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Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001 ----------------------
Willy Tarreau8317b282014-04-23 01:49:41 +02002 HAProxy
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02003 Configuration Manual
4 ----------------------
Willy Tarreaub3066502017-11-26 19:50:17 +01005 version 1.9
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02006 willy tarreau
Willy Tarreau0b787922017-11-26 19:25:23 +01007 2017/11/26
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02008
9
10This document covers the configuration language as implemented in the version
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011specified above. It does not provide any hints, examples, or advice. For such
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +010012documentation, please refer to the Reference Manual or the Architecture Manual.
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013The summary below is meant to help you find sections by name and navigate
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020014through the document.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020015
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020016Note to documentation contributors :
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -040017 This document is formatted with 80 columns per line, with even number of
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020018 spaces for indentation and without tabs. Please follow these rules strictly
19 so that it remains easily printable everywhere. If a line needs to be
20 printed verbatim and does not fit, please end each line with a backslash
Willy Tarreau62a36c42010-08-17 15:53:10 +020021 ('\') and continue on next line, indented by two characters. It is also
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010022 sometimes useful to prefix all output lines (logs, console outputs) with 3
23 closing angle brackets ('>>>') in order to emphasize the difference between
24 inputs and outputs when they may be ambiguous. If you add sections,
Willy Tarreau62a36c42010-08-17 15:53:10 +020025 please update the summary below for easier searching.
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020026
27
28Summary
29-------
30
311. Quick reminder about HTTP
321.1. The HTTP transaction model
331.2. HTTP request
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100341.2.1. The request line
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200351.2.2. The request headers
361.3. HTTP response
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100371.3.1. The response line
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200381.3.2. The response headers
39
402. Configuring HAProxy
412.1. Configuration file format
William Lallemandf9873ba2015-05-05 17:37:14 +0200422.2. Quoting and escaping
William Lallemandb2f07452015-05-12 14:27:13 +0200432.3. Environment variables
442.4. Time format
452.5. Examples
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020046
473. Global parameters
483.1. Process management and security
493.2. Performance tuning
503.3. Debugging
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +0100513.4. Userlists
Cyril Bontédc4d9032012-04-08 21:57:39 +0200523.5. Peers
Cyril Bonté307ee1e2015-09-28 23:16:06 +0200533.6. Mailers
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020054
554. Proxies
564.1. Proxy keywords matrix
574.2. Alphabetically sorted keywords reference
58
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100595. Bind and server options
Willy Tarreau086fbf52012-09-24 20:34:51 +0200605.1. Bind options
615.2. Server and default-server options
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +0200625.3. Server DNS resolution
635.3.1. Global overview
645.3.2. The resolvers section
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020065
666. HTTP header manipulation
67
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +0200687. Using ACLs and fetching samples
697.1. ACL basics
707.1.1. Matching booleans
717.1.2. Matching integers
727.1.3. Matching strings
737.1.4. Matching regular expressions (regexes)
747.1.5. Matching arbitrary data blocks
757.1.6. Matching IPv4 and IPv6 addresses
767.2. Using ACLs to form conditions
777.3. Fetching samples
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +0200787.3.1. Converters
797.3.2. Fetching samples from internal states
807.3.3. Fetching samples at Layer 4
817.3.4. Fetching samples at Layer 5
827.3.5. Fetching samples from buffer contents (Layer 6)
837.3.6. Fetching HTTP samples (Layer 7)
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +0200847.4. Pre-defined ACLs
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020085
868. Logging
878.1. Log levels
888.2. Log formats
898.2.1. Default log format
908.2.2. TCP log format
918.2.3. HTTP log format
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +0100928.2.4. Custom log format
Willy Tarreau5f51e1a2012-12-03 18:40:10 +0100938.2.5. Error log format
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200948.3. Advanced logging options
958.3.1. Disabling logging of external tests
968.3.2. Logging before waiting for the session to terminate
978.3.3. Raising log level upon errors
988.3.4. Disabling logging of successful connections
998.4. Timing events
1008.5. Session state at disconnection
1018.6. Non-printable characters
1028.7. Capturing HTTP cookies
1038.8. Capturing HTTP headers
1048.9. Examples of logs
105
Christopher Fauletc3fe5332016-04-07 15:30:10 +02001069. Supported filters
1079.1. Trace
1089.2. HTTP compression
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02001099.3. Stream Processing Offload Engine (SPOE)
Christopher Fauletc3fe5332016-04-07 15:30:10 +0200110
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +010011110. Cache
Cyril Bonté7b888f12017-11-26 22:24:31 +010011210.1. Limitation
11310.2. Setup
11410.2.1. Cache section
11510.2.2. Proxy section
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200116
1171. Quick reminder about HTTP
118----------------------------
119
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100120When HAProxy is running in HTTP mode, both the request and the response are
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200121fully analyzed and indexed, thus it becomes possible to build matching criteria
122on almost anything found in the contents.
123
124However, it is important to understand how HTTP requests and responses are
125formed, and how HAProxy decomposes them. It will then become easier to write
126correct rules and to debug existing configurations.
127
128
1291.1. The HTTP transaction model
130-------------------------------
131
132The HTTP protocol is transaction-driven. This means that each request will lead
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +0100133to one and only one response. Traditionally, a TCP connection is established
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100134from the client to the server, a request is sent by the client through the
135connection, the server responds, and the connection is closed. A new request
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200136will involve a new connection :
137
138 [CON1] [REQ1] ... [RESP1] [CLO1] [CON2] [REQ2] ... [RESP2] [CLO2] ...
139
140In this mode, called the "HTTP close" mode, there are as many connection
141establishments as there are HTTP transactions. Since the connection is closed
142by the server after the response, the client does not need to know the content
143length.
144
145Due to the transactional nature of the protocol, it was possible to improve it
146to avoid closing a connection between two subsequent transactions. In this mode
147however, it is mandatory that the server indicates the content length for each
148response so that the client does not wait indefinitely. For this, a special
149header is used: "Content-length". This mode is called the "keep-alive" mode :
150
151 [CON] [REQ1] ... [RESP1] [REQ2] ... [RESP2] [CLO] ...
152
153Its advantages are a reduced latency between transactions, and less processing
154power required on the server side. It is generally better than the close mode,
155but not always because the clients often limit their concurrent connections to
Patrick Mezard9ec2ec42010-06-12 17:02:45 +0200156a smaller value.
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200157
Willy Tarreau95c4e142017-11-26 12:18:55 +0100158Another improvement in the communications is the pipelining mode. It still uses
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200159keep-alive, but the client does not wait for the first response to send the
160second request. This is useful for fetching large number of images composing a
161page :
162
163 [CON] [REQ1] [REQ2] ... [RESP1] [RESP2] [CLO] ...
164
165This can obviously have a tremendous benefit on performance because the network
166latency is eliminated between subsequent requests. Many HTTP agents do not
167correctly support pipelining since there is no way to associate a response with
168the corresponding request in HTTP. For this reason, it is mandatory for the
Cyril Bonté78caf842010-03-10 22:41:43 +0100169server to reply in the exact same order as the requests were received.
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200170
Willy Tarreau95c4e142017-11-26 12:18:55 +0100171The next improvement is the multiplexed mode, as implemented in HTTP/2. This
172time, each transaction is assigned a single stream identifier, and all streams
173are multiplexed over an existing connection. Many requests can be sent in
174parallel by the client, and responses can arrive in any order since they also
175carry the stream identifier.
176
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +0100177By default HAProxy operates in keep-alive mode with regards to persistent
178connections: for each connection it processes each request and response, and
179leaves the connection idle on both sides between the end of a response and the
Willy Tarreau95c4e142017-11-26 12:18:55 +0100180start of a new request. When it receives HTTP/2 connections from a client, it
181processes all the requests in parallel and leaves the connection idling,
182waiting for new requests, just as if it was a keep-alive HTTP connection.
Patrick Mezard9ec2ec42010-06-12 17:02:45 +0200183
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +0100184HAProxy supports 5 connection modes :
185 - keep alive : all requests and responses are processed (default)
186 - tunnel : only the first request and response are processed,
187 everything else is forwarded with no analysis.
188 - passive close : tunnel with "Connection: close" added in both directions.
189 - server close : the server-facing connection is closed after the response.
190 - forced close : the connection is actively closed after end of response.
191
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100192For HTTP/2, the connection mode resembles more the "server close" mode : given
193the independence of all streams, there is currently no place to hook the idle
Willy Tarreau95c4e142017-11-26 12:18:55 +0100194server connection after a response, so it is closed after the response. HTTP/2
195is only supported for incoming connections, not on connections going to
196servers.
197
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200198
1991.2. HTTP request
200-----------------
201
202First, let's consider this HTTP request :
203
204 Line Contents
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +0100205 number
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200206 1 GET /serv/login.php?lang=en&profile=2 HTTP/1.1
207 2 Host: www.mydomain.com
208 3 User-agent: my small browser
209 4 Accept: image/jpeg, image/gif
210 5 Accept: image/png
211
212
2131.2.1. The Request line
214-----------------------
215
216Line 1 is the "request line". It is always composed of 3 fields :
217
218 - a METHOD : GET
219 - a URI : /serv/login.php?lang=en&profile=2
220 - a version tag : HTTP/1.1
221
222All of them are delimited by what the standard calls LWS (linear white spaces),
223which are commonly spaces, but can also be tabs or line feeds/carriage returns
224followed by spaces/tabs. The method itself cannot contain any colon (':') and
225is limited to alphabetic letters. All those various combinations make it
226desirable that HAProxy performs the splitting itself rather than leaving it to
227the user to write a complex or inaccurate regular expression.
228
229The URI itself can have several forms :
230
231 - A "relative URI" :
232
233 /serv/login.php?lang=en&profile=2
234
235 It is a complete URL without the host part. This is generally what is
236 received by servers, reverse proxies and transparent proxies.
237
238 - An "absolute URI", also called a "URL" :
239
240 http://192.168.0.12:8080/serv/login.php?lang=en&profile=2
241
242 It is composed of a "scheme" (the protocol name followed by '://'), a host
243 name or address, optionally a colon (':') followed by a port number, then
244 a relative URI beginning at the first slash ('/') after the address part.
245 This is generally what proxies receive, but a server supporting HTTP/1.1
246 must accept this form too.
247
248 - a star ('*') : this form is only accepted in association with the OPTIONS
249 method and is not relayable. It is used to inquiry a next hop's
250 capabilities.
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +0100251
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200252 - an address:port combination : 192.168.0.12:80
253 This is used with the CONNECT method, which is used to establish TCP
254 tunnels through HTTP proxies, generally for HTTPS, but sometimes for
255 other protocols too.
256
257In a relative URI, two sub-parts are identified. The part before the question
258mark is called the "path". It is typically the relative path to static objects
259on the server. The part after the question mark is called the "query string".
260It is mostly used with GET requests sent to dynamic scripts and is very
261specific to the language, framework or application in use.
262
Willy Tarreau95c4e142017-11-26 12:18:55 +0100263HTTP/2 doesn't convey a version information with the request, so the version is
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100264assumed to be the same as the one of the underlying protocol (i.e. "HTTP/2").
Willy Tarreau95c4e142017-11-26 12:18:55 +0100265However, haproxy natively processes HTTP/1.x requests and headers, so requests
266received over an HTTP/2 connection are transcoded to HTTP/1.1 before being
267processed. This explains why they still appear as "HTTP/1.1" in haproxy's logs
268as well as in server logs.
269
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200270
2711.2.2. The request headers
272--------------------------
273
274The headers start at the second line. They are composed of a name at the
275beginning of the line, immediately followed by a colon (':'). Traditionally,
276an LWS is added after the colon but that's not required. Then come the values.
277Multiple identical headers may be folded into one single line, delimiting the
278values with commas, provided that their order is respected. This is commonly
279encountered in the "Cookie:" field. A header may span over multiple lines if
280the subsequent lines begin with an LWS. In the example in 1.2, lines 4 and 5
281define a total of 3 values for the "Accept:" header.
282
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100283Contrary to a common misconception, header names are not case-sensitive, and
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200284their values are not either if they refer to other header names (such as the
Willy Tarreau95c4e142017-11-26 12:18:55 +0100285"Connection:" header). In HTTP/2, header names are always sent in lower case,
286as can be seen when running in debug mode.
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200287
288The end of the headers is indicated by the first empty line. People often say
289that it's a double line feed, which is not exact, even if a double line feed
290is one valid form of empty line.
291
292Fortunately, HAProxy takes care of all these complex combinations when indexing
293headers, checking values and counting them, so there is no reason to worry
294about the way they could be written, but it is important not to accuse an
295application of being buggy if it does unusual, valid things.
296
297Important note:
Lukas Tribus23953682017-04-28 13:24:30 +0000298 As suggested by RFC7231, HAProxy normalizes headers by replacing line breaks
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200299 in the middle of headers by LWS in order to join multi-line headers. This
300 is necessary for proper analysis and helps less capable HTTP parsers to work
301 correctly and not to be fooled by such complex constructs.
302
303
3041.3. HTTP response
305------------------
306
307An HTTP response looks very much like an HTTP request. Both are called HTTP
308messages. Let's consider this HTTP response :
309
310 Line Contents
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +0100311 number
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200312 1 HTTP/1.1 200 OK
313 2 Content-length: 350
314 3 Content-Type: text/html
315
Willy Tarreau816b9792009-09-15 21:25:21 +0200316As a special case, HTTP supports so called "Informational responses" as status
317codes 1xx. These messages are special in that they don't convey any part of the
318response, they're just used as sort of a signaling message to ask a client to
Willy Tarreau5843d1a2010-02-01 15:13:32 +0100319continue to post its request for instance. In the case of a status 100 response
320the requested information will be carried by the next non-100 response message
321following the informational one. This implies that multiple responses may be
322sent to a single request, and that this only works when keep-alive is enabled
323(1xx messages are HTTP/1.1 only). HAProxy handles these messages and is able to
324correctly forward and skip them, and only process the next non-100 response. As
325such, these messages are neither logged nor transformed, unless explicitly
326state otherwise. Status 101 messages indicate that the protocol is changing
327over the same connection and that haproxy must switch to tunnel mode, just as
328if a CONNECT had occurred. Then the Upgrade header would contain additional
329information about the type of protocol the connection is switching to.
Willy Tarreau816b9792009-09-15 21:25:21 +0200330
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200331
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01003321.3.1. The response line
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200333------------------------
334
335Line 1 is the "response line". It is always composed of 3 fields :
336
337 - a version tag : HTTP/1.1
338 - a status code : 200
339 - a reason : OK
340
341The status code is always 3-digit. The first digit indicates a general status :
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100342 - 1xx = informational message to be skipped (e.g. 100, 101)
343 - 2xx = OK, content is following (e.g. 200, 206)
344 - 3xx = OK, no content following (e.g. 302, 304)
345 - 4xx = error caused by the client (e.g. 401, 403, 404)
346 - 5xx = error caused by the server (e.g. 500, 502, 503)
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200347
Lukas Tribus23953682017-04-28 13:24:30 +0000348Please refer to RFC7231 for the detailed meaning of all such codes. The
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +0100349"reason" field is just a hint, but is not parsed by clients. Anything can be
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200350found there, but it's a common practice to respect the well-established
351messages. It can be composed of one or multiple words, such as "OK", "Found",
352or "Authentication Required".
353
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100354HAProxy may emit the following status codes by itself :
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200355
356 Code When / reason
357 200 access to stats page, and when replying to monitoring requests
358 301 when performing a redirection, depending on the configured code
359 302 when performing a redirection, depending on the configured code
360 303 when performing a redirection, depending on the configured code
Willy Tarreaub67fdc42013-03-29 19:28:11 +0100361 307 when performing a redirection, depending on the configured code
362 308 when performing a redirection, depending on the configured code
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200363 400 for an invalid or too large request
364 401 when an authentication is required to perform the action (when
365 accessing the stats page)
366 403 when a request is forbidden by a "block" ACL or "reqdeny" filter
367 408 when the request timeout strikes before the request is complete
368 500 when haproxy encounters an unrecoverable internal error, such as a
369 memory allocation failure, which should never happen
370 502 when the server returns an empty, invalid or incomplete response, or
371 when an "rspdeny" filter blocks the response.
372 503 when no server was available to handle the request, or in response to
373 monitoring requests which match the "monitor fail" condition
374 504 when the response timeout strikes before the server responds
375
376The error 4xx and 5xx codes above may be customized (see "errorloc" in section
3774.2).
378
379
3801.3.2. The response headers
381---------------------------
382
383Response headers work exactly like request headers, and as such, HAProxy uses
384the same parsing function for both. Please refer to paragraph 1.2.2 for more
385details.
386
387
3882. Configuring HAProxy
389----------------------
390
3912.1. Configuration file format
392------------------------------
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200393
394HAProxy's configuration process involves 3 major sources of parameters :
395
396 - the arguments from the command-line, which always take precedence
397 - the "global" section, which sets process-wide parameters
398 - the proxies sections which can take form of "defaults", "listen",
399 "frontend" and "backend".
400
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +0100401The configuration file syntax consists in lines beginning with a keyword
402referenced in this manual, optionally followed by one or several parameters
William Lallemandf9873ba2015-05-05 17:37:14 +0200403delimited by spaces.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +0100404
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200405
William Lallemandf9873ba2015-05-05 17:37:14 +02004062.2. Quoting and escaping
407-------------------------
408
409HAProxy's configuration introduces a quoting and escaping system similar to
410many programming languages. The configuration file supports 3 types: escaping
411with a backslash, weak quoting with double quotes, and strong quoting with
412single quotes.
413
414If spaces have to be entered in strings, then they must be escaped by preceding
415them by a backslash ('\') or by quoting them. Backslashes also have to be
416escaped by doubling or strong quoting them.
417
418Escaping is achieved by preceding a special character by a backslash ('\'):
419
420 \ to mark a space and differentiate it from a delimiter
421 \# to mark a hash and differentiate it from a comment
422 \\ to use a backslash
423 \' to use a single quote and differentiate it from strong quoting
424 \" to use a double quote and differentiate it from weak quoting
425
426Weak quoting is achieved by using double quotes (""). Weak quoting prevents
427the interpretation of:
428
429 space as a parameter separator
430 ' single quote as a strong quoting delimiter
431 # hash as a comment start
432
William Lallemandb2f07452015-05-12 14:27:13 +0200433Weak quoting permits the interpretation of variables, if you want to use a non
434-interpreted dollar within a double quoted string, you should escape it with a
435backslash ("\$"), it does not work outside weak quoting.
436
437Interpretation of escaping and special characters are not prevented by weak
William Lallemandf9873ba2015-05-05 17:37:14 +0200438quoting.
439
440Strong quoting is achieved by using single quotes (''). Inside single quotes,
441nothing is interpreted, it's the efficient way to quote regexes.
442
443Quoted and escaped strings are replaced in memory by their interpreted
444equivalent, it allows you to perform concatenation.
445
446 Example:
447 # those are equivalents:
448 log-format %{+Q}o\ %t\ %s\ %{-Q}r
449 log-format "%{+Q}o %t %s %{-Q}r"
450 log-format '%{+Q}o %t %s %{-Q}r'
451 log-format "%{+Q}o %t"' %s %{-Q}r'
452 log-format "%{+Q}o %t"' %s'\ %{-Q}r
453
454 # those are equivalents:
455 reqrep "^([^\ :]*)\ /static/(.*)" \1\ /\2
456 reqrep "^([^ :]*)\ /static/(.*)" '\1 /\2'
457 reqrep "^([^ :]*)\ /static/(.*)" "\1 /\2"
458 reqrep "^([^ :]*)\ /static/(.*)" "\1\ /\2"
459
460
William Lallemandb2f07452015-05-12 14:27:13 +02004612.3. Environment variables
462--------------------------
463
464HAProxy's configuration supports environment variables. Those variables are
465interpreted only within double quotes. Variables are expanded during the
466configuration parsing. Variable names must be preceded by a dollar ("$") and
467optionally enclosed with braces ("{}") similarly to what is done in Bourne
468shell. Variable names can contain alphanumerical characters or the character
469underscore ("_") but should not start with a digit.
470
471 Example:
472
473 bind "fd@${FD_APP1}"
474
475 log "${LOCAL_SYSLOG}:514" local0 notice # send to local server
476
477 user "$HAPROXY_USER"
478
479
4802.4. Time format
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200481----------------
482
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +0100483Some parameters involve values representing time, such as timeouts. These
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +0100484values are generally expressed in milliseconds (unless explicitly stated
485otherwise) but may be expressed in any other unit by suffixing the unit to the
486numeric value. It is important to consider this because it will not be repeated
487for every keyword. Supported units are :
488
489 - us : microseconds. 1 microsecond = 1/1000000 second
490 - ms : milliseconds. 1 millisecond = 1/1000 second. This is the default.
491 - s : seconds. 1s = 1000ms
492 - m : minutes. 1m = 60s = 60000ms
493 - h : hours. 1h = 60m = 3600s = 3600000ms
494 - d : days. 1d = 24h = 1440m = 86400s = 86400000ms
495
496
Lukas Tribusaa83a312017-03-21 09:25:09 +00004972.5. Examples
Patrick Mezard35da19c2010-06-12 17:02:47 +0200498-------------
499
500 # Simple configuration for an HTTP proxy listening on port 80 on all
501 # interfaces and forwarding requests to a single backend "servers" with a
502 # single server "server1" listening on 127.0.0.1:8000
503 global
504 daemon
505 maxconn 256
506
507 defaults
508 mode http
509 timeout connect 5000ms
510 timeout client 50000ms
511 timeout server 50000ms
512
513 frontend http-in
514 bind *:80
515 default_backend servers
516
517 backend servers
518 server server1 127.0.0.1:8000 maxconn 32
519
520
521 # The same configuration defined with a single listen block. Shorter but
522 # less expressive, especially in HTTP mode.
523 global
524 daemon
525 maxconn 256
526
527 defaults
528 mode http
529 timeout connect 5000ms
530 timeout client 50000ms
531 timeout server 50000ms
532
533 listen http-in
534 bind *:80
535 server server1 127.0.0.1:8000 maxconn 32
536
537
538Assuming haproxy is in $PATH, test these configurations in a shell with:
539
Willy Tarreauccb289d2010-12-11 20:19:38 +0100540 $ sudo haproxy -f configuration.conf -c
Patrick Mezard35da19c2010-06-12 17:02:47 +0200541
542
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02005433. Global parameters
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200544--------------------
545
546Parameters in the "global" section are process-wide and often OS-specific. They
547are generally set once for all and do not need being changed once correct. Some
548of them have command-line equivalents.
549
550The following keywords are supported in the "global" section :
551
552 * Process management and security
Emeric Brunc8e8d122012-10-02 18:42:10 +0200553 - ca-base
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200554 - chroot
Emeric Brunc8e8d122012-10-02 18:42:10 +0200555 - crt-base
Baptiste Assmann3493d0f2015-10-12 20:21:23 +0200556 - cpu-map
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200557 - daemon
Baptiste Assmann3493d0f2015-10-12 20:21:23 +0200558 - description
559 - deviceatlas-json-file
560 - deviceatlas-log-level
561 - deviceatlas-separator
562 - deviceatlas-properties-cookie
Simon Horman98637e52014-06-20 12:30:16 +0900563 - external-check
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200564 - gid
565 - group
Cyril Bonté203ec5a2017-03-23 22:44:13 +0100566 - hard-stop-after
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200567 - log
Baptiste Assmann3493d0f2015-10-12 20:21:23 +0200568 - log-tag
Joe Williamsdf5b38f2010-12-29 17:05:48 +0100569 - log-send-hostname
Baptiste Assmann3493d0f2015-10-12 20:21:23 +0200570 - lua-load
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200571 - nbproc
Christopher Fauletbe0faa22017-08-29 15:37:10 +0200572 - nbthread
Baptiste Assmann3493d0f2015-10-12 20:21:23 +0200573 - node
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200574 - pidfile
Willy Tarreau1d549722016-02-16 12:41:57 +0100575 - presetenv
576 - resetenv
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200577 - uid
578 - ulimit-n
579 - user
Willy Tarreau1d549722016-02-16 12:41:57 +0100580 - setenv
Willy Tarreaufbee7132007-10-18 13:53:22 +0200581 - stats
Baptiste Assmann3493d0f2015-10-12 20:21:23 +0200582 - ssl-default-bind-ciphers
583 - ssl-default-bind-options
584 - ssl-default-server-ciphers
585 - ssl-default-server-options
586 - ssl-dh-param-file
Emeric Brun850efd52014-01-29 12:24:34 +0100587 - ssl-server-verify
Willy Tarreauceb24bc2010-11-09 12:46:41 +0100588 - unix-bind
Willy Tarreau1d549722016-02-16 12:41:57 +0100589 - unsetenv
Thomas Holmesdb04f192015-05-18 13:21:39 +0100590 - 51degrees-data-file
591 - 51degrees-property-name-list
Dragan Dosen93b38d92015-06-29 16:43:25 +0200592 - 51degrees-property-separator
Dragan Dosenae6d39a2015-06-29 16:43:27 +0200593 - 51degrees-cache-size
scientiamobiled0027ed2016-11-04 10:55:08 +0100594 - wurfl-data-file
595 - wurfl-information-list
596 - wurfl-information-list-separator
597 - wurfl-engine-mode
598 - wurfl-cache-size
599 - wurfl-useragent-priority
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +0100600
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200601 * Performance tuning
Willy Tarreau1746eec2014-04-25 10:46:47 +0200602 - max-spread-checks
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200603 - maxconn
Willy Tarreau81c25d02011-09-07 15:17:21 +0200604 - maxconnrate
William Lallemandd85f9172012-11-09 17:05:39 +0100605 - maxcomprate
William Lallemand072a2bf2012-11-20 17:01:01 +0100606 - maxcompcpuusage
Willy Tarreauff4f82d2009-02-06 11:28:13 +0100607 - maxpipes
Willy Tarreau93e7c002013-10-07 18:51:07 +0200608 - maxsessrate
Willy Tarreau403edff2012-09-06 11:58:37 +0200609 - maxsslconn
Willy Tarreaue43d5322013-10-07 20:01:52 +0200610 - maxsslrate
Baptiste Assmann3493d0f2015-10-12 20:21:23 +0200611 - maxzlibmem
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200612 - noepoll
613 - nokqueue
614 - nopoll
Willy Tarreauff4f82d2009-02-06 11:28:13 +0100615 - nosplice
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +0300616 - nogetaddrinfo
Lukas Tribusa0bcbdc2016-09-12 21:42:20 +0000617 - noreuseport
Willy Tarreaufe255b72007-10-14 23:09:26 +0200618 - spread-checks
Baptiste Assmann5626f482015-08-23 10:00:10 +0200619 - server-state-base
Baptiste Assmannef1f0fc2015-08-23 10:06:39 +0200620 - server-state-file
Grant Zhang872f9c22017-01-21 01:10:18 +0000621 - ssl-engine
Grant Zhangfa6c7ee2017-01-14 01:42:15 +0000622 - ssl-mode-async
Baptiste Assmann3493d0f2015-10-12 20:21:23 +0200623 - tune.buffers.limit
624 - tune.buffers.reserve
Willy Tarreau27a674e2009-08-17 07:23:33 +0200625 - tune.bufsize
Willy Tarreau43961d52010-10-04 20:39:20 +0200626 - tune.chksize
William Lallemandf3747832012-11-09 12:33:10 +0100627 - tune.comp.maxlevel
Willy Tarreaufe20e5b2017-07-27 11:42:14 +0200628 - tune.h2.header-table-size
Willy Tarreaue6baec02017-07-27 11:45:11 +0200629 - tune.h2.initial-window-size
Willy Tarreau5242ef82017-07-27 11:47:28 +0200630 - tune.h2.max-concurrent-streams
Willy Tarreau193b8c62012-11-22 00:17:38 +0100631 - tune.http.cookielen
Stéphane Cottin23e9e932017-05-18 08:58:41 +0200632 - tune.http.logurilen
Willy Tarreauac1932d2011-10-24 19:14:41 +0200633 - tune.http.maxhdr
Willy Tarreau7e312732014-02-12 16:35:14 +0100634 - tune.idletimer
Thierry FOURNIER90da1912015-03-05 11:17:06 +0100635 - tune.lua.forced-yield
Willy Tarreau32f61e22015-03-18 17:54:59 +0100636 - tune.lua.maxmem
Thierry FOURNIER90da1912015-03-05 11:17:06 +0100637 - tune.lua.session-timeout
638 - tune.lua.task-timeout
Thierry FOURNIER7dd784b2015-10-01 14:49:33 +0200639 - tune.lua.service-timeout
Willy Tarreaua0250ba2008-01-06 11:22:57 +0100640 - tune.maxaccept
641 - tune.maxpollevents
Willy Tarreau27a674e2009-08-17 07:23:33 +0200642 - tune.maxrewrite
Willy Tarreauf3045d22015-04-29 16:24:50 +0200643 - tune.pattern.cache-size
Willy Tarreaubd9a0a72011-10-23 21:14:29 +0200644 - tune.pipesize
Willy Tarreaue803de22010-01-21 17:43:04 +0100645 - tune.rcvbuf.client
646 - tune.rcvbuf.server
Willy Tarreaub22fc302015-12-14 12:04:35 +0100647 - tune.recv_enough
Willy Tarreaue803de22010-01-21 17:43:04 +0100648 - tune.sndbuf.client
649 - tune.sndbuf.server
Willy Tarreau6ec58db2012-11-16 16:32:15 +0100650 - tune.ssl.cachesize
Willy Tarreaubfd59462013-02-21 07:46:09 +0100651 - tune.ssl.lifetime
Emeric Brun8dc60392014-05-09 13:52:00 +0200652 - tune.ssl.force-private-cache
Willy Tarreaubfd59462013-02-21 07:46:09 +0100653 - tune.ssl.maxrecord
Remi Gacognef46cd6e2014-06-12 14:58:40 +0200654 - tune.ssl.default-dh-param
Christopher Faulet31af49d2015-06-09 17:29:50 +0200655 - tune.ssl.ssl-ctx-cache-size
Thierry FOURNIER5bf77322017-02-25 12:45:22 +0100656 - tune.ssl.capture-cipherlist-size
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +0200657 - tune.vars.global-max-size
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +0100658 - tune.vars.proc-max-size
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +0200659 - tune.vars.reqres-max-size
660 - tune.vars.sess-max-size
661 - tune.vars.txn-max-size
William Lallemanda509e4c2012-11-07 16:54:34 +0100662 - tune.zlib.memlevel
663 - tune.zlib.windowsize
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +0100664
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200665 * Debugging
666 - debug
667 - quiet
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200668
669
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02006703.1. Process management and security
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200671------------------------------------
672
Emeric Brunc8e8d122012-10-02 18:42:10 +0200673ca-base <dir>
674 Assigns a default directory to fetch SSL CA certificates and CRLs from when a
Emeric Brunfd33a262012-10-11 16:28:27 +0200675 relative path is used with "ca-file" or "crl-file" directives. Absolute
676 locations specified in "ca-file" and "crl-file" prevail and ignore "ca-base".
Emeric Brunc8e8d122012-10-02 18:42:10 +0200677
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200678chroot <jail dir>
679 Changes current directory to <jail dir> and performs a chroot() there before
680 dropping privileges. This increases the security level in case an unknown
681 vulnerability would be exploited, since it would make it very hard for the
682 attacker to exploit the system. This only works when the process is started
683 with superuser privileges. It is important to ensure that <jail_dir> is both
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100684 empty and non-writable to anyone.
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +0100685
Christopher Fauletcb6a9452017-11-22 16:50:41 +0100686cpu-map [auto:]<process-set>[/<thread-set>] <cpu-set>...
687 On Linux 2.6 and above, it is possible to bind a process or a thread to a
688 specific CPU set. This means that the process or the thread will never run on
689 other CPUs. The "cpu-map" directive specifies CPU sets for process or thread
690 sets. The first argument is a process set, eventually followed by a thread
691 set. These sets have the format
692
693 all | odd | even | number[-[number]]
694
695 <number>> must be a number between 1 and 32 or 64, depending on the machine's
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100696 word size. Any process IDs above nbproc and any thread IDs above nbthread are
Christopher Fauletcb6a9452017-11-22 16:50:41 +0100697 ignored. It is possible to specify a range with two such number delimited by
698 a dash ('-'). It also is possible to specify all processes at once using
Christopher Faulet1dcb9cb2017-11-22 10:24:40 +0100699 "all", only odd numbers using "odd" or even numbers using "even", just like
700 with the "bind-process" directive. The second and forthcoming arguments are
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100701 CPU sets. Each CPU set is either a unique number between 0 and 31 or 63 or a
Christopher Faulet1dcb9cb2017-11-22 10:24:40 +0100702 range with two such numbers delimited by a dash ('-'). Multiple CPU numbers
Christopher Fauletcb6a9452017-11-22 16:50:41 +0100703 or ranges may be specified, and the processes or threads will be allowed to
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100704 bind to all of them. Obviously, multiple "cpu-map" directives may be
Christopher Fauletcb6a9452017-11-22 16:50:41 +0100705 specified. Each "cpu-map" directive will replace the previous ones when they
706 overlap. A thread will be bound on the intersection of its mapping and the
707 one of the process on which it is attached. If the intersection is null, no
708 specific binding will be set for the thread.
Willy Tarreaufc6c0322012-11-16 16:12:27 +0100709
Christopher Fauletff4121f2017-11-22 16:38:49 +0100710 Ranges can be partially defined. The higher bound can be omitted. In such
711 case, it is replaced by the corresponding maximum value, 32 or 64 depending
712 on the machine's word size.
713
Christopher Faulet26028f62017-11-22 15:01:51 +0100714 The prefix "auto:" can be added before the process set to let HAProxy
Christopher Fauletcb6a9452017-11-22 16:50:41 +0100715 automatically bind a process or a thread to a CPU by incrementing
716 process/thread and CPU sets. To be valid, both sets must have the same
717 size. No matter the declaration order of the CPU sets, it will be bound from
718 the lowest to the highest bound. Having a process and a thread range with the
719 "auto:" prefix is not supported. Only one range is supported, the other one
720 must be a fixed number.
Christopher Faulet26028f62017-11-22 15:01:51 +0100721
722 Examples:
Christopher Fauletcb6a9452017-11-22 16:50:41 +0100723 cpu-map 1-4 0-3 # bind processes 1 to 4 on the first 4 CPUs
724
725 cpu-map 1/all 0-3 # bind all threads of the first process on the
726 # first 4 CPUs
727
728 cpu-map 1- 0- # will be replaced by "cpu-map 1-64 0-63"
729 # or "cpu-map 1-32 0-31" depending on the machine's
730 # word size.
731
Christopher Faulet26028f62017-11-22 15:01:51 +0100732 # all these lines bind the process 1 to the cpu 0, the process 2 to cpu 1
Christopher Fauletcb6a9452017-11-22 16:50:41 +0100733 # and so on.
Christopher Faulet26028f62017-11-22 15:01:51 +0100734 cpu-map auto:1-4 0-3
735 cpu-map auto:1-4 0-1 2-3
736 cpu-map auto:1-4 3 2 1 0
737
Christopher Fauletcb6a9452017-11-22 16:50:41 +0100738 # all these lines bind the thread 1 to the cpu 0, the thread 2 to cpu 1
739 # and so on.
740 cpu-map auto:1/1-4 0-3
741 cpu-map auto:1/1-4 0-1 2-3
742 cpu-map auto:1/1-4 3 2 1 0
743
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100744 # bind each process to exactly one CPU using all/odd/even keyword
Christopher Faulet26028f62017-11-22 15:01:51 +0100745 cpu-map auto:all 0-63
746 cpu-map auto:even 0-31
747 cpu-map auto:odd 32-63
748
749 # invalid cpu-map because process and CPU sets have different sizes.
750 cpu-map auto:1-4 0 # invalid
751 cpu-map auto:1 0-3 # invalid
752
Christopher Fauletcb6a9452017-11-22 16:50:41 +0100753 # invalid cpu-map because automatic binding is used with a process range
754 # and a thread range.
755 cpu-map auto:all/all 0 # invalid
756 cpu-map auto:all/1-4 0 # invalid
757 cpu-map auto:1-4/all 0 # invalid
758
Emeric Brunc8e8d122012-10-02 18:42:10 +0200759crt-base <dir>
760 Assigns a default directory to fetch SSL certificates from when a relative
761 path is used with "crtfile" directives. Absolute locations specified after
762 "crtfile" prevail and ignore "crt-base".
763
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200764daemon
765 Makes the process fork into background. This is the recommended mode of
766 operation. It is equivalent to the command line "-D" argument. It can be
Lukas Tribusf46bf952017-11-21 12:39:34 +0100767 disabled by the command line "-db" argument. This option is ignored in
768 systemd mode.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200769
David Carlier8167f302015-06-01 13:50:06 +0200770deviceatlas-json-file <path>
771 Sets the path of the DeviceAtlas JSON data file to be loaded by the API.
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100772 The path must be a valid JSON data file and accessible by HAProxy process.
David Carlier8167f302015-06-01 13:50:06 +0200773
774deviceatlas-log-level <value>
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100775 Sets the level of information returned by the API. This directive is
David Carlier8167f302015-06-01 13:50:06 +0200776 optional and set to 0 by default if not set.
777
778deviceatlas-separator <char>
779 Sets the character separator for the API properties results. This directive
780 is optional and set to | by default if not set.
781
Cyril Bonté0306c4a2015-10-26 22:37:38 +0100782deviceatlas-properties-cookie <name>
Cyril Bonté307ee1e2015-09-28 23:16:06 +0200783 Sets the client cookie's name used for the detection if the DeviceAtlas
784 Client-side component was used during the request. This directive is optional
785 and set to DAPROPS by default if not set.
David Carlier29b3ca32015-09-25 14:09:21 +0100786
Simon Horman98637e52014-06-20 12:30:16 +0900787external-check
788 Allows the use of an external agent to perform health checks.
789 This is disabled by default as a security precaution.
790 See "option external-check".
791
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200792gid <number>
793 Changes the process' group ID to <number>. It is recommended that the group
794 ID is dedicated to HAProxy or to a small set of similar daemons. HAProxy must
795 be started with a user belonging to this group, or with superuser privileges.
Michael Schererab012dd2013-01-12 18:35:19 +0100796 Note that if haproxy is started from a user having supplementary groups, it
797 will only be able to drop these groups if started with superuser privileges.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200798 See also "group" and "uid".
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +0100799
Cyril Bonté203ec5a2017-03-23 22:44:13 +0100800hard-stop-after <time>
801 Defines the maximum time allowed to perform a clean soft-stop.
802
803 Arguments :
804 <time> is the maximum time (by default in milliseconds) for which the
805 instance will remain alive when a soft-stop is received via the
806 SIGUSR1 signal.
807
808 This may be used to ensure that the instance will quit even if connections
809 remain opened during a soft-stop (for example with long timeouts for a proxy
810 in tcp mode). It applies both in TCP and HTTP mode.
811
812 Example:
813 global
814 hard-stop-after 30s
815
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200816group <group name>
817 Similar to "gid" but uses the GID of group name <group name> from /etc/group.
818 See also "gid" and "user".
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +0100819
Dragan Dosen7ad31542015-09-28 17:16:47 +0200820log <address> [len <length>] [format <format>] <facility> [max level [min level]]
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200821 Adds a global syslog server. Up to two global servers can be defined. They
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100822 will receive logs for starts and exits, as well as all logs from proxies
Robert Tsai81ae1952007-12-05 10:47:29 +0100823 configured with "log global".
824
825 <address> can be one of:
826
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +0100827 - An IPv4 address optionally followed by a colon and a UDP port. If
Robert Tsai81ae1952007-12-05 10:47:29 +0100828 no port is specified, 514 is used by default (the standard syslog
829 port).
830
David du Colombier24bb5f52011-03-17 10:40:23 +0100831 - An IPv6 address followed by a colon and optionally a UDP port. If
832 no port is specified, 514 is used by default (the standard syslog
833 port).
834
Robert Tsai81ae1952007-12-05 10:47:29 +0100835 - A filesystem path to a UNIX domain socket, keeping in mind
836 considerations for chroot (be sure the path is accessible inside
837 the chroot) and uid/gid (be sure the path is appropriately
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100838 writable).
Robert Tsai81ae1952007-12-05 10:47:29 +0100839
William Lallemandb2f07452015-05-12 14:27:13 +0200840 You may want to reference some environment variables in the address
841 parameter, see section 2.3 about environment variables.
Willy Tarreaudad36a32013-03-11 01:20:04 +0100842
Willy Tarreau18324f52014-06-27 18:10:07 +0200843 <length> is an optional maximum line length. Log lines larger than this value
844 will be truncated before being sent. The reason is that syslog
845 servers act differently on log line length. All servers support the
846 default value of 1024, but some servers simply drop larger lines
847 while others do log them. If a server supports long lines, it may
848 make sense to set this value here in order to avoid truncating long
849 lines. Similarly, if a server drops long lines, it is preferable to
850 truncate them before sending them. Accepted values are 80 to 65535
851 inclusive. The default value of 1024 is generally fine for all
852 standard usages. Some specific cases of long captures or
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100853 JSON-formatted logs may require larger values. You may also need to
854 increase "tune.http.logurilen" if your request URIs are truncated.
Willy Tarreau18324f52014-06-27 18:10:07 +0200855
Dragan Dosen7ad31542015-09-28 17:16:47 +0200856 <format> is the log format used when generating syslog messages. It may be
857 one of the following :
858
859 rfc3164 The RFC3164 syslog message format. This is the default.
860 (https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3164)
861
862 rfc5424 The RFC5424 syslog message format.
863 (https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5424)
864
Robert Tsai81ae1952007-12-05 10:47:29 +0100865 <facility> must be one of the 24 standard syslog facilities :
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200866
867 kern user mail daemon auth syslog lpr news
868 uucp cron auth2 ftp ntp audit alert cron2
869 local0 local1 local2 local3 local4 local5 local6 local7
870
871 An optional level can be specified to filter outgoing messages. By default,
Willy Tarreauf7edefa2009-05-10 17:20:05 +0200872 all messages are sent. If a maximum level is specified, only messages with a
873 severity at least as important as this level will be sent. An optional minimum
874 level can be specified. If it is set, logs emitted with a more severe level
875 than this one will be capped to this level. This is used to avoid sending
876 "emerg" messages on all terminals on some default syslog configurations.
877 Eight levels are known :
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200878
Cyril Bontédc4d9032012-04-08 21:57:39 +0200879 emerg alert crit err warning notice info debug
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200880
Joe Williamsdf5b38f2010-12-29 17:05:48 +0100881log-send-hostname [<string>]
882 Sets the hostname field in the syslog header. If optional "string" parameter
883 is set the header is set to the string contents, otherwise uses the hostname
884 of the system. Generally used if one is not relaying logs through an
885 intermediate syslog server or for simply customizing the hostname printed in
886 the logs.
887
Kevinm48936af2010-12-22 16:08:21 +0000888log-tag <string>
889 Sets the tag field in the syslog header to this string. It defaults to the
890 program name as launched from the command line, which usually is "haproxy".
891 Sometimes it can be useful to differentiate between multiple processes
Willy Tarreau094af4e2015-01-07 15:03:42 +0100892 running on the same host. See also the per-proxy "log-tag" directive.
Kevinm48936af2010-12-22 16:08:21 +0000893
Thierry FOURNIER90da1912015-03-05 11:17:06 +0100894lua-load <file>
895 This global directive loads and executes a Lua file. This directive can be
896 used multiple times.
897
William Lallemand4cfede82017-11-24 22:02:34 +0100898master-worker [no-exit-on-failure]
William Lallemande202b1e2017-06-01 17:38:56 +0200899 Master-worker mode. It is equivalent to the command line "-W" argument.
900 This mode will launch a "master" which will monitor the "workers". Using
901 this mode, you can reload HAProxy directly by sending a SIGUSR2 signal to
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100902 the master. The master-worker mode is compatible either with the foreground
William Lallemande202b1e2017-06-01 17:38:56 +0200903 or daemon mode. It is recommended to use this mode with multiprocess and
904 systemd.
William Lallemand4cfede82017-11-24 22:02:34 +0100905 By default, if a worker exits with a bad return code, in the case of a
906 segfault for example, all workers will be killed, and the master will leave.
907 It is convenient to combine this behavior with Restart=on-failure in a
908 systemd unit file in order to relaunch the whole process. If you don't want
909 this behavior, you must use the keyword "no-exit-on-failure".
William Lallemande202b1e2017-06-01 17:38:56 +0200910
William Lallemand4cfede82017-11-24 22:02:34 +0100911 See also "-W" in the management guide.
William Lallemande202b1e2017-06-01 17:38:56 +0200912
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200913nbproc <number>
914 Creates <number> processes when going daemon. This requires the "daemon"
915 mode. By default, only one process is created, which is the recommended mode
916 of operation. For systems limited to small sets of file descriptors per
917 process, it may be needed to fork multiple daemons. USING MULTIPLE PROCESSES
918 IS HARDER TO DEBUG AND IS REALLY DISCOURAGED. See also "daemon".
919
Christopher Fauletbe0faa22017-08-29 15:37:10 +0200920nbthread <number>
921 This setting is only available when support for threads was built in. It
922 creates <number> threads for each created processes. It means if HAProxy is
923 started in foreground, it only creates <number> threads for the first
924 process. FOR NOW, THREADS SUPPORT IN HAPROXY IS HIGHLY EXPERIMENTAL AND IT
925 MUST BE ENABLED WITH CAUTION AND AT YOUR OWN RISK. See also "nbproc".
926
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200927pidfile <pidfile>
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100928 Writes PIDs of all daemons into file <pidfile>. This option is equivalent to
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +0200929 the "-p" command line argument. The file must be accessible to the user
930 starting the process. See also "daemon".
931
Willy Tarreau1d549722016-02-16 12:41:57 +0100932presetenv <name> <value>
933 Sets environment variable <name> to value <value>. If the variable exists, it
934 is NOT overwritten. The changes immediately take effect so that the next line
935 in the configuration file sees the new value. See also "setenv", "resetenv",
936 and "unsetenv".
937
938resetenv [<name> ...]
939 Removes all environment variables except the ones specified in argument. It
940 allows to use a clean controlled environment before setting new values with
941 setenv or unsetenv. Please note that some internal functions may make use of
942 some environment variables, such as time manipulation functions, but also
943 OpenSSL or even external checks. This must be used with extreme care and only
944 after complete validation. The changes immediately take effect so that the
945 next line in the configuration file sees the new environment. See also
946 "setenv", "presetenv", and "unsetenv".
947
Christopher Fauletff4121f2017-11-22 16:38:49 +0100948stats bind-process [ all | odd | even | <process_num>[-[process_num>]] ] ...
Willy Tarreau35b7b162012-10-22 23:17:18 +0200949 Limits the stats socket to a certain set of processes numbers. By default the
950 stats socket is bound to all processes, causing a warning to be emitted when
951 nbproc is greater than 1 because there is no way to select the target process
952 when connecting. However, by using this setting, it becomes possible to pin
953 the stats socket to a specific set of processes, typically the first one. The
954 warning will automatically be disabled when this setting is used, whatever
Willy Tarreaua9db57e2013-01-18 11:29:29 +0100955 the number of processes used. The maximum process ID depends on the machine's
Christopher Fauletff4121f2017-11-22 16:38:49 +0100956 word size (32 or 64). Ranges can be partially defined. The higher bound can
957 be omitted. In such case, it is replaced by the corresponding maximum
958 value. A better option consists in using the "process" setting of the "stats
959 socket" line to force the process on each line.
Willy Tarreau35b7b162012-10-22 23:17:18 +0200960
Baptiste Assmann5626f482015-08-23 10:00:10 +0200961server-state-base <directory>
962 Specifies the directory prefix to be prepended in front of all servers state
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +0200963 file names which do not start with a '/'. See also "server-state-file",
964 "load-server-state-from-file" and "server-state-file-name".
Baptiste Assmannef1f0fc2015-08-23 10:06:39 +0200965
966server-state-file <file>
967 Specifies the path to the file containing state of servers. If the path starts
968 with a slash ('/'), it is considered absolute, otherwise it is considered
969 relative to the directory specified using "server-state-base" (if set) or to
970 the current directory. Before reloading HAProxy, it is possible to save the
971 servers' current state using the stats command "show servers state". The
972 output of this command must be written in the file pointed by <file>. When
973 starting up, before handling traffic, HAProxy will read, load and apply state
974 for each server found in the file and available in its current running
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +0200975 configuration. See also "server-state-base" and "show servers state",
976 "load-server-state-from-file" and "server-state-file-name"
Baptiste Assmann5626f482015-08-23 10:00:10 +0200977
Willy Tarreau1d549722016-02-16 12:41:57 +0100978setenv <name> <value>
979 Sets environment variable <name> to value <value>. If the variable exists, it
980 is overwritten. The changes immediately take effect so that the next line in
981 the configuration file sees the new value. See also "presetenv", "resetenv",
982 and "unsetenv".
983
Willy Tarreau610f04b2014-02-13 11:36:41 +0100984ssl-default-bind-ciphers <ciphers>
985 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It sets
986 the default string describing the list of cipher algorithms ("cipher suite")
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +0300987 that are negotiated during the SSL/TLS handshake for all "bind" lines which
Willy Tarreau610f04b2014-02-13 11:36:41 +0100988 do not explicitly define theirs. The format of the string is defined in
989 "man 1 ciphers" from OpenSSL man pages, and can be for instance a string such
990 as "AES:ALL:!aNULL:!eNULL:+RC4:@STRENGTH" (without quotes). Please check the
991 "bind" keyword for more information.
992
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +0100993ssl-default-bind-options [<option>]...
994 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It sets
995 default ssl-options to force on all "bind" lines. Please check the "bind"
996 keyword to see available options.
997
998 Example:
999 global
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +02001000 ssl-default-bind-options ssl-min-ver TLSv1.0 no-tls-tickets
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +01001001
Willy Tarreau610f04b2014-02-13 11:36:41 +01001002ssl-default-server-ciphers <ciphers>
1003 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
1004 sets the default string describing the list of cipher algorithms that are
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03001005 negotiated during the SSL/TLS handshake with the server, for all "server"
Willy Tarreau610f04b2014-02-13 11:36:41 +01001006 lines which do not explicitly define theirs. The format of the string is
1007 defined in "man 1 ciphers". Please check the "server" keyword for more
1008 information.
1009
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +01001010ssl-default-server-options [<option>]...
1011 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It sets
1012 default ssl-options to force on all "server" lines. Please check the "server"
1013 keyword to see available options.
