makefile as |
| follows : |
| |
| $ gmake TARGET=openbsd USE_OPENSSL=1 USE_ZLIB=1 USE_PRIVATE_CACHE=1 |
| |
| If you need to pass other defines, includes, libraries, etc... then please |
| check the Makefile to see which ones will be available in your case, and |
| use the USE_* variables in the GNU Makefile, or ADDINC, ADDLIB, and DEFINE |
| variables in the BSD makefiles. |
| |
| AIX 5.3 is known to work with the generic target. However, for the binary to |
| also run on 5.2 or earlier, you need to build with DEFINE="-D_MSGQSUPPORT", |
| otherwise __fd_select() will be used while not being present in the libc. |
| If you get build errors because of strange symbols or section mismatches, |
| simply remove -g from DEBUG_CFLAGS. |
| |
| You can easily define your own target with the GNU Makefile. Unknown targets |
| are processed with no default option except USE_POLL=default. So you can very |
| well use that property to define your own set of options. USE_POLL can even be |
| disabled by setting USE_POLL="". For example : |
| |
| $ gmake TARGET=tiny USE_POLL="" TARGET_CFLAGS=-fomit-frame-pointer |
| |
| |
| 2) How to install it |
| -------------------- |
| |
| To install haproxy, you can either copy the single resulting binary to the |
| place you want, or run : |
| |
| $ sudo make install |
| |
| If you're packaging it for another system, you can specify its root directory |
| in the usual DESTDIR variable. |
| |
| |
| 3) How to set it up |
| ------------------- |
| |
| There is some documentation in the doc/ directory : |
| |
| - architecture.txt : this is the architecture manual. It is quite old and |
| does not tell about the nice new features, but it's still a good starting |
| point when you know what you want but don't know how to do it. |
| |
| - configuration.txt : this is the configuration manual. It recalls a few |
| essential HTTP basic concepts, and details all the configuration file |
| syntax (keywords, units). It also describes the log and stats format. It |
| is normally always up to date. If you see that something is missing from |
| it, please report it as this is a bug. |
| |
| - haproxy-en.txt / haproxy-fr.txt : these are the old outdated docs. You |
| should never need them. If you do, then please report what you didn't |
| find in the other ones. |
| |
| - gpl.txt / lgpl.txt : the copy of the licenses covering the software. See |
| the 'LICENSE' file at the top for more information. |
| |
| - the rest is mainly for developers. |
| |
| There are also a number of nice configuration examples in the "examples" |
| directory as well as on several sites and articles on the net which are linked |
| to from the haproxy web site. |
| |
| |
| 4) How to report a bug |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| It is possible that from time to time you'll find a bug. A bug is a case where |
| what you see is not what is documented. Otherwise it can be a misdesign. If you |
| find that something is stupidly design, please discuss it on the list (see the |
| "how to contribute" section below). If you feel like you're proceeding right |
| and haproxy doesn't obey, then first ask yourself if it is possible that nobody |
| before you has even encountered this issue. If it's unlikely, the you probably |
| have an issue in your setup. Just in case of doubt, please consult the mailing |
| list archives : |
| |
| http://marc.info/?l=haproxy |
| |
| Otherwise, please try to gather the maximum amount of information to help |
| reproduce the issue and send that to the mailing list : |
| |
| haproxy@formilux.org |
| |
| Please include your configuration and logs. You can mask your IP addresses and |
| passwords, we don't need them. But it's essential that you post your config if |
| you want people to guess what is happening. |
| |
| Also, keep in mind that haproxy is designed to NEVER CRASH. If you see it die |
| without any reason, then it definitely is a critical bug that must be reported |
| and urgently fixed. It has happened a couple of times in the past, essentially |
| on development versions running on new architectures. If you think your setup |
| is fairly common, then it is possible that the issue is totally unrelated. |
| Anyway, if that happens, feel free to contact me directly, as I will give you |
| instructions on how to collect a usable core file, and will probably ask for |
| other captures that you'll not want to share with the list. |
| |
| |
| 5) How to contribute |
| -------------------- |
| |
| It is possible that you'll want to add a specific feature to satisfy your needs |
| or one of your customers'. Contributions are welcome, however I'm often very |
| picky about changes. I will generally reject patches that change massive parts |
| of the code, or that touch the core parts without any good reason if those |
| changes have not been discussed first. |
| |
| The proper place to discuss your changes is the HAProxy Mailing List. There are |
| enough skilled readers to catch hazardous mistakes and to suggest improvements. |
| I trust a number of them enough to merge a patch if they say it's OK, so using |
| the list is the fastest way to get your code reviewed and merged. You can |
| subscribe to it by sending an empty e-mail at the following address : |
| |
| haproxy+subscribe@formilux.org |
| |
| If you have an idea about something to implement, *please* discuss it on the |
| list first. It has already happened several times that two persons did the same |
| thing simultaneously. This is a waste of time for both of them. It's also very |
| common to see some changes rejected because they're done in a way that will |
| conflict with future evolutions, or that does not leave a good feeling. It's |
| always unpleasant for the person who did the work, and it is unpleasant for me |