1014
Remi Gacogne47783ef2015-05-29 15:53:22 +02001015ssl-dh-param-file <file>
1016 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It sets
1017 the default DH parameters that are used during the SSL/TLS handshake when
1018 ephemeral Diffie-Hellman (DHE) key exchange is used, for all "bind" lines
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001019 which do not explicitly define theirs. It will be overridden by custom DH
Remi Gacogne47783ef2015-05-29 15:53:22 +02001020 parameters found in a bind certificate file if any. If custom DH parameters
Cyril Bonté307ee1e2015-09-28 23:16:06 +02001021 are not specified either by using ssl-dh-param-file or by setting them
1022 directly in the certificate file, pre-generated DH parameters of the size
1023 specified by tune.ssl.default-dh-param will be used. Custom parameters are
1024 known to be more secure and therefore their use is recommended.
Remi Gacogne47783ef2015-05-29 15:53:22 +02001025 Custom DH parameters may be generated by using the OpenSSL command
1026 "openssl dhparam <size>", where size should be at least 2048, as 1024-bit DH
1027 parameters should not be considered secure anymore.
1028
Emeric Brun850efd52014-01-29 12:24:34 +01001029ssl-server-verify [none|required]
1030 The default behavior for SSL verify on servers side. If specified to 'none',
1031 servers certificates are not verified. The default is 'required' except if
1032 forced using cmdline option '-dV'.
1033
Willy Tarreauabb175f2012-09-24 12:43:26 +02001034stats socket [<address:port>|<path>] [param*]
1035 Binds a UNIX socket to <path> or a TCPv4/v6 address to <address:port>.
1036 Connections to this socket will return various statistics outputs and even
1037 allow some commands to be issued to change some runtime settings. Please
Willy Tarreau1af20c72017-06-23 16:01:14 +02001038 consult section 9.3 "Unix Socket commands" of Management Guide for more
Kevin Decherf949c7202015-10-13 23:26:44 +02001039 details.
Willy Tarreau6162db22009-10-10 17:13:00 +02001040
Willy Tarreauabb175f2012-09-24 12:43:26 +02001041 All parameters supported by "bind" lines are supported, for instance to
1042 restrict access to some users or their access rights. Please consult
1043 section 5.1 for more information.
Willy Tarreaufbee7132007-10-18 13:53:22 +02001044
1045stats timeout <timeout, in milliseconds>
1046 The default timeout on the stats socket is set to 10 seconds. It is possible
1047 to change this value with "stats timeout". The value must be passed in
Willy Tarreaubefdff12007-12-02 22:27:38 +01001048 milliseconds, or be suffixed by a time unit among { us, ms, s, m, h, d }.
Willy Tarreaufbee7132007-10-18 13:53:22 +02001049
1050stats maxconn <connections>
1051 By default, the stats socket is limited to 10 concurrent connections. It is
1052 possible to change this value with "stats maxconn".
1053
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001054uid <number>
1055 Changes the process' user ID to <number>. It is recommended that the user ID
1056 is dedicated to HAProxy or to a small set of similar daemons. HAProxy must
1057 be started with superuser privileges in order to be able to switch to another
1058 one. See also "gid" and "user".
1059
1060ulimit-n <number>
1061 Sets the maximum number of per-process file-descriptors to <number>. By
1062 default, it is automatically computed, so it is recommended not to use this
1063 option.
1064
Willy Tarreauceb24bc2010-11-09 12:46:41 +01001065unix-bind [ prefix <prefix> ] [ mode <mode> ] [ user <user> ] [ uid <uid> ]
1066 [ group <group> ] [ gid <gid> ]
1067
1068 Fixes common settings to UNIX listening sockets declared in "bind" statements.
1069 This is mainly used to simplify declaration of those UNIX sockets and reduce
1070 the risk of errors, since those settings are most commonly required but are
1071 also process-specific. The <prefix> setting can be used to force all socket
1072 path to be relative to that directory. This might be needed to access another
1073 component's chroot. Note that those paths are resolved before haproxy chroots
1074 itself, so they are absolute. The <mode>, <user>, <uid>, <group> and <gid>
1075 all have the same meaning as their homonyms used by the "bind" statement. If
1076 both are specified, the "bind" statement has priority, meaning that the
1077 "unix-bind" settings may be seen as process-wide default settings.
1078
Willy Tarreau1d549722016-02-16 12:41:57 +01001079unsetenv [<name> ...]
1080 Removes environment variables specified in arguments. This can be useful to
1081 hide some sensitive information that are occasionally inherited from the
1082 user's environment during some operations. Variables which did not exist are
1083 silently ignored so that after the operation, it is certain that none of
1084 these variables remain. The changes immediately take effect so that the next
1085 line in the configuration file will not see these variables. See also
1086 "setenv", "presetenv", and "resetenv".
1087
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001088user <user name>
1089 Similar to "uid" but uses the UID of user name <user name> from /etc/passwd.
1090 See also "uid" and "group".
1091
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki48cb2ae2009-10-02 22:51:14 +02001092node <name>
1093 Only letters, digits, hyphen and underscore are allowed, like in DNS names.
1094
1095 This statement is useful in HA configurations where two or more processes or
1096 servers share the same IP address. By setting a different node-name on all
1097 nodes, it becomes easy to immediately spot what server is handling the
1098 traffic.
1099
1100description <text>
1101 Add a text that describes the instance.
1102
1103 Please note that it is required to escape certain characters (# for example)
1104 and this text is inserted into a html page so you should avoid using
1105 "<" and ">" characters.
1106
Thomas Holmesdb04f192015-05-18 13:21:39 +0100110751degrees-data-file <file path>
1108 The path of the 51Degrees data file to provide device detection services. The
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001109 file should be unzipped and accessible by HAProxy with relevant permissions.
Thomas Holmesdb04f192015-05-18 13:21:39 +01001110
Dragan Dosenae6d39a2015-06-29 16:43:27 +02001111 Please note that this option is only available when haproxy has been
Thomas Holmesdb04f192015-05-18 13:21:39 +01001112 compiled with USE_51DEGREES.
1113
Ben Shillitof25e8e52016-12-02 14:25:37 +0000111451degrees-property-name-list [<string> ...]
Thomas Holmesdb04f192015-05-18 13:21:39 +01001115 A list of 51Degrees property names to be load from the dataset. A full list
1116 of names is available on the 51Degrees website:
1117 https://51degrees.com/resources/property-dictionary
1118
Dragan Dosenae6d39a2015-06-29 16:43:27 +02001119 Please note that this option is only available when haproxy has been
Thomas Holmesdb04f192015-05-18 13:21:39 +01001120 compiled with USE_51DEGREES.
1121
Dragan Dosen93b38d92015-06-29 16:43:25 +0200112251degrees-property-separator <char>
Thomas Holmesdb04f192015-05-18 13:21:39 +01001123 A char that will be appended to every property value in a response header
1124 containing 51Degrees results. If not set that will be set as ','.
1125
Dragan Dosenae6d39a2015-06-29 16:43:27 +02001126 Please note that this option is only available when haproxy has been
1127 compiled with USE_51DEGREES.
1128
112951degrees-cache-size <number>
1130 Sets the size of the 51Degrees converter cache to <number> entries. This
1131 is an LRU cache which reminds previous device detections and their results.
1132 By default, this cache is disabled.
1133
1134 Please note that this option is only available when haproxy has been
Thomas Holmesdb04f192015-05-18 13:21:39 +01001135 compiled with USE_51DEGREES.
1136
scientiamobiled0027ed2016-11-04 10:55:08 +01001137wurfl-data-file <file path>
1138 The path of the WURFL data file to provide device detection services. The
1139 file should be accessible by HAProxy with relevant permissions.
1140
1141 Please note that this option is only available when haproxy has been compiled
1142 with USE_WURFL=1.
1143
1144wurfl-information-list [<capability>]*
1145 A space-delimited list of WURFL capabilities, virtual capabilities, property
1146 names we plan to use in injected headers. A full list of capability and
1147 virtual capability names is available on the Scientiamobile website :
1148
1149 https://www.scientiamobile.com/wurflCapability
1150
1151 Valid WURFL properties are:
1152 - wurfl_id Contains the device ID of the matched device.
1153
1154 - wurfl_root_id Contains the device root ID of the matched
1155 device.
1156
1157 - wurfl_isdevroot Tells if the matched device is a root device.
1158 Possible values are "TRUE" or "FALSE".
1159
1160 - wurfl_useragent The original useragent coming with this
1161 particular web request.
1162
1163 - wurfl_api_version Contains a string representing the currently
1164 used Libwurfl API version.
1165
1166 - wurfl_engine_target Contains a string representing the currently
1167 set WURFL Engine Target. Possible values are
1168 "HIGH_ACCURACY", "HIGH_PERFORMANCE", "INVALID".
1169
1170 - wurfl_info A string containing information on the parsed
1171 wurfl.xml and its full path.
1172
1173 - wurfl_last_load_time Contains the UNIX timestamp of the last time
1174 WURFL has been loaded successfully.
1175
1176 - wurfl_normalized_useragent The normalized useragent.
1177
1178 - wurfl_useragent_priority The user agent priority used by WURFL.
1179
1180 Please note that this option is only available when haproxy has been compiled
1181 with USE_WURFL=1.
1182
1183wurfl-information-list-separator <char>
1184 A char that will be used to separate values in a response header containing
1185 WURFL results. If not set that a comma (',') will be used by default.
1186
1187 Please note that this option is only available when haproxy has been compiled
1188 with USE_WURFL=1.
1189
1190wurfl-patch-file [<file path>]
1191 A list of WURFL patch file paths. Note that patches are loaded during startup
1192 thus before the chroot.
1193
1194 Please note that this option is only available when haproxy has been compiled
1195 with USE_WURFL=1.
1196
1197wurfl-engine-mode { accuracy | performance }
1198 Sets the WURFL engine target. You can choose between 'accuracy' or
1199 'performance' targets. In performance mode, desktop web browser detection is
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001200 done programmatically without referencing the WURFL data. As a result, most
scientiamobiled0027ed2016-11-04 10:55:08 +01001201 desktop web browsers are returned as generic_web_browser WURFL ID for
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001202 performance. If either performance or accuracy are not defined, performance
scientiamobiled0027ed2016-11-04 10:55:08 +01001203 mode is enabled by default.
1204
1205 Please note that this option is only available when haproxy has been compiled
1206 with USE_WURFL=1.
1207
1208wurfl-cache-size <U>[,<D>]
1209 Sets the WURFL caching strategy. Here <U> is the Useragent cache size, and
1210 <D> is the internal device cache size. There are three possibilities here :
1211 - "0" : no cache is used.
1212 - <U> : the Single LRU cache is used, the size is expressed in elements.
1213 - <U>,<D> : the Double LRU cache is used, both sizes are in elements. This is
1214 the highest performing option.
1215
1216 Please note that this option is only available when haproxy has been compiled
1217 with USE_WURFL=1.
1218
1219wurfl-useragent-priority { plain | sideloaded_browser }
1220 Tells WURFL if it should prioritize use of the plain user agent ('plain')
1221 over the default sideloaded browser user agent ('sideloaded_browser').
1222
1223 Please note that this option is only available when haproxy has been compiled
1224 with USE_WURFL=1.
1225
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001226
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020012273.2. Performance tuning
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001228-----------------------
1229
Willy Tarreau1746eec2014-04-25 10:46:47 +02001230max-spread-checks <delay in milliseconds>
1231 By default, haproxy tries to spread the start of health checks across the
1232 smallest health check interval of all the servers in a farm. The principle is
1233 to avoid hammering services running on the same server. But when using large
1234 check intervals (10 seconds or more), the last servers in the farm take some
1235 time before starting to be tested, which can be a problem. This parameter is
1236 used to enforce an upper bound on delay between the first and the last check,
1237 even if the servers' check intervals are larger. When servers run with
1238 shorter intervals, their intervals will be respected though.
1239
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001240maxconn <number>
1241 Sets the maximum per-process number of concurrent connections to <number>. It
1242 is equivalent to the command-line argument "-n". Proxies will stop accepting
1243 connections when this limit is reached. The "ulimit-n" parameter is
Willy Tarreau8274e102014-06-19 15:31:25 +02001244 automatically adjusted according to this value. See also "ulimit-n". Note:
1245 the "select" poller cannot reliably use more than 1024 file descriptors on
1246 some platforms. If your platform only supports select and reports "select
1247 FAILED" on startup, you need to reduce maxconn until it works (slightly
Willy Tarreaud0256482015-01-15 21:45:22 +01001248 below 500 in general). If this value is not set, it will default to the value
1249 set in DEFAULT_MAXCONN at build time (reported in haproxy -vv) if no memory
1250 limit is enforced, or will be computed based on the memory limit, the buffer
1251 size, memory allocated to compression, SSL cache size, and use or not of SSL
1252 and the associated maxsslconn (which can also be automatic).
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001253
Willy Tarreau81c25d02011-09-07 15:17:21 +02001254maxconnrate <number>
1255 Sets the maximum per-process number of connections per second to <number>.
1256 Proxies will stop accepting connections when this limit is reached. It can be
1257 used to limit the global capacity regardless of each frontend capacity. It is
1258 important to note that this can only be used as a service protection measure,
1259 as there will not necessarily be a fair share between frontends when the
1260 limit is reached, so it's a good idea to also limit each frontend to some
1261 value close to its expected share. Also, lowering tune.maxaccept can improve
1262 fairness.
1263
William Lallemandd85f9172012-11-09 17:05:39 +01001264maxcomprate <number>
1265 Sets the maximum per-process input compression rate to <number> kilobytes
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001266 per second. For each session, if the maximum is reached, the compression
William Lallemandd85f9172012-11-09 17:05:39 +01001267 level will be decreased during the session. If the maximum is reached at the
1268 beginning of a session, the session will not compress at all. If the maximum
1269 is not reached, the compression level will be increased up to
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001270 tune.comp.maxlevel. A value of zero means there is no limit, this is the
William Lallemandd85f9172012-11-09 17:05:39 +01001271 default value.
1272
William Lallemand072a2bf2012-11-20 17:01:01 +01001273maxcompcpuusage <number>
1274 Sets the maximum CPU usage HAProxy can reach before stopping the compression
1275 for new requests or decreasing the compression level of current requests.
1276 It works like 'maxcomprate' but measures CPU usage instead of incoming data
1277 bandwidth. The value is expressed in percent of the CPU used by haproxy. In
1278 case of multiple processes (nbproc > 1), each process manages its individual
1279 usage. A value of 100 disable the limit. The default value is 100. Setting
1280 a lower value will prevent the compression work from slowing the whole
1281 process down and from introducing high latencies.
1282
Willy Tarreauff4f82d2009-02-06 11:28:13 +01001283maxpipes <number>
1284 Sets the maximum per-process number of pipes to <number>. Currently, pipes
1285 are only used by kernel-based tcp splicing. Since a pipe contains two file
1286 descriptors, the "ulimit-n" value will be increased accordingly. The default
1287 value is maxconn/4, which seems to be more than enough for most heavy usages.
1288 The splice code dynamically allocates and releases pipes, and can fall back
1289 to standard copy, so setting this value too low may only impact performance.
1290
Willy Tarreau93e7c002013-10-07 18:51:07 +02001291maxsessrate <number>
1292 Sets the maximum per-process number of sessions per second to <number>.
1293 Proxies will stop accepting connections when this limit is reached. It can be
1294 used to limit the global capacity regardless of each frontend capacity. It is
1295 important to note that this can only be used as a service protection measure,
1296 as there will not necessarily be a fair share between frontends when the
1297 limit is reached, so it's a good idea to also limit each frontend to some
1298 value close to its expected share. Also, lowering tune.maxaccept can improve
1299 fairness.
1300
Willy Tarreau403edff2012-09-06 11:58:37 +02001301maxsslconn <number>
1302 Sets the maximum per-process number of concurrent SSL connections to
1303 <number>. By default there is no SSL-specific limit, which means that the
1304 global maxconn setting will apply to all connections. Setting this limit
1305 avoids having openssl use too much memory and crash when malloc returns NULL
1306 (since it unfortunately does not reliably check for such conditions). Note
1307 that the limit applies both to incoming and outgoing connections, so one
1308 connection which is deciphered then ciphered accounts for 2 SSL connections.
Willy Tarreaud0256482015-01-15 21:45:22 +01001309 If this value is not set, but a memory limit is enforced, this value will be
1310 automatically computed based on the memory limit, maxconn, the buffer size,
1311 memory allocated to compression, SSL cache size, and use of SSL in either
1312 frontends, backends or both. If neither maxconn nor maxsslconn are specified
1313 when there is a memory limit, haproxy will automatically adjust these values
1314 so that 100% of the connections can be made over SSL with no risk, and will
1315 consider the sides where it is enabled (frontend, backend, both).
Willy Tarreau403edff2012-09-06 11:58:37 +02001316
Willy Tarreaue43d5322013-10-07 20:01:52 +02001317maxsslrate <number>
1318 Sets the maximum per-process number of SSL sessions per second to <number>.
1319 SSL listeners will stop accepting connections when this limit is reached. It
1320 can be used to limit the global SSL CPU usage regardless of each frontend
1321 capacity. It is important to note that this can only be used as a service
1322 protection measure, as there will not necessarily be a fair share between
1323 frontends when the limit is reached, so it's a good idea to also limit each
1324 frontend to some value close to its expected share. It is also important to
1325 note that the sessions are accounted before they enter the SSL stack and not
1326 after, which also protects the stack against bad handshakes. Also, lowering
1327 tune.maxaccept can improve fairness.
1328
William Lallemand9d5f5482012-11-07 16:12:57 +01001329maxzlibmem <number>
1330 Sets the maximum amount of RAM in megabytes per process usable by the zlib.
1331 When the maximum amount is reached, future sessions will not compress as long
1332 as RAM is unavailable. When sets to 0, there is no limit.
William Lallemande3a7d992012-11-20 11:25:20 +01001333 The default value is 0. The value is available in bytes on the UNIX socket
1334 with "show info" on the line "MaxZlibMemUsage", the memory used by zlib is
1335 "ZlibMemUsage" in bytes.
1336
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001337noepoll
1338 Disables the use of the "epoll" event polling system on Linux. It is
1339 equivalent to the command-line argument "-de". The next polling system
Willy Tarreaue9f49e72012-11-11 17:42:00 +01001340 used will generally be "poll". See also "nopoll".
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001341
1342nokqueue
1343 Disables the use of the "kqueue" event polling system on BSD. It is
1344 equivalent to the command-line argument "-dk". The next polling system
1345 used will generally be "poll". See also "nopoll".
1346
1347nopoll
1348 Disables the use of the "poll" event polling system. It is equivalent to the
1349 command-line argument "-dp". The next polling system used will be "select".
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01001350 It should never be needed to disable "poll" since it's available on all
Willy Tarreaue9f49e72012-11-11 17:42:00 +01001351 platforms supported by HAProxy. See also "nokqueue" and "noepoll".
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001352
Willy Tarreauff4f82d2009-02-06 11:28:13 +01001353nosplice
1354 Disables the use of kernel tcp splicing between sockets on Linux. It is
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001355 equivalent to the command line argument "-dS". Data will then be copied
Willy Tarreauff4f82d2009-02-06 11:28:13 +01001356 using conventional and more portable recv/send calls. Kernel tcp splicing is
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01001357 limited to some very recent instances of kernel 2.6. Most versions between
Willy Tarreauff4f82d2009-02-06 11:28:13 +01001358 2.6.25 and 2.6.28 are buggy and will forward corrupted data, so they must not
1359 be used. This option makes it easier to globally disable kernel splicing in
1360 case of doubt. See also "option splice-auto", "option splice-request" and
1361 "option splice-response".
1362
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03001363nogetaddrinfo
1364 Disables the use of getaddrinfo(3) for name resolving. It is equivalent to
1365 the command line argument "-dG". Deprecated gethostbyname(3) will be used.
1366
Lukas Tribusa0bcbdc2016-09-12 21:42:20 +00001367noreuseport
1368 Disables the use of SO_REUSEPORT - see socket(7). It is equivalent to the
1369 command line argument "-dR".
1370
Willy Tarreaufe255b72007-10-14 23:09:26 +02001371spread-checks <0..50, in percent>
Simon Hormand60d6912013-11-25 10:46:36 +09001372 Sometimes it is desirable to avoid sending agent and health checks to
1373 servers at exact intervals, for instance when many logical servers are
1374 located on the same physical server. With the help of this parameter, it
1375 becomes possible to add some randomness in the check interval between 0
1376 and +/- 50%. A value between 2 and 5 seems to show good results. The
1377 default value remains at 0.
Willy Tarreaufe255b72007-10-14 23:09:26 +02001378
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001379ssl-engine <name> [algo <comma-separated list of algorithms>]
Grant Zhang872f9c22017-01-21 01:10:18 +00001380 Sets the OpenSSL engine to <name>. List of valid values for <name> may be
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001381 obtained using the command "openssl engine". This statement may be used
Grant Zhang872f9c22017-01-21 01:10:18 +00001382 multiple times, it will simply enable multiple crypto engines. Referencing an
1383 unsupported engine will prevent haproxy from starting. Note that many engines
1384 will lead to lower HTTPS performance than pure software with recent
1385 processors. The optional command "algo" sets the default algorithms an ENGINE
1386 will supply using the OPENSSL function ENGINE_set_default_string(). A value
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001387 of "ALL" uses the engine for all cryptographic operations. If no list of
1388 algo is specified then the value of "ALL" is used. A comma-separated list
Grant Zhang872f9c22017-01-21 01:10:18 +00001389 of different algorithms may be specified, including: RSA, DSA, DH, EC, RAND,
1390 CIPHERS, DIGESTS, PKEY, PKEY_CRYPTO, PKEY_ASN1. This is the same format that
1391 openssl configuration file uses:
1392 https://www.openssl.org/docs/man1.0.2/apps/config.html
1393
Grant Zhangfa6c7ee2017-01-14 01:42:15 +00001394ssl-mode-async
1395 Adds SSL_MODE_ASYNC mode to the SSL context. This enables asynchronous TLS
Emeric Brun3854e012017-05-17 20:42:48 +02001396 I/O operations if asynchronous capable SSL engines are used. The current
Emeric Brunb5e42a82017-06-06 12:35:14 +00001397 implementation supports a maximum of 32 engines. The Openssl ASYNC API
1398 doesn't support moving read/write buffers and is not compliant with
1399 haproxy's buffer management. So the asynchronous mode is disabled on
1400 read/write operations (it is only enabled during initial and reneg
1401 handshakes).
Grant Zhangfa6c7ee2017-01-14 01:42:15 +00001402
Willy Tarreau33cb0652014-12-23 22:52:37 +01001403tune.buffers.limit <number>
1404 Sets a hard limit on the number of buffers which may be allocated per process.
1405 The default value is zero which means unlimited. The minimum non-zero value
1406 will always be greater than "tune.buffers.reserve" and should ideally always
1407 be about twice as large. Forcing this value can be particularly useful to
1408 limit the amount of memory a process may take, while retaining a sane
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001409 behavior. When this limit is reached, sessions which need a buffer wait for
Willy Tarreau33cb0652014-12-23 22:52:37 +01001410 another one to be released by another session. Since buffers are dynamically
1411 allocated and released, the waiting time is very short and not perceptible
1412 provided that limits remain reasonable. In fact sometimes reducing the limit
1413 may even increase performance by increasing the CPU cache's efficiency. Tests
1414 have shown good results on average HTTP traffic with a limit to 1/10 of the
1415 expected global maxconn setting, which also significantly reduces memory
1416 usage. The memory savings come from the fact that a number of connections
1417 will not allocate 2*tune.bufsize. It is best not to touch this value unless
1418 advised to do so by an haproxy core developer.
1419
Willy Tarreau1058ae72014-12-23 22:40:40 +01001420tune.buffers.reserve <number>
1421 Sets the number of buffers which are pre-allocated and reserved for use only
1422 during memory shortage conditions resulting in failed memory allocations. The
1423 minimum value is 2 and is also the default. There is no reason a user would
1424 want to change this value, it's mostly aimed at haproxy core developers.
1425
Willy Tarreau27a674e2009-08-17 07:23:33 +02001426tune.bufsize <number>
1427 Sets the buffer size to this size (in bytes). Lower values allow more
1428 sessions to coexist in the same amount of RAM, and higher values allow some
1429 applications with very large cookies to work. The default value is 16384 and
1430 can be changed at build time. It is strongly recommended not to change this
1431 from the default value, as very low values will break some services such as
1432 statistics, and values larger than default size will increase memory usage,
1433 possibly causing the system to run out of memory. At least the global maxconn
Willy Tarreau45a66cc2017-11-24 11:28:00 +01001434 parameter should be decreased by the same factor as this one is increased. In
1435 addition, use of HTTP/2 mandates that this value must be 16384 or more. If an
1436 HTTP request is larger than (tune.bufsize - tune.maxrewrite), haproxy will
Dmitry Sivachenkof6f4f7b2012-10-21 18:10:25 +04001437 return HTTP 400 (Bad Request) error. Similarly if an HTTP response is larger
1438 than this size, haproxy will return HTTP 502 (Bad Gateway).
Willy Tarreau27a674e2009-08-17 07:23:33 +02001439
Willy Tarreau43961d52010-10-04 20:39:20 +02001440tune.chksize <number>
1441 Sets the check buffer size to this size (in bytes). Higher values may help
1442 find string or regex patterns in very large pages, though doing so may imply
1443 more memory and CPU usage. The default value is 16384 and can be changed at
1444 build time. It is not recommended to change this value, but to use better
1445 checks whenever possible.
1446
William Lallemandf3747832012-11-09 12:33:10 +01001447tune.comp.maxlevel <number>
1448 Sets the maximum compression level. The compression level affects CPU
1449 usage during compression. This value affects CPU usage during compression.
1450 Each session using compression initializes the compression algorithm with
1451 this value. The default value is 1.
1452
Willy Tarreaufe20e5b2017-07-27 11:42:14 +02001453tune.h2.header-table-size <number>
1454 Sets the HTTP/2 dynamic header table size. It defaults to 4096 bytes and
1455 cannot be larger than 65536 bytes. A larger value may help certain clients
1456 send more compact requests, depending on their capabilities. This amount of
1457 memory is consumed for each HTTP/2 connection. It is recommended not to
1458 change it.
1459
Willy Tarreaue6baec02017-07-27 11:45:11 +02001460tune.h2.initial-window-size <number>
1461 Sets the HTTP/2 initial window size, which is the number of bytes the client
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001462 can upload before waiting for an acknowledgment from haproxy. This setting
1463 only affects payload contents (i.e. the body of POST requests), not headers.
Willy Tarreaue6baec02017-07-27 11:45:11 +02001464 The default value is 65535, which roughly allows up to 5 Mbps of upload
1465 bandwidth per client over a network showing a 100 ms ping time, or 500 Mbps
1466 over a 1-ms local network. It can make sense to increase this value to allow
1467 faster uploads, or to reduce it to increase fairness when dealing with many
1468 clients. It doesn't affect resource usage.
1469
Willy Tarreau5242ef82017-07-27 11:47:28 +02001470tune.h2.max-concurrent-streams <number>
1471 Sets the HTTP/2 maximum number of concurrent streams per connection (ie the
1472 number of outstanding requests on a single connection). The default value is
1473 100. A larger one may slightly improve page load time for complex sites when
1474 visited over high latency networks, but increases the amount of resources a
1475 single client may allocate. A value of zero disables the limit so a single
1476 client may create as many streams as allocatable by haproxy. It is highly
1477 recommended not to change this value.
1478
Willy Tarreau193b8c62012-11-22 00:17:38 +01001479tune.http.cookielen <number>
1480 Sets the maximum length of captured cookies. This is the maximum value that
1481 the "capture cookie xxx len yyy" will be allowed to take, and any upper value
1482 will automatically be truncated to this one. It is important not to set too
1483 high a value because all cookie captures still allocate this size whatever
1484 their configured value (they share a same pool). This value is per request
1485 per response, so the memory allocated is twice this value per connection.
1486 When not specified, the limit is set to 63 characters. It is recommended not
1487 to change this value.
1488
Stéphane Cottin23e9e932017-05-18 08:58:41 +02001489tune.http.logurilen <number>
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001490 Sets the maximum length of request URI in logs. This prevents truncating long
1491 request URIs with valuable query strings in log lines. This is not related
Stéphane Cottin23e9e932017-05-18 08:58:41 +02001492 to syslog limits. If you increase this limit, you may also increase the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001493 'log ... len yyy' parameter. Your syslog daemon may also need specific
Stéphane Cottin23e9e932017-05-18 08:58:41 +02001494 configuration directives too.
1495 The default value is 1024.
1496
Willy Tarreauac1932d2011-10-24 19:14:41 +02001497tune.http.maxhdr <number>
1498 Sets the maximum number of headers in a request. When a request comes with a
1499 number of headers greater than this value (including the first line), it is
1500 rejected with a "400 Bad Request" status code. Similarly, too large responses
1501 are blocked with "502 Bad Gateway". The default value is 101, which is enough
1502 for all usages, considering that the widely deployed Apache server uses the
1503 same limit. It can be useful to push this limit further to temporarily allow
Christopher Faulet50174f32017-06-21 16:31:35 +02001504 a buggy application to work by the time it gets fixed. The accepted range is
1505 1..32767. Keep in mind that each new header consumes 32bits of memory for
1506 each session, so don't push this limit too high.
Willy Tarreauac1932d2011-10-24 19:14:41 +02001507
Willy Tarreau7e312732014-02-12 16:35:14 +01001508tune.idletimer <timeout>
1509 Sets the duration after which haproxy will consider that an empty buffer is
1510 probably associated with an idle stream. This is used to optimally adjust
1511 some packet sizes while forwarding large and small data alternatively. The
1512 decision to use splice() or to send large buffers in SSL is modulated by this
1513 parameter. The value is in milliseconds between 0 and 65535. A value of zero
1514 means that haproxy will not try to detect idle streams. The default is 1000,
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001515 which seems to correctly detect end user pauses (e.g. read a page before
Willy Tarreau7e312732014-02-12 16:35:14 +01001516 clicking). There should be not reason for changing this value. Please check
1517 tune.ssl.maxrecord below.
1518
Thierry FOURNIER90da1912015-03-05 11:17:06 +01001519tune.lua.forced-yield <number>
1520 This directive forces the Lua engine to execute a yield each <number> of
Tim Düsterhus4896c442016-11-29 02:15:19 +01001521 instructions executed. This permits interrupting a long script and allows the
Thierry FOURNIER90da1912015-03-05 11:17:06 +01001522 HAProxy scheduler to process other tasks like accepting connections or
1523 forwarding traffic. The default value is 10000 instructions. If HAProxy often
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001524 executes some Lua code but more responsiveness is required, this value can be
Thierry FOURNIER90da1912015-03-05 11:17:06 +01001525 lowered. If the Lua code is quite long and its result is absolutely required
1526 to process the data, the <number> can be increased.
1527
Willy Tarreau32f61e22015-03-18 17:54:59 +01001528tune.lua.maxmem
1529 Sets the maximum amount of RAM in megabytes per process usable by Lua. By
1530 default it is zero which means unlimited. It is important to set a limit to
1531 ensure that a bug in a script will not result in the system running out of
1532 memory.
1533
Thierry FOURNIER90da1912015-03-05 11:17:06 +01001534tune.lua.session-timeout <timeout>
1535 This is the execution timeout for the Lua sessions. This is useful for
Thierry FOURNIER7dd784b2015-10-01 14:49:33 +02001536 preventing infinite loops or spending too much time in Lua. This timeout
1537 counts only the pure Lua runtime. If the Lua does a sleep, the sleep is
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001538 not taken in account. The default timeout is 4s.
Thierry FOURNIER90da1912015-03-05 11:17:06 +01001539
1540tune.lua.task-timeout <timeout>
1541 Purpose is the same as "tune.lua.session-timeout", but this timeout is
1542 dedicated to the tasks. By default, this timeout isn't set because a task may
1543 remain alive during of the lifetime of HAProxy. For example, a task used to
1544 check servers.
1545
Thierry FOURNIER7dd784b2015-10-01 14:49:33 +02001546tune.lua.service-timeout <timeout>
1547 This is the execution timeout for the Lua services. This is useful for
1548 preventing infinite loops or spending too much time in Lua. This timeout
1549 counts only the pure Lua runtime. If the Lua does a sleep, the sleep is
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001550 not taken in account. The default timeout is 4s.
Thierry FOURNIER7dd784b2015-10-01 14:49:33 +02001551
Willy Tarreaua0250ba2008-01-06 11:22:57 +01001552tune.maxaccept <number>
Willy Tarreau16a21472012-11-19 12:39:59 +01001553 Sets the maximum number of consecutive connections a process may accept in a
1554 row before switching to other work. In single process mode, higher numbers
1555 give better performance at high connection rates. However in multi-process
1556 modes, keeping a bit of fairness between processes generally is better to
1557 increase performance. This value applies individually to each listener, so
1558 that the number of processes a listener is bound to is taken into account.
1559 This value defaults to 64. In multi-process mode, it is divided by twice
1560 the number of processes the listener is bound to. Setting this value to -1
1561 completely disables the limitation. It should normally not be needed to tweak
1562 this value.
Willy Tarreaua0250ba2008-01-06 11:22:57 +01001563
1564tune.maxpollevents <number>
1565 Sets the maximum amount of events that can be processed at once in a call to
1566 the polling system. The default value is adapted to the operating system. It
1567 has been noticed that reducing it below 200 tends to slightly decrease
1568 latency at the expense of network bandwidth, and increasing it above 200
1569 tends to trade latency for slightly increased bandwidth.
1570
Willy Tarreau27a674e2009-08-17 07:23:33 +02001571tune.maxrewrite <number>
1572 Sets the reserved buffer space to this size in bytes. The reserved space is
1573 used for header rewriting or appending. The first reads on sockets will never
1574 fill more than bufsize-maxrewrite. Historically it has defaulted to half of
1575 bufsize, though that does not make much sense since there are rarely large
1576 numbers of headers to add. Setting it too high prevents processing of large
1577 requests or responses. Setting it too low prevents addition of new headers
1578 to already large requests or to POST requests. It is generally wise to set it
1579 to about 1024. It is automatically readjusted to half of bufsize if it is
1580 larger than that. This means you don't have to worry about it when changing
1581 bufsize.
1582
Willy Tarreauf3045d22015-04-29 16:24:50 +02001583tune.pattern.cache-size <number>
1584 Sets the size of the pattern lookup cache to <number> entries. This is an LRU
1585 cache which reminds previous lookups and their results. It is used by ACLs
1586 and maps on slow pattern lookups, namely the ones using the "sub", "reg",
1587 "dir", "dom", "end", "bin" match methods as well as the case-insensitive
1588 strings. It applies to pattern expressions which means that it will be able
1589 to memorize the result of a lookup among all the patterns specified on a
1590 configuration line (including all those loaded from files). It automatically
1591 invalidates entries which are updated using HTTP actions or on the CLI. The
1592 default cache size is set to 10000 entries, which limits its footprint to
1593 about 5 MB on 32-bit systems and 8 MB on 64-bit systems. There is a very low
1594 risk of collision in this cache, which is in the order of the size of the
1595 cache divided by 2^64. Typically, at 10000 requests per second with the
1596 default cache size of 10000 entries, there's 1% chance that a brute force
1597 attack could cause a single collision after 60 years, or 0.1% after 6 years.
1598 This is considered much lower than the risk of a memory corruption caused by
1599 aging components. If this is not acceptable, the cache can be disabled by
1600 setting this parameter to 0.
1601
Willy Tarreaubd9a0a72011-10-23 21:14:29 +02001602tune.pipesize <number>
1603 Sets the kernel pipe buffer size to this size (in bytes). By default, pipes
1604 are the default size for the system. But sometimes when using TCP splicing,
1605 it can improve performance to increase pipe sizes, especially if it is
1606 suspected that pipes are not filled and that many calls to splice() are
1607 performed. This has an impact on the kernel's memory footprint, so this must
1608 not be changed if impacts are not understood.
1609
Willy Tarreaue803de22010-01-21 17:43:04 +01001610tune.rcvbuf.client <number>
1611tune.rcvbuf.server <number>
1612 Forces the kernel socket receive buffer size on the client or the server side
1613 to the specified value in bytes. This value applies to all TCP/HTTP frontends
1614 and backends. It should normally never be set, and the default size (0) lets
1615 the kernel autotune this value depending on the amount of available memory.
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001616 However it can sometimes help to set it to very low values (e.g. 4096) in
Willy Tarreaue803de22010-01-21 17:43:04 +01001617 order to save kernel memory by preventing it from buffering too large amounts
1618 of received data. Lower values will significantly increase CPU usage though.
1619
Willy Tarreaub22fc302015-12-14 12:04:35 +01001620tune.recv_enough <number>
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001621 HAProxy uses some hints to detect that a short read indicates the end of the
Willy Tarreaub22fc302015-12-14 12:04:35 +01001622 socket buffers. One of them is that a read returns more than <recv_enough>
1623 bytes, which defaults to 10136 (7 segments of 1448 each). This default value
1624 may be changed by this setting to better deal with workloads involving lots
1625 of short messages such as telnet or SSH sessions.
1626
Willy Tarreaue803de22010-01-21 17:43:04 +01001627tune.sndbuf.client <number>
1628tune.sndbuf.server <number>
1629 Forces the kernel socket send buffer size on the client or the server side to
1630 the specified value in bytes. This value applies to all TCP/HTTP frontends
1631 and backends. It should normally never be set, and the default size (0) lets
1632 the kernel autotune this value depending on the amount of available memory.
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001633 However it can sometimes help to set it to very low values (e.g. 4096) in
Willy Tarreaue803de22010-01-21 17:43:04 +01001634 order to save kernel memory by preventing it from buffering too large amounts
1635 of received data. Lower values will significantly increase CPU usage though.
1636 Another use case is to prevent write timeouts with extremely slow clients due
1637 to the kernel waiting for a large part of the buffer to be read before
1638 notifying haproxy again.
1639
Willy Tarreau6ec58db2012-11-16 16:32:15 +01001640tune.ssl.cachesize <number>
Emeric Brunaf9619d2012-11-28 18:47:52 +01001641 Sets the size of the global SSL session cache, in a number of blocks. A block
1642 is large enough to contain an encoded session without peer certificate.
1643 An encoded session with peer certificate is stored in multiple blocks
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03001644 depending on the size of the peer certificate. A block uses approximately
Emeric Brunaf9619d2012-11-28 18:47:52 +01001645 200 bytes of memory. The default value may be forced at build time, otherwise
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001646 defaults to 20000. When the cache is full, the most idle entries are purged
Emeric Brunaf9619d2012-11-28 18:47:52 +01001647 and reassigned. Higher values reduce the occurrence of such a purge, hence
1648 the number of CPU-intensive SSL handshakes by ensuring that all users keep
1649 their session as long as possible. All entries are pre-allocated upon startup
Emeric Brun22890a12012-12-28 14:41:32 +01001650 and are shared between all processes if "nbproc" is greater than 1. Setting
1651 this value to 0 disables the SSL session cache.
Willy Tarreau6ec58db2012-11-16 16:32:15 +01001652
Emeric Brun8dc60392014-05-09 13:52:00 +02001653tune.ssl.force-private-cache
1654 This boolean disables SSL session cache sharing between all processes. It
1655 should normally not be used since it will force many renegotiations due to
1656 clients hitting a random process. But it may be required on some operating
1657 systems where none of the SSL cache synchronization method may be used. In
1658 this case, adding a first layer of hash-based load balancing before the SSL
1659 layer might limit the impact of the lack of session sharing.
1660
Emeric Brun4f65bff2012-11-16 15:11:00 +01001661tune.ssl.lifetime <timeout>
1662 Sets how long a cached SSL session may remain valid. This time is expressed
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03001663 in seconds and defaults to 300 (5 min). It is important to understand that it
Emeric Brun4f65bff2012-11-16 15:11:00 +01001664 does not guarantee that sessions will last that long, because if the cache is
1665 full, the longest idle sessions will be purged despite their configured
1666 lifetime. The real usefulness of this setting is to prevent sessions from
1667 being used for too long.
1668
Willy Tarreaubfd59462013-02-21 07:46:09 +01001669tune.ssl.maxrecord <number>
1670 Sets the maximum amount of bytes passed to SSL_write() at a time. Default
1671 value 0 means there is no limit. Over SSL/TLS, the client can decipher the
1672 data only once it has received a full record. With large records, it means
1673 that clients might have to download up to 16kB of data before starting to
1674 process them. Limiting the value can improve page load times on browsers
1675 located over high latency or low bandwidth networks. It is suggested to find
1676 optimal values which fit into 1 or 2 TCP segments (generally 1448 bytes over
1677 Ethernet with TCP timestamps enabled, or 1460 when timestamps are disabled),
1678 keeping in mind that SSL/TLS add some overhead. Typical values of 1419 and
1679 2859 gave good results during tests. Use "strace -e trace=write" to find the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001680 best value. HAProxy will automatically switch to this setting after an idle
Willy Tarreau7e312732014-02-12 16:35:14 +01001681 stream has been detected (see tune.idletimer above).
Willy Tarreaubfd59462013-02-21 07:46:09 +01001682
Remi Gacognef46cd6e2014-06-12 14:58:40 +02001683tune.ssl.default-dh-param <number>
1684 Sets the maximum size of the Diffie-Hellman parameters used for generating
1685 the ephemeral/temporary Diffie-Hellman key in case of DHE key exchange. The
1686 final size will try to match the size of the server's RSA (or DSA) key (e.g,
1687 a 2048 bits temporary DH key for a 2048 bits RSA key), but will not exceed
1688 this maximum value. Default value if 1024. Only 1024 or higher values are
1689 allowed. Higher values will increase the CPU load, and values greater than
1690 1024 bits are not supported by Java 7 and earlier clients. This value is not
Remi Gacogne47783ef2015-05-29 15:53:22 +02001691 used if static Diffie-Hellman parameters are supplied either directly
1692 in the certificate file or by using the ssl-dh-param-file parameter.
Remi Gacognef46cd6e2014-06-12 14:58:40 +02001693
Christopher Faulet31af49d2015-06-09 17:29:50 +02001694tune.ssl.ssl-ctx-cache-size <number>
1695 Sets the size of the cache used to store generated certificates to <number>
1696 entries. This is a LRU cache. Because generating a SSL certificate
1697 dynamically is expensive, they are cached. The default cache size is set to
1698 1000 entries.
1699
Thierry FOURNIER5bf77322017-02-25 12:45:22 +01001700tune.ssl.capture-cipherlist-size <number>
1701 Sets the maximum size of the buffer used for capturing client-hello cipher
1702 list. If the value is 0 (default value) the capture is disabled, otherwise
1703 a buffer is allocated for each SSL/TLS connection.
1704
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02001705tune.vars.global-max-size <size>
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +01001706tune.vars.proc-max-size <size>
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02001707tune.vars.reqres-max-size <size>
1708tune.vars.sess-max-size <size>
1709tune.vars.txn-max-size <size>
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +01001710 These five tunes help to manage the maximum amount of memory used by the
1711 variables system. "global" limits the overall amount of memory available for
1712 all scopes. "proc" limits the memory for the process scope, "sess" limits the
1713 memory for the session scope, "txn" for the transaction scope, and "reqres"
1714 limits the memory for each request or response processing.
1715 Memory accounting is hierarchical, meaning more coarse grained limits include
1716 the finer grained ones: "proc" includes "sess", "sess" includes "txn", and
1717 "txn" includes "reqres".
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02001718
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01001719 For example, when "tune.vars.sess-max-size" is limited to 100,
1720 "tune.vars.txn-max-size" and "tune.vars.reqres-max-size" cannot exceed
1721 100 either. If we create a variable "txn.var" that contains 100 bytes,
1722 all available space is consumed.
1723 Notice that exceeding the limits at runtime will not result in an error
1724 message, but values might be cut off or corrupted. So make sure to accurately
1725 plan for the amount of space needed to store all your variables.
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02001726
William Lallemanda509e4c2012-11-07 16:54:34 +01001727tune.zlib.memlevel <number>
1728 Sets the memLevel parameter in zlib initialization for each session. It
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03001729 defines how much memory should be allocated for the internal compression
William Lallemanda509e4c2012-11-07 16:54:34 +01001730 state. A value of 1 uses minimum memory but is slow and reduces compression
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001731 ratio, a value of 9 uses maximum memory for optimal speed. Can be a value
William Lallemanda509e4c2012-11-07 16:54:34 +01001732 between 1 and 9. The default value is 8.
1733
1734tune.zlib.windowsize <number>
1735 Sets the window size (the size of the history buffer) as a parameter of the
1736 zlib initialization for each session. Larger values of this parameter result
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01001737 in better compression at the expense of memory usage. Can be a value between
1738 8 and 15. The default value is 15.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001739
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020017403.3. Debugging
1741--------------
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001742
1743debug
1744 Enables debug mode which dumps to stdout all exchanges, and disables forking
1745 into background. It is the equivalent of the command-line argument "-d". It
1746 should never be used in a production configuration since it may prevent full
1747 system startup.
1748
1749quiet
1750 Do not display any message during startup. It is equivalent to the command-
1751 line argument "-q".
1752
Emeric Brunf099e792010-09-27 12:05:28 +02001753
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +010017543.4. Userlists
1755--------------
1756It is possible to control access to frontend/backend/listen sections or to
1757http stats by allowing only authenticated and authorized users. To do this,
1758it is required to create at least one userlist and to define users.
1759
1760userlist <listname>
Cyril Bonté78caf842010-03-10 22:41:43 +01001761 Creates new userlist with name <listname>. Many independent userlists can be
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +01001762 used to store authentication & authorization data for independent customers.
1763
1764group <groupname> [users <user>,<user>,(...)]
Cyril Bonté78caf842010-03-10 22:41:43 +01001765 Adds group <groupname> to the current userlist. It is also possible to
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +01001766 attach users to this group by using a comma separated list of names
1767 proceeded by "users" keyword.
1768
Cyril Bontéf0c60612010-02-06 14:44:47 +01001769user <username> [password|insecure-password <password>]
1770 [groups <group>,<group>,(...)]
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +01001771 Adds user <username> to the current userlist. Both secure (encrypted) and
1772 insecure (unencrypted) passwords can be used. Encrypted passwords are
Daniel Schnellerd06f31c2017-11-06 16:51:04 +01001773 evaluated using the crypt(3) function, so depending on the system's
1774 capabilities, different algorithms are supported. For example, modern Glibc
1775 based Linux systems support MD5, SHA-256, SHA-512, and, of course, the
1776 classic DES-based method of encrypting passwords.
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +01001777
Daniel Schnellerd06f31c2017-11-06 16:51:04 +01001778 Attention: Be aware that using encrypted passwords might cause significantly
1779 increased CPU usage, depending on the number of requests, and the algorithm
1780 used. For any of the hashed variants, the password for each request must
1781 be processed through the chosen algorithm, before it can be compared to the
1782 value specified in the config file. Most current algorithms are deliberately
1783 designed to be expensive to compute to achieve resistance against brute
1784 force attacks. They do not simply salt/hash the clear text password once,
1785 but thousands of times. This can quickly become a major factor in haproxy's
1786 overall CPU consumption!
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +01001787
1788 Example:
Cyril Bontéf0c60612010-02-06 14:44:47 +01001789 userlist L1
1790 group G1 users tiger,scott
1791 group G2 users xdb,scott
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +01001792
Cyril Bontéf0c60612010-02-06 14:44:47 +01001793 user tiger password $6$k6y3o.eP$JlKBx9za9667qe4(...)xHSwRv6J.C0/D7cV91
1794 user scott insecure-password elgato
1795 user xdb insecure-password hello
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +01001796
Cyril Bontéf0c60612010-02-06 14:44:47 +01001797 userlist L2
1798 group G1
1799 group G2
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +01001800
Cyril Bontéf0c60612010-02-06 14:44:47 +01001801 user tiger password $6$k6y3o.eP$JlKBx(...)xHSwRv6J.C0/D7cV91 groups G1
1802 user scott insecure-password elgato groups G1,G2
1803 user xdb insecure-password hello groups G2
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +01001804
1805 Please note that both lists are functionally identical.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001806
Emeric Brunf099e792010-09-27 12:05:28 +02001807
18083.5. Peers
Cyril Bontédc4d9032012-04-08 21:57:39 +02001809----------
Emeric Brun94900952015-06-11 18:25:54 +02001810It is possible to propagate entries of any data-types in stick-tables between
1811several haproxy instances over TCP connections in a multi-master fashion. Each
1812instance pushes its local updates and insertions to remote peers. The pushed
1813values overwrite remote ones without aggregation. Interrupted exchanges are
1814automatically detected and recovered from the last known point.
1815In addition, during a soft restart, the old process connects to the new one
1816using such a TCP connection to push all its entries before the new process
1817tries to connect to other peers. That ensures very fast replication during a
1818reload, it typically takes a fraction of a second even for large tables.
1819Note that Server IDs are used to identify servers remotely, so it is important
1820that configurations look similar or at least that the same IDs are forced on
1821each server on all participants.
Emeric Brunf099e792010-09-27 12:05:28 +02001822
1823peers <peersect>
Jamie Gloudon801a0a32012-08-25 00:18:33 -04001824 Creates a new peer list with name <peersect>. It is an independent section,
Emeric Brunf099e792010-09-27 12:05:28 +02001825 which is referenced by one or more stick-tables.
1826
Willy Tarreau77e4bd12015-05-01 20:02:17 +02001827disabled
1828 Disables a peers section. It disables both listening and any synchronization
1829 related to this section. This is provided to disable synchronization of stick
1830 tables without having to comment out all "peers" references.
1831
1832enable
1833 This re-enables a disabled peers section which was previously disabled.
1834
Emeric Brunf099e792010-09-27 12:05:28 +02001835peer <peername> <ip>:<port>
1836 Defines a peer inside a peers section.
1837 If <peername> is set to the local peer name (by default hostname, or forced
1838 using "-L" command line option), haproxy will listen for incoming remote peer
1839 connection on <ip>:<port>. Otherwise, <ip>:<port> defines where to connect to
1840 to join the remote peer, and <peername> is used at the protocol level to
1841 identify and validate the remote peer on the server side.
1842
1843 During a soft restart, local peer <ip>:<port> is used by the old instance to
1844 connect the new one and initiate a complete replication (teaching process).
1845
1846 It is strongly recommended to have the exact same peers declaration on all
1847 peers and to only rely on the "-L" command line argument to change the local
1848 peer name. This makes it easier to maintain coherent configuration files
1849 across all peers.
1850
William Lallemandb2f07452015-05-12 14:27:13 +02001851 You may want to reference some environment variables in the address
1852 parameter, see section 2.3 about environment variables.
Willy Tarreaudad36a32013-03-11 01:20:04 +01001853
Cyril Bontédc4d9032012-04-08 21:57:39 +02001854 Example:
Emeric Brunf099e792010-09-27 12:05:28 +02001855 peers mypeers
Willy Tarreauf7b30a92010-12-06 22:59:17 +01001856 peer haproxy1 192.168.0.1:1024
1857 peer haproxy2 192.168.0.2:1024
1858 peer haproxy3 10.2.0.1:1024
Emeric Brunf099e792010-09-27 12:05:28 +02001859
1860 backend mybackend
1861 mode tcp
1862 balance roundrobin
1863 stick-table type ip size 20k peers mypeers
1864 stick on src
1865
Willy Tarreauf7b30a92010-12-06 22:59:17 +01001866 server srv1 192.168.0.30:80
1867 server srv2 192.168.0.31:80
Emeric Brunf099e792010-09-27 12:05:28 +02001868
1869
Simon Horman51a1cf62015-02-03 13:00:44 +090018703.6. Mailers
1871------------
1872It is possible to send email alerts when the state of servers changes.
1873If configured email alerts are sent to each mailer that is configured
1874in a mailers section. Email is sent to mailers using SMTP.
1875
Pieter Baauw386a1272015-08-16 15:26:24 +02001876mailers <mailersect>
Simon Horman51a1cf62015-02-03 13:00:44 +09001877 Creates a new mailer list with the name <mailersect>. It is an
1878 independent section which is referenced by one or more proxies.
1879
1880mailer <mailername> <ip>:<port>
1881 Defines a mailer inside a mailers section.
1882
1883 Example:
1884 mailers mymailers
1885 mailer smtp1 192.168.0.1:587
1886 mailer smtp2 192.168.0.2:587
1887
1888 backend mybackend
1889 mode tcp
1890 balance roundrobin
1891
1892 email-alert mailers mymailers
1893 email-alert from test1@horms.org
1894 email-alert to test2@horms.org
1895
1896 server srv1 192.168.0.30:80
1897 server srv2 192.168.0.31:80
1898
Pieter Baauw235fcfc2016-02-13 15:33:40 +01001899timeout mail <time>
1900 Defines the time available for a mail/connection to be made and send to
1901 the mail-server. If not defined the default value is 10 seconds. To allow
1902 for at least two SYN-ACK packets to be send during initial TCP handshake it
1903 is advised to keep this value above 4 seconds.
1904
1905 Example:
1906 mailers mymailers
1907 timeout mail 20s
1908 mailer smtp1 192.168.0.1:587
Simon Horman51a1cf62015-02-03 13:00:44 +09001909
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020019104. Proxies
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001911----------
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01001912
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001913Proxy configuration can be located in a set of sections :
William Lallemand6e62fb62015-04-28 16:55:23 +02001914 - defaults [<name>]
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001915 - frontend <name>
1916 - backend <name>
1917 - listen <name>
1918
1919A "defaults" section sets default parameters for all other sections following
1920its declaration. Those default parameters are reset by the next "defaults"
1921section. See below for the list of parameters which can be set in a "defaults"
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01001922section. The name is optional but its use is encouraged for better readability.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02001923
1924A "frontend" section describes a set of listening sockets accepting client
1925connections.
1926
1927A "backend" section describes a set of servers to which the proxy will connect
1928to forward incoming connections.
1929
1930A "listen" section defines a complete proxy with its frontend and backend
1931parts combined in one section. It is generally useful for TCP-only traffic.
1932
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01001933All proxy names must be formed from upper and lower case letters, digits,
1934'-' (dash), '_' (underscore) , '.' (dot) and ':' (colon). ACL names are
1935case-sensitive, which means that "www" and "WWW" are two different proxies.
1936
1937Historically, all proxy names could overlap, it just caused troubles in the
1938logs. Since the introduction of content switching, it is mandatory that two
1939proxies with overlapping capabilities (frontend/backend) have different names.
1940However, it is still permitted that a frontend and a backend share the same
1941name, as this configuration seems to be commonly encountered.
1942
1943Right now, two major proxy modes are supported : "tcp", also known as layer 4,
1944and "http", also known as layer 7. In layer 4 mode, HAProxy simply forwards
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01001945bidirectional traffic between two sides. In layer 7 mode, HAProxy analyzes the
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01001946protocol, and can interact with it by allowing, blocking, switching, adding,
1947modifying, or removing arbitrary contents in requests or responses, based on
1948arbitrary criteria.
1949
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +01001950In HTTP mode, the processing applied to requests and responses flowing over
1951a connection depends in the combination of the frontend's HTTP options and
1952the backend's. HAProxy supports 5 connection modes :
1953
1954 - KAL : keep alive ("option http-keep-alive") which is the default mode : all
1955 requests and responses are processed, and connections remain open but idle
1956 between responses and new requests.
1957
1958 - TUN: tunnel ("option http-tunnel") : this was the default mode for versions
1959 1.0 to 1.5-dev21 : only the first request and response are processed, and
1960 everything else is forwarded with no analysis at all. This mode should not
1961 be used as it creates lots of trouble with logging and HTTP processing.
1962
1963 - PCL: passive close ("option httpclose") : exactly the same as tunnel mode,
1964 but with "Connection: close" appended in both directions to try to make
1965 both ends close after the first request/response exchange.
1966
1967 - SCL: server close ("option http-server-close") : the server-facing
1968 connection is closed after the end of the response is received, but the
1969 client-facing connection remains open.
1970
1971 - FCL: forced close ("option forceclose") : the connection is actively closed
1972 after the end of the response.
1973
1974The effective mode that will be applied to a connection passing through a
1975frontend and a backend can be determined by both proxy modes according to the
1976following matrix, but in short, the modes are symmetric, keep-alive is the
1977weakest option and force close is the strongest.
1978
1979 Backend mode
1980
1981 | KAL | TUN | PCL | SCL | FCL
1982 ----+-----+-----+-----+-----+----
1983 KAL | KAL | TUN | PCL | SCL | FCL
1984 ----+-----+-----+-----+-----+----
1985 TUN | TUN | TUN | PCL | SCL | FCL
1986 Frontend ----+-----+-----+-----+-----+----
1987 mode PCL | PCL | PCL | PCL | FCL | FCL
1988 ----+-----+-----+-----+-----+----
1989 SCL | SCL | SCL | FCL | SCL | FCL
1990 ----+-----+-----+-----+-----+----
1991 FCL | FCL | FCL | FCL | FCL | FCL
1992
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01001993
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +01001994
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020019954.1. Proxy keywords matrix
1996--------------------------
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01001997
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02001998The following list of keywords is supported. Most of them may only be used in a
1999limited set of section types. Some of them are marked as "deprecated" because
2000they are inherited from an old syntax which may be confusing or functionally
2001limited, and there are new recommended keywords to replace them. Keywords
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01002002marked with "(*)" can be optionally inverted using the "no" prefix, e.g. "no
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02002003option contstats". This makes sense when the option has been enabled by default
Willy Tarreau3842f002009-06-14 11:39:52 +02002004and must be disabled for a specific instance. Such options may also be prefixed
2005with "default" in order to restore default settings regardless of what has been
2006specified in a previous "defaults" section.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002007
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02002008
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002009 keyword defaults frontend listen backend
2010------------------------------------+----------+----------+---------+---------
2011acl - X X X
Willy Tarreau294d0f02015-08-10 19:40:12 +02002012appsession - - - -
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002013backlog X X X -
2014balance X - X X
2015bind - X X -
2016bind-process X X X X
Jarno Huuskonen8c8c3492016-12-28 18:50:29 +02002017block (deprecated) - X X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002018capture cookie - X X -
2019capture request header - X X -
2020capture response header - X X -
2021clitimeout (deprecated) X X X -
William Lallemand82fe75c2012-10-23 10:25:10 +02002022compression X X X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002023contimeout (deprecated) X - X X
2024cookie X - X X
Thierry FOURNIERa0a1b752015-05-26 17:44:32 +02002025declare capture - X X -
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002026default-server X - X X
2027default_backend X X X -
2028description - X X X
2029disabled X X X X
2030dispatch - - X X
Simon Horman51a1cf62015-02-03 13:00:44 +09002031email-alert from X X X X
Simon Horman64e34162015-02-06 11:11:57 +09002032email-alert level X X X X
Simon Horman51a1cf62015-02-03 13:00:44 +09002033email-alert mailers X X X X
2034email-alert myhostname X X X X
2035email-alert to X X X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002036enabled X X X X
2037errorfile X X X X
2038errorloc X X X X
2039errorloc302 X X X X
2040-- keyword -------------------------- defaults - frontend - listen -- backend -
2041errorloc303 X X X X
Cyril Bonté0d4bf012010-04-25 23:21:46 +02002042force-persist - X X X
Christopher Fauletc3fe5332016-04-07 15:30:10 +02002043filter - X X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002044fullconn X - X X
2045grace X X X X
2046hash-type X - X X
2047http-check disable-on-404 X - X X
Willy Tarreaubd741542010-03-16 18:46:54 +01002048http-check expect - - X X
Willy Tarreau7ab6aff2010-10-12 06:30:16 +02002049http-check send-state X - X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002050http-request - X X X
Willy Tarreaue365c0b2013-06-11 16:06:12 +02002051http-response - X X X
Willy Tarreau30631952015-08-06 15:05:24 +02002052http-reuse X - X X
Baptiste Assmann2c42ef52013-10-09 21:57:02 +02002053http-send-name-header - - X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002054id - X X X
Cyril Bonté0d4bf012010-04-25 23:21:46 +02002055ignore-persist - X X X
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +02002056load-server-state-from-file X - X X
William Lallemand0f99e342011-10-12 17:50:54 +02002057log (*) X X X X
Willy Tarreaufb4e7ea2015-01-07 14:55:17 +01002058log-format X X X -
Dragan Dosen7ad31542015-09-28 17:16:47 +02002059log-format-sd X X X -
Willy Tarreau094af4e2015-01-07 15:03:42 +01002060log-tag X X X X
Willy Tarreauc35362a2014-04-25 13:58:37 +02002061max-keep-alive-queue X - X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002062maxconn X X X -
2063mode X X X X
2064monitor fail - X X -
2065monitor-net X X X -
2066monitor-uri X X X -
2067option abortonclose (*) X - X X
2068option accept-invalid-http-request (*) X X X -
2069option accept-invalid-http-response (*) X - X X
2070option allbackups (*) X - X X
2071option checkcache (*) X - X X
2072option clitcpka (*) X X X -
2073option contstats (*) X X X -
2074option dontlog-normal (*) X X X -
2075option dontlognull (*) X X X -
2076option forceclose (*) X X X X
2077-- keyword -------------------------- defaults - frontend - listen -- backend -
2078option forwardfor X X X X
Willy Tarreau9fbe18e2015-05-01 22:42:08 +02002079option http-buffer-request (*) X X X X
Willy Tarreau82649f92015-05-01 22:40:51 +02002080option http-ignore-probes (*) X X X -
Willy Tarreau16bfb022010-01-16 19:48:41 +01002081option http-keep-alive (*) X X X X
Willy Tarreau96e31212011-05-30 18:10:30 +02002082option http-no-delay (*) X X X X
Willy Tarreau8a8e1d92010-04-05 16:15:16 +02002083option http-pretend-keepalive (*) X X X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002084option http-server-close (*) X X X X
Willy Tarreau02bce8b2014-01-30 00:15:28 +01002085option http-tunnel (*) X X X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002086option http-use-proxy-header (*) X X X -
2087option httpchk X - X X
2088option httpclose (*) X X X X
2089option httplog X X X X
2090option http_proxy (*) X X X X
Jamie Gloudon801a0a32012-08-25 00:18:33 -04002091option independent-streams (*) X X X X
Gabor Lekenyb4c81e42010-09-29 18:17:05 +02002092option ldap-check X - X X
Simon Horman98637e52014-06-20 12:30:16 +09002093option external-check X - X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002094option log-health-checks (*) X - X X
2095option log-separate-errors (*) X X X -
2096option logasap (*) X X X -
2097option mysql-check X - X X
2098option nolinger (*) X X X X
2099option originalto X X X X
2100option persist (*) X - X X
Baptiste Assmann809e22a2015-10-12 20:22:55 +02002101option pgsql-check X - X X
2102option prefer-last-server (*) X - X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002103option redispatch (*) X - X X
Hervé COMMOWICKec032d62011-08-05 16:23:48 +02002104option redis-check X - X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002105option smtpchk X - X X
2106option socket-stats (*) X X X -
2107option splice-auto (*) X X X X
2108option splice-request (*) X X X X
2109option splice-response (*) X X X X
Christopher Fauletba7bc162016-11-07 21:07:38 +01002110option spop-check - - - X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002111option srvtcpka (*) X - X X
2112option ssl-hello-chk X - X X
2113-- keyword -------------------------- defaults - frontend - listen -- backend -
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01002114option tcp-check X - X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002115option tcp-smart-accept (*) X X X -
2116option tcp-smart-connect (*) X - X X
2117option tcpka X X X X
2118option tcplog X X X X
2119option transparent (*) X - X X
Simon Horman98637e52014-06-20 12:30:16 +09002120external-check command X - X X
2121external-check path X - X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002122persist rdp-cookie X - X X
2123rate-limit sessions X X X -
2124redirect - X X X
2125redisp (deprecated) X - X X
2126redispatch (deprecated) X - X X
2127reqadd - X X X
2128reqallow - X X X
2129reqdel - X X X
2130reqdeny - X X X
2131reqiallow - X X X
2132reqidel - X X X
2133reqideny - X X X
2134reqipass - X X X
2135reqirep - X X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002136reqitarpit - X X X
2137reqpass - X X X
2138reqrep - X X X
2139-- keyword -------------------------- defaults - frontend - listen -- backend -
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002140reqtarpit - X X X
2141retries X - X X
2142rspadd - X X X
2143rspdel - X X X
2144rspdeny - X X X
2145rspidel - X X X
2146rspideny - X X X
2147rspirep - X X X
2148rsprep - X X X
2149server - - X X
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +02002150server-state-file-name X - X X
Frédéric Lécaillecb4502e2017-04-20 13:36:25 +02002151server-template - - X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002152source X - X X
2153srvtimeout (deprecated) X - X X
Baptiste Assmann5a549212015-10-12 20:30:24 +02002154stats admin - X X X
2155stats auth X X X X
2156stats enable X X X X
2157stats hide-version X X X X
2158stats http-request - X X X
2159stats realm X X X X
2160stats refresh X X X X
2161stats scope X X X X
2162stats show-desc X X X X
2163stats show-legends X X X X
2164stats show-node X X X X
2165stats uri X X X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002166-- keyword -------------------------- defaults - frontend - listen -- backend -
2167stick match - - X X
2168stick on - - X X
2169stick store-request - - X X
Willy Tarreaud8dc99f2011-07-01 11:33:25 +02002170stick store-response - - X X
Adam Spiers68af3c12017-04-06 16:31:39 +01002171stick-table - X X X
Willy Tarreau938c7fe2014-04-25 14:21:39 +02002172tcp-check connect - - X X
2173tcp-check expect - - X X
2174tcp-check send - - X X
2175tcp-check send-binary - - X X
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02002176tcp-request connection - X X -
2177tcp-request content - X X X
Willy Tarreaua56235c2010-09-14 11:31:36 +02002178tcp-request inspect-delay - X X X
Willy Tarreau4f614292016-10-21 17:49:36 +02002179tcp-request session - X X -
Emeric Brun0a3b67f2010-09-24 15:34:53 +02002180tcp-response content - - X X
2181tcp-response inspect-delay - - X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002182timeout check X - X X
2183timeout client X X X -
Willy Tarreau05cdd962014-05-10 14:30:07 +02002184timeout client-fin X X X -
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002185timeout clitimeout (deprecated) X X X -
2186timeout connect X - X X
2187timeout contimeout (deprecated) X - X X
2188timeout http-keep-alive X X X X
2189timeout http-request X X X X
2190timeout queue X - X X
2191timeout server X - X X
Willy Tarreau05cdd962014-05-10 14:30:07 +02002192timeout server-fin X - X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002193timeout srvtimeout (deprecated) X - X X
2194timeout tarpit X X X X
Willy Tarreauce887fd2012-05-12 12:50:00 +02002195timeout tunnel X - X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002196transparent (deprecated) X - X X
William Lallemanda73203e2012-03-12 12:48:57 +01002197unique-id-format X X X -
2198unique-id-header X X X -
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002199use_backend - X X -
Willy Tarreau4a5cade2012-04-05 21:09:48 +02002200use-server - - X X
Willy Tarreau5c6f7b32010-02-26 13:34:29 +01002201------------------------------------+----------+----------+---------+---------
2202 keyword defaults frontend listen backend
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02002203
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002204
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020022054.2. Alphabetically sorted keywords reference
2206---------------------------------------------
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002207
2208This section provides a description of each keyword and its usage.
2209
2210
2211acl <aclname> <criterion> [flags] [operator] <value> ...
2212 Declare or complete an access list.
2213 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
2214 no | yes | yes | yes
2215 Example:
2216 acl invalid_src src 0.0.0.0/7 224.0.0.0/3
2217 acl invalid_src src_port 0:1023
2218 acl local_dst hdr(host) -i localhost
2219
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02002220 See section 7 about ACL usage.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002221
2222
Cyril Bontéb21570a2009-11-29 20:04:48 +01002223appsession <cookie> len <length> timeout <holdtime>
2224 [request-learn] [prefix] [mode <path-parameters|query-string>]
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002225 Define session stickiness on an existing application cookie.
2226 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
2227 no | no | yes | yes
2228 Arguments :
2229 <cookie> this is the name of the cookie used by the application and which
2230 HAProxy will have to learn for each new session.
2231
Cyril Bontéb21570a2009-11-29 20:04:48 +01002232 <length> this is the max number of characters that will be memorized and
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002233 checked in each cookie value.
2234
2235 <holdtime> this is the time after which the cookie will be removed from
2236 memory if unused. If no unit is specified, this time is in
2237 milliseconds.
2238
Cyril Bontébf47aeb2009-10-15 00:15:40 +02002239 request-learn
2240 If this option is specified, then haproxy will be able to learn
2241 the cookie found in the request in case the server does not
2242 specify any in response. This is typically what happens with
2243 PHPSESSID cookies, or when haproxy's session expires before
2244 the application's session and the correct server is selected.
2245 It is recommended to specify this option to improve reliability.
2246
Cyril Bontéb21570a2009-11-29 20:04:48 +01002247 prefix When this option is specified, haproxy will match on the cookie
2248 prefix (or URL parameter prefix). The appsession value is the
2249 data following this prefix.
2250
2251 Example :
2252 appsession ASPSESSIONID len 64 timeout 3h prefix
2253
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01002254 This will match the cookie ASPSESSIONIDXXX=XXXX,
2255 the appsession value will be XXX=XXXX.
Cyril Bontéb21570a2009-11-29 20:04:48 +01002256
2257 mode This option allows to change the URL parser mode.
2258 2 modes are currently supported :
2259 - path-parameters :
2260 The parser looks for the appsession in the path parameters
2261 part (each parameter is separated by a semi-colon), which is
2262 convenient for JSESSIONID for example.
2263 This is the default mode if the option is not set.
2264 - query-string :
2265 In this mode, the parser will look for the appsession in the
2266 query string.
2267
Willy Tarreau294d0f02015-08-10 19:40:12 +02002268 As of version 1.6, appsessions was removed. It is more flexible and more
2269 convenient to use stick-tables instead, and stick-tables support multi-master
2270 replication and data conservation across reloads, which appsessions did not.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002271
Cyril Bonté02ff8ef2010-12-14 22:48:49 +01002272 See also : "cookie", "capture cookie", "balance", "stick", "stick-table",
2273 "ignore-persist", "nbproc" and "bind-process".
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002274
2275
Willy Tarreauc73ce2b2008-01-06 10:55:10 +01002276backlog <conns>
2277 Give hints to the system about the approximate listen backlog desired size
2278 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
2279 yes | yes | yes | no
2280 Arguments :
2281 <conns> is the number of pending connections. Depending on the operating
2282 system, it may represent the number of already acknowledged
Cyril Bontédc4d9032012-04-08 21:57:39 +02002283 connections, of non-acknowledged ones, or both.
Willy Tarreauc73ce2b2008-01-06 10:55:10 +01002284
2285 In order to protect against SYN flood attacks, one solution is to increase
2286 the system's SYN backlog size. Depending on the system, sometimes it is just
2287 tunable via a system parameter, sometimes it is not adjustable at all, and
2288 sometimes the system relies on hints given by the application at the time of
2289 the listen() syscall. By default, HAProxy passes the frontend's maxconn value
2290 to the listen() syscall. On systems which can make use of this value, it can
2291 sometimes be useful to be able to specify a different value, hence this
2292 backlog parameter.
2293
2294 On Linux 2.4, the parameter is ignored by the system. On Linux 2.6, it is
2295 used as a hint and the system accepts up to the smallest greater power of
2296 two, and never more than some limits (usually 32768).
2297
2298 See also : "maxconn" and the target operating system's tuning guide.
2299
2300
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002301balance <algorithm> [ <arguments> ]
Willy Tarreau226071e2014-04-10 11:55:45 +02002302balance url_param <param> [check_post]
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002303 Define the load balancing algorithm to be used in a backend.
2304 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
2305 yes | no | yes | yes
2306 Arguments :
2307 <algorithm> is the algorithm used to select a server when doing load
2308 balancing. This only applies when no persistence information
2309 is available, or when a connection is redispatched to another
2310 server. <algorithm> may be one of the following :
2311
2312 roundrobin Each server is used in turns, according to their weights.
2313 This is the smoothest and fairest algorithm when the server's
2314 processing time remains equally distributed. This algorithm
2315 is dynamic, which means that server weights may be adjusted
Willy Tarreau9757a382009-10-03 12:56:50 +02002316 on the fly for slow starts for instance. It is limited by
Godbacha34bdc02013-07-22 07:44:53 +08002317 design to 4095 active servers per backend. Note that in some
Willy Tarreau9757a382009-10-03 12:56:50 +02002318 large farms, when a server becomes up after having been down
2319 for a very short time, it may sometimes take a few hundreds
2320 requests for it to be re-integrated into the farm and start
2321 receiving traffic. This is normal, though very rare. It is
2322 indicated here in case you would have the chance to observe
2323 it, so that you don't worry.
2324
2325 static-rr Each server is used in turns, according to their weights.
2326 This algorithm is as similar to roundrobin except that it is
2327 static, which means that changing a server's weight on the
2328 fly will have no effect. On the other hand, it has no design
2329 limitation on the number of servers, and when a server goes
2330 up, it is always immediately reintroduced into the farm, once
2331 the full map is recomputed. It also uses slightly less CPU to
2332 run (around -1%).
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002333
Willy Tarreau2d2a7f82008-03-17 12:07:56 +01002334 leastconn The server with the lowest number of connections receives the
2335 connection. Round-robin is performed within groups of servers
2336 of the same load to ensure that all servers will be used. Use
2337 of this algorithm is recommended where very long sessions are
2338 expected, such as LDAP, SQL, TSE, etc... but is not very well
2339 suited for protocols using short sessions such as HTTP. This
2340 algorithm is dynamic, which means that server weights may be
2341 adjusted on the fly for slow starts for instance.
2342
Willy Tarreauf09c6602012-02-13 17:12:08 +01002343 first The first server with available connection slots receives the
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03002344 connection. The servers are chosen from the lowest numeric
Willy Tarreauf09c6602012-02-13 17:12:08 +01002345 identifier to the highest (see server parameter "id"), which
2346 defaults to the server's position in the farm. Once a server
Willy Tarreau64559c52012-04-07 09:08:45 +02002347 reaches its maxconn value, the next server is used. It does
Willy Tarreauf09c6602012-02-13 17:12:08 +01002348 not make sense to use this algorithm without setting maxconn.
2349 The purpose of this algorithm is to always use the smallest
2350 number of servers so that extra servers can be powered off
2351 during non-intensive hours. This algorithm ignores the server
2352 weight, and brings more benefit to long session such as RDP
Willy Tarreau64559c52012-04-07 09:08:45 +02002353 or IMAP than HTTP, though it can be useful there too. In
2354 order to use this algorithm efficiently, it is recommended
2355 that a cloud controller regularly checks server usage to turn
2356 them off when unused, and regularly checks backend queue to
2357 turn new servers on when the queue inflates. Alternatively,
2358 using "http-check send-state" may inform servers on the load.
Willy Tarreauf09c6602012-02-13 17:12:08 +01002359
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002360 source The source IP address is hashed and divided by the total
2361 weight of the running servers to designate which server will
2362 receive the request. This ensures that the same client IP
2363 address will always reach the same server as long as no
2364 server goes down or up. If the hash result changes due to the
2365 number of running servers changing, many clients will be
2366 directed to a different server. This algorithm is generally
2367 used in TCP mode where no cookie may be inserted. It may also
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01002368 be used on the Internet to provide a best-effort stickiness
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002369 to clients which refuse session cookies. This algorithm is
Willy Tarreau6b2e11b2009-10-01 07:52:15 +02002370 static by default, which means that changing a server's
2371 weight on the fly will have no effect, but this can be
2372 changed using "hash-type".
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002373
Oskar Stolc8dc41842012-05-19 10:19:54 +01002374 uri This algorithm hashes either the left part of the URI (before
2375 the question mark) or the whole URI (if the "whole" parameter
2376 is present) and divides the hash value by the total weight of
2377 the running servers. The result designates which server will
2378 receive the request. This ensures that the same URI will
2379 always be directed to the same server as long as no server
2380 goes up or down. This is used with proxy caches and
2381 anti-virus proxies in order to maximize the cache hit rate.
2382 Note that this algorithm may only be used in an HTTP backend.
2383 This algorithm is static by default, which means that
2384 changing a server's weight on the fly will have no effect,
2385 but this can be changed using "hash-type".
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002386
Oskar Stolc8dc41842012-05-19 10:19:54 +01002387 This algorithm supports two optional parameters "len" and
Marek Majkowski9c30fc12008-04-27 23:25:55 +02002388 "depth", both followed by a positive integer number. These
2389 options may be helpful when it is needed to balance servers
2390 based on the beginning of the URI only. The "len" parameter
2391 indicates that the algorithm should only consider that many
2392 characters at the beginning of the URI to compute the hash.
2393 Note that having "len" set to 1 rarely makes sense since most
2394 URIs start with a leading "/".
2395
2396 The "depth" parameter indicates the maximum directory depth
2397 to be used to compute the hash. One level is counted for each
2398 slash in the request. If both parameters are specified, the
2399 evaluation stops when either is reached.
2400
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002401 url_param The URL parameter specified in argument will be looked up in
matt.farnsworth@nokia.com1c2ab962008-04-14 20:47:37 +02002402 the query string of each HTTP GET request.
2403
2404 If the modifier "check_post" is used, then an HTTP POST
Cyril Bontédc4d9032012-04-08 21:57:39 +02002405 request entity will be searched for the parameter argument,
2406 when it is not found in a query string after a question mark
Willy Tarreau226071e2014-04-10 11:55:45 +02002407 ('?') in the URL. The message body will only start to be
2408 analyzed once either the advertised amount of data has been
2409 received or the request buffer is full. In the unlikely event
2410 that chunked encoding is used, only the first chunk is
Cyril Bontédc4d9032012-04-08 21:57:39 +02002411 scanned. Parameter values separated by a chunk boundary, may
Willy Tarreau226071e2014-04-10 11:55:45 +02002412 be randomly balanced if at all. This keyword used to support
2413 an optional <max_wait> parameter which is now ignored.
matt.farnsworth@nokia.com1c2ab962008-04-14 20:47:37 +02002414
2415 If the parameter is found followed by an equal sign ('=') and
2416 a value, then the value is hashed and divided by the total
2417 weight of the running servers. The result designates which
2418 server will receive the request.
2419
2420 This is used to track user identifiers in requests and ensure
2421 that a same user ID will always be sent to the same server as
2422 long as no server goes up or down. If no value is found or if
2423 the parameter is not found, then a round robin algorithm is
2424 applied. Note that this algorithm may only be used in an HTTP
Willy Tarreau6b2e11b2009-10-01 07:52:15 +02002425 backend. This algorithm is static by default, which means
2426 that changing a server's weight on the fly will have no
2427 effect, but this can be changed using "hash-type".
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002428
Cyril Bontédc4d9032012-04-08 21:57:39 +02002429 hdr(<name>) The HTTP header <name> will be looked up in each HTTP
2430 request. Just as with the equivalent ACL 'hdr()' function,
2431 the header name in parenthesis is not case sensitive. If the
2432 header is absent or if it does not contain any value, the
2433 roundrobin algorithm is applied instead.
Benoitaffb4812009-03-25 13:02:10 +01002434
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01002435 An optional 'use_domain_only' parameter is available, for
Benoitaffb4812009-03-25 13:02:10 +01002436 reducing the hash algorithm to the main domain part with some
2437 specific headers such as 'Host'. For instance, in the Host
2438 value "haproxy.1wt.eu", only "1wt" will be considered.
2439
Willy Tarreau6b2e11b2009-10-01 07:52:15 +02002440 This algorithm is static by default, which means that
2441 changing a server's weight on the fly will have no effect,
2442 but this can be changed using "hash-type".
2443
Emeric Brun736aa232009-06-30 17:56:00 +02002444 rdp-cookie
Hervé COMMOWICKa3eb39c2011-08-05 18:48:51 +02002445 rdp-cookie(<name>)
Emeric Brun736aa232009-06-30 17:56:00 +02002446 The RDP cookie <name> (or "mstshash" if omitted) will be
2447 looked up and hashed for each incoming TCP request. Just as
2448 with the equivalent ACL 'req_rdp_cookie()' function, the name
2449 is not case-sensitive. This mechanism is useful as a degraded
2450 persistence mode, as it makes it possible to always send the
2451 same user (or the same session ID) to the same server. If the
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01002452 cookie is not found, the normal roundrobin algorithm is
Emeric Brun736aa232009-06-30 17:56:00 +02002453 used instead.
2454
2455 Note that for this to work, the frontend must ensure that an
2456 RDP cookie is already present in the request buffer. For this
2457 you must use 'tcp-request content accept' rule combined with
2458 a 'req_rdp_cookie_cnt' ACL.
2459
Willy Tarreau6b2e11b2009-10-01 07:52:15 +02002460 This algorithm is static by default, which means that
2461 changing a server's weight on the fly will have no effect,
2462 but this can be changed using "hash-type".
2463
Cyril Bontédc4d9032012-04-08 21:57:39 +02002464 See also the rdp_cookie pattern fetch function.
Simon Hormanab814e02011-06-24 14:50:20 +09002465
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002466 <arguments> is an optional list of arguments which may be needed by some
Marek Majkowski9c30fc12008-04-27 23:25:55 +02002467 algorithms. Right now, only "url_param" and "uri" support an
2468 optional argument.
matt.farnsworth@nokia.com1c2ab962008-04-14 20:47:37 +02002469
Willy Tarreau3cd9af22009-03-15 14:06:41 +01002470 The load balancing algorithm of a backend is set to roundrobin when no other
2471 algorithm, mode nor option have been set. The algorithm may only be set once
2472 for each backend.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002473
2474 Examples :
2475 balance roundrobin
2476 balance url_param userid
matt.farnsworth@nokia.com1c2ab962008-04-14 20:47:37 +02002477 balance url_param session_id check_post 64
Benoitaffb4812009-03-25 13:02:10 +01002478 balance hdr(User-Agent)
2479 balance hdr(host)
2480 balance hdr(Host) use_domain_only
matt.farnsworth@nokia.com1c2ab962008-04-14 20:47:37 +02002481
2482 Note: the following caveats and limitations on using the "check_post"
2483 extension with "url_param" must be considered :
2484
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01002485 - all POST requests are eligible for consideration, because there is no way
matt.farnsworth@nokia.com1c2ab962008-04-14 20:47:37 +02002486 to determine if the parameters will be found in the body or entity which
2487 may contain binary data. Therefore another method may be required to
2488 restrict consideration of POST requests that have no URL parameters in
2489 the body. (see acl reqideny http_end)
2490
2491 - using a <max_wait> value larger than the request buffer size does not
2492 make sense and is useless. The buffer size is set at build time, and
2493 defaults to 16 kB.
2494
2495 - Content-Encoding is not supported, the parameter search will probably
2496 fail; and load balancing will fall back to Round Robin.
2497
2498 - Expect: 100-continue is not supported, load balancing will fall back to
2499 Round Robin.
2500
Lukas Tribus23953682017-04-28 13:24:30 +00002501 - Transfer-Encoding (RFC7230 3.3.1) is only supported in the first chunk.
matt.farnsworth@nokia.com1c2ab962008-04-14 20:47:37 +02002502 If the entire parameter value is not present in the first chunk, the
2503 selection of server is undefined (actually, defined by how little
2504 actually appeared in the first chunk).
2505
2506 - This feature does not support generation of a 100, 411 or 501 response.
2507
2508 - In some cases, requesting "check_post" MAY attempt to scan the entire
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01002509 contents of a message body. Scanning normally terminates when linear
matt.farnsworth@nokia.com1c2ab962008-04-14 20:47:37 +02002510 white space or control characters are found, indicating the end of what
2511 might be a URL parameter list. This is probably not a concern with SGML
2512 type message bodies.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002513
Willy Tarreau294d0f02015-08-10 19:40:12 +02002514 See also : "dispatch", "cookie", "transparent", "hash-type" and "http_proxy".
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002515
2516
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +02002517bind [<address>]:<port_range> [, ...] [param*]
2518bind /<path> [, ...] [param*]
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002519 Define one or several listening addresses and/or ports in a frontend.
2520 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
2521 no | yes | yes | no
2522 Arguments :
Willy Tarreaub1e52e82008-01-13 14:49:51 +01002523 <address> is optional and can be a host name, an IPv4 address, an IPv6
2524 address, or '*'. It designates the address the frontend will
2525 listen on. If unset, all IPv4 addresses of the system will be
2526 listened on. The same will apply for '*' or the system's
David du Colombier9c938da2011-03-17 10:40:27 +01002527 special address "0.0.0.0". The IPv6 equivalent is '::'.
Willy Tarreau24709282013-03-10 21:32:12 +01002528 Optionally, an address family prefix may be used before the
2529 address to force the family regardless of the address format,
2530 which can be useful to specify a path to a unix socket with
2531 no slash ('/'). Currently supported prefixes are :
2532 - 'ipv4@' -> address is always IPv4
2533 - 'ipv6@' -> address is always IPv6
2534 - 'unix@' -> address is a path to a local unix socket
Willy Tarreau70f72e02014-07-08 00:37:50 +02002535 - 'abns@' -> address is in abstract namespace (Linux only).
2536 Note: since abstract sockets are not "rebindable", they
2537 do not cope well with multi-process mode during
2538 soft-restart, so it is better to avoid them if
2539 nbproc is greater than 1. The effect is that if the
2540 new process fails to start, only one of the old ones
2541 will be able to rebind to the socket.
Willy Tarreau40aa0702013-03-10 23:51:38 +01002542 - 'fd@<n>' -> use file descriptor <n> inherited from the
2543 parent. The fd must be bound and may or may not already
2544 be listening.
William Lallemandb2f07452015-05-12 14:27:13 +02002545 You may want to reference some environment variables in the
2546 address parameter, see section 2.3 about environment
2547 variables.
Willy Tarreaub1e52e82008-01-13 14:49:51 +01002548
Willy Tarreauc5011ca2010-03-22 11:53:56 +01002549 <port_range> is either a unique TCP port, or a port range for which the
2550 proxy will accept connections for the IP address specified
Willy Tarreauceb24bc2010-11-09 12:46:41 +01002551 above. The port is mandatory for TCP listeners. Note that in
2552 the case of an IPv6 address, the port is always the number
2553 after the last colon (':'). A range can either be :
Willy Tarreauc5011ca2010-03-22 11:53:56 +01002554 - a numerical port (ex: '80')
2555 - a dash-delimited ports range explicitly stating the lower
2556 and upper bounds (ex: '2000-2100') which are included in
2557 the range.
2558
2559 Particular care must be taken against port ranges, because
2560 every <address:port> couple consumes one socket (= a file
2561 descriptor), so it's easy to consume lots of descriptors
2562 with a simple range, and to run out of sockets. Also, each
2563 <address:port> couple must be used only once among all
2564 instances running on a same system. Please note that binding
2565 to ports lower than 1024 generally require particular
Jamie Gloudon801a0a32012-08-25 00:18:33 -04002566 privileges to start the program, which are independent of
Willy Tarreauc5011ca2010-03-22 11:53:56 +01002567 the 'uid' parameter.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002568
Willy Tarreauceb24bc2010-11-09 12:46:41 +01002569 <path> is a UNIX socket path beginning with a slash ('/'). This is
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01002570 alternative to the TCP listening port. HAProxy will then
Willy Tarreauceb24bc2010-11-09 12:46:41 +01002571 receive UNIX connections on the socket located at this place.
2572 The path must begin with a slash and by default is absolute.
2573 It can be relative to the prefix defined by "unix-bind" in
2574 the global section. Note that the total length of the prefix
2575 followed by the socket path cannot exceed some system limits
2576 for UNIX sockets, which commonly are set to 107 characters.
2577
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +02002578 <param*> is a list of parameters common to all sockets declared on the
2579 same line. These numerous parameters depend on OS and build
2580 options and have a complete section dedicated to them. Please
2581 refer to section 5 to for more details.
Willy Tarreaua0ee1d02012-09-10 09:01:23 +02002582
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002583 It is possible to specify a list of address:port combinations delimited by
2584 commas. The frontend will then listen on all of these addresses. There is no
2585 fixed limit to the number of addresses and ports which can be listened on in
2586 a frontend, as well as there is no limit to the number of "bind" statements
2587 in a frontend.
2588
2589 Example :
2590 listen http_proxy
2591 bind :80,:443
2592 bind 10.0.0.1:10080,10.0.0.1:10443
Willy Tarreauceb24bc2010-11-09 12:46:41 +01002593 bind /var/run/ssl-frontend.sock user root mode 600 accept-proxy
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002594
Willy Tarreaua0ee1d02012-09-10 09:01:23 +02002595 listen http_https_proxy
2596 bind :80
Cyril Bonté0d44fc62012-10-09 22:45:33 +02002597 bind :443 ssl crt /etc/haproxy/site.pem
Willy Tarreaua0ee1d02012-09-10 09:01:23 +02002598
Willy Tarreau24709282013-03-10 21:32:12 +01002599 listen http_https_proxy_explicit
2600 bind ipv6@:80
2601 bind ipv4@public_ssl:443 ssl crt /etc/haproxy/site.pem
2602 bind unix@ssl-frontend.sock user root mode 600 accept-proxy
2603
Willy Tarreaudad36a32013-03-11 01:20:04 +01002604 listen external_bind_app1
William Lallemandb2f07452015-05-12 14:27:13 +02002605 bind "fd@${FD_APP1}"
Willy Tarreaudad36a32013-03-11 01:20:04 +01002606
Willy Tarreau55dcaf62015-09-27 15:03:15 +02002607 Note: regarding Linux's abstract namespace sockets, HAProxy uses the whole
2608 sun_path length is used for the address length. Some other programs
2609 such as socat use the string length only by default. Pass the option
2610 ",unix-tightsocklen=0" to any abstract socket definition in socat to
2611 make it compatible with HAProxy's.
2612
Willy Tarreauceb24bc2010-11-09 12:46:41 +01002613 See also : "source", "option forwardfor", "unix-bind" and the PROXY protocol
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +02002614 documentation, and section 5 about bind options.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002615
2616
Christopher Fauletff4121f2017-11-22 16:38:49 +01002617bind-process [ all | odd | even | <process_num>[-[<process_num>]] ] ...
Willy Tarreau0b9c02c2009-02-04 22:05:05 +01002618 Limit visibility of an instance to a certain set of processes numbers.
2619 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
2620 yes | yes | yes | yes
2621 Arguments :
2622 all All process will see this instance. This is the default. It
2623 may be used to override a default value.
2624
Willy Tarreaua9db57e2013-01-18 11:29:29 +01002625 odd This instance will be enabled on processes 1,3,5,...63. This
Willy Tarreau0b9c02c2009-02-04 22:05:05 +01002626 option may be combined with other numbers.
2627
Willy Tarreaua9db57e2013-01-18 11:29:29 +01002628 even This instance will be enabled on processes 2,4,6,...64. This
Willy Tarreau0b9c02c2009-02-04 22:05:05 +01002629 option may be combined with other numbers. Do not use it
2630 with less than 2 processes otherwise some instances might be
2631 missing from all processes.
2632
Christopher Fauletff4121f2017-11-22 16:38:49 +01002633 process_num The instance will be enabled on this process number or range,
Willy Tarreaua9db57e2013-01-18 11:29:29 +01002634 whose values must all be between 1 and 32 or 64 depending on
Christopher Fauletff4121f2017-11-22 16:38:49 +01002635 the machine's word size. Ranges can be partially defined. The
2636 higher bound can be omitted. In such case, it is replaced by
2637 the corresponding maximum value. If a proxy is bound to
2638 process numbers greater than the configured global.nbproc, it
2639 will either be forced to process #1 if a single process was
Willy Tarreau102df612014-05-07 23:56:38 +02002640 specified, or to all processes otherwise.
Willy Tarreau0b9c02c2009-02-04 22:05:05 +01002641
2642 This keyword limits binding of certain instances to certain processes. This
2643 is useful in order not to have too many processes listening to the same
2644 ports. For instance, on a dual-core machine, it might make sense to set
2645 'nbproc 2' in the global section, then distributes the listeners among 'odd'
2646 and 'even' instances.
2647
Willy Tarreaua9db57e2013-01-18 11:29:29 +01002648 At the moment, it is not possible to reference more than 32 or 64 processes
2649 using this keyword, but this should be more than enough for most setups.
2650 Please note that 'all' really means all processes regardless of the machine's
2651 word size, and is not limited to the first 32 or 64.
Willy Tarreau0b9c02c2009-02-04 22:05:05 +01002652
Willy Tarreau6ae1ba62014-05-07 19:01:58 +02002653 Each "bind" line may further be limited to a subset of the proxy's processes,
2654 please consult the "process" bind keyword in section 5.1.
2655
Willy Tarreaub369a042014-09-16 13:21:03 +02002656 When a frontend has no explicit "bind-process" line, it tries to bind to all
2657 the processes referenced by its "bind" lines. That means that frontends can
2658 easily adapt to their listeners' processes.
2659
Willy Tarreau0b9c02c2009-02-04 22:05:05 +01002660 If some backends are referenced by frontends bound to other processes, the
2661 backend automatically inherits the frontend's processes.
2662
2663 Example :
2664 listen app_ip1
2665 bind 10.0.0.1:80
Willy Tarreaubfcd3112010-10-23 11:22:08 +02002666 bind-process odd
Willy Tarreau0b9c02c2009-02-04 22:05:05 +01002667
2668 listen app_ip2
2669 bind 10.0.0.2:80
Willy Tarreaubfcd3112010-10-23 11:22:08 +02002670 bind-process even
Willy Tarreau0b9c02c2009-02-04 22:05:05 +01002671
2672 listen management
2673 bind 10.0.0.3:80
Willy Tarreaubfcd3112010-10-23 11:22:08 +02002674 bind-process 1 2 3 4
Willy Tarreau0b9c02c2009-02-04 22:05:05 +01002675
Willy Tarreau110ecc12012-11-15 17:50:01 +01002676 listen management
2677 bind 10.0.0.4:80
2678 bind-process 1-4
2679
Willy Tarreau6ae1ba62014-05-07 19:01:58 +02002680 See also : "nbproc" in global section, and "process" in section 5.1.
Willy Tarreau0b9c02c2009-02-04 22:05:05 +01002681
2682
Jarno Huuskonen8c8c3492016-12-28 18:50:29 +02002683block { if | unless } <condition> (deprecated)
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002684 Block a layer 7 request if/unless a condition is matched
2685 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
2686 no | yes | yes | yes
2687
2688 The HTTP request will be blocked very early in the layer 7 processing
2689 if/unless <condition> is matched. A 403 error will be returned if the request
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02002690 is blocked. The condition has to reference ACLs (see section 7). This is
Willy Tarreau3c92c5f2011-08-28 09:45:47 +02002691 typically used to deny access to certain sensitive resources if some
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002692 conditions are met or not met. There is no fixed limit to the number of
Jarno Huuskonen95b012b2017-04-06 13:59:14 +03002693 "block" statements per instance. To block connections at layer 4 (without
2694 sending a 403 error) see "tcp-request connection reject" and
2695 "tcp-request content reject" rules.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002696
Jarno Huuskonen8c8c3492016-12-28 18:50:29 +02002697 This form is deprecated, do not use it in any new configuration, use the new
2698 "http-request deny" instead.
2699
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002700 Example:
2701 acl invalid_src src 0.0.0.0/7 224.0.0.0/3
2702 acl invalid_src src_port 0:1023
2703 acl local_dst hdr(host) -i localhost
Jarno Huuskonen84c51ec2017-04-03 14:20:34 +03002704 # block is deprecated. Use http-request deny instead:
2705 #block if invalid_src || local_dst
2706 http-request deny if invalid_src || local_dst
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002707
Jarno Huuskonen95b012b2017-04-06 13:59:14 +03002708 See also : section 7 about ACL usage, "http-request deny",
2709 "http-response deny", "tcp-request connection reject" and
2710 "tcp-request content reject".
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002711
2712capture cookie <name> len <length>
2713 Capture and log a cookie in the request and in the response.
2714 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
2715 no | yes | yes | no
2716 Arguments :
2717 <name> is the beginning of the name of the cookie to capture. In order
2718 to match the exact name, simply suffix the name with an equal
2719 sign ('='). The full name will appear in the logs, which is
2720 useful with application servers which adjust both the cookie name
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01002721 and value (e.g. ASPSESSIONXXX).
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002722
2723 <length> is the maximum number of characters to report in the logs, which
2724 include the cookie name, the equal sign and the value, all in the
2725 standard "name=value" form. The string will be truncated on the
2726 right if it exceeds <length>.
2727
2728 Only the first cookie is captured. Both the "cookie" request headers and the
2729 "set-cookie" response headers are monitored. This is particularly useful to
2730 check for application bugs causing session crossing or stealing between
2731 users, because generally the user's cookies can only change on a login page.
2732
2733 When the cookie was not presented by the client, the associated log column
2734 will report "-". When a request does not cause a cookie to be assigned by the
2735 server, a "-" is reported in the response column.
2736
2737 The capture is performed in the frontend only because it is necessary that
2738 the log format does not change for a given frontend depending on the
2739 backends. This may change in the future. Note that there can be only one
Willy Tarreau193b8c62012-11-22 00:17:38 +01002740 "capture cookie" statement in a frontend. The maximum capture length is set
2741 by the global "tune.http.cookielen" setting and defaults to 63 characters. It
2742 is not possible to specify a capture in a "defaults" section.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002743
2744 Example:
2745 capture cookie ASPSESSION len 32
2746
2747 See also : "capture request header", "capture response header" as well as
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02002748 section 8 about logging.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002749
2750
2751capture request header <name> len <length>
Willy Tarreau4460d032012-11-21 23:37:37 +01002752 Capture and log the last occurrence of the specified request header.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002753 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
2754 no | yes | yes | no
2755 Arguments :
2756 <name> is the name of the header to capture. The header names are not
Willy Tarreaud2a4aa22008-01-31 15:28:22 +01002757 case-sensitive, but it is a common practice to write them as they
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002758 appear in the requests, with the first letter of each word in
2759 upper case. The header name will not appear in the logs, only the
2760 value is reported, but the position in the logs is respected.
2761
2762 <length> is the maximum number of characters to extract from the value and
2763 report in the logs. The string will be truncated on the right if
2764 it exceeds <length>.
2765
Willy Tarreau4460d032012-11-21 23:37:37 +01002766 The complete value of the last occurrence of the header is captured. The
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002767 value will be added to the logs between braces ('{}'). If multiple headers
2768 are captured, they will be delimited by a vertical bar ('|') and will appear
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +01002769 in the same order they were declared in the configuration. Non-existent
2770 headers will be logged just as an empty string. Common uses for request
2771 header captures include the "Host" field in virtual hosting environments, the
2772 "Content-length" when uploads are supported, "User-agent" to quickly
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01002773 differentiate between real users and robots, and "X-Forwarded-For" in proxied
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +01002774 environments to find where the request came from.
2775
2776 Note that when capturing headers such as "User-agent", some spaces may be
2777 logged, making the log analysis more difficult. Thus be careful about what
2778 you log if you know your log parser is not smart enough to rely on the
2779 braces.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002780
Willy Tarreau0900abb2012-11-22 00:21:46 +01002781 There is no limit to the number of captured request headers nor to their
2782 length, though it is wise to keep them low to limit memory usage per session.
2783 In order to keep log format consistent for a same frontend, header captures
2784 can only be declared in a frontend. It is not possible to specify a capture
2785 in a "defaults" section.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002786
2787 Example:
2788 capture request header Host len 15
2789 capture request header X-Forwarded-For len 15
Cyril Bontéd1b0f7c2015-10-26 22:37:39 +01002790 capture request header Referer len 15
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002791
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02002792 See also : "capture cookie", "capture response header" as well as section 8
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002793 about logging.
2794
2795
2796capture response header <name> len <length>
Willy Tarreau4460d032012-11-21 23:37:37 +01002797 Capture and log the last occurrence of the specified response header.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002798 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
2799 no | yes | yes | no
2800 Arguments :
2801 <name> is the name of the header to capture. The header names are not
Willy Tarreaud2a4aa22008-01-31 15:28:22 +01002802 case-sensitive, but it is a common practice to write them as they
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002803 appear in the response, with the first letter of each word in
2804 upper case. The header name will not appear in the logs, only the
2805 value is reported, but the position in the logs is respected.
2806
2807 <length> is the maximum number of characters to extract from the value and
2808 report in the logs. The string will be truncated on the right if
2809 it exceeds <length>.
2810
Willy Tarreau4460d032012-11-21 23:37:37 +01002811 The complete value of the last occurrence of the header is captured. The
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002812 result will be added to the logs between braces ('{}') after the captured
2813 request headers. If multiple headers are captured, they will be delimited by
2814 a vertical bar ('|') and will appear in the same order they were declared in
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +01002815 the configuration. Non-existent headers will be logged just as an empty
2816 string. Common uses for response header captures include the "Content-length"
2817 header which indicates how many bytes are expected to be returned, the
2818 "Location" header to track redirections.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002819
Willy Tarreau0900abb2012-11-22 00:21:46 +01002820 There is no limit to the number of captured response headers nor to their
2821 length, though it is wise to keep them low to limit memory usage per session.