| too because I value people's time and efforts. That would not happen if these |
| were discussed first. There is no problem posting work in progress to the list, |
| it happens quite often in fact. Also, don't waste your time with the doc when |
| submitting patches for review, only add the doc with the patch you consider |
| ready to merge. |
| |
| If your work is very confidential and you can't publicly discuss it, you can |
| also mail me directly about it, but your mail may be waiting several days in |
| the queue before you get a response. |
| |
| If you'd like a feature to be added but you think you don't have the skills to |
| implement it yourself, you should follow these steps : |
| |
| 1. discuss the feature on the mailing list. It is possible that someone |
| else has already implemented it, or that someone will tell you how to |
| proceed without it, or even why not to do it. It is also possible that |
| in fact it's quite easy to implement and people will guide you through |
| the process. That way you'll finally have YOUR patch merged, providing |
| the feature YOU need. |
| |
| 2. if you really can't code it yourself after discussing it, then you may |
| consider contacting someone to do the job for you. Some people on the |
| list might be OK with trying to do it. Otherwise, you can check the list |
| of contributors at the URL below, some of the regular contributors may |
| be able to do the work, probably not for free but their time is as much |
| valuable as yours after all, you can't eat the cake and have it too. |
| |
| The list of past and regular contributors is available below. It lists not only |
| significant code contributions (features, fixes), but also time or money |
| donations : |
| |
| http://haproxy.1wt.eu/contrib.html |
| |
| Note to contributors: it's very handy when patches comes with a properly |
| formated subject. There are 3 criteria of particular importance in any patch : |
| |
| - its nature (is it a fix for a bug, a new feature, an optimization, ...) |
| - its importance, which generally reflects the risk of merging/not merging it |
| - what area it applies to (eg: http, stats, startup, config, doc, ...) |
| |
| It's important to make these 3 criteria easy to spot in the patch's subject, |
| because it's the first (and sometimes the only) thing which is read when |
| reviewing patches to find which ones need to be backported to older versions. |
| |
| Specifically, bugs must be clearly easy to spot so that they're never missed. |
| Any patch fixing a bug must have the "BUG" tag in its subject. Most common |
| patch types include : |
| |
| - BUG fix for a bug. The severity of the bug should also be indicated |
| when known. Similarly, if a backport is needed to older versions, |
| it should be indicated on the last line of the commit message. If |
| the bug has been identified as a regression brought by a specific |
| patch or version, this indication will be appreciated too. New |
| maintenance releases are generally emitted when a few of these |
| patches are merged. |
| |
| - CLEANUP code cleanup, silence of warnings, etc... theorically no impact. |
| These patches will rarely be seen in stable branches, though they |
| may appear when they remove some annoyance or when they make |
| backporting easier. By nature, a cleanup is always minor. |
| |
| - REORG code reorganization. Some blocks may be moved to other places, |
| some important checks might be swapped, etc... These changes |
| always present a risk of regression. For this reason, they should |
| never be mixed with any bug fix nor functional change. Code is |
| only moved as-is. Indicating the risk of breakage is highly |
| recommended. |
| |
| - BUILD updates or fixes for build issues. Changes to makefiles also fall |
| into this category. The risk of breakage should be indicated if |
| known. It is also appreciated to indicate what platforms and/or |
| configurations were tested after the change. |
| |
| - OPTIM some code was optimised. Sometimes if the regression risk is very |
| low and the gains significant, such patches may be merged in the |
| stable branch. Depending on the amount of code changed or replaced |
| and the level of trust the author has in the change, the risk of |
| regression should be indicated. |
| |
| - RELEASE release of a new version (development or stable). |
| |
| - LICENSE licensing updates (may impact distro packagers). |
| |
| |
| When the patch cannot be categorized, it's best not to put any tag. This is |
| commonly the case for new features, which development versions are mostly made |
| of. |
| |
| Additionally, the importance of the patch should be indicated when known. A |
| single upper-case word is preferred, among : |
| |
| - MINOR minor change, very low risk of impact. It is often the case for |
| code additions that don't touch live code. For a bug, it generally |
| indicates an annoyance, nothing more. |
| |
| - MEDIUM medium risk, may cause unexpected regressions of low importance or |
| which may quickly be discovered. For a bug, it generally indicates |
| something odd which requires changing the configuration in an |
| undesired way to work around the issue. |
| |
| - MAJOR major risk of hidden regression. This happens when I rearrange |
| large parts of code, when I play with timeouts, with variable |
| initializations, etc... We should only exceptionally find such |
| patches in stable branches. For a bug, it indicates severe |
| reliability issues for which workarounds are identified with or |
| without performance impacts. |
| |
| - CRITICAL medium-term reliability or security is at risk and workarounds, |
| if they exist, might not always be acceptable. An upgrade is |
| absolutely required. A maintenance release may be emitted even if |
| only one of these bugs are fixed. Note that this tag is only used |