2822 In order to keep log format consistent for a same frontend, header captures
2823 can only be declared in a frontend. It is not possible to specify a capture
2824 in a "defaults" section.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002825
2826 Example:
2827 capture response header Content-length len 9
2828 capture response header Location len 15
2829
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02002830 See also : "capture cookie", "capture request header" as well as section 8
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002831 about logging.
2832
2833
Cyril Bontéf0c60612010-02-06 14:44:47 +01002834clitimeout <timeout> (deprecated)
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002835 Set the maximum inactivity time on the client side.
2836 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
2837 yes | yes | yes | no
2838 Arguments :
2839 <timeout> is the timeout value is specified in milliseconds by default, but
2840 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
2841 as explained at the top of this document.
2842
2843 The inactivity timeout applies when the client is expected to acknowledge or
2844 send data. In HTTP mode, this timeout is particularly important to consider
2845 during the first phase, when the client sends the request, and during the
2846 response while it is reading data sent by the server. The value is specified
2847 in milliseconds by default, but can be in any other unit if the number is
2848 suffixed by the unit, as specified at the top of this document. In TCP mode
2849 (and to a lesser extent, in HTTP mode), it is highly recommended that the
2850 client timeout remains equal to the server timeout in order to avoid complex
Willy Tarreaud2a4aa22008-01-31 15:28:22 +01002851 situations to debug. It is a good practice to cover one or several TCP packet
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002852 losses by specifying timeouts that are slightly above multiples of 3 seconds
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01002853 (e.g. 4 or 5 seconds).
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002854
2855 This parameter is specific to frontends, but can be specified once for all in
2856 "defaults" sections. This is in fact one of the easiest solutions not to
2857 forget about it. An unspecified timeout results in an infinite timeout, which
2858 is not recommended. Such a usage is accepted and works but reports a warning
2859 during startup because it may results in accumulation of expired sessions in
2860 the system if the system's timeouts are not configured either.
2861
2862 This parameter is provided for compatibility but is currently deprecated.
2863 Please use "timeout client" instead.
2864
Willy Tarreau036fae02008-01-06 13:24:40 +01002865 See also : "timeout client", "timeout http-request", "timeout server", and
2866 "srvtimeout".
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002867
Cyril Bonté316a8cf2012-11-11 13:38:27 +01002868compression algo <algorithm> ...
2869compression type <mime type> ...
Willy Tarreau70737d12012-10-27 00:34:28 +02002870compression offload
William Lallemand82fe75c2012-10-23 10:25:10 +02002871 Enable HTTP compression.
2872 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
2873 yes | yes | yes | yes
2874 Arguments :
Cyril Bonté316a8cf2012-11-11 13:38:27 +01002875 algo is followed by the list of supported compression algorithms.
2876 type is followed by the list of MIME types that will be compressed.
2877 offload makes haproxy work as a compression offloader only (see notes).
2878
2879 The currently supported algorithms are :
Willy Tarreauc91840a2015-03-28 17:00:39 +01002880 identity this is mostly for debugging, and it was useful for developing
2881 the compression feature. Identity does not apply any change on
2882 data.
Cyril Bonté316a8cf2012-11-11 13:38:27 +01002883
Willy Tarreauc91840a2015-03-28 17:00:39 +01002884 gzip applies gzip compression. This setting is only available when
Baptiste Assmannf085d632015-12-21 17:57:32 +01002885 support for zlib or libslz was built in.
Willy Tarreauc91840a2015-03-28 17:00:39 +01002886
2887 deflate same as "gzip", but with deflate algorithm and zlib format.
2888 Note that this algorithm has ambiguous support on many
2889 browsers and no support at all from recent ones. It is
2890 strongly recommended not to use it for anything else than
2891 experimentation. This setting is only available when support
Baptiste Assmannf085d632015-12-21 17:57:32 +01002892 for zlib or libslz was built in.
Cyril Bonté316a8cf2012-11-11 13:38:27 +01002893
Willy Tarreauc91840a2015-03-28 17:00:39 +01002894 raw-deflate same as "deflate" without the zlib wrapper, and used as an
2895 alternative when the browser wants "deflate". All major
2896 browsers understand it and despite violating the standards,
2897 it is known to work better than "deflate", at least on MSIE
2898 and some versions of Safari. Do not use it in conjunction
2899 with "deflate", use either one or the other since both react
2900 to the same Accept-Encoding token. This setting is only
Baptiste Assmannf085d632015-12-21 17:57:32 +01002901 available when support for zlib or libslz was built in.
Cyril Bonté316a8cf2012-11-11 13:38:27 +01002902
Dmitry Sivachenko87c208b2012-11-22 20:03:26 +04002903 Compression will be activated depending on the Accept-Encoding request
Cyril Bonté316a8cf2012-11-11 13:38:27 +01002904 header. With identity, it does not take care of that header.
Dmitry Sivachenkoc9f3b452012-11-28 17:47:11 +04002905 If backend servers support HTTP compression, these directives
2906 will be no-op: haproxy will see the compressed response and will not
2907 compress again. If backend servers do not support HTTP compression and
2908 there is Accept-Encoding header in request, haproxy will compress the
2909 matching response.
Willy Tarreau70737d12012-10-27 00:34:28 +02002910
2911 The "offload" setting makes haproxy remove the Accept-Encoding header to
2912 prevent backend servers from compressing responses. It is strongly
2913 recommended not to do this because this means that all the compression work
2914 will be done on the single point where haproxy is located. However in some
2915 deployment scenarios, haproxy may be installed in front of a buggy gateway
Dmitry Sivachenkoc9f3b452012-11-28 17:47:11 +04002916 with broken HTTP compression implementation which can't be turned off.
2917 In that case haproxy can be used to prevent that gateway from emitting
2918 invalid payloads. In this case, simply removing the header in the
2919 configuration does not work because it applies before the header is parsed,
2920 so that prevents haproxy from compressing. The "offload" setting should
Willy Tarreauffea9fd2014-07-12 16:37:02 +02002921 then be used for such scenarios. Note: for now, the "offload" setting is
2922 ignored when set in a defaults section.
William Lallemand82fe75c2012-10-23 10:25:10 +02002923
William Lallemand05097442012-11-20 12:14:28 +01002924 Compression is disabled when:
Baptiste Assmann650d53d2013-01-05 15:44:44 +01002925 * the request does not advertise a supported compression algorithm in the
2926 "Accept-Encoding" header
2927 * the response message is not HTTP/1.1
William Lallemandd3002612012-11-26 14:34:47 +01002928 * HTTP status code is not 200
William Lallemand8bb4e342013-12-10 17:28:48 +01002929 * response header "Transfer-Encoding" contains "chunked" (Temporary
2930 Workaround)
Baptiste Assmann650d53d2013-01-05 15:44:44 +01002931 * response contain neither a "Content-Length" header nor a
2932 "Transfer-Encoding" whose last value is "chunked"
2933 * response contains a "Content-Type" header whose first value starts with
2934 "multipart"
2935 * the response contains the "no-transform" value in the "Cache-control"
2936 header
2937 * User-Agent matches "Mozilla/4" unless it is MSIE 6 with XP SP2, or MSIE 7
2938 and later
2939 * The response contains a "Content-Encoding" header, indicating that the
2940 response is already compressed (see compression offload)
William Lallemand05097442012-11-20 12:14:28 +01002941
Baptiste Assmann650d53d2013-01-05 15:44:44 +01002942 Note: The compression does not rewrite Etag headers, and does not emit the
2943 Warning header.
William Lallemand05097442012-11-20 12:14:28 +01002944
William Lallemand82fe75c2012-10-23 10:25:10 +02002945 Examples :
2946 compression algo gzip
2947 compression type text/html text/plain
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002948
Christopher Fauletc3fe5332016-04-07 15:30:10 +02002949
Cyril Bontéf0c60612010-02-06 14:44:47 +01002950contimeout <timeout> (deprecated)
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002951 Set the maximum time to wait for a connection attempt to a server to succeed.
2952 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
2953 yes | no | yes | yes
2954 Arguments :
2955 <timeout> is the timeout value is specified in milliseconds by default, but
2956 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
2957 as explained at the top of this document.
2958
2959 If the server is located on the same LAN as haproxy, the connection should be
Willy Tarreaud2a4aa22008-01-31 15:28:22 +01002960 immediate (less than a few milliseconds). Anyway, it is a good practice to
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +01002961 cover one or several TCP packet losses by specifying timeouts that are
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01002962 slightly above multiples of 3 seconds (e.g. 4 or 5 seconds). By default, the
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002963 connect timeout also presets the queue timeout to the same value if this one
2964 has not been specified. Historically, the contimeout was also used to set the
2965 tarpit timeout in a listen section, which is not possible in a pure frontend.
2966
2967 This parameter is specific to backends, but can be specified once for all in
2968 "defaults" sections. This is in fact one of the easiest solutions not to
2969 forget about it. An unspecified timeout results in an infinite timeout, which
2970 is not recommended. Such a usage is accepted and works but reports a warning
2971 during startup because it may results in accumulation of failed sessions in
2972 the system if the system's timeouts are not configured either.
2973
2974 This parameter is provided for backwards compatibility but is currently
2975 deprecated. Please use "timeout connect", "timeout queue" or "timeout tarpit"
2976 instead.
2977
2978 See also : "timeout connect", "timeout queue", "timeout tarpit",
2979 "timeout server", "contimeout".
2980
2981
Willy Tarreau55165fe2009-05-10 12:02:55 +02002982cookie <name> [ rewrite | insert | prefix ] [ indirect ] [ nocache ]
Willy Tarreau4992dd22012-05-31 21:02:17 +02002983 [ postonly ] [ preserve ] [ httponly ] [ secure ]
2984 [ domain <domain> ]* [ maxidle <idle> ] [ maxlife <life> ]
Olivier Houchard4e694042017-03-14 20:01:29 +01002985 [ dynamic ]
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002986 Enable cookie-based persistence in a backend.
2987 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
2988 yes | no | yes | yes
2989 Arguments :
2990 <name> is the name of the cookie which will be monitored, modified or
2991 inserted in order to bring persistence. This cookie is sent to
2992 the client via a "Set-Cookie" header in the response, and is
2993 brought back by the client in a "Cookie" header in all requests.
2994 Special care should be taken to choose a name which does not
2995 conflict with any likely application cookie. Also, if the same
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01002996 backends are subject to be used by the same clients (e.g.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01002997 HTTP/HTTPS), care should be taken to use different cookie names
2998 between all backends if persistence between them is not desired.
2999
3000 rewrite This keyword indicates that the cookie will be provided by the
3001 server and that haproxy will have to modify its value to set the
3002 server's identifier in it. This mode is handy when the management
3003 of complex combinations of "Set-cookie" and "Cache-control"
3004 headers is left to the application. The application can then
3005 decide whether or not it is appropriate to emit a persistence
Lukas Tribusf01a9cd2016-02-03 18:09:37 +01003006 cookie. Since all responses should be monitored, this mode
3007 doesn't work in HTTP tunnel mode. Unless the application
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01003008 behavior is very complex and/or broken, it is advised not to
Lukas Tribusf01a9cd2016-02-03 18:09:37 +01003009 start with this mode for new deployments. This keyword is
3010 incompatible with "insert" and "prefix".
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003011
3012 insert This keyword indicates that the persistence cookie will have to
Willy Tarreaua79094d2010-08-31 22:54:15 +02003013 be inserted by haproxy in server responses if the client did not
Willy Tarreauba4c5be2010-10-23 12:46:42 +02003014
Willy Tarreaua79094d2010-08-31 22:54:15 +02003015 already have a cookie that would have permitted it to access this
Willy Tarreauba4c5be2010-10-23 12:46:42 +02003016 server. When used without the "preserve" option, if the server
3017 emits a cookie with the same name, it will be remove before
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01003018 processing. For this reason, this mode can be used to upgrade
Willy Tarreauba4c5be2010-10-23 12:46:42 +02003019 existing configurations running in the "rewrite" mode. The cookie
3020 will only be a session cookie and will not be stored on the
3021 client's disk. By default, unless the "indirect" option is added,
3022 the server will see the cookies emitted by the client. Due to
3023 caching effects, it is generally wise to add the "nocache" or
3024 "postonly" keywords (see below). The "insert" keyword is not
3025 compatible with "rewrite" and "prefix".
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003026
3027 prefix This keyword indicates that instead of relying on a dedicated
3028 cookie for the persistence, an existing one will be completed.
3029 This may be needed in some specific environments where the client
3030 does not support more than one single cookie and the application
3031 already needs it. In this case, whenever the server sets a cookie
3032 named <name>, it will be prefixed with the server's identifier
3033 and a delimiter. The prefix will be removed from all client
3034 requests so that the server still finds the cookie it emitted.
3035 Since all requests and responses are subject to being modified,
Lukas Tribusf01a9cd2016-02-03 18:09:37 +01003036 this mode doesn't work with tunnel mode. The "prefix" keyword is
Willy Tarreau37229df2011-10-17 12:24:55 +02003037 not compatible with "rewrite" and "insert". Note: it is highly
3038 recommended not to use "indirect" with "prefix", otherwise server
3039 cookie updates would not be sent to clients.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003040
Willy Tarreaua79094d2010-08-31 22:54:15 +02003041 indirect When this option is specified, no cookie will be emitted to a
3042 client which already has a valid one for the server which has
3043 processed the request. If the server sets such a cookie itself,
Willy Tarreauba4c5be2010-10-23 12:46:42 +02003044 it will be removed, unless the "preserve" option is also set. In
3045 "insert" mode, this will additionally remove cookies from the
3046 requests transmitted to the server, making the persistence
3047 mechanism totally transparent from an application point of view.
Willy Tarreau37229df2011-10-17 12:24:55 +02003048 Note: it is highly recommended not to use "indirect" with
3049 "prefix", otherwise server cookie updates would not be sent to
3050 clients.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003051
3052 nocache This option is recommended in conjunction with the insert mode
3053 when there is a cache between the client and HAProxy, as it
3054 ensures that a cacheable response will be tagged non-cacheable if
3055 a cookie needs to be inserted. This is important because if all
3056 persistence cookies are added on a cacheable home page for
3057 instance, then all customers will then fetch the page from an
3058 outer cache and will all share the same persistence cookie,
3059 leading to one server receiving much more traffic than others.
3060 See also the "insert" and "postonly" options.
3061
3062 postonly This option ensures that cookie insertion will only be performed
3063 on responses to POST requests. It is an alternative to the
3064 "nocache" option, because POST responses are not cacheable, so
3065 this ensures that the persistence cookie will never get cached.
3066 Since most sites do not need any sort of persistence before the
3067 first POST which generally is a login request, this is a very
3068 efficient method to optimize caching without risking to find a
3069 persistence cookie in the cache.
3070 See also the "insert" and "nocache" options.
3071
Willy Tarreauba4c5be2010-10-23 12:46:42 +02003072 preserve This option may only be used with "insert" and/or "indirect". It
3073 allows the server to emit the persistence cookie itself. In this
3074 case, if a cookie is found in the response, haproxy will leave it
3075 untouched. This is useful in order to end persistence after a
3076 logout request for instance. For this, the server just has to
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01003077 emit a cookie with an invalid value (e.g. empty) or with a date in
Willy Tarreauba4c5be2010-10-23 12:46:42 +02003078 the past. By combining this mechanism with the "disable-on-404"
3079 check option, it is possible to perform a completely graceful
3080 shutdown because users will definitely leave the server after
3081 they logout.
3082
Willy Tarreau4992dd22012-05-31 21:02:17 +02003083 httponly This option tells haproxy to add an "HttpOnly" cookie attribute
3084 when a cookie is inserted. This attribute is used so that a
3085 user agent doesn't share the cookie with non-HTTP components.
3086 Please check RFC6265 for more information on this attribute.
3087
3088 secure This option tells haproxy to add a "Secure" cookie attribute when
3089 a cookie is inserted. This attribute is used so that a user agent
3090 never emits this cookie over non-secure channels, which means
3091 that a cookie learned with this flag will be presented only over
3092 SSL/TLS connections. Please check RFC6265 for more information on
3093 this attribute.
3094
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkiefe3b6f2008-05-23 23:49:32 +02003095 domain This option allows to specify the domain at which a cookie is
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01003096 inserted. It requires exactly one parameter: a valid domain
Willy Tarreau68a897b2009-12-03 23:28:34 +01003097 name. If the domain begins with a dot, the browser is allowed to
3098 use it for any host ending with that name. It is also possible to
3099 specify several domain names by invoking this option multiple
3100 times. Some browsers might have small limits on the number of
3101 domains, so be careful when doing that. For the record, sending
3102 10 domains to MSIE 6 or Firefox 2 works as expected.
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkiefe3b6f2008-05-23 23:49:32 +02003103
Willy Tarreau996a92c2010-10-13 19:30:47 +02003104 maxidle This option allows inserted cookies to be ignored after some idle
3105 time. It only works with insert-mode cookies. When a cookie is
3106 sent to the client, the date this cookie was emitted is sent too.
3107 Upon further presentations of this cookie, if the date is older
3108 than the delay indicated by the parameter (in seconds), it will
3109 be ignored. Otherwise, it will be refreshed if needed when the
3110 response is sent to the client. This is particularly useful to
3111 prevent users who never close their browsers from remaining for
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01003112 too long on the same server (e.g. after a farm size change). When
Willy Tarreau996a92c2010-10-13 19:30:47 +02003113 this option is set and a cookie has no date, it is always
3114 accepted, but gets refreshed in the response. This maintains the
3115 ability for admins to access their sites. Cookies that have a
3116 date in the future further than 24 hours are ignored. Doing so
3117 lets admins fix timezone issues without risking kicking users off
3118 the site.
3119
3120 maxlife This option allows inserted cookies to be ignored after some life
3121 time, whether they're in use or not. It only works with insert
3122 mode cookies. When a cookie is first sent to the client, the date
3123 this cookie was emitted is sent too. Upon further presentations
3124 of this cookie, if the date is older than the delay indicated by
3125 the parameter (in seconds), it will be ignored. If the cookie in
3126 the request has no date, it is accepted and a date will be set.
3127 Cookies that have a date in the future further than 24 hours are
3128 ignored. Doing so lets admins fix timezone issues without risking
3129 kicking users off the site. Contrary to maxidle, this value is
3130 not refreshed, only the first visit date counts. Both maxidle and
3131 maxlife may be used at the time. This is particularly useful to
3132 prevent users who never close their browsers from remaining for
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01003133 too long on the same server (e.g. after a farm size change). This
Willy Tarreau996a92c2010-10-13 19:30:47 +02003134 is stronger than the maxidle method in that it forces a
3135 redispatch after some absolute delay.
3136
Olivier Houchard4e694042017-03-14 20:01:29 +01003137 dynamic Activate dynamic cookies. When used, a session cookie is
3138 dynamically created for each server, based on the IP and port
3139 of the server, and a secret key, specified in the
3140 "dynamic-cookie-key" backend directive.
3141 The cookie will be regenerated each time the IP address change,
3142 and is only generated for IPv4/IPv6.
3143
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003144 There can be only one persistence cookie per HTTP backend, and it can be
3145 declared in a defaults section. The value of the cookie will be the value
3146 indicated after the "cookie" keyword in a "server" statement. If no cookie
3147 is declared for a given server, the cookie is not set.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +02003148
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003149 Examples :
3150 cookie JSESSIONID prefix
3151 cookie SRV insert indirect nocache
3152 cookie SRV insert postonly indirect
Willy Tarreau996a92c2010-10-13 19:30:47 +02003153 cookie SRV insert indirect nocache maxidle 30m maxlife 8h
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003154
Willy Tarreau294d0f02015-08-10 19:40:12 +02003155 See also : "balance source", "capture cookie", "server" and "ignore-persist".
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003156
Willy Tarreau983e01e2010-01-11 18:42:06 +01003157
Thierry FOURNIERa0a1b752015-05-26 17:44:32 +02003158declare capture [ request | response ] len <length>
3159 Declares a capture slot.
3160 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3161 no | yes | yes | no
3162 Arguments:
3163 <length> is the length allowed for the capture.
3164
3165 This declaration is only available in the frontend or listen section, but the
3166 reserved slot can be used in the backends. The "request" keyword allocates a
3167 capture slot for use in the request, and "response" allocates a capture slot
3168 for use in the response.
3169
3170 See also: "capture-req", "capture-res" (sample converters),
Baptiste Assmann5ac425c2015-10-21 23:13:46 +02003171 "capture.req.hdr", "capture.res.hdr" (sample fetches),
Thierry FOURNIERa0a1b752015-05-26 17:44:32 +02003172 "http-request capture" and "http-response capture".
3173
3174
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic6df0662010-01-05 16:38:49 +01003175default-server [param*]
3176 Change default options for a server in a backend
3177 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3178 yes | no | yes | yes
3179 Arguments:
Willy Tarreau983e01e2010-01-11 18:42:06 +01003180 <param*> is a list of parameters for this server. The "default-server"
3181 keyword accepts an important number of options and has a complete
3182 section dedicated to it. Please refer to section 5 for more
3183 details.
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic6df0662010-01-05 16:38:49 +01003184
Willy Tarreau983e01e2010-01-11 18:42:06 +01003185 Example :
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic6df0662010-01-05 16:38:49 +01003186 default-server inter 1000 weight 13
3187
3188 See also: "server" and section 5 about server options
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003189
Willy Tarreau983e01e2010-01-11 18:42:06 +01003190
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003191default_backend <backend>
3192 Specify the backend to use when no "use_backend" rule has been matched.
3193 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3194 yes | yes | yes | no
3195 Arguments :
3196 <backend> is the name of the backend to use.
3197
3198 When doing content-switching between frontend and backends using the
3199 "use_backend" keyword, it is often useful to indicate which backend will be
3200 used when no rule has matched. It generally is the dynamic backend which
3201 will catch all undetermined requests.
3202
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003203 Example :
3204
3205 use_backend dynamic if url_dyn
3206 use_backend static if url_css url_img extension_img
3207 default_backend dynamic
3208
Willy Tarreau98d04852015-05-26 12:18:29 +02003209 See also : "use_backend"
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003210
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003211
Baptiste Assmann27f51342013-10-09 06:51:49 +02003212description <string>
3213 Describe a listen, frontend or backend.
3214 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3215 no | yes | yes | yes
3216 Arguments : string
3217
3218 Allows to add a sentence to describe the related object in the HAProxy HTML
3219 stats page. The description will be printed on the right of the object name
3220 it describes.
3221 No need to backslash spaces in the <string> arguments.
3222
3223
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003224disabled
3225 Disable a proxy, frontend or backend.
3226 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3227 yes | yes | yes | yes
3228 Arguments : none
3229
3230 The "disabled" keyword is used to disable an instance, mainly in order to
3231 liberate a listening port or to temporarily disable a service. The instance
3232 will still be created and its configuration will be checked, but it will be
3233 created in the "stopped" state and will appear as such in the statistics. It
3234 will not receive any traffic nor will it send any health-checks or logs. It
3235 is possible to disable many instances at once by adding the "disabled"
3236 keyword in a "defaults" section.
3237
3238 See also : "enabled"
3239
3240
Willy Tarreau5ce94572010-06-07 14:35:41 +02003241dispatch <address>:<port>
3242 Set a default server address
3243 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3244 no | no | yes | yes
Cyril Bonté108cf6e2012-04-21 23:30:29 +02003245 Arguments :
Willy Tarreau5ce94572010-06-07 14:35:41 +02003246
3247 <address> is the IPv4 address of the default server. Alternatively, a
3248 resolvable hostname is supported, but this name will be resolved
3249 during start-up.
3250
3251 <ports> is a mandatory port specification. All connections will be sent
3252 to this port, and it is not permitted to use port offsets as is
3253 possible with normal servers.
3254
Willy Tarreau787aed52011-04-15 06:45:37 +02003255 The "dispatch" keyword designates a default server for use when no other
Willy Tarreau5ce94572010-06-07 14:35:41 +02003256 server can take the connection. In the past it was used to forward non
3257 persistent connections to an auxiliary load balancer. Due to its simple
3258 syntax, it has also been used for simple TCP relays. It is recommended not to
3259 use it for more clarity, and to use the "server" directive instead.
3260
3261 See also : "server"
3262
Olivier Houchard4e694042017-03-14 20:01:29 +01003263
3264dynamic-cookie-key <string>
3265 Set the dynamic cookie secret key for a backend.
3266 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3267 yes | no | yes | yes
3268 Arguments : The secret key to be used.
3269
3270 When dynamic cookies are enabled (see the "dynamic" directive for cookie),
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01003271 a dynamic cookie is created for each server (unless one is explicitly
Olivier Houchard4e694042017-03-14 20:01:29 +01003272 specified on the "server" line), using a hash of the IP address of the
3273 server, the TCP port, and the secret key.
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01003274 That way, we can ensure session persistence across multiple load-balancers,
Olivier Houchard4e694042017-03-14 20:01:29 +01003275 even if servers are dynamically added or removed.
Willy Tarreau5ce94572010-06-07 14:35:41 +02003276
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003277enabled
3278 Enable a proxy, frontend or backend.
3279 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3280 yes | yes | yes | yes
3281 Arguments : none
3282
3283 The "enabled" keyword is used to explicitly enable an instance, when the
3284 defaults has been set to "disabled". This is very rarely used.
3285
3286 See also : "disabled"
3287
3288
3289errorfile <code> <file>
3290 Return a file contents instead of errors generated by HAProxy
3291 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3292 yes | yes | yes | yes
3293 Arguments :
3294 <code> is the HTTP status code. Currently, HAProxy is capable of
Olivier Houchard51a76d82017-10-02 16:12:07 +02003295 generating codes 200, 400, 403, 405, 408, 425, 429, 500, 502,
3296 503, and 504.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003297
3298 <file> designates a file containing the full HTTP response. It is
Willy Tarreaud2a4aa22008-01-31 15:28:22 +01003299 recommended to follow the common practice of appending ".http" to
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003300 the filename so that people do not confuse the response with HTML
Willy Tarreau59140a22009-02-22 12:02:30 +01003301 error pages, and to use absolute paths, since files are read
3302 before any chroot is performed.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003303
3304 It is important to understand that this keyword is not meant to rewrite
3305 errors returned by the server, but errors detected and returned by HAProxy.
3306 This is why the list of supported errors is limited to a small set.
3307
Willy Tarreauae94d4d2011-05-11 16:28:49 +02003308 Code 200 is emitted in response to requests matching a "monitor-uri" rule.
3309
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003310 The files are returned verbatim on the TCP socket. This allows any trick such
3311 as redirections to another URL or site, as well as tricks to clean cookies,
3312 force enable or disable caching, etc... The package provides default error
3313 files returning the same contents as default errors.
3314
Willy Tarreau59140a22009-02-22 12:02:30 +01003315 The files should not exceed the configured buffer size (BUFSIZE), which
3316 generally is 8 or 16 kB, otherwise they will be truncated. It is also wise
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01003317 not to put any reference to local contents (e.g. images) in order to avoid
Willy Tarreau59140a22009-02-22 12:02:30 +01003318 loops between the client and HAProxy when all servers are down, causing an
3319 error to be returned instead of an image. For better HTTP compliance, it is
3320 recommended that all header lines end with CR-LF and not LF alone.
3321
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003322 The files are read at the same time as the configuration and kept in memory.
3323 For this reason, the errors continue to be returned even when the process is
3324 chrooted, and no file change is considered while the process is running. A
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01003325 simple method for developing those files consists in associating them to the
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003326 403 status code and interrogating a blocked URL.
3327
3328 See also : "errorloc", "errorloc302", "errorloc303"
3329
Willy Tarreau59140a22009-02-22 12:02:30 +01003330 Example :
3331 errorfile 400 /etc/haproxy/errorfiles/400badreq.http
Willy Tarreau989222a2016-01-15 10:26:26 +01003332 errorfile 408 /dev/null # work around Chrome pre-connect bug
Willy Tarreau59140a22009-02-22 12:02:30 +01003333 errorfile 403 /etc/haproxy/errorfiles/403forbid.http
3334 errorfile 503 /etc/haproxy/errorfiles/503sorry.http
3335
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003336
3337errorloc <code> <url>
3338errorloc302 <code> <url>
3339 Return an HTTP redirection to a URL instead of errors generated by HAProxy
3340 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3341 yes | yes | yes | yes
3342 Arguments :
3343 <code> is the HTTP status code. Currently, HAProxy is capable of
Olivier Houchard51a76d82017-10-02 16:12:07 +02003344 generating codes 200, 400, 403, 405, 408, 425, 429, 500, 502,
3345 503, and 504.
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003346
3347 <url> it is the exact contents of the "Location" header. It may contain
3348 either a relative URI to an error page hosted on the same site,
3349 or an absolute URI designating an error page on another site.
3350 Special care should be given to relative URIs to avoid redirect
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01003351 loops if the URI itself may generate the same error (e.g. 500).
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003352
3353 It is important to understand that this keyword is not meant to rewrite
3354 errors returned by the server, but errors detected and returned by HAProxy.
3355 This is why the list of supported errors is limited to a small set.
3356
Willy Tarreauae94d4d2011-05-11 16:28:49 +02003357 Code 200 is emitted in response to requests matching a "monitor-uri" rule.
3358
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003359 Note that both keyword return the HTTP 302 status code, which tells the
3360 client to fetch the designated URL using the same HTTP method. This can be
3361 quite problematic in case of non-GET methods such as POST, because the URL
3362 sent to the client might not be allowed for something other than GET. To
Willy Tarreau989222a2016-01-15 10:26:26 +01003363 work around this problem, please use "errorloc303" which send the HTTP 303
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003364 status code, indicating to the client that the URL must be fetched with a GET
3365 request.
3366
3367 See also : "errorfile", "errorloc303"
3368
3369
3370errorloc303 <code> <url>
3371 Return an HTTP redirection to a URL instead of errors generated by HAProxy
3372 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3373 yes | yes | yes | yes
3374 Arguments :
3375 <code> is the HTTP status code. Currently, HAProxy is capable of
Olivier Houchard51a76d82017-10-02 16:12:07 +02003376 generating codes 200, 400, 403, 405, 408, 425, 429, 500, 502,
3377 503, and 504.
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003378
3379 <url> it is the exact contents of the "Location" header. It may contain
3380 either a relative URI to an error page hosted on the same site,
3381 or an absolute URI designating an error page on another site.
3382 Special care should be given to relative URIs to avoid redirect
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01003383 loops if the URI itself may generate the same error (e.g. 500).
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003384
3385 It is important to understand that this keyword is not meant to rewrite
3386 errors returned by the server, but errors detected and returned by HAProxy.
3387 This is why the list of supported errors is limited to a small set.
3388
Willy Tarreauae94d4d2011-05-11 16:28:49 +02003389 Code 200 is emitted in response to requests matching a "monitor-uri" rule.
3390
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003391 Note that both keyword return the HTTP 303 status code, which tells the
3392 client to fetch the designated URL using the same HTTP GET method. This
3393 solves the usual problems associated with "errorloc" and the 302 code. It is
3394 possible that some very old browsers designed before HTTP/1.1 do not support
Willy Tarreaud2a4aa22008-01-31 15:28:22 +01003395 it, but no such problem has been reported till now.
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003396
3397 See also : "errorfile", "errorloc", "errorloc302"
3398
3399
Simon Horman51a1cf62015-02-03 13:00:44 +09003400email-alert from <emailaddr>
3401 Declare the from email address to be used in both the envelope and header
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01003402 of email alerts. This is the address that email alerts are sent from.
Simon Horman51a1cf62015-02-03 13:00:44 +09003403 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3404 yes | yes | yes | yes
3405
3406 Arguments :
3407
3408 <emailaddr> is the from email address to use when sending email alerts
3409
3410 Also requires "email-alert mailers" and "email-alert to" to be set
3411 and if so sending email alerts is enabled for the proxy.
3412
Simon Horman64e34162015-02-06 11:11:57 +09003413 See also : "email-alert level", "email-alert mailers",
Cyril Bonté307ee1e2015-09-28 23:16:06 +02003414 "email-alert myhostname", "email-alert to", section 3.6 about
3415 mailers.
Simon Horman64e34162015-02-06 11:11:57 +09003416
3417
3418email-alert level <level>
3419 Declare the maximum log level of messages for which email alerts will be
3420 sent. This acts as a filter on the sending of email alerts.
3421 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3422 yes | yes | yes | yes
3423
3424 Arguments :
3425
3426 <level> One of the 8 syslog levels:
3427 emerg alert crit err warning notice info debug
3428 The above syslog levels are ordered from lowest to highest.
3429
3430 By default level is alert
3431
3432 Also requires "email-alert from", "email-alert mailers" and
3433 "email-alert to" to be set and if so sending email alerts is enabled
3434 for the proxy.
3435
Simon Horman1421e212015-04-30 13:10:35 +09003436 Alerts are sent when :
3437
3438 * An un-paused server is marked as down and <level> is alert or lower
3439 * A paused server is marked as down and <level> is notice or lower
3440 * A server is marked as up or enters the drain state and <level>
3441 is notice or lower
3442 * "option log-health-checks" is enabled, <level> is info or lower,
3443 and a health check status update occurs
3444
Simon Horman64e34162015-02-06 11:11:57 +09003445 See also : "email-alert from", "email-alert mailers",
3446 "email-alert myhostname", "email-alert to",
Simon Horman51a1cf62015-02-03 13:00:44 +09003447 section 3.6 about mailers.
3448
3449
3450email-alert mailers <mailersect>
3451 Declare the mailers to be used when sending email alerts
3452 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3453 yes | yes | yes | yes
3454
3455 Arguments :
3456
3457 <mailersect> is the name of the mailers section to send email alerts.
3458
3459 Also requires "email-alert from" and "email-alert to" to be set
3460 and if so sending email alerts is enabled for the proxy.
3461
Simon Horman64e34162015-02-06 11:11:57 +09003462 See also : "email-alert from", "email-alert level", "email-alert myhostname",
3463 "email-alert to", section 3.6 about mailers.
Simon Horman51a1cf62015-02-03 13:00:44 +09003464
3465
3466email-alert myhostname <hostname>
3467 Declare the to hostname address to be used when communicating with
3468 mailers.
3469 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3470 yes | yes | yes | yes
3471
3472 Arguments :
3473
Baptiste Assmann738bad92015-12-21 15:27:53 +01003474 <hostname> is the hostname to use when communicating with mailers
Simon Horman51a1cf62015-02-03 13:00:44 +09003475
3476 By default the systems hostname is used.
3477
3478 Also requires "email-alert from", "email-alert mailers" and
3479 "email-alert to" to be set and if so sending email alerts is enabled
3480 for the proxy.
3481
Simon Horman64e34162015-02-06 11:11:57 +09003482 See also : "email-alert from", "email-alert level", "email-alert mailers",
3483 "email-alert to", section 3.6 about mailers.
Simon Horman51a1cf62015-02-03 13:00:44 +09003484
3485
3486email-alert to <emailaddr>
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01003487 Declare both the recipient address in the envelope and to address in the
Simon Horman51a1cf62015-02-03 13:00:44 +09003488 header of email alerts. This is the address that email alerts are sent to.
3489 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3490 yes | yes | yes | yes
3491
3492 Arguments :
3493
3494 <emailaddr> is the to email address to use when sending email alerts
3495
3496 Also requires "email-alert mailers" and "email-alert to" to be set
3497 and if so sending email alerts is enabled for the proxy.
3498
Simon Horman64e34162015-02-06 11:11:57 +09003499 See also : "email-alert from", "email-alert level", "email-alert mailers",
Simon Horman51a1cf62015-02-03 13:00:44 +09003500 "email-alert myhostname", section 3.6 about mailers.
3501
3502
Willy Tarreau4de91492010-01-22 19:10:05 +01003503force-persist { if | unless } <condition>
3504 Declare a condition to force persistence on down servers
3505 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3506 no | yes | yes | yes
3507
3508 By default, requests are not dispatched to down servers. It is possible to
3509 force this using "option persist", but it is unconditional and redispatches
3510 to a valid server if "option redispatch" is set. That leaves with very little
3511 possibilities to force some requests to reach a server which is artificially
3512 marked down for maintenance operations.
3513
3514 The "force-persist" statement allows one to declare various ACL-based
3515 conditions which, when met, will cause a request to ignore the down status of
3516 a server and still try to connect to it. That makes it possible to start a
3517 server, still replying an error to the health checks, and run a specially
3518 configured browser to test the service. Among the handy methods, one could
3519 use a specific source IP address, or a specific cookie. The cookie also has
3520 the advantage that it can easily be added/removed on the browser from a test
3521 page. Once the service is validated, it is then possible to open the service
3522 to the world by returning a valid response to health checks.
3523
3524 The forced persistence is enabled when an "if" condition is met, or unless an
3525 "unless" condition is met. The final redispatch is always disabled when this
3526 is used.
3527
Cyril Bonté0d4bf012010-04-25 23:21:46 +02003528 See also : "option redispatch", "ignore-persist", "persist",
Cyril Bontéa8e7bbc2010-04-25 22:29:29 +02003529 and section 7 about ACL usage.
Willy Tarreau4de91492010-01-22 19:10:05 +01003530
Christopher Fauletc3fe5332016-04-07 15:30:10 +02003531
3532filter <name> [param*]
3533 Add the filter <name> in the filter list attached to the proxy.
3534 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3535 no | yes | yes | yes
3536 Arguments :
3537 <name> is the name of the filter. Officially supported filters are
3538 referenced in section 9.
3539
Tim Düsterhus4896c442016-11-29 02:15:19 +01003540 <param*> is a list of parameters accepted by the filter <name>. The
Christopher Fauletc3fe5332016-04-07 15:30:10 +02003541 parsing of these parameters are the responsibility of the
Tim Düsterhus4896c442016-11-29 02:15:19 +01003542 filter. Please refer to the documentation of the corresponding
3543 filter (section 9) for all details on the supported parameters.
Christopher Fauletc3fe5332016-04-07 15:30:10 +02003544
3545 Multiple occurrences of the filter line can be used for the same proxy. The
3546 same filter can be referenced many times if needed.
3547
3548 Example:
3549 listen
3550 bind *:80
3551
3552 filter trace name BEFORE-HTTP-COMP
3553 filter compression
3554 filter trace name AFTER-HTTP-COMP
3555
3556 compression algo gzip
3557 compression offload
3558
3559 server srv1 192.168.0.1:80
3560
3561 See also : section 9.
3562
Willy Tarreau4de91492010-01-22 19:10:05 +01003563
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003564fullconn <conns>
3565 Specify at what backend load the servers will reach their maxconn
3566 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3567 yes | no | yes | yes
3568 Arguments :
3569 <conns> is the number of connections on the backend which will make the
3570 servers use the maximal number of connections.
3571
Willy Tarreau198a7442008-01-17 12:05:32 +01003572 When a server has a "maxconn" parameter specified, it means that its number
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003573 of concurrent connections will never go higher. Additionally, if it has a
Willy Tarreau198a7442008-01-17 12:05:32 +01003574 "minconn" parameter, it indicates a dynamic limit following the backend's
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003575 load. The server will then always accept at least <minconn> connections,
3576 never more than <maxconn>, and the limit will be on the ramp between both
3577 values when the backend has less than <conns> concurrent connections. This
3578 makes it possible to limit the load on the servers during normal loads, but
3579 push it further for important loads without overloading the servers during
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01003580 exceptional loads.
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003581
Willy Tarreaufbb78422011-06-05 15:38:35 +02003582 Since it's hard to get this value right, haproxy automatically sets it to
3583 10% of the sum of the maxconns of all frontends that may branch to this
Bertrand Jacquin702d44f2013-11-19 11:43:06 +01003584 backend (based on "use_backend" and "default_backend" rules). That way it's
3585 safe to leave it unset. However, "use_backend" involving dynamic names are
3586 not counted since there is no way to know if they could match or not.
Willy Tarreaufbb78422011-06-05 15:38:35 +02003587
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003588 Example :
3589 # The servers will accept between 100 and 1000 concurrent connections each
3590 # and the maximum of 1000 will be reached when the backend reaches 10000
3591 # connections.
3592 backend dynamic
3593 fullconn 10000
3594 server srv1 dyn1:80 minconn 100 maxconn 1000
3595 server srv2 dyn2:80 minconn 100 maxconn 1000
3596
3597 See also : "maxconn", "server"
3598
3599
3600grace <time>
3601 Maintain a proxy operational for some time after a soft stop
3602 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Cyril Bonté99ed3272010-01-24 23:29:44 +01003603 yes | yes | yes | yes
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003604 Arguments :
3605 <time> is the time (by default in milliseconds) for which the instance
3606 will remain operational with the frontend sockets still listening
3607 when a soft-stop is received via the SIGUSR1 signal.
3608
3609 This may be used to ensure that the services disappear in a certain order.
3610 This was designed so that frontends which are dedicated to monitoring by an
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01003611 external equipment fail immediately while other ones remain up for the time
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003612 needed by the equipment to detect the failure.
3613
3614 Note that currently, there is very little benefit in using this parameter,
3615 and it may in fact complicate the soft-reconfiguration process more than
3616 simplify it.
3617
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003618
Andrew Rodland17be45e2016-10-25 17:04:12 -04003619hash-balance-factor <factor>
3620 Specify the balancing factor for bounded-load consistent hashing
3621 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3622 yes | no | no | yes
3623 Arguments :
3624 <factor> is the control for the maximum number of concurrent requests to
3625 send to a server, expressed as a percentage of the average number
3626 of concurrent requests across all of the active servers.
3627
3628 Specifying a "hash-balance-factor" for a server with "hash-type consistent"
3629 enables an algorithm that prevents any one server from getting too many
3630 requests at once, even if some hash buckets receive many more requests than
3631 others. Setting <factor> to 0 (the default) disables the feature. Otherwise,
3632 <factor> is a percentage greater than 100. For example, if <factor> is 150,
3633 then no server will be allowed to have a load more than 1.5 times the average.
3634 If server weights are used, they will be respected.
3635
3636 If the first-choice server is disqualified, the algorithm will choose another
3637 server based on the request hash, until a server with additional capacity is
3638 found. A higher <factor> allows more imbalance between the servers, while a
3639 lower <factor> means that more servers will be checked on average, affecting
3640 performance. Reasonable values are from 125 to 200.
3641
3642 See also : "balance" and "hash-type".
3643
3644
Bhaskar Maddalab6c0ac92013-11-05 11:54:02 -05003645hash-type <method> <function> <modifier>
Willy Tarreau6b2e11b2009-10-01 07:52:15 +02003646 Specify a method to use for mapping hashes to servers
3647 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3648 yes | no | yes | yes
3649 Arguments :
Bhaskar98634f02013-10-29 23:30:51 -04003650 <method> is the method used to select a server from the hash computed by
3651 the <function> :
Willy Tarreau6b2e11b2009-10-01 07:52:15 +02003652
Bhaskar98634f02013-10-29 23:30:51 -04003653 map-based the hash table is a static array containing all alive servers.
3654 The hashes will be very smooth, will consider weights, but
3655 will be static in that weight changes while a server is up
3656 will be ignored. This means that there will be no slow start.
3657 Also, since a server is selected by its position in the array,
3658 most mappings are changed when the server count changes. This
3659 means that when a server goes up or down, or when a server is
3660 added to a farm, most connections will be redistributed to
3661 different servers. This can be inconvenient with caches for
3662 instance.
Willy Tarreau798a39c2010-11-24 15:04:29 +01003663
Bhaskar98634f02013-10-29 23:30:51 -04003664 consistent the hash table is a tree filled with many occurrences of each
3665 server. The hash key is looked up in the tree and the closest
3666 server is chosen. This hash is dynamic, it supports changing
3667 weights while the servers are up, so it is compatible with the
3668 slow start feature. It has the advantage that when a server
3669 goes up or down, only its associations are moved. When a
3670 server is added to the farm, only a few part of the mappings
3671 are redistributed, making it an ideal method for caches.
3672 However, due to its principle, the distribution will never be
3673 very smooth and it may sometimes be necessary to adjust a
3674 server's weight or its ID to get a more balanced distribution.
3675 In order to get the same distribution on multiple load
3676 balancers, it is important that all servers have the exact
Bhaskar Maddalab6c0ac92013-11-05 11:54:02 -05003677 same IDs. Note: consistent hash uses sdbm and avalanche if no
3678 hash function is specified.
Bhaskar98634f02013-10-29 23:30:51 -04003679
3680 <function> is the hash function to be used :
3681
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03003682 sdbm this function was created initially for sdbm (a public-domain
Bhaskar98634f02013-10-29 23:30:51 -04003683 reimplementation of ndbm) database library. It was found to do
3684 well in scrambling bits, causing better distribution of the keys
3685 and fewer splits. It also happens to be a good general hashing
Bhaskar Maddalab6c0ac92013-11-05 11:54:02 -05003686 function with good distribution, unless the total server weight
3687 is a multiple of 64, in which case applying the avalanche
3688 modifier may help.
Bhaskar98634f02013-10-29 23:30:51 -04003689
3690 djb2 this function was first proposed by Dan Bernstein many years ago
3691 on comp.lang.c. Studies have shown that for certain workload this
Bhaskar Maddalab6c0ac92013-11-05 11:54:02 -05003692 function provides a better distribution than sdbm. It generally
3693 works well with text-based inputs though it can perform extremely
3694 poorly with numeric-only input or when the total server weight is
3695 a multiple of 33, unless the avalanche modifier is also used.
3696
Willy Tarreaua0f42712013-11-14 14:30:35 +01003697 wt6 this function was designed for haproxy while testing other
3698 functions in the past. It is not as smooth as the other ones, but
3699 is much less sensible to the input data set or to the number of
3700 servers. It can make sense as an alternative to sdbm+avalanche or
3701 djb2+avalanche for consistent hashing or when hashing on numeric
3702 data such as a source IP address or a visitor identifier in a URL
3703 parameter.
3704
Willy Tarreau324f07f2015-01-20 19:44:50 +01003705 crc32 this is the most common CRC32 implementation as used in Ethernet,
3706 gzip, PNG, etc. It is slower than the other ones but may provide
3707 a better distribution or less predictable results especially when
3708 used on strings.
3709
Bhaskar Maddalab6c0ac92013-11-05 11:54:02 -05003710 <modifier> indicates an optional method applied after hashing the key :
3711
3712 avalanche This directive indicates that the result from the hash
3713 function above should not be used in its raw form but that
3714 a 4-byte full avalanche hash must be applied first. The
3715 purpose of this step is to mix the resulting bits from the
3716 previous hash in order to avoid any undesired effect when
3717 the input contains some limited values or when the number of
3718 servers is a multiple of one of the hash's components (64
3719 for SDBM, 33 for DJB2). Enabling avalanche tends to make the
3720 result less predictable, but it's also not as smooth as when
3721 using the original function. Some testing might be needed
3722 with some workloads. This hash is one of the many proposed
3723 by Bob Jenkins.
Willy Tarreau6b2e11b2009-10-01 07:52:15 +02003724
Bhaskar98634f02013-10-29 23:30:51 -04003725 The default hash type is "map-based" and is recommended for most usages. The
3726 default function is "sdbm", the selection of a function should be based on
3727 the range of the values being hashed.
Willy Tarreau6b2e11b2009-10-01 07:52:15 +02003728
Andrew Rodland17be45e2016-10-25 17:04:12 -04003729 See also : "balance", "hash-balance-factor", "server"
Willy Tarreau6b2e11b2009-10-01 07:52:15 +02003730
3731
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003732http-check disable-on-404
3733 Enable a maintenance mode upon HTTP/404 response to health-checks
3734 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003735 yes | no | yes | yes
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003736 Arguments : none
3737
3738 When this option is set, a server which returns an HTTP code 404 will be
3739 excluded from further load-balancing, but will still receive persistent
3740 connections. This provides a very convenient method for Web administrators
3741 to perform a graceful shutdown of their servers. It is also important to note
3742 that a server which is detected as failed while it was in this mode will not
3743 generate an alert, just a notice. If the server responds 2xx or 3xx again, it
3744 will immediately be reinserted into the farm. The status on the stats page
3745 reports "NOLB" for a server in this mode. It is important to note that this
Willy Tarreaubd741542010-03-16 18:46:54 +01003746 option only works in conjunction with the "httpchk" option. If this option
3747 is used with "http-check expect", then it has precedence over it so that 404
3748 responses will still be considered as soft-stop.
3749
3750 See also : "option httpchk", "http-check expect"
3751
3752
3753http-check expect [!] <match> <pattern>
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -04003754 Make HTTP health checks consider response contents or specific status codes
Willy Tarreaubd741542010-03-16 18:46:54 +01003755 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreau1ee51a62011-08-19 20:04:17 +02003756 yes | no | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaubd741542010-03-16 18:46:54 +01003757 Arguments :
3758 <match> is a keyword indicating how to look for a specific pattern in the
3759 response. The keyword may be one of "status", "rstatus",
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -04003760 "string", or "rstring". The keyword may be preceded by an
Willy Tarreaubd741542010-03-16 18:46:54 +01003761 exclamation mark ("!") to negate the match. Spaces are allowed
3762 between the exclamation mark and the keyword. See below for more
3763 details on the supported keywords.
3764
3765 <pattern> is the pattern to look for. It may be a string or a regular
3766 expression. If the pattern contains spaces, they must be escaped
3767 with the usual backslash ('\').
3768
3769 By default, "option httpchk" considers that response statuses 2xx and 3xx
3770 are valid, and that others are invalid. When "http-check expect" is used,
3771 it defines what is considered valid or invalid. Only one "http-check"
3772 statement is supported in a backend. If a server fails to respond or times
3773 out, the check obviously fails. The available matches are :
3774
3775 status <string> : test the exact string match for the HTTP status code.
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -04003776 A health check response will be considered valid if the
Willy Tarreaubd741542010-03-16 18:46:54 +01003777 response's status code is exactly this string. If the
3778 "status" keyword is prefixed with "!", then the response
3779 will be considered invalid if the status code matches.
3780
3781 rstatus <regex> : test a regular expression for the HTTP status code.
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -04003782 A health check response will be considered valid if the
Willy Tarreaubd741542010-03-16 18:46:54 +01003783 response's status code matches the expression. If the
3784 "rstatus" keyword is prefixed with "!", then the response
3785 will be considered invalid if the status code matches.
3786 This is mostly used to check for multiple codes.
3787
3788 string <string> : test the exact string match in the HTTP response body.
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -04003789 A health check response will be considered valid if the
Willy Tarreaubd741542010-03-16 18:46:54 +01003790 response's body contains this exact string. If the
3791 "string" keyword is prefixed with "!", then the response
3792 will be considered invalid if the body contains this
3793 string. This can be used to look for a mandatory word at
3794 the end of a dynamic page, or to detect a failure when a
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01003795 specific error appears on the check page (e.g. a stack
Willy Tarreaubd741542010-03-16 18:46:54 +01003796 trace).
3797
3798 rstring <regex> : test a regular expression on the HTTP response body.
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -04003799 A health check response will be considered valid if the
Willy Tarreaubd741542010-03-16 18:46:54 +01003800 response's body matches this expression. If the "rstring"
3801 keyword is prefixed with "!", then the response will be
3802 considered invalid if the body matches the expression.
3803 This can be used to look for a mandatory word at the end
3804 of a dynamic page, or to detect a failure when a specific
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01003805 error appears on the check page (e.g. a stack trace).
Willy Tarreaubd741542010-03-16 18:46:54 +01003806
3807 It is important to note that the responses will be limited to a certain size
3808 defined by the global "tune.chksize" option, which defaults to 16384 bytes.
3809 Thus, too large responses may not contain the mandatory pattern when using
3810 "string" or "rstring". If a large response is absolutely required, it is
3811 possible to change the default max size by setting the global variable.
3812 However, it is worth keeping in mind that parsing very large responses can
3813 waste some CPU cycles, especially when regular expressions are used, and that
3814 it is always better to focus the checks on smaller resources.
3815
Cyril Bonté32602d22015-01-30 00:07:07 +01003816 Also "http-check expect" doesn't support HTTP keep-alive. Keep in mind that it
3817 will automatically append a "Connection: close" header, meaning that this
3818 header should not be present in the request provided by "option httpchk".
3819
Willy Tarreaubd741542010-03-16 18:46:54 +01003820 Last, if "http-check expect" is combined with "http-check disable-on-404",
3821 then this last one has precedence when the server responds with 404.
3822
3823 Examples :
3824 # only accept status 200 as valid
Willy Tarreau8f2a1e72011-01-06 16:36:10 +01003825 http-check expect status 200
Willy Tarreaubd741542010-03-16 18:46:54 +01003826
3827 # consider SQL errors as errors
Willy Tarreau8f2a1e72011-01-06 16:36:10 +01003828 http-check expect ! string SQL\ Error
Willy Tarreaubd741542010-03-16 18:46:54 +01003829
3830 # consider status 5xx only as errors
Willy Tarreau8f2a1e72011-01-06 16:36:10 +01003831 http-check expect ! rstatus ^5
Willy Tarreaubd741542010-03-16 18:46:54 +01003832
3833 # check that we have a correct hexadecimal tag before /html
Jarno Huuskonene5ae7022017-04-03 14:36:21 +03003834 http-check expect rstring <!--tag:[0-9a-f]*--></html>
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01003835
Willy Tarreaubd741542010-03-16 18:46:54 +01003836 See also : "option httpchk", "http-check disable-on-404"
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01003837
3838
Willy Tarreauef781042010-01-27 11:53:01 +01003839http-check send-state
3840 Enable emission of a state header with HTTP health checks
3841 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3842 yes | no | yes | yes
3843 Arguments : none
3844
3845 When this option is set, haproxy will systematically send a special header
3846 "X-Haproxy-Server-State" with a list of parameters indicating to each server
3847 how they are seen by haproxy. This can be used for instance when a server is
3848 manipulated without access to haproxy and the operator needs to know whether
3849 haproxy still sees it up or not, or if the server is the last one in a farm.
3850
3851 The header is composed of fields delimited by semi-colons, the first of which
3852 is a word ("UP", "DOWN", "NOLB"), possibly followed by a number of valid
3853 checks on the total number before transition, just as appears in the stats
3854 interface. Next headers are in the form "<variable>=<value>", indicating in
3855 no specific order some values available in the stats interface :
Joseph Lynch514061c2015-01-15 17:52:59 -08003856 - a variable "address", containing the address of the backend server.
3857 This corresponds to the <address> field in the server declaration. For
3858 unix domain sockets, it will read "unix".
3859
3860 - a variable "port", containing the port of the backend server. This
3861 corresponds to the <port> field in the server declaration. For unix
3862 domain sockets, it will read "unix".
3863
Willy Tarreauef781042010-01-27 11:53:01 +01003864 - a variable "name", containing the name of the backend followed by a slash
3865 ("/") then the name of the server. This can be used when a server is
3866 checked in multiple backends.
3867
3868 - a variable "node" containing the name of the haproxy node, as set in the
3869 global "node" variable, otherwise the system's hostname if unspecified.
3870
3871 - a variable "weight" indicating the weight of the server, a slash ("/")
3872 and the total weight of the farm (just counting usable servers). This
3873 helps to know if other servers are available to handle the load when this
3874 one fails.
3875
3876 - a variable "scur" indicating the current number of concurrent connections
3877 on the server, followed by a slash ("/") then the total number of
3878 connections on all servers of the same backend.
3879
3880 - a variable "qcur" indicating the current number of requests in the
3881 server's queue.
3882
3883 Example of a header received by the application server :
3884 >>> X-Haproxy-Server-State: UP 2/3; name=bck/srv2; node=lb1; weight=1/2; \
3885 scur=13/22; qcur=0
3886
3887 See also : "option httpchk", "http-check disable-on-404"
3888
Willy Tarreau53275e82017-11-24 07:52:01 +01003889http-request { allow | auth [realm <realm>] | redirect <rule> | reject |
Jarno Huuskonen800d1762017-03-06 14:56:36 +02003890 tarpit [deny_status <status>] | deny [deny_status <status>] |
Willy Tarreauf4c43c12013-06-11 17:01:13 +02003891 add-header <name> <fmt> | set-header <name> <fmt> |
Thierry FOURNIER82bf70d2015-05-26 17:58:29 +02003892 capture <sample> [ len <length> | id <id> ] |
Thierry FOURNIERdad3d1d2014-04-22 18:07:25 +02003893 del-header <name> | set-nice <nice> | set-log-level <level> |
Sasha Pachev218f0642014-06-16 12:05:59 -06003894 replace-header <name> <match-regex> <replace-fmt> |
3895 replace-value <name> <match-regex> <replace-fmt> |
Willy Tarreaua0dc23f2015-01-22 20:46:11 +01003896 set-method <fmt> | set-path <fmt> | set-query <fmt> |
3897 set-uri <fmt> | set-tos <tos> | set-mark <mark> |
Baptiste Assmannfabcbe02014-04-24 22:16:59 +02003898 add-acl(<file name>) <key fmt> |
3899 del-acl(<file name>) <key fmt> |
3900 del-map(<file name>) <key fmt> |
Baptiste Assmannbb7e86a2014-09-03 18:29:47 +02003901 set-map(<file name>) <key fmt> <value fmt> |
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02003902 set-var(<var name>) <expr> |
Christopher Faulet85d79c92016-11-09 16:54:56 +01003903 unset-var(<var name>) |
Thierry FOURNIER90da1912015-03-05 11:17:06 +01003904 { track-sc0 | track-sc1 | track-sc2 } <key> [table <table>] |
Thierry FOURNIERe0627bd2015-08-04 08:20:33 +02003905 sc-inc-gpc0(<sc-id>) |
Thierry FOURNIER236657b2015-08-19 08:25:14 +02003906 sc-set-gpt0(<sc-id>) <int> |
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02003907 silent-drop |
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +01003908 send-spoe-group |
3909 cache-use
Baptiste Assmannfabcbe02014-04-24 22:16:59 +02003910 }
Cyril Bontéf0c60612010-02-06 14:44:47 +01003911 [ { if | unless } <condition> ]
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +01003912 Access control for Layer 7 requests
3913
3914 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
3915 no | yes | yes | yes
3916
Willy Tarreau20b0de52012-12-24 15:45:22 +01003917 The http-request statement defines a set of rules which apply to layer 7
3918 processing. The rules are evaluated in their declaration order when they are
3919 met in a frontend, listen or backend section. Any rule may optionally be
3920 followed by an ACL-based condition, in which case it will only be evaluated
3921 if the condition is true.
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +01003922
Willy Tarreau20b0de52012-12-24 15:45:22 +01003923 The first keyword is the rule's action. Currently supported actions include :
3924 - "allow" : this stops the evaluation of the rules and lets the request
3925 pass the check. No further "http-request" rules are evaluated.
3926
3927 - "deny" : this stops the evaluation of the rules and immediately rejects
Willy Tarreaube1d34d2016-06-26 19:37:59 +02003928 the request and emits an HTTP 403 error, or optionally the status code
3929 specified as an argument to "deny_status". The list of permitted status
3930 codes is limited to those that can be overridden by the "errorfile"
3931 directive. No further "http-request" rules are evaluated.
Willy Tarreau20b0de52012-12-24 15:45:22 +01003932
Willy Tarreau53275e82017-11-24 07:52:01 +01003933 - "reject" : this stops the evaluation of the rules and immediately closes
3934 the connection without sending any response. It acts similarly to the
3935 "tcp-request content reject" rules. It can be useful to force an
3936 immediate connection closure on HTTP/2 connections.
3937
Willy Tarreauccbcc372012-12-27 12:37:57 +01003938 - "tarpit" : this stops the evaluation of the rules and immediately blocks
3939 the request without responding for a delay specified by "timeout tarpit"
3940 or "timeout connect" if the former is not set. After that delay, if the
Jarno Huuskonen800d1762017-03-06 14:56:36 +02003941 client is still connected, an HTTP error 500 (or optionally the status
3942 code specified as an argument to "deny_status") is returned so that the
Willy Tarreauccbcc372012-12-27 12:37:57 +01003943 client does not suspect it has been tarpitted. Logs will report the flags
3944 "PT". The goal of the tarpit rule is to slow down robots during an attack
3945 when they're limited on the number of concurrent requests. It can be very
3946 efficient against very dumb robots, and will significantly reduce the
3947 load on firewalls compared to a "deny" rule. But when facing "correctly"
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03003948 developed robots, it can make things worse by forcing haproxy and the
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02003949 front firewall to support insane number of concurrent connections. See
3950 also the "silent-drop" action below.
Willy Tarreauccbcc372012-12-27 12:37:57 +01003951
Willy Tarreau20b0de52012-12-24 15:45:22 +01003952 - "auth" : this stops the evaluation of the rules and immediately responds
3953 with an HTTP 401 or 407 error code to invite the user to present a valid
3954 user name and password. No further "http-request" rules are evaluated. An
3955 optional "realm" parameter is supported, it sets the authentication realm
3956 that is returned with the response (typically the application's name).
3957
Willy Tarreau81499eb2012-12-27 12:19:02 +01003958 - "redirect" : this performs an HTTP redirection based on a redirect rule.
3959 This is exactly the same as the "redirect" statement except that it
3960 inserts a redirect rule which can be processed in the middle of other
Thierry FOURNIERd18cd0f2013-11-29 12:15:45 +01003961 "http-request" rules and that these rules use the "log-format" strings.
3962 See the "redirect" keyword for the rule's syntax.
Willy Tarreau81499eb2012-12-27 12:19:02 +01003963
Willy Tarreau20b0de52012-12-24 15:45:22 +01003964 - "add-header" appends an HTTP header field whose name is specified in
3965 <name> and whose value is defined by <fmt> which follows the log-format
3966 rules (see Custom Log Format in section 8.2.4). This is particularly
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01003967 useful to pass connection-specific information to the server (e.g. the
Willy Tarreau20b0de52012-12-24 15:45:22 +01003968 client's SSL certificate), or to combine several headers into one. This
3969 rule is not final, so it is possible to add other similar rules. Note
3970 that header addition is performed immediately, so one rule might reuse
3971 the resulting header from a previous rule.
3972
3973 - "set-header" does the same as "add-header" except that the header name
3974 is first removed if it existed. This is useful when passing security
3975 information to the server, where the header must not be manipulated by
Willy Tarreau85603282015-01-21 20:39:27 +01003976 external users. Note that the new value is computed before the removal so
3977 it is possible to concatenate a value to an existing header.
Willy Tarreau20b0de52012-12-24 15:45:22 +01003978
Thierry FOURNIERdad3d1d2014-04-22 18:07:25 +02003979 - "del-header" removes all HTTP header fields whose name is specified in
3980 <name>.
3981
Sasha Pachev218f0642014-06-16 12:05:59 -06003982 - "replace-header" matches the regular expression in all occurrences of
3983 header field <name> according to <match-regex>, and replaces them with
3984 the <replace-fmt> argument. Format characters are allowed in replace-fmt
3985 and work like in <fmt> arguments in "add-header". The match is only
3986 case-sensitive. It is important to understand that this action only
3987 considers whole header lines, regardless of the number of values they
3988 may contain. This usage is suited to headers naturally containing commas
3989 in their value, such as If-Modified-Since and so on.
3990
3991 Example:
3992
3993 http-request replace-header Cookie foo=([^;]*);(.*) foo=\1;ip=%bi;\2
3994
3995 applied to:
3996
3997 Cookie: foo=foobar; expires=Tue, 14-Jun-2016 01:40:45 GMT;
3998
3999 outputs:
4000
4001 Cookie: foo=foobar;ip=192.168.1.20; expires=Tue, 14-Jun-2016 01:40:45 GMT;
4002
4003 assuming the backend IP is 192.168.1.20
4004
4005 - "replace-value" works like "replace-header" except that it matches the
4006 regex against every comma-delimited value of the header field <name>
4007 instead of the entire header. This is suited for all headers which are
4008 allowed to carry more than one value. An example could be the Accept
4009 header.
4010
4011 Example:
4012
4013 http-request replace-value X-Forwarded-For ^192\.168\.(.*)$ 172.16.\1
4014
4015 applied to:
4016
4017 X-Forwarded-For: 192.168.10.1, 192.168.13.24, 10.0.0.37
4018
4019 outputs:
4020
4021 X-Forwarded-For: 172.16.10.1, 172.16.13.24, 10.0.0.37
4022
Willy Tarreaua0dc23f2015-01-22 20:46:11 +01004023 - "set-method" rewrites the request method with the result of the
4024 evaluation of format string <fmt>. There should be very few valid reasons
4025 for having to do so as this is more likely to break something than to fix
4026 it.
4027
4028 - "set-path" rewrites the request path with the result of the evaluation of
4029 format string <fmt>. The query string, if any, is left intact. If a
4030 scheme and authority is found before the path, they are left intact as
4031 well. If the request doesn't have a path ("*"), this one is replaced with
4032 the format. This can be used to prepend a directory component in front of
4033 a path for example. See also "set-query" and "set-uri".
4034
4035 Example :
4036 # prepend the host name before the path
4037 http-request set-path /%[hdr(host)]%[path]
4038
4039 - "set-query" rewrites the request's query string which appears after the
4040 first question mark ("?") with the result of the evaluation of format
4041 string <fmt>. The part prior to the question mark is left intact. If the
4042 request doesn't contain a question mark and the new value is not empty,
4043 then one is added at the end of the URI, followed by the new value. If
4044 a question mark was present, it will never be removed even if the value
4045 is empty. This can be used to add or remove parameters from the query
4046 string. See also "set-query" and "set-uri".
4047
4048 Example :
4049 # replace "%3D" with "=" in the query string
4050 http-request set-query %[query,regsub(%3D,=,g)]
4051
4052 - "set-uri" rewrites the request URI with the result of the evaluation of
4053 format string <fmt>. The scheme, authority, path and query string are all
4054 replaced at once. This can be used to rewrite hosts in front of proxies,
4055 or to perform complex modifications to the URI such as moving parts
4056 between the path and the query string. See also "set-path" and
4057 "set-query".
4058
Willy Tarreauf4c43c12013-06-11 17:01:13 +02004059 - "set-nice" sets the "nice" factor of the current request being processed.
4060 It only has effect against the other requests being processed at the same
4061 time. The default value is 0, unless altered by the "nice" setting on the
4062 "bind" line. The accepted range is -1024..1024. The higher the value, the
4063 nicest the request will be. Lower values will make the request more
4064 important than other ones. This can be useful to improve the speed of
4065 some requests, or lower the priority of non-important requests. Using
4066 this setting without prior experimentation can cause some major slowdown.
4067
Willy Tarreau9a355ec2013-06-11 17:45:46 +02004068 - "set-log-level" is used to change the log level of the current request
4069 when a certain condition is met. Valid levels are the 8 syslog levels
4070 (see the "log" keyword) plus the special level "silent" which disables
4071 logging for this request. This rule is not final so the last matching
4072 rule wins. This rule can be useful to disable health checks coming from
4073 another equipment.
4074
Willy Tarreau42cf39e2013-06-11 18:51:32 +02004075 - "set-tos" is used to set the TOS or DSCP field value of packets sent to
4076 the client to the value passed in <tos> on platforms which support this.
4077 This value represents the whole 8 bits of the IP TOS field, and can be
4078 expressed both in decimal or hexadecimal format (prefixed by "0x"). Note
4079 that only the 6 higher bits are used in DSCP or TOS, and the two lower
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004080 bits are always 0. This can be used to adjust some routing behavior on
Willy Tarreau42cf39e2013-06-11 18:51:32 +02004081 border routers based on some information from the request. See RFC 2474,
4082 2597, 3260 and 4594 for more information.
4083
Willy Tarreau51347ed2013-06-11 19:34:13 +02004084 - "set-mark" is used to set the Netfilter MARK on all packets sent to the
4085 client to the value passed in <mark> on platforms which support it. This
4086 value is an unsigned 32 bit value which can be matched by netfilter and
4087 by the routing table. It can be expressed both in decimal or hexadecimal
4088 format (prefixed by "0x"). This can be useful to force certain packets to
4089 take a different route (for example a cheaper network path for bulk
4090 downloads). This works on Linux kernels 2.6.32 and above and requires
4091 admin privileges.
4092
Baptiste Assmannfabcbe02014-04-24 22:16:59 +02004093 - "add-acl" is used to add a new entry into an ACL. The ACL must be loaded
4094 from a file (even a dummy empty file). The file name of the ACL to be
4095 updated is passed between parentheses. It takes one argument: <key fmt>,
4096 which follows log-format rules, to collect content of the new entry. It
4097 performs a lookup in the ACL before insertion, to avoid duplicated (or
4098 more) values. This lookup is done by a linear search and can be expensive
4099 with large lists! It is the equivalent of the "add acl" command from the
4100 stats socket, but can be triggered by an HTTP request.
4101
4102 - "del-acl" is used to delete an entry from an ACL. The ACL must be loaded
4103 from a file (even a dummy empty file). The file name of the ACL to be
4104 updated is passed between parentheses. It takes one argument: <key fmt>,
4105 which follows log-format rules, to collect content of the entry to delete.
4106 It is the equivalent of the "del acl" command from the stats socket, but
4107 can be triggered by an HTTP request.
4108
4109 - "del-map" is used to delete an entry from a MAP. The MAP must be loaded
4110 from a file (even a dummy empty file). The file name of the MAP to be
4111 updated is passed between parentheses. It takes one argument: <key fmt>,
4112 which follows log-format rules, to collect content of the entry to delete.
4113 It takes one argument: "file name" It is the equivalent of the "del map"
4114 command from the stats socket, but can be triggered by an HTTP request.
4115
4116 - "set-map" is used to add a new entry into a MAP. The MAP must be loaded
4117 from a file (even a dummy empty file). The file name of the MAP to be
4118 updated is passed between parentheses. It takes 2 arguments: <key fmt>,
4119 which follows log-format rules, used to collect MAP key, and <value fmt>,
4120 which follows log-format rules, used to collect content for the new entry.
4121 It performs a lookup in the MAP before insertion, to avoid duplicated (or
4122 more) values. This lookup is done by a linear search and can be expensive
4123 with large lists! It is the equivalent of the "set map" command from the
4124 stats socket, but can be triggered by an HTTP request.
4125
Thierry FOURNIER82bf70d2015-05-26 17:58:29 +02004126 - capture <sample> [ len <length> | id <id> ] :
Willy Tarreaua9083d02015-05-08 15:27:59 +02004127 captures sample expression <sample> from the request buffer, and converts
4128 it to a string of at most <len> characters. The resulting string is
4129 stored into the next request "capture" slot, so it will possibly appear
4130 next to some captured HTTP headers. It will then automatically appear in
4131 the logs, and it will be possible to extract it using sample fetch rules
4132 to feed it into headers or anything. The length should be limited given
4133 that this size will be allocated for each capture during the whole
4134 session life. Please check section 7.3 (Fetching samples) and "capture
4135 request header" for more information.
4136
Thierry FOURNIER82bf70d2015-05-26 17:58:29 +02004137 If the keyword "id" is used instead of "len", the action tries to store
4138 the captured string in a previously declared capture slot. This is useful
4139 to run captures in backends. The slot id can be declared by a previous
4140 directive "http-request capture" or with the "declare capture" keyword.
Baptiste Assmanne9544932015-11-03 23:31:35 +01004141 If the slot <id> doesn't exist, then HAProxy fails parsing the
4142 configuration to prevent unexpected behavior at run time.
Thierry FOURNIER82bf70d2015-05-26 17:58:29 +02004143
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +01004144 - cache-use <name> :
4145 See section 10.2 about cache setup.
4146
Willy Tarreau09448f72014-06-25 18:12:15 +02004147 - { track-sc0 | track-sc1 | track-sc2 } <key> [table <table>] :
4148 enables tracking of sticky counters from current request. These rules
4149 do not stop evaluation and do not change default action. Three sets of
4150 counters may be simultaneously tracked by the same connection. The first
4151 "track-sc0" rule executed enables tracking of the counters of the
4152 specified table as the first set. The first "track-sc1" rule executed
4153 enables tracking of the counters of the specified table as the second
4154 set. The first "track-sc2" rule executed enables tracking of the
4155 counters of the specified table as the third set. It is a recommended
4156 practice to use the first set of counters for the per-frontend counters
4157 and the second set for the per-backend ones. But this is just a
4158 guideline, all may be used everywhere.
4159
4160 These actions take one or two arguments :
4161 <key> is mandatory, and is a sample expression rule as described
4162 in section 7.3. It describes what elements of the incoming
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004163 request or connection will be analyzed, extracted, combined,
Willy Tarreau09448f72014-06-25 18:12:15 +02004164 and used to select which table entry to update the counters.
4165
4166 <table> is an optional table to be used instead of the default one,
4167 which is the stick-table declared in the current proxy. All
4168 the counters for the matches and updates for the key will
4169 then be performed in that table until the session ends.
4170
4171 Once a "track-sc*" rule is executed, the key is looked up in the table
4172 and if it is not found, an entry is allocated for it. Then a pointer to
4173 that entry is kept during all the session's life, and this entry's
4174 counters are updated as often as possible, every time the session's
4175 counters are updated, and also systematically when the session ends.
4176 Counters are only updated for events that happen after the tracking has
4177 been started. As an exception, connection counters and request counters
4178 are systematically updated so that they reflect useful information.
4179
4180 If the entry tracks concurrent connection counters, one connection is
4181 counted for as long as the entry is tracked, and the entry will not
4182 expire during that time. Tracking counters also provides a performance
4183 advantage over just checking the keys, because only one table lookup is
4184 performed for all ACL checks that make use of it.
4185
Thierry FOURNIER236657b2015-08-19 08:25:14 +02004186 - sc-set-gpt0(<sc-id>) <int> :
4187 This action sets the GPT0 tag according to the sticky counter designated
4188 by <sc-id> and the value of <int>. The expected result is a boolean. If
4189 an error occurs, this action silently fails and the actions evaluation
4190 continues.
4191
Thierry FOURNIERe0627bd2015-08-04 08:20:33 +02004192 - sc-inc-gpc0(<sc-id>):
4193 This action increments the GPC0 counter according with the sticky counter
4194 designated by <sc-id>. If an error occurs, this action silently fails and
4195 the actions evaluation continues.
4196
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02004197 - set-var(<var-name>) <expr> :
4198 Is used to set the contents of a variable. The variable is declared
4199 inline.
4200
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01004201 <var-name> The name of the variable starts with an indication about
4202 its scope. The scopes allowed are:
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +01004203 "proc" : the variable is shared with the whole process
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01004204 "sess" : the variable is shared with the whole session
4205 "txn" : the variable is shared with the transaction
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02004206 (request and response)
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01004207 "req" : the variable is shared only during request
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02004208 processing
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01004209 "res" : the variable is shared only during response
4210 processing
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02004211 This prefix is followed by a name. The separator is a '.'.
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01004212 The name may only contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9'
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02004213 and '_'.
4214
4215 <expr> Is a standard HAProxy expression formed by a sample-fetch
4216 followed by some converters.
4217
4218 Example:
4219
4220 http-request set-var(req.my_var) req.fhdr(user-agent),lower
4221
Christopher Faulet85d79c92016-11-09 16:54:56 +01004222 - unset-var(<var-name>) :
4223 Is used to unset a variable. See above for details about <var-name>.
4224
4225 Example:
4226
4227 http-request unset-var(req.my_var)
4228
Adis Nezirovic2fbcafc2015-07-06 15:44:30 +02004229 - set-src <expr> :
4230 Is used to set the source IP address to the value of specified
4231 expression. Useful when a proxy in front of HAProxy rewrites source IP,
4232 but provides the correct IP in a HTTP header; or you want to mask
4233 source IP for privacy.
4234
4235 <expr> Is a standard HAProxy expression formed by a sample-fetch
4236 followed by some converters.
4237
4238 Example:
4239
4240 http-request set-src hdr(x-forwarded-for)
4241 http-request set-src src,ipmask(24)
4242
Willy Tarreau00005ce2016-10-21 15:07:45 +02004243 When possible, set-src preserves the original source port as long as the
4244 address family allows it, otherwise the source port is set to 0.
Adis Nezirovic2fbcafc2015-07-06 15:44:30 +02004245
William Lallemand44be6402016-05-25 01:51:35 +02004246 - set-src-port <expr> :
4247 Is used to set the source port address to the value of specified
4248 expression.
4249
4250 <expr> Is a standard HAProxy expression formed by a sample-fetch
4251 followed by some converters.
4252
4253 Example:
4254
4255 http-request set-src-port hdr(x-port)
4256 http-request set-src-port int(4000)
4257
Willy Tarreau00005ce2016-10-21 15:07:45 +02004258 When possible, set-src-port preserves the original source address as long
4259 as the address family supports a port, otherwise it forces the source
4260 address to IPv4 "0.0.0.0" before rewriting the port.
William Lallemand44be6402016-05-25 01:51:35 +02004261
William Lallemand13e9b0c2016-05-25 02:34:07 +02004262 - set-dst <expr> :
4263 Is used to set the destination IP address to the value of specified
4264 expression. Useful when a proxy in front of HAProxy rewrites destination
4265 IP, but provides the correct IP in a HTTP header; or you want to mask
4266 the IP for privacy. If you want to connect to the new address/port, use
4267 '0.0.0.0:0' as a server address in the backend.
4268
4269 <expr> Is a standard HAProxy expression formed by a sample-fetch
4270 followed by some converters.
4271
4272 Example:
4273
4274 http-request set-dst hdr(x-dst)
4275 http-request set-dst dst,ipmask(24)
4276
Willy Tarreau00005ce2016-10-21 15:07:45 +02004277 When possible, set-dst preserves the original destination port as long as
4278 the address family allows it, otherwise the destination port is set to 0.
4279
William Lallemand13e9b0c2016-05-25 02:34:07 +02004280 - set-dst-port <expr> :
4281 Is used to set the destination port address to the value of specified
4282 expression. If you want to connect to the new address/port, use
4283 '0.0.0.0:0' as a server address in the backend.
4284
4285 <expr> Is a standard HAProxy expression formed by a sample-fetch
4286 followed by some converters.
4287
4288 Example:
4289
4290 http-request set-dst-port hdr(x-port)
4291 http-request set-dst-port int(4000)
4292
Willy Tarreau00005ce2016-10-21 15:07:45 +02004293 When possible, set-dst-port preserves the original destination address as
4294 long as the address family supports a port, otherwise it forces the
4295 destination address to IPv4 "0.0.0.0" before rewriting the port.
4296
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02004297 - "silent-drop" : this stops the evaluation of the rules and makes the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004298 client-facing connection suddenly disappear using a system-dependent way
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02004299 that tries to prevent the client from being notified. The effect it then
4300 that the client still sees an established connection while there's none
4301 on HAProxy. The purpose is to achieve a comparable effect to "tarpit"
4302 except that it doesn't use any local resource at all on the machine
4303 running HAProxy. It can resist much higher loads than "tarpit", and slow
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004304 down stronger attackers. It is important to understand the impact of using
4305 this mechanism. All stateful equipment placed between the client and
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02004306 HAProxy (firewalls, proxies, load balancers) will also keep the
4307 established connection for a long time and may suffer from this action.
4308 On modern Linux systems running with enough privileges, the TCP_REPAIR
4309 socket option is used to block the emission of a TCP reset. On other
4310 systems, the socket's TTL is reduced to 1 so that the TCP reset doesn't
4311 pass the first router, though it's still delivered to local networks. Do
4312 not use it unless you fully understand how it works.
4313
Christopher Faulet76c09ef2017-09-21 11:03:52 +02004314
Olivier Houchardccaa7de2017-10-02 11:51:03 +02004315 - "wait-for-handshake" : this will delay the processing of the request
4316 until the SSL handshake happened. This is mostly useful to delay
4317 processing early data until we're sure they are valid.
4318
Christopher Faulet76c09ef2017-09-21 11:03:52 +02004319 - send-spoe-group <engine-name> <group-name> :
4320 This action is used to trigger sending of a group of SPOE messages. To do
4321 so, the SPOE engine used to send messages must be defined, as well as the
4322 SPOE group to send. Of course, the SPOE engine must refer to an existing
4323 SPOE filter. If not engine name is provided on the SPOE filter line, the
4324 SPOE agent name must be used.
4325
4326 <engine-name> The SPOE engine name.
4327
4328 <group-name> The SPOE group name as specified in the engine
4329 configuration.
4330
Willy Tarreau20b0de52012-12-24 15:45:22 +01004331 There is no limit to the number of http-request statements per instance.
4332
4333 It is important to know that http-request rules are processed very early in
4334 the HTTP processing, just after "block" rules and before "reqdel" or "reqrep"
Ruoshan Huangeb5a3632015-12-08 21:00:23 +08004335 or "reqadd" rules. That way, headers added by "add-header"/"set-header" are
4336 visible by almost all further ACL rules.
4337
4338 Using "reqadd"/"reqdel"/"reqrep" to manipulate request headers is discouraged
4339 in newer versions (>= 1.5). But if you need to use regular expression to
4340 delete headers, you can still use "reqdel". Also please use
4341 "http-request deny/allow/tarpit" instead of "reqdeny"/"reqpass"/"reqtarpit".
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +01004342
4343 Example:
Cyril Bonté78caf842010-03-10 22:41:43 +01004344 acl nagios src 192.168.129.3
4345 acl local_net src 192.168.0.0/16
4346 acl auth_ok http_auth(L1)
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +01004347
Cyril Bonté78caf842010-03-10 22:41:43 +01004348 http-request allow if nagios
4349 http-request allow if local_net auth_ok
4350 http-request auth realm Gimme if local_net auth_ok
4351 http-request deny
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +01004352
Cyril Bonté78caf842010-03-10 22:41:43 +01004353 Example:
4354 acl auth_ok http_auth_group(L1) G1
Cyril Bonté78caf842010-03-10 22:41:43 +01004355 http-request auth unless auth_ok
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +01004356
Willy Tarreau20b0de52012-12-24 15:45:22 +01004357 Example:
4358 http-request set-header X-Haproxy-Current-Date %T
4359 http-request set-header X-SSL %[ssl_fc]
Willy Tarreaufca42612015-08-27 17:15:05 +02004360 http-request set-header X-SSL-Session_ID %[ssl_fc_session_id,hex]
Willy Tarreau20b0de52012-12-24 15:45:22 +01004361 http-request set-header X-SSL-Client-Verify %[ssl_c_verify]
4362 http-request set-header X-SSL-Client-DN %{+Q}[ssl_c_s_dn]
4363 http-request set-header X-SSL-Client-CN %{+Q}[ssl_c_s_dn(cn)]
4364 http-request set-header X-SSL-Issuer %{+Q}[ssl_c_i_dn]
4365 http-request set-header X-SSL-Client-NotBefore %{+Q}[ssl_c_notbefore]
4366 http-request set-header X-SSL-Client-NotAfter %{+Q}[ssl_c_notafter]
4367
Baptiste Assmannfabcbe02014-04-24 22:16:59 +02004368 Example:
4369 acl key req.hdr(X-Add-Acl-Key) -m found
4370 acl add path /addacl
4371 acl del path /delacl
4372
4373 acl myhost hdr(Host) -f myhost.lst
4374
4375 http-request add-acl(myhost.lst) %[req.hdr(X-Add-Acl-Key)] if key add
4376 http-request del-acl(myhost.lst) %[req.hdr(X-Add-Acl-Key)] if key del
4377
4378 Example:
4379 acl value req.hdr(X-Value) -m found
4380 acl setmap path /setmap
4381 acl delmap path /delmap
4382
4383 use_backend bk_appli if { hdr(Host),map_str(map.lst) -m found }
4384
4385 http-request set-map(map.lst) %[src] %[req.hdr(X-Value)] if setmap value
4386 http-request del-map(map.lst) %[src] if delmap
4387
Cyril Bonté2be1b3f2010-09-30 23:46:30 +02004388 See also : "stats http-request", section 3.4 about userlists and section 7
4389 about ACL usage.
Willy Tarreauef781042010-01-27 11:53:01 +01004390
Willy Tarreauf4c43c12013-06-11 17:01:13 +02004391http-response { allow | deny | add-header <name> <fmt> | set-nice <nice> |
Willy Tarreau51d861a2015-05-22 17:30:48 +02004392 capture <sample> id <id> | redirect <rule> |
Thierry FOURNIERdad3d1d2014-04-22 18:07:25 +02004393 set-header <name> <fmt> | del-header <name> |
Sasha Pachev218f0642014-06-16 12:05:59 -06004394 replace-header <name> <regex-match> <replace-fmt> |
4395 replace-value <name> <regex-match> <replace-fmt> |
Robin H. Johnson52f5db22017-01-01 13:10:52 -08004396 set-status <status> [reason <str>] |
Baptiste Assmannfabcbe02014-04-24 22:16:59 +02004397 set-log-level <level> | set-mark <mark> | set-tos <tos> |
4398 add-acl(<file name>) <key fmt> |
4399 del-acl(<file name>) <key fmt> |
4400 del-map(<file name>) <key fmt> |
Thierry FOURNIER90da1912015-03-05 11:17:06 +01004401 set-map(<file name>) <key fmt> <value fmt> |
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02004402 set-var(<var-name>) <expr> |
Christopher Faulet85d79c92016-11-09 16:54:56 +01004403 unset-var(<var-name>) |
Ruoshan Huange4edc6b2016-07-14 15:07:45 +08004404 { track-sc0 | track-sc1 | track-sc2 } <key> [table <table>] |
Thierry FOURNIERe0627bd2015-08-04 08:20:33 +02004405 sc-inc-gpc0(<sc-id>) |
Thierry FOURNIER236657b2015-08-19 08:25:14 +02004406 sc-set-gpt0(<sc-id>) <int> |
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02004407 silent-drop |
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +01004408 send-spoe-group |
4409 cache-store
Baptiste Assmannfabcbe02014-04-24 22:16:59 +02004410 }
Lukas Tribus2dd1d1a2013-06-19 23:34:41 +02004411 [ { if | unless } <condition> ]
Willy Tarreaue365c0b2013-06-11 16:06:12 +02004412 Access control for Layer 7 responses
4413
4414 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
4415 no | yes | yes | yes
4416
4417 The http-response statement defines a set of rules which apply to layer 7
4418 processing. The rules are evaluated in their declaration order when they are
4419 met in a frontend, listen or backend section. Any rule may optionally be
4420 followed by an ACL-based condition, in which case it will only be evaluated
4421 if the condition is true. Since these rules apply on responses, the backend
4422 rules are applied first, followed by the frontend's rules.
4423
4424 The first keyword is the rule's action. Currently supported actions include :
4425 - "allow" : this stops the evaluation of the rules and lets the response
4426 pass the check. No further "http-response" rules are evaluated for the
4427 current section.
4428
4429 - "deny" : this stops the evaluation of the rules and immediately rejects
4430 the response and emits an HTTP 502 error. No further "http-response"
4431 rules are evaluated.
4432
4433 - "add-header" appends an HTTP header field whose name is specified in
4434 <name> and whose value is defined by <fmt> which follows the log-format
4435 rules (see Custom Log Format in section 8.2.4). This may be used to send
4436 a cookie to a client for example, or to pass some internal information.
4437 This rule is not final, so it is possible to add other similar rules.
4438 Note that header addition is performed immediately, so one rule might
4439 reuse the resulting header from a previous rule.
4440
4441 - "set-header" does the same as "add-header" except that the header name
4442 is first removed if it existed. This is useful when passing security
4443 information to the server, where the header must not be manipulated by
4444 external users.
4445
Thierry FOURNIERdad3d1d2014-04-22 18:07:25 +02004446 - "del-header" removes all HTTP header fields whose name is specified in
4447 <name>.
4448
Sasha Pachev218f0642014-06-16 12:05:59 -06004449 - "replace-header" matches the regular expression in all occurrences of
4450 header field <name> according to <match-regex>, and replaces them with
4451 the <replace-fmt> argument. Format characters are allowed in replace-fmt
4452 and work like in <fmt> arguments in "add-header". The match is only
4453 case-sensitive. It is important to understand that this action only
4454 considers whole header lines, regardless of the number of values they
4455 may contain. This usage is suited to headers naturally containing commas
4456 in their value, such as Set-Cookie, Expires and so on.
4457
4458 Example:
4459
4460 http-response replace-header Set-Cookie (C=[^;]*);(.*) \1;ip=%bi;\2
4461
4462 applied to:
4463
4464 Set-Cookie: C=1; expires=Tue, 14-Jun-2016 01:40:45 GMT
4465
4466 outputs:
4467
4468 Set-Cookie: C=1;ip=192.168.1.20; expires=Tue, 14-Jun-2016 01:40:45 GMT
4469
4470 assuming the backend IP is 192.168.1.20.
4471
4472 - "replace-value" works like "replace-header" except that it matches the
4473 regex against every comma-delimited value of the header field <name>
4474 instead of the entire header. This is suited for all headers which are
4475 allowed to carry more than one value. An example could be the Accept
4476 header.
4477
4478 Example:
4479
4480 http-response replace-value Cache-control ^public$ private
4481
4482 applied to:
4483
4484 Cache-Control: max-age=3600, public
4485
4486 outputs:
4487
4488 Cache-Control: max-age=3600, private
4489
Thierry FOURNIER35d70ef2015-08-26 16:21:56 +02004490 - "set-status" replaces the response status code with <status> which must
Robin H. Johnson52f5db22017-01-01 13:10:52 -08004491 be an integer between 100 and 999. Optionally, a custom reason text can be
4492 provided defined by <str>, or the default reason for the specified code
4493 will be used as a fallback.
Thierry FOURNIER35d70ef2015-08-26 16:21:56 +02004494
4495 Example:
4496
4497 # return "431 Request Header Fields Too Large"
4498 http-response set-status 431
Robin H. Johnson52f5db22017-01-01 13:10:52 -08004499 # return "503 Slow Down", custom reason
4500 http-response set-status 503 reason "Slow Down".
Thierry FOURNIER35d70ef2015-08-26 16:21:56 +02004501
Willy Tarreauf4c43c12013-06-11 17:01:13 +02004502 - "set-nice" sets the "nice" factor of the current request being processed.
4503 It only has effect against the other requests being processed at the same
4504 time. The default value is 0, unless altered by the "nice" setting on the
4505 "bind" line. The accepted range is -1024..1024. The higher the value, the
4506 nicest the request will be. Lower values will make the request more
4507 important than other ones. This can be useful to improve the speed of
4508 some requests, or lower the priority of non-important requests. Using
4509 this setting without prior experimentation can cause some major slowdown.
4510
Willy Tarreau9a355ec2013-06-11 17:45:46 +02004511 - "set-log-level" is used to change the log level of the current request
4512 when a certain condition is met. Valid levels are the 8 syslog levels
4513 (see the "log" keyword) plus the special level "silent" which disables
4514 logging for this request. This rule is not final so the last matching
4515 rule wins. This rule can be useful to disable health checks coming from
4516 another equipment.
4517
Willy Tarreau42cf39e2013-06-11 18:51:32 +02004518 - "set-tos" is used to set the TOS or DSCP field value of packets sent to
4519 the client to the value passed in <tos> on platforms which support this.
4520 This value represents the whole 8 bits of the IP TOS field, and can be
4521 expressed both in decimal or hexadecimal format (prefixed by "0x"). Note
4522 that only the 6 higher bits are used in DSCP or TOS, and the two lower
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004523 bits are always 0. This can be used to adjust some routing behavior on
Willy Tarreau42cf39e2013-06-11 18:51:32 +02004524 border routers based on some information from the request. See RFC 2474,
4525 2597, 3260 and 4594 for more information.
4526
Willy Tarreau51347ed2013-06-11 19:34:13 +02004527 - "set-mark" is used to set the Netfilter MARK on all packets sent to the
4528 client to the value passed in <mark> on platforms which support it. This
4529 value is an unsigned 32 bit value which can be matched by netfilter and
4530 by the routing table. It can be expressed both in decimal or hexadecimal
4531 format (prefixed by "0x"). This can be useful to force certain packets to
4532 take a different route (for example a cheaper network path for bulk
4533 downloads). This works on Linux kernels 2.6.32 and above and requires
4534 admin privileges.
4535
Baptiste Assmannfabcbe02014-04-24 22:16:59 +02004536 - "add-acl" is used to add a new entry into an ACL. The ACL must be loaded
4537 from a file (even a dummy empty file). The file name of the ACL to be
4538 updated is passed between parentheses. It takes one argument: <key fmt>,
4539 which follows log-format rules, to collect content of the new entry. It
4540 performs a lookup in the ACL before insertion, to avoid duplicated (or
4541 more) values. This lookup is done by a linear search and can be expensive
4542 with large lists! It is the equivalent of the "add acl" command from the
4543 stats socket, but can be triggered by an HTTP response.
4544
4545 - "del-acl" is used to delete an entry from an ACL. The ACL must be loaded
4546 from a file (even a dummy empty file). The file name of the ACL to be
4547 updated is passed between parentheses. It takes one argument: <key fmt>,
4548 which follows log-format rules, to collect content of the entry to delete.
4549 It is the equivalent of the "del acl" command from the stats socket, but
4550 can be triggered by an HTTP response.
4551
4552 - "del-map" is used to delete an entry from a MAP. The MAP must be loaded
4553 from a file (even a dummy empty file). The file name of the MAP to be
4554 updated is passed between parentheses. It takes one argument: <key fmt>,
4555 which follows log-format rules, to collect content of the entry to delete.
4556 It takes one argument: "file name" It is the equivalent of the "del map"
4557 command from the stats socket, but can be triggered by an HTTP response.
4558
4559 - "set-map" is used to add a new entry into a MAP. The MAP must be loaded
4560 from a file (even a dummy empty file). The file name of the MAP to be
4561 updated is passed between parentheses. It takes 2 arguments: <key fmt>,
4562 which follows log-format rules, used to collect MAP key, and <value fmt>,
4563 which follows log-format rules, used to collect content for the new entry.
4564 It performs a lookup in the MAP before insertion, to avoid duplicated (or
4565 more) values. This lookup is done by a linear search and can be expensive
4566 with large lists! It is the equivalent of the "set map" command from the
4567 stats socket, but can be triggered by an HTTP response.
4568
Thierry FOURNIERe80fada2015-05-26 18:06:31 +02004569 - capture <sample> id <id> :
4570 captures sample expression <sample> from the response buffer, and converts
4571 it to a string. The resulting string is stored into the next request
4572 "capture" slot, so it will possibly appear next to some captured HTTP
4573 headers. It will then automatically appear in the logs, and it will be
4574 possible to extract it using sample fetch rules to feed it into headers or
4575 anything. Please check section 7.3 (Fetching samples) and "capture
4576 response header" for more information.
4577
4578 The keyword "id" is the id of the capture slot which is used for storing
4579 the string. The capture slot must be defined in an associated frontend.
4580 This is useful to run captures in backends. The slot id can be declared by
4581 a previous directive "http-response capture" or with the "declare capture"
4582 keyword.
Baptiste Assmanne9544932015-11-03 23:31:35 +01004583 If the slot <id> doesn't exist, then HAProxy fails parsing the
4584 configuration to prevent unexpected behavior at run time.
Thierry FOURNIERe80fada2015-05-26 18:06:31 +02004585
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +01004586 - cache-store <name> :
4587 See section 10.2 about cache setup.
4588
Willy Tarreau51d861a2015-05-22 17:30:48 +02004589 - "redirect" : this performs an HTTP redirection based on a redirect rule.
4590 This supports a format string similarly to "http-request redirect" rules,
4591 with the exception that only the "location" type of redirect is possible
4592 on the response. See the "redirect" keyword for the rule's syntax. When
4593 a redirect rule is applied during a response, connections to the server
4594 are closed so that no data can be forwarded from the server to the client.
4595
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02004596 - set-var(<var-name>) expr:
4597 Is used to set the contents of a variable. The variable is declared
4598 inline.
4599
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01004600 <var-name> The name of the variable starts with an indication about
4601 its scope. The scopes allowed are:
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +01004602 "proc" : the variable is shared with the whole process
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01004603 "sess" : the variable is shared with the whole session
4604 "txn" : the variable is shared with the transaction
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02004605 (request and response)
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01004606 "req" : the variable is shared only during request
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02004607 processing
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01004608 "res" : the variable is shared only during response
4609 processing
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02004610 This prefix is followed by a name. The separator is a '.'.
Christopher Fauletb71557a2016-10-31 10:49:03 +01004611 The name may only contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9',
4612 '.' and '_'.
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02004613
4614 <expr> Is a standard HAProxy expression formed by a sample-fetch
4615 followed by some converters.
4616
4617 Example:
4618
4619 http-response set-var(sess.last_redir) res.hdr(location)
4620
Christopher Faulet85d79c92016-11-09 16:54:56 +01004621 - unset-var(<var-name>) :
4622 Is used to unset a variable. See above for details about <var-name>.
4623
4624 Example:
4625
4626 http-response unset-var(sess.last_redir)
4627
Ruoshan Huange4edc6b2016-07-14 15:07:45 +08004628 - { track-sc0 | track-sc1 | track-sc2 } <key> [table <table>] :
4629 enables tracking of sticky counters from current response. Please refer to
4630 "http-request track-sc" for a complete description. The only difference
4631 from "http-request track-sc" is the <key> sample expression can only make
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004632 use of samples in response (e.g. res.*, status etc.) and samples below
4633 Layer 6 (e.g. SSL-related samples, see section 7.3.4). If the sample is
Ruoshan Huange4edc6b2016-07-14 15:07:45 +08004634 not supported, haproxy will fail and warn while parsing the config.
4635
Thierry FOURNIER236657b2015-08-19 08:25:14 +02004636 - sc-set-gpt0(<sc-id>) <int> :
4637 This action sets the GPT0 tag according to the sticky counter designated
4638 by <sc-id> and the value of <int>. The expected result is a boolean. If
4639 an error occurs, this action silently fails and the actions evaluation
4640 continues.
4641
Thierry FOURNIERe0627bd2015-08-04 08:20:33 +02004642 - sc-inc-gpc0(<sc-id>):
4643 This action increments the GPC0 counter according with the sticky counter
4644 designated by <sc-id>. If an error occurs, this action silently fails and
4645 the actions evaluation continues.
4646
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02004647 - "silent-drop" : this stops the evaluation of the rules and makes the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004648 client-facing connection suddenly disappear using a system-dependent way
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02004649 that tries to prevent the client from being notified. The effect it then
4650 that the client still sees an established connection while there's none
4651 on HAProxy. The purpose is to achieve a comparable effect to "tarpit"
4652 except that it doesn't use any local resource at all on the machine
4653 running HAProxy. It can resist much higher loads than "tarpit", and slow
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004654 down stronger attackers. It is important to understand the impact of using
4655 this mechanism. All stateful equipment placed between the client and
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02004656 HAProxy (firewalls, proxies, load balancers) will also keep the
4657 established connection for a long time and may suffer from this action.
4658 On modern Linux systems running with enough privileges, the TCP_REPAIR
4659 socket option is used to block the emission of a TCP reset. On other
4660 systems, the socket's TTL is reduced to 1 so that the TCP reset doesn't
4661 pass the first router, though it's still delivered to local networks. Do
4662 not use it unless you fully understand how it works.
4663
Christopher Faulet76c09ef2017-09-21 11:03:52 +02004664 - send-spoe-group <engine-name> <group-name> :
4665 This action is used to trigger sending of a group of SPOE messages. To do
4666 so, the SPOE engine used to send messages must be defined, as well as the
4667 SPOE group to send. Of course, the SPOE engine must refer to an existing
4668 SPOE filter. If not engine name is provided on the SPOE filter line, the
4669 SPOE agent name must be used.
4670
4671 <engine-name> The SPOE engine name.
4672
4673 <group-name> The SPOE group name as specified in the engine
4674 configuration.
4675
Willy Tarreaue365c0b2013-06-11 16:06:12 +02004676 There is no limit to the number of http-response statements per instance.
4677
Godbach09250262013-07-02 01:19:15 +08004678 It is important to know that http-response rules are processed very early in
Ruoshan Huangeb5a3632015-12-08 21:00:23 +08004679 the HTTP processing, before "rspdel" or "rsprep" or "rspadd" rules. That way,
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004680 headers added by "add-header"/"set-header" are visible by almost all further
4681 ACL rules.
Willy Tarreaue365c0b2013-06-11 16:06:12 +02004682
Ruoshan Huangeb5a3632015-12-08 21:00:23 +08004683 Using "rspadd"/"rspdel"/"rsprep" to manipulate request headers is discouraged
4684 in newer versions (>= 1.5). But if you need to use regular expression to
4685 delete headers, you can still use "rspdel". Also please use
4686 "http-response deny" instead of "rspdeny".