| with bugs. Such patches must indicate what is the first version |
| affected, and if known, the commit ID which introduced the issue. |
| |
| If this criterion doesn't apply, it's best not to put it. For instance, most |
| doc updates and most examples or test files are just added or updated without |
| any need to qualify a level of importance. |
| |
| The area the patch applies to is quite important, because some areas are known |
| to be similar in older versions, suggesting a backport might be desirable, and |
| conversely, some areas are known to be specific to one version. When the tag is |
| used alone, uppercase is preferred for readability, otherwise lowercase is fine |
| too. The following tags are suggested but not limitative : |
| |
| - doc documentation updates or fixes. No code is affected, no need to |
| upgrade. These patches can also be sent right after a new feature, |
| to document it. |
| |
| - examples example files. Be careful, sometimes these files are packaged. |
| |
| - tests regression test files. No code is affected, no need to upgrade. |
| |
| - init initialization code, arguments parsing, etc... |
| |
| - config configuration parser, mostly used when adding new config keywords |
| |
| - http the HTTP engine |
| |
| - stats the stats reporting engine as well as the stats socket CLI |
| |
| - checks the health checks engine (eg: when adding new checks) |
| |
| - acl the ACL processing core or some ACLs from other areas |
| |
| - peers the peer synchronization engine |
| |
| - listeners everything related to incoming connection settings |
| |
| - frontend everything related to incoming connection processing |
| |
| - backend everything related to LB algorithms and server farm |
| |
| - session session processing and flags (very sensible, be careful) |
| |
| - server server connection management, queueing |
| |
| - proxy proxy maintenance (start/stop) |
| |
| - log log management |
| |
| - poll any of the pollers |
| |
| - halog the halog sub-component in the contrib directory |
| |
| - contrib any addition to the contrib directory |
| |
| Other names may be invented when more precise indications are meaningful, for |
| instance : "cookie" which indicates cookie processing in the HTTP core. Last, |
| indicating the name of the affected file is also a good way to quickly spot |
| changes. Many commits were already tagged with "stream_sock" or "cfgparse" for |
| instance. |
| |
| It is desired that AT LEAST one of the 3 criteria tags is reported in the patch |
| subject. Ideally, we would have the 3 most often. The two first criteria should |
| be present before a first colon (':'). If both are present, then they should be |
| delimited with a slash ('/'). The 3rd criterion (area) should appear next, also |
| followed by a colon. Thus, all of the following messages are valid : |
| |
| Examples of messages : |
| - DOC: document options forwardfor to logasap |
| - DOC/MAJOR: reorganize the whole document and change indenting |
| - BUG: stats: connection reset counters must be plain ascii, not HTML |
| - BUG/MINOR: stats: connection reset counters must be plain ascii, not HTML |
| - MEDIUM: checks: support multi-packet health check responses |
| - RELEASE: Released version 1.4.2 |
| - BUILD: stats: stdint is not present on solaris |
| - OPTIM/MINOR: halog: make fgets parse more bytes by blocks |
| - REORG/MEDIUM: move syscall redefinition to specific places |
| |
| Please do not use square brackets anymore around the tags, because they give me |
| more work when merging patches. By default I'm asking Git to keep them but this |
| causes trouble when patches are prefixed with the [PATCH] tag because in order |
| not to store it, I have to hand-edit the patches. So as of now, I will ask Git |
| to remove whatever is located between square brackets, which implies that any |
| subject formatted the old way will have its tag stripped out. |
| |
| In fact, one of the only square bracket tags that still makes sense is '[RFC]' |
| at the beginning of the subject, when you're asking for someone to review your |
| change before getting it merged. If the patch is OK to be merged, then I can |
| merge it as-is and the '[RFC]' tag will automatically be removed. If you don't |
| want it to be merged at all, you can simply state it in the message, or use an |
| alternate '[WIP]' tag ("work in progress"). |
| |
| The tags are not rigid, follow your intuition first, anyway I reserve the right |
| to change them when merging the patch. It may happen that a same patch has a |
| different tag in two distinct branches. The reason is that a bug in one branch |
| may just be a cleanup in the other one because the code cannot be triggered. |
| |
| |
| For a more efficient interaction between the mainline code and your code, I can |
| only strongly encourage you to try the Git version control system : |
| |
| http://git-scm.com/ |
| |
| It's very fast, lightweight and lets you undo/redo your work as often as you |
| want, without making your mistakes visible to the rest of the world. It will |
| definitely help you contribute quality code and take other people's feedback |
| in consideration. In order to clone the HAProxy Git repository : |
| |
| $ git clone http://git.1wt.eu/git/haproxy-1.4.git (stable 1.4) |
| $ git clone http://git.1wt.eu/git/haproxy.git/ (development) |
| |
| The site above is slow, a faster mirror is maintained up to date here : |
| |
| $ git clone http://master.formilux.org/git/people/willy/haproxy.git/ |
| |
| If you decide to use Git for your developments, then your commit messages will |
| have the subject line in the format described above, then the whole description |
| of your work (mainly why you did it) will be in the body. You can directly send |
| your commits to the mailing list, the format is convenient to read and process. |
| |
| -- end |