4687
Baptiste Assmannfabcbe02014-04-24 22:16:59 +02004688 Example:
4689 acl key_acl res.hdr(X-Acl-Key) -m found
4690
4691 acl myhost hdr(Host) -f myhost.lst
4692
4693 http-response add-acl(myhost.lst) %[res.hdr(X-Acl-Key)] if key_acl
4694 http-response del-acl(myhost.lst) %[res.hdr(X-Acl-Key)] if key_acl
4695
4696 Example:
4697 acl value res.hdr(X-Value) -m found
4698
4699 use_backend bk_appli if { hdr(Host),map_str(map.lst) -m found }
4700
4701 http-response set-map(map.lst) %[src] %[res.hdr(X-Value)] if value
4702 http-response del-map(map.lst) %[src] if ! value
4703
Willy Tarreaue365c0b2013-06-11 16:06:12 +02004704 See also : "http-request", section 3.4 about userlists and section 7 about
4705 ACL usage.
4706
Baptiste Assmann5ecb77f2013-10-06 23:24:13 +02004707
Willy Tarreau30631952015-08-06 15:05:24 +02004708http-reuse { never | safe | aggressive | always }
4709 Declare how idle HTTP connections may be shared between requests
4710
4711 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
4712 yes | no | yes | yes
4713
4714 By default, a connection established between haproxy and the backend server
4715 belongs to the session that initiated it. The downside is that between the
4716 response and the next request, the connection remains idle and is not used.
4717 In many cases for performance reasons it is desirable to make it possible to
4718 reuse these idle connections to serve other requests from different sessions.
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004719 This directive allows to tune this behavior.
Willy Tarreau30631952015-08-06 15:05:24 +02004720
4721 The argument indicates the desired connection reuse strategy :
4722
4723 - "never" : idle connections are never shared between sessions. This is
4724 the default choice. It may be enforced to cancel a different
4725 strategy inherited from a defaults section or for
4726 troubleshooting. For example, if an old bogus application
4727 considers that multiple requests over the same connection come
4728 from the same client and it is not possible to fix the
4729 application, it may be desirable to disable connection sharing
4730 in a single backend. An example of such an application could
4731 be an old haproxy using cookie insertion in tunnel mode and
4732 not checking any request past the first one.
4733
4734 - "safe" : this is the recommended strategy. The first request of a
4735 session is always sent over its own connection, and only
4736 subsequent requests may be dispatched over other existing
4737 connections. This ensures that in case the server closes the
4738 connection when the request is being sent, the browser can
4739 decide to silently retry it. Since it is exactly equivalent to
4740 regular keep-alive, there should be no side effects.
4741
4742 - "aggressive" : this mode may be useful in webservices environments where
4743 all servers are not necessarily known and where it would be
4744 appreciable to deliver most first requests over existing
4745 connections. In this case, first requests are only delivered
4746 over existing connections that have been reused at least once,
4747 proving that the server correctly supports connection reuse.
4748 It should only be used when it's sure that the client can
4749 retry a failed request once in a while and where the benefit
4750 of aggressive connection reuse significantly outweights the
4751 downsides of rare connection failures.
4752
4753 - "always" : this mode is only recommended when the path to the server is
4754 known for never breaking existing connections quickly after
4755 releasing them. It allows the first request of a session to be
4756 sent to an existing connection. This can provide a significant
4757 performance increase over the "safe" strategy when the backend
4758 is a cache farm, since such components tend to show a
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004759 consistent behavior and will benefit from the connection
Willy Tarreau30631952015-08-06 15:05:24 +02004760 sharing. It is recommended that the "http-keep-alive" timeout
4761 remains low in this mode so that no dead connections remain
4762 usable. In most cases, this will lead to the same performance
4763 gains as "aggressive" but with more risks. It should only be
4764 used when it improves the situation over "aggressive".
4765
4766 When http connection sharing is enabled, a great care is taken to respect the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004767 connection properties and compatibility. Specifically :
4768 - connections made with "usesrc" followed by a client-dependent value
4769 ("client", "clientip", "hdr_ip") are marked private and never shared;
Willy Tarreau30631952015-08-06 15:05:24 +02004770
4771 - connections sent to a server with a TLS SNI extension are marked private
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004772 and are never shared;
Willy Tarreau30631952015-08-06 15:05:24 +02004773
4774 - connections receiving a status code 401 or 407 expect some authentication
4775 to be sent in return. Due to certain bogus authentication schemes (such
4776 as NTLM) relying on the connection, these connections are marked private
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004777 and are never shared;
Willy Tarreau30631952015-08-06 15:05:24 +02004778
4779 No connection pool is involved, once a session dies, the last idle connection
4780 it was attached to is deleted at the same time. This ensures that connections
4781 may not last after all sessions are closed.
4782
4783 Note: connection reuse improves the accuracy of the "server maxconn" setting,
4784 because almost no new connection will be established while idle connections
4785 remain available. This is particularly true with the "always" strategy.
4786
4787 See also : "option http-keep-alive", "server maxconn"
4788
4789
Mark Lamourinec2247f02012-01-04 13:02:01 -05004790http-send-name-header [<header>]
4791 Add the server name to a request. Use the header string given by <header>
4792
4793 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
4794 yes | no | yes | yes
4795
4796 Arguments :
4797
4798 <header> The header string to use to send the server name
4799
4800 The "http-send-name-header" statement causes the name of the target
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004801 server to be added to the headers of an HTTP request. The name
Mark Lamourinec2247f02012-01-04 13:02:01 -05004802 is added with the header string proved.
4803
4804 See also : "server"
4805
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif58a9622008-02-23 01:19:10 +01004806id <value>
Willy Tarreau53fb4ae2009-10-04 23:04:08 +02004807 Set a persistent ID to a proxy.
4808 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
4809 no | yes | yes | yes
4810 Arguments : none
4811
4812 Set a persistent ID for the proxy. This ID must be unique and positive.
4813 An unused ID will automatically be assigned if unset. The first assigned
4814 value will be 1. This ID is currently only returned in statistics.
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif58a9622008-02-23 01:19:10 +01004815
4816
Cyril Bonté0d4bf012010-04-25 23:21:46 +02004817ignore-persist { if | unless } <condition>
4818 Declare a condition to ignore persistence
4819 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
4820 no | yes | yes | yes
4821
4822 By default, when cookie persistence is enabled, every requests containing
4823 the cookie are unconditionally persistent (assuming the target server is up
4824 and running).
4825
4826 The "ignore-persist" statement allows one to declare various ACL-based
4827 conditions which, when met, will cause a request to ignore persistence.
4828 This is sometimes useful to load balance requests for static files, which
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03004829 often don't require persistence. This can also be used to fully disable
Cyril Bonté0d4bf012010-04-25 23:21:46 +02004830 persistence for a specific User-Agent (for example, some web crawler bots).
4831
Cyril Bonté0d4bf012010-04-25 23:21:46 +02004832 The persistence is ignored when an "if" condition is met, or unless an
4833 "unless" condition is met.
4834
Jarno Huuskonene5ae7022017-04-03 14:36:21 +03004835 Example:
4836 acl url_static path_beg /static /images /img /css
4837 acl url_static path_end .gif .png .jpg .css .js
4838 ignore-persist if url_static
4839
Cyril Bonté0d4bf012010-04-25 23:21:46 +02004840 See also : "force-persist", "cookie", and section 7 about ACL usage.
4841
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +02004842load-server-state-from-file { global | local | none }
4843 Allow seamless reload of HAProxy
4844 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
4845 yes | no | yes | yes
4846
4847 This directive points HAProxy to a file where server state from previous
4848 running process has been saved. That way, when starting up, before handling
4849 traffic, the new process can apply old states to servers exactly has if no
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004850 reload occurred. The purpose of the "load-server-state-from-file" directive is
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +02004851 to tell haproxy which file to use. For now, only 2 arguments to either prevent
4852 loading state or load states from a file containing all backends and servers.
4853 The state file can be generated by running the command "show servers state"
4854 over the stats socket and redirect output.
4855
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004856 The format of the file is versioned and is very specific. To understand it,
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +02004857 please read the documentation of the "show servers state" command (chapter
Willy Tarreau1af20c72017-06-23 16:01:14 +02004858 9.3 of Management Guide).
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +02004859
4860 Arguments:
4861 global load the content of the file pointed by the global directive
4862 named "server-state-file".
4863
4864 local load the content of the file pointed by the directive
4865 "server-state-file-name" if set. If not set, then the backend
4866 name is used as a file name.
4867
4868 none don't load any stat for this backend
4869
4870 Notes:
Willy Tarreaue5a60682016-11-09 14:54:53 +01004871 - server's IP address is preserved across reloads by default, but the
4872 order can be changed thanks to the server's "init-addr" setting. This
4873 means that an IP address change performed on the CLI at run time will
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004874 be preserved, and that any change to the local resolver (e.g. /etc/hosts)
Willy Tarreaue5a60682016-11-09 14:54:53 +01004875 will possibly not have any effect if the state file is in use.
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +02004876
4877 - server's weight is applied from previous running process unless it has
4878 has changed between previous and new configuration files.
4879
Olivier Doucetaa1ea8a2016-08-05 17:15:20 +02004880 Example: Minimal configuration
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +02004881
Olivier Doucetaa1ea8a2016-08-05 17:15:20 +02004882 global
4883 stats socket /tmp/socket
4884 server-state-file /tmp/server_state
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +02004885
Olivier Doucetaa1ea8a2016-08-05 17:15:20 +02004886 defaults
4887 load-server-state-from-file global
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +02004888
Olivier Doucetaa1ea8a2016-08-05 17:15:20 +02004889 backend bk
4890 server s1 127.0.0.1:22 check weight 11
4891 server s2 127.0.0.1:22 check weight 12
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +02004892
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +02004893
4894 Then one can run :
4895
4896 socat /tmp/socket - <<< "show servers state" > /tmp/server_state
4897
4898 Content of the file /tmp/server_state would be like this:
4899
4900 1
4901 # <field names skipped for the doc example>
4902 1 bk 1 s1 127.0.0.1 2 0 11 11 4 6 3 4 6 0 0
4903 1 bk 2 s2 127.0.0.1 2 0 12 12 4 6 3 4 6 0 0
4904
Olivier Doucetaa1ea8a2016-08-05 17:15:20 +02004905 Example: Minimal configuration
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +02004906
4907 global
4908 stats socket /tmp/socket
4909 server-state-base /etc/haproxy/states
4910
4911 defaults
4912 load-server-state-from-file local
4913
4914 backend bk
4915 server s1 127.0.0.1:22 check weight 11
4916 server s2 127.0.0.1:22 check weight 12
4917
Olivier Doucetaa1ea8a2016-08-05 17:15:20 +02004918
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +02004919 Then one can run :
4920
4921 socat /tmp/socket - <<< "show servers state bk" > /etc/haproxy/states/bk
4922
4923 Content of the file /etc/haproxy/states/bk would be like this:
4924
4925 1
4926 # <field names skipped for the doc example>
4927 1 bk 1 s1 127.0.0.1 2 0 11 11 4 6 3 4 6 0 0
4928 1 bk 2 s2 127.0.0.1 2 0 12 12 4 6 3 4 6 0 0
4929
4930 See also: "server-state-file", "server-state-file-name", and
4931 "show servers state"
4932
Cyril Bonté0d4bf012010-04-25 23:21:46 +02004933
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01004934log global
Willy Tarreau18324f52014-06-27 18:10:07 +02004935log <address> [len <length>] <facility> [<level> [<minlevel>]]
William Lallemand0f99e342011-10-12 17:50:54 +02004936no log
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01004937 Enable per-instance logging of events and traffic.
4938 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
4939 yes | yes | yes | yes
William Lallemand0f99e342011-10-12 17:50:54 +02004940
4941 Prefix :
4942 no should be used when the logger list must be flushed. For example,
4943 if you don't want to inherit from the default logger list. This
4944 prefix does not allow arguments.
4945
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01004946 Arguments :
4947 global should be used when the instance's logging parameters are the
4948 same as the global ones. This is the most common usage. "global"
4949 replaces <address>, <facility> and <level> with those of the log
4950 entries found in the "global" section. Only one "log global"
4951 statement may be used per instance, and this form takes no other
4952 parameter.
4953
4954 <address> indicates where to send the logs. It takes the same format as
4955 for the "global" section's logs, and can be one of :
4956
4957 - An IPv4 address optionally followed by a colon (':') and a UDP
4958 port. If no port is specified, 514 is used by default (the
4959 standard syslog port).
4960
David du Colombier24bb5f52011-03-17 10:40:23 +01004961 - An IPv6 address followed by a colon (':') and optionally a UDP
4962 port. If no port is specified, 514 is used by default (the
4963 standard syslog port).
4964
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01004965 - A filesystem path to a UNIX domain socket, keeping in mind
4966 considerations for chroot (be sure the path is accessible
4967 inside the chroot) and uid/gid (be sure the path is
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004968 appropriately writable).
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01004969
William Lallemandb2f07452015-05-12 14:27:13 +02004970 You may want to reference some environment variables in the
4971 address parameter, see section 2.3 about environment variables.
Willy Tarreaudad36a32013-03-11 01:20:04 +01004972
Willy Tarreau18324f52014-06-27 18:10:07 +02004973 <length> is an optional maximum line length. Log lines larger than this
4974 value will be truncated before being sent. The reason is that
4975 syslog servers act differently on log line length. All servers
4976 support the default value of 1024, but some servers simply drop
4977 larger lines while others do log them. If a server supports long
4978 lines, it may make sense to set this value here in order to avoid
4979 truncating long lines. Similarly, if a server drops long lines,
4980 it is preferable to truncate them before sending them. Accepted
4981 values are 80 to 65535 inclusive. The default value of 1024 is
4982 generally fine for all standard usages. Some specific cases of
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01004983 long captures or JSON-formatted logs may require larger values.
Willy Tarreau18324f52014-06-27 18:10:07 +02004984
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01004985 <facility> must be one of the 24 standard syslog facilities :
4986
4987 kern user mail daemon auth syslog lpr news
4988 uucp cron auth2 ftp ntp audit alert cron2
4989 local0 local1 local2 local3 local4 local5 local6 local7
4990
4991 <level> is optional and can be specified to filter outgoing messages. By
4992 default, all messages are sent. If a level is specified, only
4993 messages with a severity at least as important as this level
Willy Tarreauf7edefa2009-05-10 17:20:05 +02004994 will be sent. An optional minimum level can be specified. If it
4995 is set, logs emitted with a more severe level than this one will
4996 be capped to this level. This is used to avoid sending "emerg"
4997 messages on all terminals on some default syslog configurations.
4998 Eight levels are known :
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01004999
5000 emerg alert crit err warning notice info debug
5001
William Lallemand0f99e342011-10-12 17:50:54 +02005002 It is important to keep in mind that it is the frontend which decides what to
5003 log from a connection, and that in case of content switching, the log entries
5004 from the backend will be ignored. Connections are logged at level "info".
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +01005005
5006 However, backend log declaration define how and where servers status changes
5007 will be logged. Level "notice" will be used to indicate a server going up,
5008 "warning" will be used for termination signals and definitive service
5009 termination, and "alert" will be used for when a server goes down.
5010
5011 Note : According to RFC3164, messages are truncated to 1024 bytes before
5012 being emitted.
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005013
5014 Example :
5015 log global
Willy Tarreauf7edefa2009-05-10 17:20:05 +02005016 log 127.0.0.1:514 local0 notice # only send important events
5017 log 127.0.0.1:514 local0 notice notice # same but limit output level
William Lallemandb2f07452015-05-12 14:27:13 +02005018 log "${LOCAL_SYSLOG}:514" local0 notice # send to local server
Willy Tarreaudad36a32013-03-11 01:20:04 +01005019
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005020
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +01005021log-format <string>
Willy Tarreaufb4e7ea2015-01-07 14:55:17 +01005022 Specifies the log format string to use for traffic logs
5023 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5024 yes | yes | yes | no
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +01005025
Willy Tarreaufb4e7ea2015-01-07 14:55:17 +01005026 This directive specifies the log format string that will be used for all logs
5027 resulting from traffic passing through the frontend using this line. If the
5028 directive is used in a defaults section, all subsequent frontends will use
5029 the same log format. Please see section 8.2.4 which covers the log format
5030 string in depth.
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +01005031
Guillaume de Lafond29f45602017-03-31 19:52:15 +02005032 "log-format" directive overrides previous "option tcplog", "log-format" and
5033 "option httplog" directives.
5034
Dragan Dosen7ad31542015-09-28 17:16:47 +02005035log-format-sd <string>
5036 Specifies the RFC5424 structured-data log format string
5037 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5038 yes | yes | yes | no
5039
5040 This directive specifies the RFC5424 structured-data log format string that
5041 will be used for all logs resulting from traffic passing through the frontend
5042 using this line. If the directive is used in a defaults section, all
5043 subsequent frontends will use the same log format. Please see section 8.2.4
5044 which covers the log format string in depth.
5045
5046 See https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5424#section-6.3 for more information
5047 about the RFC5424 structured-data part.
5048
5049 Note : This log format string will be used only for loggers that have set
5050 log format to "rfc5424".
5051
5052 Example :
5053 log-format-sd [exampleSDID@1234\ bytes=\"%B\"\ status=\"%ST\"]
5054
5055
Willy Tarreau094af4e2015-01-07 15:03:42 +01005056log-tag <string>
5057 Specifies the log tag to use for all outgoing logs
5058 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5059 yes | yes | yes | yes
5060
5061 Sets the tag field in the syslog header to this string. It defaults to the
5062 log-tag set in the global section, otherwise the program name as launched
5063 from the command line, which usually is "haproxy". Sometimes it can be useful
5064 to differentiate between multiple processes running on the same host, or to
5065 differentiate customer instances running in the same process. In the backend,
5066 logs about servers up/down will use this tag. As a hint, it can be convenient
5067 to set a log-tag related to a hosted customer in a defaults section then put
5068 all the frontends and backends for that customer, then start another customer
5069 in a new defaults section. See also the global "log-tag" directive.
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005070
Willy Tarreauc35362a2014-04-25 13:58:37 +02005071max-keep-alive-queue <value>
5072 Set the maximum server queue size for maintaining keep-alive connections
5073 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5074 yes | no | yes | yes
5075
5076 HTTP keep-alive tries to reuse the same server connection whenever possible,
5077 but sometimes it can be counter-productive, for example if a server has a lot
5078 of connections while other ones are idle. This is especially true for static
5079 servers.
5080
5081 The purpose of this setting is to set a threshold on the number of queued
5082 connections at which haproxy stops trying to reuse the same server and prefers
5083 to find another one. The default value, -1, means there is no limit. A value
5084 of zero means that keep-alive requests will never be queued. For very close
5085 servers which can be reached with a low latency and which are not sensible to
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005086 breaking keep-alive, a low value is recommended (e.g. local static server can
Willy Tarreauc35362a2014-04-25 13:58:37 +02005087 use a value of 10 or less). For remote servers suffering from a high latency,
5088 higher values might be needed to cover for the latency and/or the cost of
5089 picking a different server.
5090
5091 Note that this has no impact on responses which are maintained to the same
5092 server consecutively to a 401 response. They will still go to the same server
5093 even if they have to be queued.
5094
5095 See also : "option http-server-close", "option prefer-last-server", server
5096 "maxconn" and cookie persistence.
5097
5098
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005099maxconn <conns>
5100 Fix the maximum number of concurrent connections on a frontend
5101 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5102 yes | yes | yes | no
5103 Arguments :
5104 <conns> is the maximum number of concurrent connections the frontend will
5105 accept to serve. Excess connections will be queued by the system
5106 in the socket's listen queue and will be served once a connection
5107 closes.
5108
5109 If the system supports it, it can be useful on big sites to raise this limit
5110 very high so that haproxy manages connection queues, instead of leaving the
5111 clients with unanswered connection attempts. This value should not exceed the
5112 global maxconn. Also, keep in mind that a connection contains two buffers
Baptiste Assmann79fb45d2016-03-06 23:34:31 +01005113 of tune.bufsize (16kB by default) each, as well as some other data resulting
5114 in about 33 kB of RAM being consumed per established connection. That means
5115 that a medium system equipped with 1GB of RAM can withstand around
5116 20000-25000 concurrent connections if properly tuned.
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005117
5118 Also, when <conns> is set to large values, it is possible that the servers
5119 are not sized to accept such loads, and for this reason it is generally wise
5120 to assign them some reasonable connection limits.
5121
Vincent Bernat6341be52012-06-27 17:18:30 +02005122 By default, this value is set to 2000.
5123
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005124 See also : "server", global section's "maxconn", "fullconn"
5125
5126
5127mode { tcp|http|health }
5128 Set the running mode or protocol of the instance
5129 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5130 yes | yes | yes | yes
5131 Arguments :
5132 tcp The instance will work in pure TCP mode. A full-duplex connection
5133 will be established between clients and servers, and no layer 7
5134 examination will be performed. This is the default mode. It
5135 should be used for SSL, SSH, SMTP, ...
5136
5137 http The instance will work in HTTP mode. The client request will be
5138 analyzed in depth before connecting to any server. Any request
5139 which is not RFC-compliant will be rejected. Layer 7 filtering,
5140 processing and switching will be possible. This is the mode which
5141 brings HAProxy most of its value.
5142
5143 health The instance will work in "health" mode. It will just reply "OK"
Willy Tarreau82569f92012-09-27 23:48:56 +02005144 to incoming connections and close the connection. Alternatively,
5145 If the "httpchk" option is set, "HTTP/1.0 200 OK" will be sent
5146 instead. Nothing will be logged in either case. This mode is used
5147 to reply to external components health checks. This mode is
5148 deprecated and should not be used anymore as it is possible to do
5149 the same and even better by combining TCP or HTTP modes with the
5150 "monitor" keyword.
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005151
Cyril Bonté108cf6e2012-04-21 23:30:29 +02005152 When doing content switching, it is mandatory that the frontend and the
5153 backend are in the same mode (generally HTTP), otherwise the configuration
5154 will be refused.
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005155
Cyril Bonté108cf6e2012-04-21 23:30:29 +02005156 Example :
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005157 defaults http_instances
5158 mode http
5159
Cyril Bonté108cf6e2012-04-21 23:30:29 +02005160 See also : "monitor", "monitor-net"
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005161
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01005162
Cyril Bontéf0c60612010-02-06 14:44:47 +01005163monitor fail { if | unless } <condition>
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005164 Add a condition to report a failure to a monitor HTTP request.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01005165 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5166 no | yes | yes | no
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01005167 Arguments :
5168 if <cond> the monitor request will fail if the condition is satisfied,
5169 and will succeed otherwise. The condition should describe a
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01005170 combined test which must induce a failure if all conditions
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01005171 are met, for instance a low number of servers both in a
5172 backend and its backup.
5173
5174 unless <cond> the monitor request will succeed only if the condition is
5175 satisfied, and will fail otherwise. Such a condition may be
5176 based on a test on the presence of a minimum number of active
5177 servers in a list of backends.
5178
5179 This statement adds a condition which can force the response to a monitor
5180 request to report a failure. By default, when an external component queries
5181 the URI dedicated to monitoring, a 200 response is returned. When one of the
5182 conditions above is met, haproxy will return 503 instead of 200. This is
5183 very useful to report a site failure to an external component which may base
5184 routing advertisements between multiple sites on the availability reported by
5185 haproxy. In this case, one would rely on an ACL involving the "nbsrv"
Willy Tarreauae94d4d2011-05-11 16:28:49 +02005186 criterion. Note that "monitor fail" only works in HTTP mode. Both status
5187 messages may be tweaked using "errorfile" or "errorloc" if needed.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01005188
5189 Example:
5190 frontend www
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005191 mode http
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01005192 acl site_dead nbsrv(dynamic) lt 2
5193 acl site_dead nbsrv(static) lt 2
5194 monitor-uri /site_alive
5195 monitor fail if site_dead
5196
Willy Tarreauae94d4d2011-05-11 16:28:49 +02005197 See also : "monitor-net", "monitor-uri", "errorfile", "errorloc"
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005198
5199
5200monitor-net <source>
5201 Declare a source network which is limited to monitor requests
5202 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5203 yes | yes | yes | no
5204 Arguments :
5205 <source> is the source IPv4 address or network which will only be able to
5206 get monitor responses to any request. It can be either an IPv4
5207 address, a host name, or an address followed by a slash ('/')
5208 followed by a mask.
5209
5210 In TCP mode, any connection coming from a source matching <source> will cause
5211 the connection to be immediately closed without any log. This allows another
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01005212 equipment to probe the port and verify that it is still listening, without
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005213 forwarding the connection to a remote server.
5214
5215 In HTTP mode, a connection coming from a source matching <source> will be
5216 accepted, the following response will be sent without waiting for a request,
5217 then the connection will be closed : "HTTP/1.0 200 OK". This is normally
5218 enough for any front-end HTTP probe to detect that the service is UP and
Willy Tarreau82569f92012-09-27 23:48:56 +02005219 running without forwarding the request to a backend server. Note that this
5220 response is sent in raw format, without any transformation. This is important
5221 as it means that it will not be SSL-encrypted on SSL listeners.
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005222
Willy Tarreau82569f92012-09-27 23:48:56 +02005223 Monitor requests are processed very early, just after tcp-request connection
5224 ACLs which are the only ones able to block them. These connections are short
5225 lived and never wait for any data from the client. They cannot be logged, and
5226 it is the intended purpose. They are only used to report HAProxy's health to
5227 an upper component, nothing more. Please note that "monitor fail" rules do
5228 not apply to connections intercepted by "monitor-net".
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005229
Willy Tarreau95cd2832010-03-04 23:36:33 +01005230 Last, please note that only one "monitor-net" statement can be specified in
5231 a frontend. If more than one is found, only the last one will be considered.
Cyril Bonté108cf6e2012-04-21 23:30:29 +02005232
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005233 Example :
5234 # addresses .252 and .253 are just probing us.
5235 frontend www
5236 monitor-net 192.168.0.252/31
5237
5238 See also : "monitor fail", "monitor-uri"
5239
5240
5241monitor-uri <uri>
5242 Intercept a URI used by external components' monitor requests
5243 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5244 yes | yes | yes | no
5245 Arguments :
5246 <uri> is the exact URI which we want to intercept to return HAProxy's
5247 health status instead of forwarding the request.
5248
5249 When an HTTP request referencing <uri> will be received on a frontend,
5250 HAProxy will not forward it nor log it, but instead will return either
5251 "HTTP/1.0 200 OK" or "HTTP/1.0 503 Service unavailable", depending on failure
5252 conditions defined with "monitor fail". This is normally enough for any
5253 front-end HTTP probe to detect that the service is UP and running without
5254 forwarding the request to a backend server. Note that the HTTP method, the
5255 version and all headers are ignored, but the request must at least be valid
5256 at the HTTP level. This keyword may only be used with an HTTP-mode frontend.
5257
Willy Tarreau721d8e02017-12-01 18:25:08 +01005258 Monitor requests are processed very early, just after the request is parsed
5259 and even before any "http-request" or "block" rulesets. The only rulesets
5260 applied before are the tcp-request ones. They cannot be logged either, and it
5261 is the intended purpose. They are only used to report HAProxy's health to an
5262 upper component, nothing more. However, it is possible to add any number of
5263 conditions using "monitor fail" and ACLs so that the result can be adjusted
5264 to whatever check can be imagined (most often the number of available servers
5265 in a backend).
Willy Tarreau2769aa02007-12-27 18:26:09 +01005266
5267 Example :
5268 # Use /haproxy_test to report haproxy's status
5269 frontend www
5270 mode http
5271 monitor-uri /haproxy_test
5272
5273 See also : "monitor fail", "monitor-net"
5274
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01005275
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005276option abortonclose
5277no option abortonclose
5278 Enable or disable early dropping of aborted requests pending in queues.
5279 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5280 yes | no | yes | yes
5281 Arguments : none
5282
5283 In presence of very high loads, the servers will take some time to respond.
5284 The per-instance connection queue will inflate, and the response time will
5285 increase respective to the size of the queue times the average per-session
5286 response time. When clients will wait for more than a few seconds, they will
Willy Tarreau198a7442008-01-17 12:05:32 +01005287 often hit the "STOP" button on their browser, leaving a useless request in
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005288 the queue, and slowing down other users, and the servers as well, because the
5289 request will eventually be served, then aborted at the first error
5290 encountered while delivering the response.
5291
5292 As there is no way to distinguish between a full STOP and a simple output
5293 close on the client side, HTTP agents should be conservative and consider
5294 that the client might only have closed its output channel while waiting for
5295 the response. However, this introduces risks of congestion when lots of users
5296 do the same, and is completely useless nowadays because probably no client at
5297 all will close the session while waiting for the response. Some HTTP agents
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005298 support this behavior (Squid, Apache, HAProxy), and others do not (TUX, most
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005299 hardware-based load balancers). So the probability for a closed input channel
Willy Tarreau198a7442008-01-17 12:05:32 +01005300 to represent a user hitting the "STOP" button is close to 100%, and the risk
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005301 of being the single component to break rare but valid traffic is extremely
5302 low, which adds to the temptation to be able to abort a session early while
5303 still not served and not pollute the servers.
5304
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005305 In HAProxy, the user can choose the desired behavior using the option
5306 "abortonclose". By default (without the option) the behavior is HTTP
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005307 compliant and aborted requests will be served. But when the option is
5308 specified, a session with an incoming channel closed will be aborted while
5309 it is still possible, either pending in the queue for a connection slot, or
5310 during the connection establishment if the server has not yet acknowledged
5311 the connection request. This considerably reduces the queue size and the load
5312 on saturated servers when users are tempted to click on STOP, which in turn
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +01005313 reduces the response time for other users.
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005314
5315 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
5316 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
5317
5318 See also : "timeout queue" and server's "maxconn" and "maxqueue" parameters
5319
5320
Willy Tarreau4076a152009-04-02 15:18:36 +02005321option accept-invalid-http-request
5322no option accept-invalid-http-request
5323 Enable or disable relaxing of HTTP request parsing
5324 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5325 yes | yes | yes | no
5326 Arguments : none
5327
Willy Tarreau91852eb2015-05-01 13:26:00 +02005328 By default, HAProxy complies with RFC7230 in terms of message parsing. This
Willy Tarreau4076a152009-04-02 15:18:36 +02005329 means that invalid characters in header names are not permitted and cause an
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005330 error to be returned to the client. This is the desired behavior as such
Willy Tarreau4076a152009-04-02 15:18:36 +02005331 forbidden characters are essentially used to build attacks exploiting server
5332 weaknesses, and bypass security filtering. Sometimes, a buggy browser or
5333 server will emit invalid header names for whatever reason (configuration,
5334 implementation) and the issue will not be immediately fixed. In such a case,
5335 it is possible to relax HAProxy's header name parser to accept any character
Willy Tarreau422246e2012-01-07 23:54:13 +01005336 even if that does not make sense, by specifying this option. Similarly, the
5337 list of characters allowed to appear in a URI is well defined by RFC3986, and
5338 chars 0-31, 32 (space), 34 ('"'), 60 ('<'), 62 ('>'), 92 ('\'), 94 ('^'), 96
5339 ('`'), 123 ('{'), 124 ('|'), 125 ('}'), 127 (delete) and anything above are
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005340 not allowed at all. HAProxy always blocks a number of them (0..32, 127). The
Willy Tarreau91852eb2015-05-01 13:26:00 +02005341 remaining ones are blocked by default unless this option is enabled. This
Willy Tarreau13317662015-05-01 13:47:08 +02005342 option also relaxes the test on the HTTP version, it allows HTTP/0.9 requests
5343 to pass through (no version specified) and multiple digits for both the major
5344 and the minor version.
Willy Tarreau4076a152009-04-02 15:18:36 +02005345
5346 This option should never be enabled by default as it hides application bugs
5347 and open security breaches. It should only be deployed after a problem has
5348 been confirmed.
5349
5350 When this option is enabled, erroneous header names will still be accepted in
5351 requests, but the complete request will be captured in order to permit later
Willy Tarreau422246e2012-01-07 23:54:13 +01005352 analysis using the "show errors" request on the UNIX stats socket. Similarly,
5353 requests containing invalid chars in the URI part will be logged. Doing this
Willy Tarreau4076a152009-04-02 15:18:36 +02005354 also helps confirming that the issue has been solved.
5355
5356 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
5357 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
5358
5359 See also : "option accept-invalid-http-response" and "show errors" on the
5360 stats socket.
5361
5362
5363option accept-invalid-http-response
5364no option accept-invalid-http-response
5365 Enable or disable relaxing of HTTP response parsing
5366 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5367 yes | no | yes | yes
5368 Arguments : none
5369
Willy Tarreau91852eb2015-05-01 13:26:00 +02005370 By default, HAProxy complies with RFC7230 in terms of message parsing. This
Willy Tarreau4076a152009-04-02 15:18:36 +02005371 means that invalid characters in header names are not permitted and cause an
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005372 error to be returned to the client. This is the desired behavior as such
Willy Tarreau4076a152009-04-02 15:18:36 +02005373 forbidden characters are essentially used to build attacks exploiting server
5374 weaknesses, and bypass security filtering. Sometimes, a buggy browser or
5375 server will emit invalid header names for whatever reason (configuration,
5376 implementation) and the issue will not be immediately fixed. In such a case,
5377 it is possible to relax HAProxy's header name parser to accept any character
Willy Tarreau91852eb2015-05-01 13:26:00 +02005378 even if that does not make sense, by specifying this option. This option also
5379 relaxes the test on the HTTP version format, it allows multiple digits for
5380 both the major and the minor version.
Willy Tarreau4076a152009-04-02 15:18:36 +02005381
5382 This option should never be enabled by default as it hides application bugs
5383 and open security breaches. It should only be deployed after a problem has
5384 been confirmed.
5385
5386 When this option is enabled, erroneous header names will still be accepted in
5387 responses, but the complete response will be captured in order to permit
5388 later analysis using the "show errors" request on the UNIX stats socket.
5389 Doing this also helps confirming that the issue has been solved.
5390
5391 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
5392 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
5393
5394 See also : "option accept-invalid-http-request" and "show errors" on the
5395 stats socket.
5396
5397
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005398option allbackups
5399no option allbackups
5400 Use either all backup servers at a time or only the first one
5401 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5402 yes | no | yes | yes
5403 Arguments : none
5404
5405 By default, the first operational backup server gets all traffic when normal
5406 servers are all down. Sometimes, it may be preferred to use multiple backups
5407 at once, because one will not be enough. When "option allbackups" is enabled,
5408 the load balancing will be performed among all backup servers when all normal
5409 ones are unavailable. The same load balancing algorithm will be used and the
5410 servers' weights will be respected. Thus, there will not be any priority
5411 order between the backup servers anymore.
5412
5413 This option is mostly used with static server farms dedicated to return a
5414 "sorry" page when an application is completely offline.
5415
5416 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
5417 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
5418
5419
5420option checkcache
5421no option checkcache
Godbach7056a352013-12-11 20:01:07 +08005422 Analyze all server responses and block responses with cacheable cookies
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005423 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5424 yes | no | yes | yes
5425 Arguments : none
5426
5427 Some high-level frameworks set application cookies everywhere and do not
5428 always let enough control to the developer to manage how the responses should
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01005429 be cached. When a session cookie is returned on a cacheable object, there is a
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005430 high risk of session crossing or stealing between users traversing the same
5431 caches. In some situations, it is better to block the response than to let
Willy Tarreau3c92c5f2011-08-28 09:45:47 +02005432 some sensitive session information go in the wild.
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005433
5434 The option "checkcache" enables deep inspection of all server responses for
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01005435 strict compliance with HTTP specification in terms of cacheability. It
Willy Tarreau198a7442008-01-17 12:05:32 +01005436 carefully checks "Cache-control", "Pragma" and "Set-cookie" headers in server
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005437 response to check if there's a risk of caching a cookie on a client-side
5438 proxy. When this option is enabled, the only responses which can be delivered
Willy Tarreau198a7442008-01-17 12:05:32 +01005439 to the client are :
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005440 - all those without "Set-Cookie" header;
Willy Tarreauc55ddce2017-12-21 11:41:38 +01005441 - all those with a return code other than 200, 203, 204, 206, 300, 301,
5442 404, 405, 410, 414, 501, provided that the server has not set a
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005443 "Cache-control: public" header field;
Willy Tarreau24ea0bc2017-12-21 11:32:55 +01005444 - all those that result from a request using a method other than GET, HEAD,
5445 OPTIONS, TRACE, provided that the server has not set a 'Cache-Control:
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005446 public' header field;
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005447 - those with a 'Pragma: no-cache' header
5448 - those with a 'Cache-control: private' header
5449 - those with a 'Cache-control: no-store' header
5450 - those with a 'Cache-control: max-age=0' header
5451 - those with a 'Cache-control: s-maxage=0' header
5452 - those with a 'Cache-control: no-cache' header
5453 - those with a 'Cache-control: no-cache="set-cookie"' header
5454 - those with a 'Cache-control: no-cache="set-cookie,' header
5455 (allowing other fields after set-cookie)
5456
5457 If a response doesn't respect these requirements, then it will be blocked
Willy Tarreau198a7442008-01-17 12:05:32 +01005458 just as if it was from an "rspdeny" filter, with an "HTTP 502 bad gateway".
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005459 The session state shows "PH--" meaning that the proxy blocked the response
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01005460 during headers processing. Additionally, an alert will be sent in the logs so
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005461 that admins are informed that there's something to be fixed.
5462
5463 Due to the high impact on the application, the application should be tested
5464 in depth with the option enabled before going to production. It is also a
Willy Tarreaud2a4aa22008-01-31 15:28:22 +01005465 good practice to always activate it during tests, even if it is not used in
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005466 production, as it will report potentially dangerous application behaviors.
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005467
5468 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
5469 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
5470
5471
5472option clitcpka
5473no option clitcpka
5474 Enable or disable the sending of TCP keepalive packets on the client side
5475 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5476 yes | yes | yes | no
5477 Arguments : none
5478
5479 When there is a firewall or any session-aware component between a client and
5480 a server, and when the protocol involves very long sessions with long idle
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005481 periods (e.g. remote desktops), there is a risk that one of the intermediate
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005482 components decides to expire a session which has remained idle for too long.
5483
5484 Enabling socket-level TCP keep-alives makes the system regularly send packets
5485 to the other end of the connection, leaving it active. The delay between
5486 keep-alive probes is controlled by the system only and depends both on the
5487 operating system and its tuning parameters.
5488
5489 It is important to understand that keep-alive packets are neither emitted nor
5490 received at the application level. It is only the network stacks which sees
5491 them. For this reason, even if one side of the proxy already uses keep-alives
5492 to maintain its connection alive, those keep-alive packets will not be
5493 forwarded to the other side of the proxy.
5494
5495 Please note that this has nothing to do with HTTP keep-alive.
5496
5497 Using option "clitcpka" enables the emission of TCP keep-alive probes on the
5498 client side of a connection, which should help when session expirations are
5499 noticed between HAProxy and a client.
5500
5501 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
5502 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
5503
5504 See also : "option srvtcpka", "option tcpka"
5505
5506
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01005507option contstats
5508 Enable continuous traffic statistics updates
5509 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5510 yes | yes | yes | no
5511 Arguments : none
5512
5513 By default, counters used for statistics calculation are incremented
5514 only when a session finishes. It works quite well when serving small
5515 objects, but with big ones (for example large images or archives) or
5516 with A/V streaming, a graph generated from haproxy counters looks like
Willy Tarreaudef0d222016-11-08 22:03:00 +01005517 a hedgehog. With this option enabled counters get incremented frequently
5518 along the session, typically every 5 seconds, which is often enough to
5519 produce clean graphs. Recounting touches a hotpath directly so it is not
5520 not enabled by default, as it can cause a lot of wakeups for very large
5521 session counts and cause a small performance drop.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01005522
5523
Willy Tarreauc9bd0cc2009-05-10 11:57:02 +02005524option dontlog-normal
5525no option dontlog-normal
5526 Enable or disable logging of normal, successful connections
5527 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5528 yes | yes | yes | no
5529 Arguments : none
5530
5531 There are large sites dealing with several thousand connections per second
5532 and for which logging is a major pain. Some of them are even forced to turn
5533 logs off and cannot debug production issues. Setting this option ensures that
5534 normal connections, those which experience no error, no timeout, no retry nor
5535 redispatch, will not be logged. This leaves disk space for anomalies. In HTTP
5536 mode, the response status code is checked and return codes 5xx will still be
5537 logged.
5538
5539 It is strongly discouraged to use this option as most of the time, the key to
5540 complex issues is in the normal logs which will not be logged here. If you
5541 need to separate logs, see the "log-separate-errors" option instead.
5542
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02005543 See also : "log", "dontlognull", "log-separate-errors" and section 8 about
Willy Tarreauc9bd0cc2009-05-10 11:57:02 +02005544 logging.
5545
5546
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005547option dontlognull
5548no option dontlognull
5549 Enable or disable logging of null connections
5550 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5551 yes | yes | yes | no
5552 Arguments : none
5553
5554 In certain environments, there are components which will regularly connect to
5555 various systems to ensure that they are still alive. It can be the case from
5556 another load balancer as well as from monitoring systems. By default, even a
5557 simple port probe or scan will produce a log. If those connections pollute
5558 the logs too much, it is possible to enable option "dontlognull" to indicate
5559 that a connection on which no data has been transferred will not be logged,
Willy Tarreau0f228a02015-05-01 15:37:53 +02005560 which typically corresponds to those probes. Note that errors will still be
5561 returned to the client and accounted for in the stats. If this is not what is
5562 desired, option http-ignore-probes can be used instead.
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005563
5564 It is generally recommended not to use this option in uncontrolled
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005565 environments (e.g. internet), otherwise scans and other malicious activities
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005566 would not be logged.
5567
5568 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
5569 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
5570
Willy Tarreau0f228a02015-05-01 15:37:53 +02005571 See also : "log", "http-ignore-probes", "monitor-net", "monitor-uri", and
5572 section 8 about logging.
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005573
5574
5575option forceclose
5576no option forceclose
5577 Enable or disable active connection closing after response is transferred.
5578 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreaua31e5df2009-12-30 01:10:35 +01005579 yes | yes | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005580 Arguments : none
5581
5582 Some HTTP servers do not necessarily close the connections when they receive
5583 the "Connection: close" set by "option httpclose", and if the client does not
5584 close either, then the connection remains open till the timeout expires. This
5585 causes high number of simultaneous connections on the servers and shows high
5586 global session times in the logs.
5587
5588 When this happens, it is possible to use "option forceclose". It will
Willy Tarreau82eeaf22009-12-29 12:09:05 +01005589 actively close the outgoing server channel as soon as the server has finished
Cyril Bonté653dcd62014-02-20 00:13:15 +01005590 to respond and release some resources earlier than with "option httpclose".
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005591
Willy Tarreau8a8e1d92010-04-05 16:15:16 +02005592 This option may also be combined with "option http-pretend-keepalive", which
5593 will disable sending of the "Connection: close" header, but will still cause
5594 the connection to be closed once the whole response is received.
5595
Cyril Bonté653dcd62014-02-20 00:13:15 +01005596 This option disables and replaces any previous "option httpclose", "option
5597 http-server-close", "option http-keep-alive", or "option http-tunnel".
Willy Tarreau02bce8b2014-01-30 00:15:28 +01005598
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005599 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
5600 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
5601
Willy Tarreau8a8e1d92010-04-05 16:15:16 +02005602 See also : "option httpclose" and "option http-pretend-keepalive"
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01005603
5604
Willy Tarreau87cf5142011-08-19 22:57:24 +02005605option forwardfor [ except <network> ] [ header <name> ] [ if-none ]
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01005606 Enable insertion of the X-Forwarded-For header to requests sent to servers
5607 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5608 yes | yes | yes | yes
5609 Arguments :
5610 <network> is an optional argument used to disable this option for sources
5611 matching <network>
Ross Westaf72a1d2008-08-03 10:51:45 +02005612 <name> an optional argument to specify a different "X-Forwarded-For"
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +01005613 header name.
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01005614
5615 Since HAProxy works in reverse-proxy mode, the servers see its IP address as
5616 their client address. This is sometimes annoying when the client's IP address
5617 is expected in server logs. To solve this problem, the well-known HTTP header
5618 "X-Forwarded-For" may be added by HAProxy to all requests sent to the server.
5619 This header contains a value representing the client's IP address. Since this
5620 header is always appended at the end of the existing header list, the server
5621 must be configured to always use the last occurrence of this header only. See
Ross Westaf72a1d2008-08-03 10:51:45 +02005622 the server's manual to find how to enable use of this standard header. Note
5623 that only the last occurrence of the header must be used, since it is really
5624 possible that the client has already brought one.
5625
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +01005626 The keyword "header" may be used to supply a different header name to replace
Ross Westaf72a1d2008-08-03 10:51:45 +02005627 the default "X-Forwarded-For". This can be useful where you might already
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005628 have a "X-Forwarded-For" header from a different application (e.g. stunnel),
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +01005629 and you need preserve it. Also if your backend server doesn't use the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005630 "X-Forwarded-For" header and requires different one (e.g. Zeus Web Servers
Ross Westaf72a1d2008-08-03 10:51:45 +02005631 require "X-Cluster-Client-IP").
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01005632
5633 Sometimes, a same HAProxy instance may be shared between a direct client
5634 access and a reverse-proxy access (for instance when an SSL reverse-proxy is
5635 used to decrypt HTTPS traffic). It is possible to disable the addition of the
5636 header for a known source address or network by adding the "except" keyword
5637 followed by the network address. In this case, any source IP matching the
5638 network will not cause an addition of this header. Most common uses are with
5639 private networks or 127.0.0.1.
5640
Willy Tarreau87cf5142011-08-19 22:57:24 +02005641 Alternatively, the keyword "if-none" states that the header will only be
5642 added if it is not present. This should only be used in perfectly trusted
5643 environment, as this might cause a security issue if headers reaching haproxy
5644 are under the control of the end-user.
5645
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01005646 This option may be specified either in the frontend or in the backend. If at
Ross Westaf72a1d2008-08-03 10:51:45 +02005647 least one of them uses it, the header will be added. Note that the backend's
5648 setting of the header subargument takes precedence over the frontend's if
Willy Tarreau87cf5142011-08-19 22:57:24 +02005649 both are defined. In the case of the "if-none" argument, if at least one of
5650 the frontend or the backend does not specify it, it wants the addition to be
5651 mandatory, so it wins.
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01005652
Olivier Doucetaa1ea8a2016-08-05 17:15:20 +02005653 Example :
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01005654 # Public HTTP address also used by stunnel on the same machine
5655 frontend www
5656 mode http
5657 option forwardfor except 127.0.0.1 # stunnel already adds the header
5658
Ross Westaf72a1d2008-08-03 10:51:45 +02005659 # Those servers want the IP Address in X-Client
5660 backend www
5661 mode http
5662 option forwardfor header X-Client
5663
Willy Tarreau87cf5142011-08-19 22:57:24 +02005664 See also : "option httpclose", "option http-server-close",
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +01005665 "option forceclose", "option http-keep-alive"
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01005666
Willy Tarreau8a8e1d92010-04-05 16:15:16 +02005667
Willy Tarreau9fbe18e2015-05-01 22:42:08 +02005668option http-buffer-request
5669no option http-buffer-request
5670 Enable or disable waiting for whole HTTP request body before proceeding
5671 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5672 yes | yes | yes | yes
5673 Arguments : none
5674
5675 It is sometimes desirable to wait for the body of an HTTP request before
5676 taking a decision. This is what is being done by "balance url_param" for
5677 example. The first use case is to buffer requests from slow clients before
5678 connecting to the server. Another use case consists in taking the routing
5679 decision based on the request body's contents. This option placed in a
5680 frontend or backend forces the HTTP processing to wait until either the whole
5681 body is received, or the request buffer is full, or the first chunk is
5682 complete in case of chunked encoding. It can have undesired side effects with
Tim Düsterhus4896c442016-11-29 02:15:19 +01005683 some applications abusing HTTP by expecting unbuffered transmissions between
Willy Tarreau9fbe18e2015-05-01 22:42:08 +02005684 the frontend and the backend, so this should definitely not be used by
5685 default.
5686
Baptiste Assmanneccdf432015-10-28 13:49:01 +01005687 See also : "option http-no-delay", "timeout http-request"
Willy Tarreau9fbe18e2015-05-01 22:42:08 +02005688
5689
Willy Tarreau0f228a02015-05-01 15:37:53 +02005690option http-ignore-probes
5691no option http-ignore-probes
5692 Enable or disable logging of null connections and request timeouts
5693 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5694 yes | yes | yes | no
5695 Arguments : none
5696
5697 Recently some browsers started to implement a "pre-connect" feature
5698 consisting in speculatively connecting to some recently visited web sites
5699 just in case the user would like to visit them. This results in many
5700 connections being established to web sites, which end up in 408 Request
5701 Timeout if the timeout strikes first, or 400 Bad Request when the browser
5702 decides to close them first. These ones pollute the log and feed the error
5703 counters. There was already "option dontlognull" but it's insufficient in
5704 this case. Instead, this option does the following things :
5705 - prevent any 400/408 message from being sent to the client if nothing
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005706 was received over a connection before it was closed;
5707 - prevent any log from being emitted in this situation;
Willy Tarreau0f228a02015-05-01 15:37:53 +02005708 - prevent any error counter from being incremented
5709
5710 That way the empty connection is silently ignored. Note that it is better
5711 not to use this unless it is clear that it is needed, because it will hide
5712 real problems. The most common reason for not receiving a request and seeing
5713 a 408 is due to an MTU inconsistency between the client and an intermediary
5714 element such as a VPN, which blocks too large packets. These issues are
5715 generally seen with POST requests as well as GET with large cookies. The logs
5716 are often the only way to detect them.
5717
5718 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
5719 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
5720
5721 See also : "log", "dontlognull", "errorfile", and section 8 about logging.
5722
5723
Willy Tarreau16bfb022010-01-16 19:48:41 +01005724option http-keep-alive
5725no option http-keep-alive
5726 Enable or disable HTTP keep-alive from client to server
5727 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5728 yes | yes | yes | yes
5729 Arguments : none
5730
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +01005731 By default HAProxy operates in keep-alive mode with regards to persistent
5732 connections: for each connection it processes each request and response, and
5733 leaves the connection idle on both sides between the end of a response and the
5734 start of a new request. This mode may be changed by several options such as
5735 "option http-server-close", "option forceclose", "option httpclose" or
5736 "option http-tunnel". This option allows to set back the keep-alive mode,
5737 which can be useful when another mode was used in a defaults section.
5738
5739 Setting "option http-keep-alive" enables HTTP keep-alive mode on the client-
5740 and server- sides. This provides the lowest latency on the client side (slow
Willy Tarreau16bfb022010-01-16 19:48:41 +01005741 network) and the fastest session reuse on the server side at the expense
5742 of maintaining idle connections to the servers. In general, it is possible
5743 with this option to achieve approximately twice the request rate that the
5744 "http-server-close" option achieves on small objects. There are mainly two
5745 situations where this option may be useful :
5746
5747 - when the server is non-HTTP compliant and authenticates the connection
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005748 instead of requests (e.g. NTLM authentication)
Willy Tarreau16bfb022010-01-16 19:48:41 +01005749
5750 - when the cost of establishing the connection to the server is significant
5751 compared to the cost of retrieving the associated object from the server.
5752
5753 This last case can happen when the server is a fast static server of cache.
5754 In this case, the server will need to be properly tuned to support high enough
5755 connection counts because connections will last until the client sends another
5756 request.
5757
5758 If the client request has to go to another backend or another server due to
5759 content switching or the load balancing algorithm, the idle connection will
Willy Tarreau9420b122013-12-15 18:58:25 +01005760 immediately be closed and a new one re-opened. Option "prefer-last-server" is
5761 available to try optimize server selection so that if the server currently
5762 attached to an idle connection is usable, it will be used.
Willy Tarreau16bfb022010-01-16 19:48:41 +01005763
5764 In general it is preferred to use "option http-server-close" with application
5765 servers, and some static servers might benefit from "option http-keep-alive".
5766
5767 At the moment, logs will not indicate whether requests came from the same
5768 session or not. The accept date reported in the logs corresponds to the end
5769 of the previous request, and the request time corresponds to the time spent
5770 waiting for a new request. The keep-alive request time is still bound to the
5771 timeout defined by "timeout http-keep-alive" or "timeout http-request" if
5772 not set.
5773
Cyril Bonté653dcd62014-02-20 00:13:15 +01005774 This option disables and replaces any previous "option httpclose", "option
5775 http-server-close", "option forceclose" or "option http-tunnel". When backend
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +01005776 and frontend options differ, all of these 4 options have precedence over
Cyril Bonté653dcd62014-02-20 00:13:15 +01005777 "option http-keep-alive".
Willy Tarreau16bfb022010-01-16 19:48:41 +01005778
5779 See also : "option forceclose", "option http-server-close",
Willy Tarreau9420b122013-12-15 18:58:25 +01005780 "option prefer-last-server", "option http-pretend-keepalive",
5781 "option httpclose", and "1.1. The HTTP transaction model".
Willy Tarreau16bfb022010-01-16 19:48:41 +01005782
5783
Willy Tarreau96e31212011-05-30 18:10:30 +02005784option http-no-delay
5785no option http-no-delay
5786 Instruct the system to favor low interactive delays over performance in HTTP
5787 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5788 yes | yes | yes | yes
5789 Arguments : none
5790
5791 In HTTP, each payload is unidirectional and has no notion of interactivity.
5792 Any agent is expected to queue data somewhat for a reasonably low delay.
5793 There are some very rare server-to-server applications that abuse the HTTP
5794 protocol and expect the payload phase to be highly interactive, with many
5795 interleaved data chunks in both directions within a single request. This is
5796 absolutely not supported by the HTTP specification and will not work across
5797 most proxies or servers. When such applications attempt to do this through
5798 haproxy, it works but they will experience high delays due to the network
5799 optimizations which favor performance by instructing the system to wait for
5800 enough data to be available in order to only send full packets. Typical
5801 delays are around 200 ms per round trip. Note that this only happens with
5802 abnormal uses. Normal uses such as CONNECT requests nor WebSockets are not
5803 affected.
5804
5805 When "option http-no-delay" is present in either the frontend or the backend
5806 used by a connection, all such optimizations will be disabled in order to
5807 make the exchanges as fast as possible. Of course this offers no guarantee on
5808 the functionality, as it may break at any other place. But if it works via
5809 HAProxy, it will work as fast as possible. This option should never be used
5810 by default, and should never be used at all unless such a buggy application
5811 is discovered. The impact of using this option is an increase of bandwidth
5812 usage and CPU usage, which may significantly lower performance in high
5813 latency environments.
5814
Willy Tarreau9fbe18e2015-05-01 22:42:08 +02005815 See also : "option http-buffer-request"
5816
Willy Tarreau96e31212011-05-30 18:10:30 +02005817
Willy Tarreau8a8e1d92010-04-05 16:15:16 +02005818option http-pretend-keepalive
5819no option http-pretend-keepalive
5820 Define whether haproxy will announce keepalive to the server or not
5821 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5822 yes | yes | yes | yes
5823 Arguments : none
5824
5825 When running with "option http-server-close" or "option forceclose", haproxy
5826 adds a "Connection: close" header to the request forwarded to the server.
5827 Unfortunately, when some servers see this header, they automatically refrain
5828 from using the chunked encoding for responses of unknown length, while this
5829 is totally unrelated. The immediate effect is that this prevents haproxy from
5830 maintaining the client connection alive. A second effect is that a client or
5831 a cache could receive an incomplete response without being aware of it, and
5832 consider the response complete.
5833
5834 By setting "option http-pretend-keepalive", haproxy will make the server
5835 believe it will keep the connection alive. The server will then not fall back
5836 to the abnormal undesired above. When haproxy gets the whole response, it
5837 will close the connection with the server just as it would do with the
5838 "forceclose" option. That way the client gets a normal response and the
5839 connection is correctly closed on the server side.
5840
5841 It is recommended not to enable this option by default, because most servers
5842 will more efficiently close the connection themselves after the last packet,
5843 and release its buffers slightly earlier. Also, the added packet on the
5844 network could slightly reduce the overall peak performance. However it is
5845 worth noting that when this option is enabled, haproxy will have slightly
5846 less work to do. So if haproxy is the bottleneck on the whole architecture,
5847 enabling this option might save a few CPU cycles.
5848
5849 This option may be set both in a frontend and in a backend. It is enabled if
5850 at least one of the frontend or backend holding a connection has it enabled.
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -04005851 This option may be combined with "option httpclose", which will cause
Willy Tarreau22a95342010-09-29 14:31:41 +02005852 keepalive to be announced to the server and close to be announced to the
5853 client. This practice is discouraged though.
Willy Tarreau8a8e1d92010-04-05 16:15:16 +02005854
5855 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
5856 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
5857
Willy Tarreau16bfb022010-01-16 19:48:41 +01005858 See also : "option forceclose", "option http-server-close", and
5859 "option http-keep-alive"
Willy Tarreau8a8e1d92010-04-05 16:15:16 +02005860
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01005861
Willy Tarreaub608feb2010-01-02 22:47:18 +01005862option http-server-close
5863no option http-server-close
5864 Enable or disable HTTP connection closing on the server side
5865 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5866 yes | yes | yes | yes
5867 Arguments : none
5868
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +01005869 By default HAProxy operates in keep-alive mode with regards to persistent
5870 connections: for each connection it processes each request and response, and
5871 leaves the connection idle on both sides between the end of a response and
5872 the start of a new request. This mode may be changed by several options such
5873 as "option http-server-close", "option forceclose", "option httpclose" or
5874 "option http-tunnel". Setting "option http-server-close" enables HTTP
5875 connection-close mode on the server side while keeping the ability to support
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01005876 HTTP keep-alive and pipelining on the client side. This provides the lowest
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +01005877 latency on the client side (slow network) and the fastest session reuse on
5878 the server side to save server resources, similarly to "option forceclose".
5879 It also permits non-keepalive capable servers to be served in keep-alive mode
Lukas Tribus23953682017-04-28 13:24:30 +00005880 to the clients if they conform to the requirements of RFC7230. Please note
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +01005881 that some servers do not always conform to those requirements when they see
5882 "Connection: close" in the request. The effect will be that keep-alive will
5883 never be used. A workaround consists in enabling "option
5884 http-pretend-keepalive".
Willy Tarreaub608feb2010-01-02 22:47:18 +01005885
5886 At the moment, logs will not indicate whether requests came from the same
5887 session or not. The accept date reported in the logs corresponds to the end
5888 of the previous request, and the request time corresponds to the time spent
5889 waiting for a new request. The keep-alive request time is still bound to the
Willy Tarreaub16a5742010-01-10 14:46:16 +01005890 timeout defined by "timeout http-keep-alive" or "timeout http-request" if
5891 not set.
Willy Tarreaub608feb2010-01-02 22:47:18 +01005892
5893 This option may be set both in a frontend and in a backend. It is enabled if
5894 at least one of the frontend or backend holding a connection has it enabled.
Cyril Bonté653dcd62014-02-20 00:13:15 +01005895 It disables and replaces any previous "option httpclose", "option forceclose",
5896 "option http-tunnel" or "option http-keep-alive". Please check section 4
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +01005897 ("Proxies") to see how this option combines with others when frontend and
5898 backend options differ.
Willy Tarreaub608feb2010-01-02 22:47:18 +01005899
5900 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
5901 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
5902
Patrick Mezard9ec2ec42010-06-12 17:02:45 +02005903 See also : "option forceclose", "option http-pretend-keepalive",
Willy Tarreau16bfb022010-01-16 19:48:41 +01005904 "option httpclose", "option http-keep-alive", and
5905 "1.1. The HTTP transaction model".
Willy Tarreaub608feb2010-01-02 22:47:18 +01005906
5907
Willy Tarreau02bce8b2014-01-30 00:15:28 +01005908option http-tunnel
5909no option http-tunnel
5910 Disable or enable HTTP connection processing after first transaction
5911 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5912 yes | yes | yes | yes
5913 Arguments : none
5914
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +01005915 By default HAProxy operates in keep-alive mode with regards to persistent
5916 connections: for each connection it processes each request and response, and
5917 leaves the connection idle on both sides between the end of a response and
5918 the start of a new request. This mode may be changed by several options such
5919 as "option http-server-close", "option forceclose", "option httpclose" or
5920 "option http-tunnel".
5921
5922 Option "http-tunnel" disables any HTTP processing past the first request and
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03005923 the first response. This is the mode which was used by default in versions
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +01005924 1.0 to 1.5-dev21. It is the mode with the lowest processing overhead, which
5925 is normally not needed anymore unless in very specific cases such as when
5926 using an in-house protocol that looks like HTTP but is not compatible, or
5927 just to log one request per client in order to reduce log size. Note that
5928 everything which works at the HTTP level, including header parsing/addition,
5929 cookie processing or content switching will only work for the first request
5930 and will be ignored after the first response.
Willy Tarreau02bce8b2014-01-30 00:15:28 +01005931
5932 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
5933 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
5934
5935 See also : "option forceclose", "option http-server-close",
5936 "option httpclose", "option http-keep-alive", and
5937 "1.1. The HTTP transaction model".
5938
5939
Willy Tarreau88d349d2010-01-25 12:15:43 +01005940option http-use-proxy-header
Cyril Bontéf0c60612010-02-06 14:44:47 +01005941no option http-use-proxy-header
Willy Tarreau88d349d2010-01-25 12:15:43 +01005942 Make use of non-standard Proxy-Connection header instead of Connection
5943 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5944 yes | yes | yes | no
5945 Arguments : none
5946
Lukas Tribus23953682017-04-28 13:24:30 +00005947 While RFC7230 explicitly states that HTTP/1.1 agents must use the
Willy Tarreau88d349d2010-01-25 12:15:43 +01005948 Connection header to indicate their wish of persistent or non-persistent
5949 connections, both browsers and proxies ignore this header for proxied
5950 connections and make use of the undocumented, non-standard Proxy-Connection
5951 header instead. The issue begins when trying to put a load balancer between
5952 browsers and such proxies, because there will be a difference between what
5953 haproxy understands and what the client and the proxy agree on.
5954
5955 By setting this option in a frontend, haproxy can automatically switch to use
5956 that non-standard header if it sees proxied requests. A proxied request is
Lukas Tribusf01a9cd2016-02-03 18:09:37 +01005957 defined here as one where the URI begins with neither a '/' nor a '*'. This
5958 is incompatible with the HTTP tunnel mode. Note that this option can only be
5959 specified in a frontend and will affect the request along its whole life.
Willy Tarreau88d349d2010-01-25 12:15:43 +01005960
Willy Tarreau844a7e72010-01-31 21:46:18 +01005961 Also, when this option is set, a request which requires authentication will
5962 automatically switch to use proxy authentication headers if it is itself a
5963 proxied request. That makes it possible to check or enforce authentication in
5964 front of an existing proxy.
5965
Willy Tarreau88d349d2010-01-25 12:15:43 +01005966 This option should normally never be used, except in front of a proxy.
5967
5968 See also : "option httpclose", "option forceclose" and "option
5969 http-server-close".
5970
5971
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01005972option httpchk
5973option httpchk <uri>
5974option httpchk <method> <uri>
5975option httpchk <method> <uri> <version>
5976 Enable HTTP protocol to check on the servers health
5977 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
5978 yes | no | yes | yes
5979 Arguments :
5980 <method> is the optional HTTP method used with the requests. When not set,
5981 the "OPTIONS" method is used, as it generally requires low server
5982 processing and is easy to filter out from the logs. Any method
5983 may be used, though it is not recommended to invent non-standard
5984 ones.
5985
5986 <uri> is the URI referenced in the HTTP requests. It defaults to " / "
5987 which is accessible by default on almost any server, but may be
5988 changed to any other URI. Query strings are permitted.
5989
5990 <version> is the optional HTTP version string. It defaults to "HTTP/1.0"
5991 but some servers might behave incorrectly in HTTP 1.0, so turning
5992 it to HTTP/1.1 may sometimes help. Note that the Host field is
5993 mandatory in HTTP/1.1, and as a trick, it is possible to pass it
5994 after "\r\n" following the version string.
5995
5996 By default, server health checks only consist in trying to establish a TCP
5997 connection. When "option httpchk" is specified, a complete HTTP request is
5998 sent once the TCP connection is established, and responses 2xx and 3xx are
5999 considered valid, while all other ones indicate a server failure, including
6000 the lack of any response.
6001
6002 The port and interval are specified in the server configuration.
6003
6004 This option does not necessarily require an HTTP backend, it also works with
6005 plain TCP backends. This is particularly useful to check simple scripts bound
6006 to some dedicated ports using the inetd daemon.
6007
6008 Examples :
6009 # Relay HTTPS traffic to Apache instance and check service availability
6010 # using HTTP request "OPTIONS * HTTP/1.1" on port 80.
6011 backend https_relay
6012 mode tcp
6013 option httpchk OPTIONS * HTTP/1.1\r\nHost:\ www
6014 server apache1 192.168.1.1:443 check port 80
6015
Simon Hormanafc47ee2013-11-25 10:46:35 +09006016 See also : "option ssl-hello-chk", "option smtpchk", "option mysql-check",
6017 "option pgsql-check", "http-check" and the "check", "port" and
6018 "inter" server options.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01006019
6020
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01006021option httpclose
6022no option httpclose
6023 Enable or disable passive HTTP connection closing
6024 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6025 yes | yes | yes | yes
6026 Arguments : none
6027
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +01006028 By default HAProxy operates in keep-alive mode with regards to persistent
6029 connections: for each connection it processes each request and response, and
6030 leaves the connection idle on both sides between the end of a response and
6031 the start of a new request. This mode may be changed by several options such
Cyril Bonté653dcd62014-02-20 00:13:15 +01006032 as "option http-server-close", "option forceclose", "option httpclose" or
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +01006033 "option http-tunnel".
6034
6035 If "option httpclose" is set, HAProxy will work in HTTP tunnel mode and check
6036 if a "Connection: close" header is already set in each direction, and will
6037 add one if missing. Each end should react to this by actively closing the TCP
6038 connection after each transfer, thus resulting in a switch to the HTTP close
6039 mode. Any "Connection" header different from "close" will also be removed.
6040 Note that this option is deprecated since what it does is very cheap but not
6041 reliable. Using "option http-server-close" or "option forceclose" is strongly
6042 recommended instead.
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01006043
6044 It seldom happens that some servers incorrectly ignore this header and do not
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -04006045 close the connection even though they reply "Connection: close". For this
Willy Tarreau0dfdf192010-01-05 11:33:11 +01006046 reason, they are not compatible with older HTTP 1.0 browsers. If this happens
6047 it is possible to use the "option forceclose" which actively closes the
6048 request connection once the server responds. Option "forceclose" also
6049 releases the server connection earlier because it does not have to wait for
6050 the client to acknowledge it.
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01006051
6052 This option may be set both in a frontend and in a backend. It is enabled if
6053 at least one of the frontend or backend holding a connection has it enabled.
Cyril Bonté653dcd62014-02-20 00:13:15 +01006054 It disables and replaces any previous "option http-server-close",
6055 "option forceclose", "option http-keep-alive" or "option http-tunnel". Please
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +01006056 check section 4 ("Proxies") to see how this option combines with others when
6057 frontend and backend options differ.
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01006058
6059 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
6060 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
6061
Patrick Mezard9ec2ec42010-06-12 17:02:45 +02006062 See also : "option forceclose", "option http-server-close" and
6063 "1.1. The HTTP transaction model".
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01006064
6065
Emeric Brun3a058f32009-06-30 18:26:00 +02006066option httplog [ clf ]
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01006067 Enable logging of HTTP request, session state and timers
6068 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6069 yes | yes | yes | yes
Emeric Brun3a058f32009-06-30 18:26:00 +02006070 Arguments :
6071 clf if the "clf" argument is added, then the output format will be
6072 the CLF format instead of HAProxy's default HTTP format. You can
6073 use this when you need to feed HAProxy's logs through a specific
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006074 log analyzer which only support the CLF format and which is not
Emeric Brun3a058f32009-06-30 18:26:00 +02006075 extensible.
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01006076
6077 By default, the log output format is very poor, as it only contains the
6078 source and destination addresses, and the instance name. By specifying
6079 "option httplog", each log line turns into a much richer format including,
6080 but not limited to, the HTTP request, the connection timers, the session
6081 status, the connections numbers, the captured headers and cookies, the
6082 frontend, backend and server name, and of course the source address and
6083 ports.
6084
6085 This option may be set either in the frontend or the backend.
6086
PiBa-NLbd556bf2014-12-11 21:31:54 +01006087 Specifying only "option httplog" will automatically clear the 'clf' mode
6088 if it was set by default.
Emeric Brun3a058f32009-06-30 18:26:00 +02006089
Guillaume de Lafond29f45602017-03-31 19:52:15 +02006090 "option httplog" overrides any previous "log-format" directive.
6091
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02006092 See also : section 8 about logging.
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01006093
Willy Tarreau55165fe2009-05-10 12:02:55 +02006094
6095option http_proxy
6096no option http_proxy
6097 Enable or disable plain HTTP proxy mode
6098 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6099 yes | yes | yes | yes
6100 Arguments : none
6101
6102 It sometimes happens that people need a pure HTTP proxy which understands
6103 basic proxy requests without caching nor any fancy feature. In this case,
6104 it may be worth setting up an HAProxy instance with the "option http_proxy"
6105 set. In this mode, no server is declared, and the connection is forwarded to
6106 the IP address and port found in the URL after the "http://" scheme.
6107
6108 No host address resolution is performed, so this only works when pure IP
6109 addresses are passed. Since this option's usage perimeter is rather limited,
Lukas Tribusf01a9cd2016-02-03 18:09:37 +01006110 it will probably be used only by experts who know they need exactly it. This
6111 is incompatible with the HTTP tunnel mode.
Willy Tarreau55165fe2009-05-10 12:02:55 +02006112
6113 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
6114 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
6115
6116 Example :
6117 # this backend understands HTTP proxy requests and forwards them directly.
6118 backend direct_forward
6119 option httpclose
6120 option http_proxy
6121
6122 See also : "option httpclose"
6123
Willy Tarreau211ad242009-10-03 21:45:07 +02006124
Jamie Gloudon801a0a32012-08-25 00:18:33 -04006125option independent-streams
6126no option independent-streams
6127 Enable or disable independent timeout processing for both directions
Willy Tarreauf27b5ea2009-10-03 22:01:18 +02006128 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6129 yes | yes | yes | yes
6130 Arguments : none
6131
6132 By default, when data is sent over a socket, both the write timeout and the
6133 read timeout for that socket are refreshed, because we consider that there is
6134 activity on that socket, and we have no other means of guessing if we should
6135 receive data or not.
6136
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006137 While this default behavior is desirable for almost all applications, there
Willy Tarreauf27b5ea2009-10-03 22:01:18 +02006138 exists a situation where it is desirable to disable it, and only refresh the
6139 read timeout if there are incoming data. This happens on sessions with large
6140 timeouts and low amounts of exchanged data such as telnet session. If the
6141 server suddenly disappears, the output data accumulates in the system's
6142 socket buffers, both timeouts are correctly refreshed, and there is no way
6143 to know the server does not receive them, so we don't timeout. However, when
6144 the underlying protocol always echoes sent data, it would be enough by itself
6145 to detect the issue using the read timeout. Note that this problem does not
6146 happen with more verbose protocols because data won't accumulate long in the
6147 socket buffers.
6148
6149 When this option is set on the frontend, it will disable read timeout updates
6150 on data sent to the client. There probably is little use of this case. When
6151 the option is set on the backend, it will disable read timeout updates on
6152 data sent to the server. Doing so will typically break large HTTP posts from
6153 slow lines, so use it with caution.
6154
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03006155 Note: older versions used to call this setting "option independent-streams"
Jamie Gloudon801a0a32012-08-25 00:18:33 -04006156 with a spelling mistake. This spelling is still supported but
6157 deprecated.
6158
Willy Tarreauce887fd2012-05-12 12:50:00 +02006159 See also : "timeout client", "timeout server" and "timeout tunnel"
Willy Tarreauf27b5ea2009-10-03 22:01:18 +02006160
6161
Gabor Lekenyb4c81e42010-09-29 18:17:05 +02006162option ldap-check
6163 Use LDAPv3 health checks for server testing
6164 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6165 yes | no | yes | yes
6166 Arguments : none
6167
6168 It is possible to test that the server correctly talks LDAPv3 instead of just
6169 testing that it accepts the TCP connection. When this option is set, an
6170 LDAPv3 anonymous simple bind message is sent to the server, and the response
6171 is analyzed to find an LDAPv3 bind response message.
6172
6173 The server is considered valid only when the LDAP response contains success
6174 resultCode (http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4511#section-4.1.9).
6175
6176 Logging of bind requests is server dependent see your documentation how to
6177 configure it.
6178
6179 Example :
6180 option ldap-check
6181
6182 See also : "option httpchk"
6183
6184
Simon Horman98637e52014-06-20 12:30:16 +09006185option external-check
6186 Use external processes for server health checks
6187 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6188 yes | no | yes | yes
6189
6190 It is possible to test the health of a server using an external command.
6191 This is achieved by running the executable set using "external-check
6192 command".
6193
6194 Requires the "external-check" global to be set.
6195
6196 See also : "external-check", "external-check command", "external-check path"
6197
6198
Willy Tarreau211ad242009-10-03 21:45:07 +02006199option log-health-checks
6200no option log-health-checks
Willy Tarreaubef1b322014-05-13 21:01:39 +02006201 Enable or disable logging of health checks status updates
Willy Tarreau211ad242009-10-03 21:45:07 +02006202 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6203 yes | no | yes | yes
6204 Arguments : none
6205
Willy Tarreaubef1b322014-05-13 21:01:39 +02006206 By default, failed health check are logged if server is UP and successful
6207 health checks are logged if server is DOWN, so the amount of additional
6208 information is limited.
Willy Tarreau211ad242009-10-03 21:45:07 +02006209
Willy Tarreaubef1b322014-05-13 21:01:39 +02006210 When this option is enabled, any change of the health check status or to
6211 the server's health will be logged, so that it becomes possible to know
6212 that a server was failing occasional checks before crashing, or exactly when
6213 it failed to respond a valid HTTP status, then when the port started to
6214 reject connections, then when the server stopped responding at all.
6215
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006216 Note that status changes not caused by health checks (e.g. enable/disable on
Willy Tarreaubef1b322014-05-13 21:01:39 +02006217 the CLI) are intentionally not logged by this option.
Willy Tarreau211ad242009-10-03 21:45:07 +02006218
Willy Tarreaubef1b322014-05-13 21:01:39 +02006219 See also: "option httpchk", "option ldap-check", "option mysql-check",
6220 "option pgsql-check", "option redis-check", "option smtpchk",
6221 "option tcp-check", "log" and section 8 about logging.
Willy Tarreau211ad242009-10-03 21:45:07 +02006222
Willy Tarreauc9bd0cc2009-05-10 11:57:02 +02006223
6224option log-separate-errors
6225no option log-separate-errors
6226 Change log level for non-completely successful connections
6227 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6228 yes | yes | yes | no
6229 Arguments : none
6230
6231 Sometimes looking for errors in logs is not easy. This option makes haproxy
6232 raise the level of logs containing potentially interesting information such
6233 as errors, timeouts, retries, redispatches, or HTTP status codes 5xx. The
6234 level changes from "info" to "err". This makes it possible to log them
6235 separately to a different file with most syslog daemons. Be careful not to
6236 remove them from the original file, otherwise you would lose ordering which
6237 provides very important information.
6238
6239 Using this option, large sites dealing with several thousand connections per
6240 second may log normal traffic to a rotating buffer and only archive smaller
6241 error logs.
6242
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02006243 See also : "log", "dontlognull", "dontlog-normal" and section 8 about
Willy Tarreauc9bd0cc2009-05-10 11:57:02 +02006244 logging.
6245
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01006246
6247option logasap
6248no option logasap
6249 Enable or disable early logging of HTTP requests
6250 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6251 yes | yes | yes | no
6252 Arguments : none
6253
6254 By default, HTTP requests are logged upon termination so that the total
6255 transfer time and the number of bytes appear in the logs. When large objects
6256 are being transferred, it may take a while before the request appears in the
6257 logs. Using "option logasap", the request gets logged as soon as the server
6258 sends the complete headers. The only missing information in the logs will be
6259 the total number of bytes which will indicate everything except the amount
6260 of data transferred, and the total time which will not take the transfer
Willy Tarreaud2a4aa22008-01-31 15:28:22 +01006261 time into account. In such a situation, it's a good practice to capture the
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01006262 "Content-Length" response header so that the logs at least indicate how many
6263 bytes are expected to be transferred.
6264
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +01006265 Examples :
6266 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:80
6267 mode http
6268 option httplog
6269 option logasap
6270 log 192.168.2.200 local3
6271
6272 >>> Feb 6 12:14:14 localhost \
6273 haproxy[14389]: 10.0.1.2:33317 [06/Feb/2009:12:14:14.655] http-in \
6274 static/srv1 9/10/7/14/+30 200 +243 - - ---- 3/1/1/1/0 1/0 \
6275 "GET /image.iso HTTP/1.0"
6276
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02006277 See also : "option httplog", "capture response header", and section 8 about
Willy Tarreauc27debf2008-01-06 08:57:02 +01006278 logging.
6279
6280
Nenad Merdanovic6639a7c2014-05-30 14:26:32 +02006281option mysql-check [ user <username> [ post-41 ] ]
Hervé COMMOWICK8776f1b2010-10-18 15:58:36 +02006282 Use MySQL health checks for server testing
Hervé COMMOWICK698ae002010-01-12 09:25:13 +01006283 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6284 yes | no | yes | yes
Hervé COMMOWICK8776f1b2010-10-18 15:58:36 +02006285 Arguments :
Cyril Bonté108cf6e2012-04-21 23:30:29 +02006286 <username> This is the username which will be used when connecting to MySQL
6287 server.
Nenad Merdanovic6639a7c2014-05-30 14:26:32 +02006288 post-41 Send post v4.1 client compatible checks
Hervé COMMOWICK8776f1b2010-10-18 15:58:36 +02006289
6290 If you specify a username, the check consists of sending two MySQL packet,
6291 one Client Authentication packet, and one QUIT packet, to correctly close
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006292 MySQL session. We then parse the MySQL Handshake Initialization packet and/or
Hervé COMMOWICK8776f1b2010-10-18 15:58:36 +02006293 Error packet. It is a basic but useful test which does not produce error nor
6294 aborted connect on the server. However, it requires adding an authorization
6295 in the MySQL table, like this :
6296
6297 USE mysql;
6298 INSERT INTO user (Host,User) values ('<ip_of_haproxy>','<username>');
6299 FLUSH PRIVILEGES;
6300
6301 If you don't specify a username (it is deprecated and not recommended), the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006302 check only consists in parsing the Mysql Handshake Initialization packet or
Hervé COMMOWICK8776f1b2010-10-18 15:58:36 +02006303 Error packet, we don't send anything in this mode. It was reported that it
6304 can generate lockout if check is too frequent and/or if there is not enough
6305 traffic. In fact, you need in this case to check MySQL "max_connect_errors"
6306 value as if a connection is established successfully within fewer than MySQL
6307 "max_connect_errors" attempts after a previous connection was interrupted,
6308 the error count for the host is cleared to zero. If HAProxy's server get
6309 blocked, the "FLUSH HOSTS" statement is the only way to unblock it.
6310
6311 Remember that this does not check database presence nor database consistency.
6312 To do this, you can use an external check with xinetd for example.
Hervé COMMOWICK698ae002010-01-12 09:25:13 +01006313
Hervé COMMOWICK212f7782011-06-10 14:05:59 +02006314 The check requires MySQL >=3.22, for older version, please use TCP check.
Hervé COMMOWICK698ae002010-01-12 09:25:13 +01006315
6316 Most often, an incoming MySQL server needs to see the client's IP address for
6317 various purposes, including IP privilege matching and connection logging.
6318 When possible, it is often wise to masquerade the client's IP address when
6319 connecting to the server using the "usesrc" argument of the "source" keyword,
Willy Tarreau29fbe512015-08-20 19:35:14 +02006320 which requires the transparent proxy feature to be compiled in, and the MySQL
6321 server to route the client via the machine hosting haproxy.
Hervé COMMOWICK698ae002010-01-12 09:25:13 +01006322
6323 See also: "option httpchk"
6324
6325
Willy Tarreaua453bdd2008-01-08 19:50:52 +01006326option nolinger
6327no option nolinger
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01006328 Enable or disable immediate session resource cleaning after close
Willy Tarreaua453bdd2008-01-08 19:50:52 +01006329 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6330 yes | yes | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01006331 Arguments : none
Willy Tarreaua453bdd2008-01-08 19:50:52 +01006332
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006333 When clients or servers abort connections in a dirty way (e.g. they are
Willy Tarreaua453bdd2008-01-08 19:50:52 +01006334 physically disconnected), the session timeouts triggers and the session is
6335 closed. But it will remain in FIN_WAIT1 state for some time in the system,
6336 using some resources and possibly limiting the ability to establish newer
6337 connections.
6338
6339 When this happens, it is possible to activate "option nolinger" which forces
6340 the system to immediately remove any socket's pending data on close. Thus,
6341 the session is instantly purged from the system's tables. This usually has
6342 side effects such as increased number of TCP resets due to old retransmits
6343 getting immediately rejected. Some firewalls may sometimes complain about
6344 this too.
6345
6346 For this reason, it is not recommended to use this option when not absolutely
6347 needed. You know that you need it when you have thousands of FIN_WAIT1
6348 sessions on your system (TIME_WAIT ones do not count).
6349
6350 This option may be used both on frontends and backends, depending on the side
6351 where it is required. Use it on the frontend for clients, and on the backend
6352 for servers.
6353
6354 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
6355 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
6356
6357
Willy Tarreau55165fe2009-05-10 12:02:55 +02006358option originalto [ except <network> ] [ header <name> ]
6359 Enable insertion of the X-Original-To header to requests sent to servers
6360 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6361 yes | yes | yes | yes
6362 Arguments :
6363 <network> is an optional argument used to disable this option for sources
6364 matching <network>
6365 <name> an optional argument to specify a different "X-Original-To"
6366 header name.
6367
6368 Since HAProxy can work in transparent mode, every request from a client can
6369 be redirected to the proxy and HAProxy itself can proxy every request to a
6370 complex SQUID environment and the destination host from SO_ORIGINAL_DST will
6371 be lost. This is annoying when you want access rules based on destination ip
6372 addresses. To solve this problem, a new HTTP header "X-Original-To" may be
6373 added by HAProxy to all requests sent to the server. This header contains a
6374 value representing the original destination IP address. Since this must be
6375 configured to always use the last occurrence of this header only. Note that
6376 only the last occurrence of the header must be used, since it is really
6377 possible that the client has already brought one.
6378
6379 The keyword "header" may be used to supply a different header name to replace
6380 the default "X-Original-To". This can be useful where you might already
6381 have a "X-Original-To" header from a different application, and you need
6382 preserve it. Also if your backend server doesn't use the "X-Original-To"
6383 header and requires different one.
6384
6385 Sometimes, a same HAProxy instance may be shared between a direct client
6386 access and a reverse-proxy access (for instance when an SSL reverse-proxy is
6387 used to decrypt HTTPS traffic). It is possible to disable the addition of the
6388 header for a known source address or network by adding the "except" keyword
6389 followed by the network address. In this case, any source IP matching the
6390 network will not cause an addition of this header. Most common uses are with
6391 private networks or 127.0.0.1.
6392
6393 This option may be specified either in the frontend or in the backend. If at
6394 least one of them uses it, the header will be added. Note that the backend's
6395 setting of the header subargument takes precedence over the frontend's if
6396 both are defined.
6397
Willy Tarreau55165fe2009-05-10 12:02:55 +02006398 Examples :
6399 # Original Destination address
6400 frontend www
6401 mode http
6402 option originalto except 127.0.0.1
6403
6404 # Those servers want the IP Address in X-Client-Dst
6405 backend www
6406 mode http
6407 option originalto header X-Client-Dst
6408
Willy Tarreau87cf5142011-08-19 22:57:24 +02006409 See also : "option httpclose", "option http-server-close",
6410 "option forceclose"
Willy Tarreau55165fe2009-05-10 12:02:55 +02006411
6412
Willy Tarreaua453bdd2008-01-08 19:50:52 +01006413option persist
6414no option persist
6415 Enable or disable forced persistence on down servers
6416 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6417 yes | no | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01006418 Arguments : none
Willy Tarreaua453bdd2008-01-08 19:50:52 +01006419
6420 When an HTTP request reaches a backend with a cookie which references a dead
6421 server, by default it is redispatched to another server. It is possible to
6422 force the request to be sent to the dead server first using "option persist"
6423 if absolutely needed. A common use case is when servers are under extreme
6424 load and spend their time flapping. In this case, the users would still be
6425 directed to the server they opened the session on, in the hope they would be
6426 correctly served. It is recommended to use "option redispatch" in conjunction
6427 with this option so that in the event it would not be possible to connect to
6428 the server at all (server definitely dead), the client would finally be
6429 redirected to another valid server.
6430
6431 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
6432 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
6433
Willy Tarreau4de91492010-01-22 19:10:05 +01006434 See also : "option redispatch", "retries", "force-persist"
Willy Tarreaua453bdd2008-01-08 19:50:52 +01006435
6436
Willy Tarreau0c122822013-12-15 18:49:01 +01006437option pgsql-check [ user <username> ]
6438 Use PostgreSQL health checks for server testing
6439 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6440 yes | no | yes | yes
6441 Arguments :
6442 <username> This is the username which will be used when connecting to
6443 PostgreSQL server.
6444
6445 The check sends a PostgreSQL StartupMessage and waits for either
6446 Authentication request or ErrorResponse message. It is a basic but useful
6447 test which does not produce error nor aborted connect on the server.
6448 This check is identical with the "mysql-check".
6449
6450 See also: "option httpchk"
6451
6452
Willy Tarreau9420b122013-12-15 18:58:25 +01006453option prefer-last-server
6454no option prefer-last-server
6455 Allow multiple load balanced requests to remain on the same server
6456 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6457 yes | no | yes | yes
6458 Arguments : none
6459
6460 When the load balancing algorithm in use is not deterministic, and a previous
6461 request was sent to a server to which haproxy still holds a connection, it is
6462 sometimes desirable that subsequent requests on a same session go to the same
6463 server as much as possible. Note that this is different from persistence, as
6464 we only indicate a preference which haproxy tries to apply without any form
6465 of warranty. The real use is for keep-alive connections sent to servers. When
6466 this option is used, haproxy will try to reuse the same connection that is
6467 attached to the server instead of rebalancing to another server, causing a
6468 close of the connection. This can make sense for static file servers. It does
Willy Tarreau068621e2013-12-23 15:11:25 +01006469 not make much sense to use this in combination with hashing algorithms. Note,
6470 haproxy already automatically tries to stick to a server which sends a 401 or
6471 to a proxy which sends a 407 (authentication required). This is mandatory for
6472 use with the broken NTLM authentication challenge, and significantly helps in
6473 troubleshooting some faulty applications. Option prefer-last-server might be
6474 desirable in these environments as well, to avoid redistributing the traffic
6475 after every other response.
Willy Tarreau9420b122013-12-15 18:58:25 +01006476
6477 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
6478 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
6479
6480 See also: "option http-keep-alive"
6481
6482
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki25b501a2008-01-06 16:36:16 +01006483option redispatch
Joseph Lynch726ab712015-05-11 23:25:34 -07006484option redispatch <interval>
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki25b501a2008-01-06 16:36:16 +01006485no option redispatch
6486 Enable or disable session redistribution in case of connection failure
6487 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6488 yes | no | yes | yes
Joseph Lynch726ab712015-05-11 23:25:34 -07006489 Arguments :
6490 <interval> The optional integer value that controls how often redispatches
6491 occur when retrying connections. Positive value P indicates a
6492 redispatch is desired on every Pth retry, and negative value
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006493 N indicate a redispatch is desired on the Nth retry prior to the
Joseph Lynch726ab712015-05-11 23:25:34 -07006494 last retry. For example, the default of -1 preserves the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006495 historical behavior of redispatching on the last retry, a
Joseph Lynch726ab712015-05-11 23:25:34 -07006496 positive value of 1 would indicate a redispatch on every retry,
6497 and a positive value of 3 would indicate a redispatch on every
6498 third retry. You can disable redispatches with a value of 0.
6499
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki25b501a2008-01-06 16:36:16 +01006500
6501 In HTTP mode, if a server designated by a cookie is down, clients may
6502 definitely stick to it because they cannot flush the cookie, so they will not
6503 be able to access the service anymore.
6504
6505 Specifying "option redispatch" will allow the proxy to break their
6506 persistence and redistribute them to a working server.
6507
Joseph Lynch726ab712015-05-11 23:25:34 -07006508 It also allows to retry connections to another server in case of multiple
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki25b501a2008-01-06 16:36:16 +01006509 connection failures. Of course, it requires having "retries" set to a nonzero
6510 value.
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +01006511
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki25b501a2008-01-06 16:36:16 +01006512 This form is the preferred form, which replaces both the "redispatch" and
6513 "redisp" keywords.
6514
6515 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
6516 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
6517
Willy Tarreau4de91492010-01-22 19:10:05 +01006518 See also : "redispatch", "retries", "force-persist"
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki25b501a2008-01-06 16:36:16 +01006519
Willy Tarreaua453bdd2008-01-08 19:50:52 +01006520
Hervé COMMOWICKec032d62011-08-05 16:23:48 +02006521option redis-check
6522 Use redis health checks for server testing
6523 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6524 yes | no | yes | yes
6525 Arguments : none
6526
6527 It is possible to test that the server correctly talks REDIS protocol instead
6528 of just testing that it accepts the TCP connection. When this option is set,
6529 a PING redis command is sent to the server, and the response is analyzed to
6530 find the "+PONG" response message.
6531
6532 Example :
6533 option redis-check
6534
Jarno Huuskonene5ae7022017-04-03 14:36:21 +03006535 See also : "option httpchk", "option tcp-check", "tcp-check expect"
Hervé COMMOWICKec032d62011-08-05 16:23:48 +02006536
6537
Willy Tarreaua453bdd2008-01-08 19:50:52 +01006538option smtpchk
6539option smtpchk <hello> <domain>
6540 Use SMTP health checks for server testing
6541 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6542 yes | no | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +01006543 Arguments :
Willy Tarreaua453bdd2008-01-08 19:50:52 +01006544 <hello> is an optional argument. It is the "hello" command to use. It can
6545 be either "HELO" (for SMTP) or "EHLO" (for ESTMP). All other
6546 values will be turned into the default command ("HELO").
6547
6548 <domain> is the domain name to present to the server. It may only be
6549 specified (and is mandatory) if the hello command has been
6550 specified. By default, "localhost" is used.
6551
6552 When "option smtpchk" is set, the health checks will consist in TCP
6553 connections followed by an SMTP command. By default, this command is
6554 "HELO localhost". The server's return code is analyzed and only return codes
6555 starting with a "2" will be considered as valid. All other responses,
6556 including a lack of response will constitute an error and will indicate a
6557 dead server.
6558
6559 This test is meant to be used with SMTP servers or relays. Depending on the
6560 request, it is possible that some servers do not log each connection attempt,
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006561 so you may want to experiment to improve the behavior. Using telnet on port
Willy Tarreaua453bdd2008-01-08 19:50:52 +01006562 25 is often easier than adjusting the configuration.
6563
6564 Most often, an incoming SMTP server needs to see the client's IP address for
6565 various purposes, including spam filtering, anti-spoofing and logging. When
6566 possible, it is often wise to masquerade the client's IP address when
6567 connecting to the server using the "usesrc" argument of the "source" keyword,
Willy Tarreau29fbe512015-08-20 19:35:14 +02006568 which requires the transparent proxy feature to be compiled in.
Willy Tarreaua453bdd2008-01-08 19:50:52 +01006569
6570 Example :
6571 option smtpchk HELO mydomain.org
6572
6573 See also : "option httpchk", "source"
6574
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki25b501a2008-01-06 16:36:16 +01006575
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkiaeebf9b2009-10-04 15:43:17 +02006576option socket-stats
6577no option socket-stats
6578
6579 Enable or disable collecting & providing separate statistics for each socket.
6580 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6581 yes | yes | yes | no
6582
6583 Arguments : none
6584
6585
Willy Tarreauff4f82d2009-02-06 11:28:13 +01006586option splice-auto
6587no option splice-auto
6588 Enable or disable automatic kernel acceleration on sockets in both directions
6589 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6590 yes | yes | yes | yes
6591 Arguments : none
6592
6593 When this option is enabled either on a frontend or on a backend, haproxy
6594 will automatically evaluate the opportunity to use kernel tcp splicing to
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006595 forward data between the client and the server, in either direction. HAProxy
Willy Tarreauff4f82d2009-02-06 11:28:13 +01006596 uses heuristics to estimate if kernel splicing might improve performance or
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01006597 not. Both directions are handled independently. Note that the heuristics used
Willy Tarreauff4f82d2009-02-06 11:28:13 +01006598 are not much aggressive in order to limit excessive use of splicing. This
6599 option requires splicing to be enabled at compile time, and may be globally
6600 disabled with the global option "nosplice". Since splice uses pipes, using it
6601 requires that there are enough spare pipes.
6602
6603 Important note: kernel-based TCP splicing is a Linux-specific feature which
6604 first appeared in kernel 2.6.25. It offers kernel-based acceleration to
6605 transfer data between sockets without copying these data to user-space, thus
6606 providing noticeable performance gains and CPU cycles savings. Since many
6607 early implementations are buggy, corrupt data and/or are inefficient, this
6608 feature is not enabled by default, and it should be used with extreme care.
6609 While it is not possible to detect the correctness of an implementation,
6610 2.6.29 is the first version offering a properly working implementation. In
6611 case of doubt, splicing may be globally disabled using the global "nosplice"
6612 keyword.
6613
6614 Example :
6615 option splice-auto
6616
6617 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
6618 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
6619
6620 See also : "option splice-request", "option splice-response", and global
6621 options "nosplice" and "maxpipes"
6622
6623
6624option splice-request
6625no option splice-request
6626 Enable or disable automatic kernel acceleration on sockets for requests
6627 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6628 yes | yes | yes | yes
6629 Arguments : none
6630
6631 When this option is enabled either on a frontend or on a backend, haproxy
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -04006632 will use kernel tcp splicing whenever possible to forward data going from
Willy Tarreauff4f82d2009-02-06 11:28:13 +01006633 the client to the server. It might still use the recv/send scheme if there
6634 are no spare pipes left. This option requires splicing to be enabled at
6635 compile time, and may be globally disabled with the global option "nosplice".
6636 Since splice uses pipes, using it requires that there are enough spare pipes.
6637
6638 Important note: see "option splice-auto" for usage limitations.
6639
6640 Example :
6641 option splice-request
6642
6643 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
6644 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
6645
6646 See also : "option splice-auto", "option splice-response", and global options
6647 "nosplice" and "maxpipes"
6648
6649
6650option splice-response
6651no option splice-response
6652 Enable or disable automatic kernel acceleration on sockets for responses
6653 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6654 yes | yes | yes | yes
6655 Arguments : none
6656
6657 When this option is enabled either on a frontend or on a backend, haproxy
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -04006658 will use kernel tcp splicing whenever possible to forward data going from
Willy Tarreauff4f82d2009-02-06 11:28:13 +01006659 the server to the client. It might still use the recv/send scheme if there
6660 are no spare pipes left. This option requires splicing to be enabled at
6661 compile time, and may be globally disabled with the global option "nosplice".
6662 Since splice uses pipes, using it requires that there are enough spare pipes.
6663
6664 Important note: see "option splice-auto" for usage limitations.
6665
6666 Example :
6667 option splice-response
6668
6669 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
6670 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
6671
6672 See also : "option splice-auto", "option splice-request", and global options
6673 "nosplice" and "maxpipes"
6674
6675
Christopher Fauletba7bc162016-11-07 21:07:38 +01006676option spop-check
6677 Use SPOP health checks for server testing
6678 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6679 no | no | no | yes
6680 Arguments : none
6681
6682 It is possible to test that the server correctly talks SPOP protocol instead
6683 of just testing that it accepts the TCP connection. When this option is set,
6684 a HELLO handshake is performed between HAProxy and the server, and the
6685 response is analyzed to check no error is reported.
6686
6687 Example :
6688 option spop-check
6689
6690 See also : "option httpchk"
6691
6692
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01006693option srvtcpka
6694no option srvtcpka
6695 Enable or disable the sending of TCP keepalive packets on the server side
6696 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6697 yes | no | yes | yes
6698 Arguments : none
6699
6700 When there is a firewall or any session-aware component between a client and
6701 a server, and when the protocol involves very long sessions with long idle
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006702 periods (e.g. remote desktops), there is a risk that one of the intermediate
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01006703 components decides to expire a session which has remained idle for too long.
6704
6705 Enabling socket-level TCP keep-alives makes the system regularly send packets
6706 to the other end of the connection, leaving it active. The delay between
6707 keep-alive probes is controlled by the system only and depends both on the
6708 operating system and its tuning parameters.
6709
6710 It is important to understand that keep-alive packets are neither emitted nor
6711 received at the application level. It is only the network stacks which sees
6712 them. For this reason, even if one side of the proxy already uses keep-alives
6713 to maintain its connection alive, those keep-alive packets will not be
6714 forwarded to the other side of the proxy.
6715
6716 Please note that this has nothing to do with HTTP keep-alive.
6717
6718 Using option "srvtcpka" enables the emission of TCP keep-alive probes on the
6719 server side of a connection, which should help when session expirations are
6720 noticed between HAProxy and a server.
6721
6722 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
6723 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
6724
6725 See also : "option clitcpka", "option tcpka"
6726
6727
Willy Tarreaua453bdd2008-01-08 19:50:52 +01006728option ssl-hello-chk
6729 Use SSLv3 client hello health checks for server testing
6730 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6731 yes | no | yes | yes
6732 Arguments : none
6733
6734 When some SSL-based protocols are relayed in TCP mode through HAProxy, it is
6735 possible to test that the server correctly talks SSL instead of just testing
6736 that it accepts the TCP connection. When "option ssl-hello-chk" is set, pure
6737 SSLv3 client hello messages are sent once the connection is established to
6738 the server, and the response is analyzed to find an SSL server hello message.
6739 The server is considered valid only when the response contains this server
6740 hello message.
6741
6742 All servers tested till there correctly reply to SSLv3 client hello messages,
6743 and most servers tested do not even log the requests containing only hello
6744 messages, which is appreciable.
6745
Willy Tarreau763a95b2012-10-04 23:15:39 +02006746 Note that this check works even when SSL support was not built into haproxy
6747 because it forges the SSL message. When SSL support is available, it is best
6748 to use native SSL health checks instead of this one.
Willy Tarreaua453bdd2008-01-08 19:50:52 +01006749
Willy Tarreau763a95b2012-10-04 23:15:39 +02006750 See also: "option httpchk", "check-ssl"
6751
Willy Tarreaua453bdd2008-01-08 19:50:52 +01006752
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006753option tcp-check
6754 Perform health checks using tcp-check send/expect sequences
6755 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6756 yes | no | yes | yes
6757
6758 This health check method is intended to be combined with "tcp-check" command
6759 lists in order to support send/expect types of health check sequences.
6760
6761 TCP checks currently support 4 modes of operations :
6762 - no "tcp-check" directive : the health check only consists in a connection
6763 attempt, which remains the default mode.
6764
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03006765 - "tcp-check send" or "tcp-check send-binary" only is mentioned : this is
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006766 used to send a string along with a connection opening. With some
6767 protocols, it helps sending a "QUIT" message for example that prevents
6768 the server from logging a connection error for each health check. The
6769 check result will still be based on the ability to open the connection
6770 only.
6771
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03006772 - "tcp-check expect" only is mentioned : this is used to test a banner.
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006773 The connection is opened and haproxy waits for the server to present some
6774 contents which must validate some rules. The check result will be based
6775 on the matching between the contents and the rules. This is suited for
6776 POP, IMAP, SMTP, FTP, SSH, TELNET.
6777
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03006778 - both "tcp-check send" and "tcp-check expect" are mentioned : this is
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006779 used to test a hello-type protocol. HAProxy sends a message, the server
6780 responds and its response is analyzed. the check result will be based on
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03006781 the matching between the response contents and the rules. This is often
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006782 suited for protocols which require a binding or a request/response model.
6783 LDAP, MySQL, Redis and SSL are example of such protocols, though they
6784 already all have their dedicated checks with a deeper understanding of
6785 the respective protocols.
6786 In this mode, many questions may be sent and many answers may be
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006787 analyzed.
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006788
Baptiste Assmannd60a9e52015-04-25 16:27:23 +02006789 A fifth mode can be used to insert comments in different steps of the
6790 script.
6791
6792 For each tcp-check rule you create, you can add a "comment" directive,
6793 followed by a string. This string will be reported in the log and stderr
6794 in debug mode. It is useful to make user-friendly error reporting.
6795 The "comment" is of course optional.
6796
6797
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006798 Examples :
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006799 # perform a POP check (analyze only server's banner)
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006800 option tcp-check
Baptiste Assmannd60a9e52015-04-25 16:27:23 +02006801 tcp-check expect string +OK\ POP3\ ready comment POP\ protocol
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006802
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006803 # perform an IMAP check (analyze only server's banner)
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006804 option tcp-check
Baptiste Assmannd60a9e52015-04-25 16:27:23 +02006805 tcp-check expect string *\ OK\ IMAP4\ ready comment IMAP\ protocol
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006806
6807 # look for the redis master server after ensuring it speaks well
6808 # redis protocol, then it exits properly.
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006809 # (send a command then analyze the response 3 times)
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006810 option tcp-check
Baptiste Assmannd60a9e52015-04-25 16:27:23 +02006811 tcp-check comment PING\ phase
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006812 tcp-check send PING\r\n
Baptiste Assmanna3322992015-08-04 10:12:18 +02006813 tcp-check expect string +PONG
Baptiste Assmannd60a9e52015-04-25 16:27:23 +02006814 tcp-check comment role\ check
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006815 tcp-check send info\ replication\r\n
6816 tcp-check expect string role:master
Baptiste Assmannd60a9e52015-04-25 16:27:23 +02006817 tcp-check comment QUIT\ phase
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006818 tcp-check send QUIT\r\n
6819 tcp-check expect string +OK
6820
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006821 forge a HTTP request, then analyze the response
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006822 (send many headers before analyzing)
6823 option tcp-check
Baptiste Assmannd60a9e52015-04-25 16:27:23 +02006824 tcp-check comment forge\ and\ send\ HTTP\ request
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006825 tcp-check send HEAD\ /\ HTTP/1.1\r\n
6826 tcp-check send Host:\ www.mydomain.com\r\n
6827 tcp-check send User-Agent:\ HAProxy\ tcpcheck\r\n
6828 tcp-check send \r\n
Baptiste Assmannd60a9e52015-04-25 16:27:23 +02006829 tcp-check expect rstring HTTP/1\..\ (2..|3..) comment check\ HTTP\ response
Willy Tarreaued179852013-12-16 01:07:00 +01006830
6831
6832 See also : "tcp-check expect", "tcp-check send"
6833
6834
Willy Tarreau9ea05a72009-06-14 12:07:01 +02006835option tcp-smart-accept
6836no option tcp-smart-accept
6837 Enable or disable the saving of one ACK packet during the accept sequence
6838 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6839 yes | yes | yes | no
6840 Arguments : none
6841
6842 When an HTTP connection request comes in, the system acknowledges it on
6843 behalf of HAProxy, then the client immediately sends its request, and the
6844 system acknowledges it too while it is notifying HAProxy about the new
6845 connection. HAProxy then reads the request and responds. This means that we
6846 have one TCP ACK sent by the system for nothing, because the request could
6847 very well be acknowledged by HAProxy when it sends its response.
6848
6849 For this reason, in HTTP mode, HAProxy automatically asks the system to avoid
6850 sending this useless ACK on platforms which support it (currently at least
6851 Linux). It must not cause any problem, because the system will send it anyway
6852 after 40 ms if the response takes more time than expected to come.
6853
6854 During complex network debugging sessions, it may be desirable to disable
6855 this optimization because delayed ACKs can make troubleshooting more complex
6856 when trying to identify where packets are delayed. It is then possible to
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006857 fall back to normal behavior by specifying "no option tcp-smart-accept".
Willy Tarreau9ea05a72009-06-14 12:07:01 +02006858
6859 It is also possible to force it for non-HTTP proxies by simply specifying
6860 "option tcp-smart-accept". For instance, it can make sense with some services
6861 such as SMTP where the server speaks first.
6862
6863 It is recommended to avoid forcing this option in a defaults section. In case
6864 of doubt, consider setting it back to automatic values by prepending the
6865 "default" keyword before it, or disabling it using the "no" keyword.
6866
Willy Tarreaud88edf22009-06-14 15:48:17 +02006867 See also : "option tcp-smart-connect"
6868
6869
6870option tcp-smart-connect
6871no option tcp-smart-connect
6872 Enable or disable the saving of one ACK packet during the connect sequence
6873 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6874 yes | no | yes | yes
6875 Arguments : none
6876
6877 On certain systems (at least Linux), HAProxy can ask the kernel not to
6878 immediately send an empty ACK upon a connection request, but to directly
6879 send the buffer request instead. This saves one packet on the network and
6880 thus boosts performance. It can also be useful for some servers, because they
6881 immediately get the request along with the incoming connection.
6882
6883 This feature is enabled when "option tcp-smart-connect" is set in a backend.
6884 It is not enabled by default because it makes network troubleshooting more
6885 complex.
6886
6887 It only makes sense to enable it with protocols where the client speaks first
6888 such as HTTP. In other situations, if there is no data to send in place of
6889 the ACK, a normal ACK is sent.
6890
6891 If this option has been enabled in a "defaults" section, it can be disabled
6892 in a specific instance by prepending the "no" keyword before it.
6893
6894 See also : "option tcp-smart-accept"
6895
Willy Tarreau9ea05a72009-06-14 12:07:01 +02006896
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01006897option tcpka
6898 Enable or disable the sending of TCP keepalive packets on both sides
6899 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6900 yes | yes | yes | yes
6901 Arguments : none
6902
6903 When there is a firewall or any session-aware component between a client and
6904 a server, and when the protocol involves very long sessions with long idle
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01006905 periods (e.g. remote desktops), there is a risk that one of the intermediate
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01006906 components decides to expire a session which has remained idle for too long.
6907
6908 Enabling socket-level TCP keep-alives makes the system regularly send packets
6909 to the other end of the connection, leaving it active. The delay between
6910 keep-alive probes is controlled by the system only and depends both on the
6911 operating system and its tuning parameters.
6912
6913 It is important to understand that keep-alive packets are neither emitted nor
6914 received at the application level. It is only the network stacks which sees
6915 them. For this reason, even if one side of the proxy already uses keep-alives
6916 to maintain its connection alive, those keep-alive packets will not be
6917 forwarded to the other side of the proxy.
6918
6919 Please note that this has nothing to do with HTTP keep-alive.
6920
6921 Using option "tcpka" enables the emission of TCP keep-alive probes on both
6922 the client and server sides of a connection. Note that this is meaningful
6923 only in "defaults" or "listen" sections. If this option is used in a
6924 frontend, only the client side will get keep-alives, and if this option is
6925 used in a backend, only the server side will get keep-alives. For this
6926 reason, it is strongly recommended to explicitly use "option clitcpka" and
6927 "option srvtcpka" when the configuration is split between frontends and
6928 backends.
6929
6930 See also : "option clitcpka", "option srvtcpka"
6931
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +01006932
6933option tcplog
6934 Enable advanced logging of TCP connections with session state and timers
6935 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6936 yes | yes | yes | yes
6937 Arguments : none
6938
6939 By default, the log output format is very poor, as it only contains the
6940 source and destination addresses, and the instance name. By specifying
6941 "option tcplog", each log line turns into a much richer format including, but
6942 not limited to, the connection timers, the session status, the connections
6943 numbers, the frontend, backend and server name, and of course the source
6944 address and ports. This option is useful for pure TCP proxies in order to
6945 find which of the client or server disconnects or times out. For normal HTTP
6946 proxies, it's better to use "option httplog" which is even more complete.
6947
6948 This option may be set either in the frontend or the backend.
6949
Guillaume de Lafond29f45602017-03-31 19:52:15 +02006950 "option tcplog" overrides any previous "log-format" directive.
6951
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02006952 See also : "option httplog", and section 8 about logging.
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +01006953
6954
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +01006955option transparent
6956no option transparent
6957 Enable client-side transparent proxying
6958 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreau4b1f8592008-12-23 23:13:55 +01006959 yes | no | yes | yes
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +01006960 Arguments : none
6961
6962 This option was introduced in order to provide layer 7 persistence to layer 3
6963 load balancers. The idea is to use the OS's ability to redirect an incoming
6964 connection for a remote address to a local process (here HAProxy), and let
6965 this process know what address was initially requested. When this option is
6966 used, sessions without cookies will be forwarded to the original destination
6967 IP address of the incoming request (which should match that of another
6968 equipment), while requests with cookies will still be forwarded to the
6969 appropriate server.
6970
6971 Note that contrary to a common belief, this option does NOT make HAProxy
6972 present the client's IP to the server when establishing the connection.
6973
Willy Tarreaua1146052011-03-01 09:51:54 +01006974 See also: the "usesrc" argument of the "source" keyword, and the
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01006975 "transparent" option of the "bind" keyword.
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +01006976
Willy Tarreaubf1f8162007-12-28 17:42:56 +01006977
Simon Horman98637e52014-06-20 12:30:16 +09006978external-check command <command>
6979 Executable to run when performing an external-check
6980 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
6981 yes | no | yes | yes
6982
6983 Arguments :
6984 <command> is the external command to run
6985
Simon Horman98637e52014-06-20 12:30:16 +09006986 The arguments passed to the to the command are:
6987
Cyril Bonté777be862014-12-02 21:21:35 +01006988 <proxy_address> <proxy_port> <server_address> <server_port>
Simon Horman98637e52014-06-20 12:30:16 +09006989
Cyril Bonté777be862014-12-02 21:21:35 +01006990 The <proxy_address> and <proxy_port> are derived from the first listener
6991 that is either IPv4, IPv6 or a UNIX socket. In the case of a UNIX socket
6992 listener the proxy_address will be the path of the socket and the
6993 <proxy_port> will be the string "NOT_USED". In a backend section, it's not
6994 possible to determine a listener, and both <proxy_address> and <proxy_port>
6995 will have the string value "NOT_USED".
Simon Horman98637e52014-06-20 12:30:16 +09006996
Cyril Bonté72cda2a2014-12-27 22:28:39 +01006997 Some values are also provided through environment variables.
6998
6999 Environment variables :
7000 HAPROXY_PROXY_ADDR The first bind address if available (or empty if not
7001 applicable, for example in a "backend" section).
7002
7003 HAPROXY_PROXY_ID The backend id.
7004
7005 HAPROXY_PROXY_NAME The backend name.
7006
7007 HAPROXY_PROXY_PORT The first bind port if available (or empty if not
7008 applicable, for example in a "backend" section or
7009 for a UNIX socket).
7010
7011 HAPROXY_SERVER_ADDR The server address.
7012
7013 HAPROXY_SERVER_CURCONN The current number of connections on the server.
7014
7015 HAPROXY_SERVER_ID The server id.
7016
7017 HAPROXY_SERVER_MAXCONN The server max connections.
7018
7019 HAPROXY_SERVER_NAME The server name.
7020
7021 HAPROXY_SERVER_PORT The server port if available (or empty for a UNIX
7022 socket).
7023
7024 PATH The PATH environment variable used when executing
7025 the command may be set using "external-check path".
7026
Simon Horman98637e52014-06-20 12:30:16 +09007027 If the command executed and exits with a zero status then the check is
7028 considered to have passed, otherwise the check is considered to have
7029 failed.
7030
7031 Example :
7032 external-check command /bin/true
7033
7034 See also : "external-check", "option external-check", "external-check path"
7035
7036
7037external-check path <path>
7038 The value of the PATH environment variable used when running an external-check
7039 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7040 yes | no | yes | yes
7041
7042 Arguments :
7043 <path> is the path used when executing external command to run
7044
7045 The default path is "".
7046
7047 Example :
7048 external-check path "/usr/bin:/bin"
7049
7050 See also : "external-check", "option external-check",
7051 "external-check command"
7052
7053
Emeric Brun647caf12009-06-30 17:57:00 +02007054persist rdp-cookie
Hervé COMMOWICKa3eb39c2011-08-05 18:48:51 +02007055persist rdp-cookie(<name>)
Emeric Brun647caf12009-06-30 17:57:00 +02007056 Enable RDP cookie-based persistence
7057 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7058 yes | no | yes | yes
7059 Arguments :
7060 <name> is the optional name of the RDP cookie to check. If omitted, the
Willy Tarreau61e28f22010-05-16 22:31:05 +02007061 default cookie name "msts" will be used. There currently is no
7062 valid reason to change this name.
Emeric Brun647caf12009-06-30 17:57:00 +02007063
7064 This statement enables persistence based on an RDP cookie. The RDP cookie
7065 contains all information required to find the server in the list of known
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01007066 servers. So when this option is set in the backend, the request is analyzed
Emeric Brun647caf12009-06-30 17:57:00 +02007067 and if an RDP cookie is found, it is decoded. If it matches a known server
7068 which is still UP (or if "option persist" is set), then the connection is
7069 forwarded to this server.
7070
7071 Note that this only makes sense in a TCP backend, but for this to work, the
7072 frontend must have waited long enough to ensure that an RDP cookie is present
7073 in the request buffer. This is the same requirement as with the "rdp-cookie"
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01007074 load-balancing method. Thus it is highly recommended to put all statements in
Emeric Brun647caf12009-06-30 17:57:00 +02007075 a single "listen" section.
7076
Willy Tarreau61e28f22010-05-16 22:31:05 +02007077 Also, it is important to understand that the terminal server will emit this
7078 RDP cookie only if it is configured for "token redirection mode", which means
7079 that the "IP address redirection" option is disabled.
7080
Emeric Brun647caf12009-06-30 17:57:00 +02007081 Example :
7082 listen tse-farm
7083 bind :3389
7084 # wait up to 5s for an RDP cookie in the request
7085 tcp-request inspect-delay 5s
7086 tcp-request content accept if RDP_COOKIE
7087 # apply RDP cookie persistence
7088 persist rdp-cookie
7089 # if server is unknown, let's balance on the same cookie.
Cyril Bontédc4d9032012-04-08 21:57:39 +02007090 # alternatively, "balance leastconn" may be useful too.
Emeric Brun647caf12009-06-30 17:57:00 +02007091 balance rdp-cookie
7092 server srv1 1.1.1.1:3389
7093 server srv2 1.1.1.2:3389
7094
Simon Hormanab814e02011-06-24 14:50:20 +09007095 See also : "balance rdp-cookie", "tcp-request", the "req_rdp_cookie" ACL and
7096 the rdp_cookie pattern fetch function.
Emeric Brun647caf12009-06-30 17:57:00 +02007097
7098
Willy Tarreau3a7d2072009-03-05 23:48:25 +01007099rate-limit sessions <rate>
7100 Set a limit on the number of new sessions accepted per second on a frontend
7101 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7102 yes | yes | yes | no
7103 Arguments :
7104 <rate> The <rate> parameter is an integer designating the maximum number
7105 of new sessions per second to accept on the frontend.
7106
7107 When the frontend reaches the specified number of new sessions per second, it
7108 stops accepting new connections until the rate drops below the limit again.
7109 During this time, the pending sessions will be kept in the socket's backlog
7110 (in system buffers) and haproxy will not even be aware that sessions are
7111 pending. When applying very low limit on a highly loaded service, it may make
7112 sense to increase the socket's backlog using the "backlog" keyword.
7113
7114 This feature is particularly efficient at blocking connection-based attacks
7115 or service abuse on fragile servers. Since the session rate is measured every
7116 millisecond, it is extremely accurate. Also, the limit applies immediately,
7117 no delay is needed at all to detect the threshold.
7118
7119 Example : limit the connection rate on SMTP to 10 per second max
7120 listen smtp
7121 mode tcp
7122 bind :25
7123 rate-limit sessions 10
Panagiotis Panagiotopoulos7282d8e2016-02-11 16:37:15 +02007124 server smtp1 127.0.0.1:1025
Willy Tarreau3a7d2072009-03-05 23:48:25 +01007125
Willy Tarreaua17c2d92011-07-25 08:16:20 +02007126 Note : when the maximum rate is reached, the frontend's status is not changed
7127 but its sockets appear as "WAITING" in the statistics if the
7128 "socket-stats" option is enabled.
Willy Tarreau3a7d2072009-03-05 23:48:25 +01007129
7130 See also : the "backlog" keyword and the "fe_sess_rate" ACL criterion.
7131
7132
Willy Tarreau2e1dca82012-09-12 08:43:15 +02007133redirect location <loc> [code <code>] <option> [{if | unless} <condition>]
7134redirect prefix <pfx> [code <code>] <option> [{if | unless} <condition>]
7135redirect scheme <sch> [code <code>] <option> [{if | unless} <condition>]
Willy Tarreaub463dfb2008-06-07 23:08:56 +02007136 Return an HTTP redirection if/unless a condition is matched
7137 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7138 no | yes | yes | yes
7139
7140 If/unless the condition is matched, the HTTP request will lead to a redirect
Willy Tarreauf285f542010-01-03 20:03:03 +01007141 response. If no condition is specified, the redirect applies unconditionally.
Willy Tarreaub463dfb2008-06-07 23:08:56 +02007142
Willy Tarreau0140f252008-11-19 21:07:09 +01007143 Arguments :
Willy Tarreau2e1dca82012-09-12 08:43:15 +02007144 <loc> With "redirect location", the exact value in <loc> is placed into
Thierry FOURNIERd18cd0f2013-11-29 12:15:45 +01007145 the HTTP "Location" header. When used in an "http-request" rule,
7146 <loc> value follows the log-format rules and can include some
7147 dynamic values (see Custom Log Format in section 8.2.4).
Willy Tarreau2e1dca82012-09-12 08:43:15 +02007148
7149 <pfx> With "redirect prefix", the "Location" header is built from the
7150 concatenation of <pfx> and the complete URI path, including the
7151 query string, unless the "drop-query" option is specified (see
7152 below). As a special case, if <pfx> equals exactly "/", then
7153 nothing is inserted before the original URI. It allows one to
Thierry FOURNIERd18cd0f2013-11-29 12:15:45 +01007154 redirect to the same URL (for instance, to insert a cookie). When
7155 used in an "http-request" rule, <pfx> value follows the log-format
7156 rules and can include some dynamic values (see Custom Log Format
7157 in section 8.2.4).
Willy Tarreau2e1dca82012-09-12 08:43:15 +02007158
7159 <sch> With "redirect scheme", then the "Location" header is built by
7160 concatenating <sch> with "://" then the first occurrence of the
7161 "Host" header, and then the URI path, including the query string
7162 unless the "drop-query" option is specified (see below). If no
7163 path is found or if the path is "*", then "/" is used instead. If
7164 no "Host" header is found, then an empty host component will be
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03007165 returned, which most recent browsers interpret as redirecting to
Willy Tarreau2e1dca82012-09-12 08:43:15 +02007166 the same host. This directive is mostly used to redirect HTTP to
Thierry FOURNIERd18cd0f2013-11-29 12:15:45 +01007167 HTTPS. When used in an "http-request" rule, <sch> value follows
7168 the log-format rules and can include some dynamic values (see
7169 Custom Log Format in section 8.2.4).
Willy Tarreau0140f252008-11-19 21:07:09 +01007170
7171 <code> The code is optional. It indicates which type of HTTP redirection
Willy Tarreaub67fdc42013-03-29 19:28:11 +01007172 is desired. Only codes 301, 302, 303, 307 and 308 are supported,
7173 with 302 used by default if no code is specified. 301 means
7174 "Moved permanently", and a browser may cache the Location. 302
Baptiste Assmannea849c02015-08-03 11:42:50 +02007175 means "Moved temporarily" and means that the browser should not
Willy Tarreaub67fdc42013-03-29 19:28:11 +01007176 cache the redirection. 303 is equivalent to 302 except that the
7177 browser will fetch the location with a GET method. 307 is just
7178 like 302 but makes it clear that the same method must be reused.
7179 Likewise, 308 replaces 301 if the same method must be used.
Willy Tarreau0140f252008-11-19 21:07:09 +01007180
7181 <option> There are several options which can be specified to adjust the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01007182 expected behavior of a redirection :
Willy Tarreau0140f252008-11-19 21:07:09 +01007183
7184 - "drop-query"
7185 When this keyword is used in a prefix-based redirection, then the
7186 location will be set without any possible query-string, which is useful
7187 for directing users to a non-secure page for instance. It has no effect
7188 with a location-type redirect.
7189
Willy Tarreau81e3b4f2010-01-10 00:42:19 +01007190 - "append-slash"
7191 This keyword may be used in conjunction with "drop-query" to redirect
7192 users who use a URL not ending with a '/' to the same one with the '/'.
7193 It can be useful to ensure that search engines will only see one URL.
7194 For this, a return code 301 is preferred.
7195
Willy Tarreau0140f252008-11-19 21:07:09 +01007196 - "set-cookie NAME[=value]"
7197 A "Set-Cookie" header will be added with NAME (and optionally "=value")
7198 to the response. This is sometimes used to indicate that a user has
7199 been seen, for instance to protect against some types of DoS. No other
7200 cookie option is added, so the cookie will be a session cookie. Note
7201 that for a browser, a sole cookie name without an equal sign is
7202 different from a cookie with an equal sign.
7203
7204 - "clear-cookie NAME[=]"
7205 A "Set-Cookie" header will be added with NAME (and optionally "="), but
7206 with the "Max-Age" attribute set to zero. This will tell the browser to
7207 delete this cookie. It is useful for instance on logout pages. It is
7208 important to note that clearing the cookie "NAME" will not remove a
7209 cookie set with "NAME=value". You have to clear the cookie "NAME=" for
7210 that, because the browser makes the difference.
Willy Tarreaub463dfb2008-06-07 23:08:56 +02007211
7212 Example: move the login URL only to HTTPS.
7213 acl clear dst_port 80
7214 acl secure dst_port 8080
7215 acl login_page url_beg /login
Willy Tarreau0140f252008-11-19 21:07:09 +01007216 acl logout url_beg /logout
Willy Tarreau79da4692008-11-19 20:03:04 +01007217 acl uid_given url_reg /login?userid=[^&]+
Willy Tarreau0140f252008-11-19 21:07:09 +01007218 acl cookie_set hdr_sub(cookie) SEEN=1
7219
7220 redirect prefix https://mysite.com set-cookie SEEN=1 if !cookie_set
Willy Tarreau79da4692008-11-19 20:03:04 +01007221 redirect prefix https://mysite.com if login_page !secure
7222 redirect prefix http://mysite.com drop-query if login_page !uid_given
7223 redirect location http://mysite.com/ if !login_page secure
Willy Tarreau0140f252008-11-19 21:07:09 +01007224 redirect location / clear-cookie USERID= if logout
Willy Tarreaub463dfb2008-06-07 23:08:56 +02007225
Willy Tarreau81e3b4f2010-01-10 00:42:19 +01007226 Example: send redirects for request for articles without a '/'.
7227 acl missing_slash path_reg ^/article/[^/]*$
7228 redirect code 301 prefix / drop-query append-slash if missing_slash
7229
Willy Tarreau2e1dca82012-09-12 08:43:15 +02007230 Example: redirect all HTTP traffic to HTTPS when SSL is handled by haproxy.
David BERARDe7153042012-11-03 00:11:31 +01007231 redirect scheme https if !{ ssl_fc }
Willy Tarreau2e1dca82012-09-12 08:43:15 +02007232
Thierry FOURNIERd18cd0f2013-11-29 12:15:45 +01007233 Example: append 'www.' prefix in front of all hosts not having it
Coen Rosdorff596659b2016-04-11 11:33:49 +02007234 http-request redirect code 301 location \
7235 http://www.%[hdr(host)]%[capture.req.uri] \
7236 unless { hdr_beg(host) -i www }
Thierry FOURNIERd18cd0f2013-11-29 12:15:45 +01007237
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02007238 See section 7 about ACL usage.
Willy Tarreaub463dfb2008-06-07 23:08:56 +02007239
7240
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki25b501a2008-01-06 16:36:16 +01007241redisp (deprecated)
7242redispatch (deprecated)
7243 Enable or disable session redistribution in case of connection failure
7244 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7245 yes | no | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007246 Arguments : none
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki25b501a2008-01-06 16:36:16 +01007247
7248 In HTTP mode, if a server designated by a cookie is down, clients may
7249 definitely stick to it because they cannot flush the cookie, so they will not
7250 be able to access the service anymore.
7251
7252 Specifying "redispatch" will allow the proxy to break their persistence and
7253 redistribute them to a working server.
7254
7255 It also allows to retry last connection to another server in case of multiple
7256 connection failures. Of course, it requires having "retries" set to a nonzero
7257 value.
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +01007258
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki25b501a2008-01-06 16:36:16 +01007259 This form is deprecated, do not use it in any new configuration, use the new
7260 "option redispatch" instead.
7261
7262 See also : "option redispatch"
7263
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007264
Willy Tarreau8abd4cd2010-01-31 14:30:44 +01007265reqadd <string> [{if | unless} <cond>]
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007266 Add a header at the end of the HTTP request
7267 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7268 no | yes | yes | yes
7269 Arguments :
7270 <string> is the complete line to be added. Any space or known delimiter
7271 must be escaped using a backslash ('\'). Please refer to section
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02007272 6 about HTTP header manipulation for more information.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007273
Willy Tarreau8abd4cd2010-01-31 14:30:44 +01007274 <cond> is an optional matching condition built from ACLs. It makes it
7275 possible to ignore this rule when other conditions are not met.
7276
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007277 A new line consisting in <string> followed by a line feed will be added after
7278 the last header of an HTTP request.
7279
7280 Header transformations only apply to traffic which passes through HAProxy,
7281 and not to traffic generated by HAProxy, such as health-checks or error
7282 responses.
7283
Willy Tarreau8abd4cd2010-01-31 14:30:44 +01007284 Example : add "X-Proto: SSL" to requests coming via port 81
7285 acl is-ssl dst_port 81
7286 reqadd X-Proto:\ SSL if is-ssl
7287
Ruoshan Huangeb5a3632015-12-08 21:00:23 +08007288 See also: "rspadd", "http-request", section 6 about HTTP header manipulation,
7289 and section 7 about ACLs.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007290
7291
Willy Tarreau5321c422010-01-28 20:35:13 +01007292reqallow <search> [{if | unless} <cond>]
7293reqiallow <search> [{if | unless} <cond>] (ignore case)
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007294 Definitely allow an HTTP request if a line matches a regular expression
7295 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7296 no | yes | yes | yes
7297 Arguments :
7298 <search> is the regular expression applied to HTTP headers and to the
7299 request line. This is an extended regular expression. Parenthesis
7300 grouping is supported and no preliminary backslash is required.
7301 Any space or known delimiter must be escaped using a backslash
7302 ('\'). The pattern applies to a full line at a time. The
7303 "reqallow" keyword strictly matches case while "reqiallow"
7304 ignores case.
7305
Willy Tarreau5321c422010-01-28 20:35:13 +01007306 <cond> is an optional matching condition built from ACLs. It makes it
7307 possible to ignore this rule when other conditions are not met.
7308
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007309 A request containing any line which matches extended regular expression
7310 <search> will mark the request as allowed, even if any later test would
7311 result in a deny. The test applies both to the request line and to request
7312 headers. Keep in mind that URLs in request line are case-sensitive while
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +01007313 header names are not.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007314
7315 It is easier, faster and more powerful to use ACLs to write access policies.
7316 Reqdeny, reqallow and reqpass should be avoided in new designs.
7317
7318 Example :
7319 # allow www.* but refuse *.local
7320 reqiallow ^Host:\ www\.
7321 reqideny ^Host:\ .*\.local
7322
Ruoshan Huangeb5a3632015-12-08 21:00:23 +08007323 See also: "reqdeny", "block", "http-request", section 6 about HTTP header
7324 manipulation, and section 7 about ACLs.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007325
7326
Willy Tarreau5321c422010-01-28 20:35:13 +01007327reqdel <search> [{if | unless} <cond>]
7328reqidel <search> [{if | unless} <cond>] (ignore case)
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007329 Delete all headers matching a regular expression in an HTTP request
7330 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7331 no | yes | yes | yes
7332 Arguments :
7333 <search> is the regular expression applied to HTTP headers and to the
7334 request line. This is an extended regular expression. Parenthesis
7335 grouping is supported and no preliminary backslash is required.
7336 Any space or known delimiter must be escaped using a backslash
7337 ('\'). The pattern applies to a full line at a time. The "reqdel"
7338 keyword strictly matches case while "reqidel" ignores case.
7339
Willy Tarreau5321c422010-01-28 20:35:13 +01007340 <cond> is an optional matching condition built from ACLs. It makes it
7341 possible to ignore this rule when other conditions are not met.
7342
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007343 Any header line matching extended regular expression <search> in the request
7344 will be completely deleted. Most common use of this is to remove unwanted
7345 and/or dangerous headers or cookies from a request before passing it to the
7346 next servers.
7347
7348 Header transformations only apply to traffic which passes through HAProxy,
7349 and not to traffic generated by HAProxy, such as health-checks or error
7350 responses. Keep in mind that header names are not case-sensitive.
7351
7352 Example :
7353 # remove X-Forwarded-For header and SERVER cookie
7354 reqidel ^X-Forwarded-For:.*
7355 reqidel ^Cookie:.*SERVER=
7356
Ruoshan Huangeb5a3632015-12-08 21:00:23 +08007357 See also: "reqadd", "reqrep", "rspdel", "http-request", section 6 about
7358 HTTP header manipulation, and section 7 about ACLs.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007359
7360
Willy Tarreau5321c422010-01-28 20:35:13 +01007361reqdeny <search> [{if | unless} <cond>]
7362reqideny <search> [{if | unless} <cond>] (ignore case)
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007363 Deny an HTTP request if a line matches a regular expression
7364 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7365 no | yes | yes | yes
7366 Arguments :
7367 <search> is the regular expression applied to HTTP headers and to the
7368 request line. This is an extended regular expression. Parenthesis
7369 grouping is supported and no preliminary backslash is required.
7370 Any space or known delimiter must be escaped using a backslash
7371 ('\'). The pattern applies to a full line at a time. The
7372 "reqdeny" keyword strictly matches case while "reqideny" ignores
7373 case.
7374
Willy Tarreau5321c422010-01-28 20:35:13 +01007375 <cond> is an optional matching condition built from ACLs. It makes it
7376 possible to ignore this rule when other conditions are not met.
7377
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007378 A request containing any line which matches extended regular expression
7379 <search> will mark the request as denied, even if any later test would
7380 result in an allow. The test applies both to the request line and to request
7381 headers. Keep in mind that URLs in request line are case-sensitive while
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +01007382 header names are not.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007383
Willy Tarreauced27012008-01-17 20:35:34 +01007384 A denied request will generate an "HTTP 403 forbidden" response once the
Willy Tarreaud2a4aa22008-01-31 15:28:22 +01007385 complete request has been parsed. This is consistent with what is practiced
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +01007386 using ACLs.
Willy Tarreauced27012008-01-17 20:35:34 +01007387
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007388 It is easier, faster and more powerful to use ACLs to write access policies.
7389 Reqdeny, reqallow and reqpass should be avoided in new designs.
7390
7391 Example :
7392 # refuse *.local, then allow www.*
7393 reqideny ^Host:\ .*\.local
7394 reqiallow ^Host:\ www\.
7395
Ruoshan Huangeb5a3632015-12-08 21:00:23 +08007396 See also: "reqallow", "rspdeny", "block", "http-request", section 6 about
7397 HTTP header manipulation, and section 7 about ACLs.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007398
7399
Willy Tarreau5321c422010-01-28 20:35:13 +01007400reqpass <search> [{if | unless} <cond>]
7401reqipass <search> [{if | unless} <cond>] (ignore case)
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007402 Ignore any HTTP request line matching a regular expression in next rules
7403 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7404 no | yes | yes | yes
7405 Arguments :
7406 <search> is the regular expression applied to HTTP headers and to the
7407 request line. This is an extended regular expression. Parenthesis
7408 grouping is supported and no preliminary backslash is required.
7409 Any space or known delimiter must be escaped using a backslash
7410 ('\'). The pattern applies to a full line at a time. The
7411 "reqpass" keyword strictly matches case while "reqipass" ignores
7412 case.
7413
Willy Tarreau5321c422010-01-28 20:35:13 +01007414 <cond> is an optional matching condition built from ACLs. It makes it
7415 possible to ignore this rule when other conditions are not met.
7416
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007417 A request containing any line which matches extended regular expression
7418 <search> will skip next rules, without assigning any deny or allow verdict.
7419 The test applies both to the request line and to request headers. Keep in
7420 mind that URLs in request line are case-sensitive while header names are not.
7421
7422 It is easier, faster and more powerful to use ACLs to write access policies.
7423 Reqdeny, reqallow and reqpass should be avoided in new designs.
7424
7425 Example :
7426 # refuse *.local, then allow www.*, but ignore "www.private.local"
7427 reqipass ^Host:\ www.private\.local
7428 reqideny ^Host:\ .*\.local
7429 reqiallow ^Host:\ www\.
7430
Ruoshan Huangeb5a3632015-12-08 21:00:23 +08007431 See also: "reqallow", "reqdeny", "block", "http-request", section 6 about
7432 HTTP header manipulation, and section 7 about ACLs.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007433
7434
Willy Tarreau5321c422010-01-28 20:35:13 +01007435reqrep <search> <string> [{if | unless} <cond>]
7436reqirep <search> <string> [{if | unless} <cond>] (ignore case)
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007437 Replace a regular expression with a string in an HTTP request line
7438 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7439 no | yes | yes | yes
7440 Arguments :
7441 <search> is the regular expression applied to HTTP headers and to the
7442 request line. This is an extended regular expression. Parenthesis
7443 grouping is supported and no preliminary backslash is required.
7444 Any space or known delimiter must be escaped using a backslash
7445 ('\'). The pattern applies to a full line at a time. The "reqrep"
7446 keyword strictly matches case while "reqirep" ignores case.
7447
7448 <string> is the complete line to be added. Any space or known delimiter
7449 must be escaped using a backslash ('\'). References to matched
7450 pattern groups are possible using the common \N form, with N
7451 being a single digit between 0 and 9. Please refer to section
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02007452 6 about HTTP header manipulation for more information.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007453
Willy Tarreau5321c422010-01-28 20:35:13 +01007454 <cond> is an optional matching condition built from ACLs. It makes it
7455 possible to ignore this rule when other conditions are not met.
7456
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007457 Any line matching extended regular expression <search> in the request (both
7458 the request line and header lines) will be completely replaced with <string>.
7459 Most common use of this is to rewrite URLs or domain names in "Host" headers.
7460
7461 Header transformations only apply to traffic which passes through HAProxy,
7462 and not to traffic generated by HAProxy, such as health-checks or error
7463 responses. Note that for increased readability, it is suggested to add enough
7464 spaces between the request and the response. Keep in mind that URLs in
7465 request line are case-sensitive while header names are not.
7466
7467 Example :
7468 # replace "/static/" with "/" at the beginning of any request path.
Dmitry Sivachenko7823de32012-05-16 14:00:26 +04007469 reqrep ^([^\ :]*)\ /static/(.*) \1\ /\2
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007470 # replace "www.mydomain.com" with "www" in the host name.
7471 reqirep ^Host:\ www.mydomain.com Host:\ www
7472
Ruoshan Huangeb5a3632015-12-08 21:00:23 +08007473 See also: "reqadd", "reqdel", "rsprep", "tune.bufsize", "http-request",
7474 section 6 about HTTP header manipulation, and section 7 about ACLs.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007475
7476
Willy Tarreau5321c422010-01-28 20:35:13 +01007477reqtarpit <search> [{if | unless} <cond>]
7478reqitarpit <search> [{if | unless} <cond>] (ignore case)
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007479 Tarpit an HTTP request containing a line matching a regular expression
7480 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7481 no | yes | yes | yes
7482 Arguments :
7483 <search> is the regular expression applied to HTTP headers and to the
7484 request line. This is an extended regular expression. Parenthesis
7485 grouping is supported and no preliminary backslash is required.
7486 Any space or known delimiter must be escaped using a backslash
7487 ('\'). The pattern applies to a full line at a time. The
7488 "reqtarpit" keyword strictly matches case while "reqitarpit"
7489 ignores case.
7490
Willy Tarreau5321c422010-01-28 20:35:13 +01007491 <cond> is an optional matching condition built from ACLs. It makes it
7492 possible to ignore this rule when other conditions are not met.
7493
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007494 A request containing any line which matches extended regular expression
7495 <search> will be tarpitted, which means that it will connect to nowhere, will
Willy Tarreauced27012008-01-17 20:35:34 +01007496 be kept open for a pre-defined time, then will return an HTTP error 500 so
7497 that the attacker does not suspect it has been tarpitted. The status 500 will
7498 be reported in the logs, but the completion flags will indicate "PT". The
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007499 delay is defined by "timeout tarpit", or "timeout connect" if the former is
7500 not set.
7501
7502 The goal of the tarpit is to slow down robots attacking servers with
7503 identifiable requests. Many robots limit their outgoing number of connections
7504 and stay connected waiting for a reply which can take several minutes to
7505 come. Depending on the environment and attack, it may be particularly
7506 efficient at reducing the load on the network and firewalls.
7507
Willy Tarreau5321c422010-01-28 20:35:13 +01007508 Examples :
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01007509 # ignore user-agents reporting any flavor of "Mozilla" or "MSIE", but
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007510 # block all others.
7511 reqipass ^User-Agent:\.*(Mozilla|MSIE)
7512 reqitarpit ^User-Agent:
7513
Willy Tarreau5321c422010-01-28 20:35:13 +01007514 # block bad guys
7515 acl badguys src 10.1.0.3 172.16.13.20/28
7516 reqitarpit . if badguys
7517
Ruoshan Huangeb5a3632015-12-08 21:00:23 +08007518 See also: "reqallow", "reqdeny", "reqpass", "http-request", section 6
7519 about HTTP header manipulation, and section 7 about ACLs.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007520
7521
Willy Tarreaue5c5ce92008-06-20 17:27:19 +02007522retries <value>
7523 Set the number of retries to perform on a server after a connection failure
7524 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7525 yes | no | yes | yes
7526 Arguments :
7527 <value> is the number of times a connection attempt should be retried on
7528 a server when a connection either is refused or times out. The
7529 default value is 3.
7530
7531 It is important to understand that this value applies to the number of
7532 connection attempts, not full requests. When a connection has effectively
7533 been established to a server, there will be no more retry.
7534
7535 In order to avoid immediate reconnections to a server which is restarting,
Joseph Lynch726ab712015-05-11 23:25:34 -07007536 a turn-around timer of min("timeout connect", one second) is applied before
7537 a retry occurs.
Willy Tarreaue5c5ce92008-06-20 17:27:19 +02007538
7539 When "option redispatch" is set, the last retry may be performed on another
7540 server even if a cookie references a different server.
7541
7542 See also : "option redispatch"
7543
7544
Willy Tarreaufdb563c2010-01-31 15:43:27 +01007545rspadd <string> [{if | unless} <cond>]
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007546 Add a header at the end of the HTTP response
7547 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7548 no | yes | yes | yes
7549 Arguments :
7550 <string> is the complete line to be added. Any space or known delimiter
7551 must be escaped using a backslash ('\'). Please refer to section
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02007552 6 about HTTP header manipulation for more information.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007553
Willy Tarreaufdb563c2010-01-31 15:43:27 +01007554 <cond> is an optional matching condition built from ACLs. It makes it
7555 possible to ignore this rule when other conditions are not met.
7556
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007557 A new line consisting in <string> followed by a line feed will be added after
7558 the last header of an HTTP response.
7559
7560 Header transformations only apply to traffic which passes through HAProxy,
7561 and not to traffic generated by HAProxy, such as health-checks or error
7562 responses.
7563
Ruoshan Huangeb5a3632015-12-08 21:00:23 +08007564 See also: "rspdel" "reqadd", "http-response", section 6 about HTTP header
7565 manipulation, and section 7 about ACLs.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007566
7567
Willy Tarreaufdb563c2010-01-31 15:43:27 +01007568rspdel <search> [{if | unless} <cond>]
7569rspidel <search> [{if | unless} <cond>] (ignore case)
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007570 Delete all headers matching a regular expression in an HTTP response
7571 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7572 no | yes | yes | yes
7573 Arguments :
7574 <search> is the regular expression applied to HTTP headers and to the
7575 response line. This is an extended regular expression, so
7576 parenthesis grouping is supported and no preliminary backslash
7577 is required. Any space or known delimiter must be escaped using
7578 a backslash ('\'). The pattern applies to a full line at a time.
7579 The "rspdel" keyword strictly matches case while "rspidel"
7580 ignores case.
7581
Willy Tarreaufdb563c2010-01-31 15:43:27 +01007582 <cond> is an optional matching condition built from ACLs. It makes it
7583 possible to ignore this rule when other conditions are not met.
7584
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007585 Any header line matching extended regular expression <search> in the response
7586 will be completely deleted. Most common use of this is to remove unwanted
Willy Tarreau3c92c5f2011-08-28 09:45:47 +02007587 and/or sensitive headers or cookies from a response before passing it to the
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007588 client.
7589
7590 Header transformations only apply to traffic which passes through HAProxy,
7591 and not to traffic generated by HAProxy, such as health-checks or error
7592 responses. Keep in mind that header names are not case-sensitive.
7593
7594 Example :
7595 # remove the Server header from responses
Willy Tarreau5e80e022013-05-25 08:31:25 +02007596 rspidel ^Server:.*
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007597
Ruoshan Huangeb5a3632015-12-08 21:00:23 +08007598 See also: "rspadd", "rsprep", "reqdel", "http-response", section 6 about
7599 HTTP header manipulation, and section 7 about ACLs.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007600
7601
Willy Tarreaufdb563c2010-01-31 15:43:27 +01007602rspdeny <search> [{if | unless} <cond>]
7603rspideny <search> [{if | unless} <cond>] (ignore case)
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007604 Block an HTTP response if a line matches a regular expression
7605 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7606 no | yes | yes | yes
7607 Arguments :
7608 <search> is the regular expression applied to HTTP headers and to the
7609 response line. This is an extended regular expression, so
7610 parenthesis grouping is supported and no preliminary backslash
7611 is required. Any space or known delimiter must be escaped using
7612 a backslash ('\'). The pattern applies to a full line at a time.
7613 The "rspdeny" keyword strictly matches case while "rspideny"
7614 ignores case.
7615
Willy Tarreaufdb563c2010-01-31 15:43:27 +01007616 <cond> is an optional matching condition built from ACLs. It makes it
7617 possible to ignore this rule when other conditions are not met.
7618
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007619 A response containing any line which matches extended regular expression
7620 <search> will mark the request as denied. The test applies both to the
7621 response line and to response headers. Keep in mind that header names are not
7622 case-sensitive.
7623
7624 Main use of this keyword is to prevent sensitive information leak and to
Willy Tarreauced27012008-01-17 20:35:34 +01007625 block the response before it reaches the client. If a response is denied, it
7626 will be replaced with an HTTP 502 error so that the client never retrieves
7627 any sensitive data.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007628
7629 It is easier, faster and more powerful to use ACLs to write access policies.
7630 Rspdeny should be avoided in new designs.
7631
7632 Example :
7633 # Ensure that no content type matching ms-word will leak
7634 rspideny ^Content-type:\.*/ms-word
7635
Ruoshan Huangeb5a3632015-12-08 21:00:23 +08007636 See also: "reqdeny", "acl", "block", "http-response", section 6 about
7637 HTTP header manipulation and section 7 about ACLs.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007638
7639
Willy Tarreaufdb563c2010-01-31 15:43:27 +01007640rsprep <search> <string> [{if | unless} <cond>]
7641rspirep <search> <string> [{if | unless} <cond>] (ignore case)
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007642 Replace a regular expression with a string in an HTTP response line
7643 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7644 no | yes | yes | yes
7645 Arguments :
7646 <search> is the regular expression applied to HTTP headers and to the
7647 response line. This is an extended regular expression, so
7648 parenthesis grouping is supported and no preliminary backslash
7649 is required. Any space or known delimiter must be escaped using
7650 a backslash ('\'). The pattern applies to a full line at a time.
7651 The "rsprep" keyword strictly matches case while "rspirep"
7652 ignores case.
7653
7654 <string> is the complete line to be added. Any space or known delimiter
7655 must be escaped using a backslash ('\'). References to matched
7656 pattern groups are possible using the common \N form, with N
7657 being a single digit between 0 and 9. Please refer to section
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02007658 6 about HTTP header manipulation for more information.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007659
Willy Tarreaufdb563c2010-01-31 15:43:27 +01007660 <cond> is an optional matching condition built from ACLs. It makes it
7661 possible to ignore this rule when other conditions are not met.
7662
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007663 Any line matching extended regular expression <search> in the response (both
7664 the response line and header lines) will be completely replaced with
7665 <string>. Most common use of this is to rewrite Location headers.
7666
7667 Header transformations only apply to traffic which passes through HAProxy,
7668 and not to traffic generated by HAProxy, such as health-checks or error
7669 responses. Note that for increased readability, it is suggested to add enough
7670 spaces between the request and the response. Keep in mind that header names
7671 are not case-sensitive.
7672
7673 Example :
7674 # replace "Location: 127.0.0.1:8080" with "Location: www.mydomain.com"
7675 rspirep ^Location:\ 127.0.0.1:8080 Location:\ www.mydomain.com
7676
Ruoshan Huangeb5a3632015-12-08 21:00:23 +08007677 See also: "rspadd", "rspdel", "reqrep", "http-response", section 6 about
7678 HTTP header manipulation, and section 7 about ACLs.
Willy Tarreau303c0352008-01-17 19:01:39 +01007679
7680
David du Colombier486df472011-03-17 10:40:26 +01007681server <name> <address>[:[port]] [param*]
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007682 Declare a server in a backend
7683 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7684 no | no | yes | yes
7685 Arguments :
7686 <name> is the internal name assigned to this server. This name will
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01007687 appear in logs and alerts. If "http-send-name-header" is
Mark Lamourinec2247f02012-01-04 13:02:01 -05007688 set, it will be added to the request header sent to the server.
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007689
David du Colombier486df472011-03-17 10:40:26 +01007690 <address> is the IPv4 or IPv6 address of the server. Alternatively, a
7691 resolvable hostname is supported, but this name will be resolved
7692 during start-up. Address "0.0.0.0" or "*" has a special meaning.
7693 It indicates that the connection will be forwarded to the same IP
Willy Tarreaud669a4f2010-07-13 14:49:50 +02007694 address as the one from the client connection. This is useful in
7695 transparent proxy architectures where the client's connection is
7696 intercepted and haproxy must forward to the original destination
7697 address. This is more or less what the "transparent" keyword does
7698 except that with a server it's possible to limit concurrency and
Willy Tarreau24709282013-03-10 21:32:12 +01007699 to report statistics. Optionally, an address family prefix may be
7700 used before the address to force the family regardless of the
7701 address format, which can be useful to specify a path to a unix
7702 socket with no slash ('/'). Currently supported prefixes are :
7703 - 'ipv4@' -> address is always IPv4
7704 - 'ipv6@' -> address is always IPv6
7705 - 'unix@' -> address is a path to a local unix socket
Willy Tarreauccfccef2014-05-10 01:49:15 +02007706 - 'abns@' -> address is in abstract namespace (Linux only)
William Lallemandb2f07452015-05-12 14:27:13 +02007707 You may want to reference some environment variables in the
7708 address parameter, see section 2.3 about environment
Willy Tarreau6a031d12016-11-07 19:42:35 +01007709 variables. The "init-addr" setting can be used to modify the way
7710 IP addresses should be resolved upon startup.
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007711
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +02007712 <port> is an optional port specification. If set, all connections will
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007713 be sent to this port. If unset, the same port the client
7714 connected to will be used. The port may also be prefixed by a "+"
7715 or a "-". In this case, the server's port will be determined by
7716 adding this value to the client's port.
7717
7718 <param*> is a list of parameters for this server. The "server" keywords
7719 accepts an important number of options and has a complete section
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02007720 dedicated to it. Please refer to section 5 for more details.
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007721
7722 Examples :
7723 server first 10.1.1.1:1080 cookie first check inter 1000
7724 server second 10.1.1.2:1080 cookie second check inter 1000
Willy Tarreau24709282013-03-10 21:32:12 +01007725 server transp ipv4@
William Lallemandb2f07452015-05-12 14:27:13 +02007726 server backup "${SRV_BACKUP}:1080" backup
7727 server www1_dc1 "${LAN_DC1}.101:80"
7728 server www1_dc2 "${LAN_DC2}.101:80"
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007729
Willy Tarreau55dcaf62015-09-27 15:03:15 +02007730 Note: regarding Linux's abstract namespace sockets, HAProxy uses the whole
7731 sun_path length is used for the address length. Some other programs
7732 such as socat use the string length only by default. Pass the option
7733 ",unix-tightsocklen=0" to any abstract socket definition in socat to
7734 make it compatible with HAProxy's.
7735
Mark Lamourinec2247f02012-01-04 13:02:01 -05007736 See also: "default-server", "http-send-name-header" and section 5 about
7737 server options
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007738
Baptiste Assmann01c6cc32015-08-23 11:45:29 +02007739server-state-file-name [<file>]
7740 Set the server state file to read, load and apply to servers available in
7741 this backend. It only applies when the directive "load-server-state-from-file"
7742 is set to "local". When <file> is not provided or if this directive is not
7743 set, then backend name is used. If <file> starts with a slash '/', then it is
7744 considered as an absolute path. Otherwise, <file> is concatenated to the
7745 global directive "server-state-file-base".
7746
7747 Example: the minimal configuration below would make HAProxy look for the
7748 state server file '/etc/haproxy/states/bk':
7749
7750 global
7751 server-state-file-base /etc/haproxy/states
7752
7753 backend bk
7754 load-server-state-from-file
7755
7756 See also: "server-state-file-base", "load-server-state-from-file", and
7757 "show servers state"
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007758
Frédéric Lécaillecb4502e2017-04-20 13:36:25 +02007759server-template <prefix> <num | range> <fqdn>[:<port>] [params*]
7760 Set a template to initialize servers with shared parameters.
7761 The names of these servers are built from <prefix> and <num | range> parameters.
7762 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7763 no | no | yes | yes
7764
7765 Arguments:
7766 <prefix> A prefix for the server names to be built.
7767
7768 <num | range>
7769 If <num> is provided, this template initializes <num> servers
7770 with 1 up to <num> as server name suffixes. A range of numbers
7771 <num_low>-<num_high> may also be used to use <num_low> up to
7772 <num_high> as server name suffixes.
7773
7774 <fqdn> A FQDN for all the servers this template initializes.
7775
7776 <port> Same meaning as "server" <port> argument (see "server" keyword).
7777
7778 <params*>
7779 Remaining server parameters among all those supported by "server"
7780 keyword.
7781
7782 Examples:
7783 # Initializes 3 servers with srv1, srv2 and srv3 as names,
7784 # google.com as FQDN, and health-check enabled.
7785 server-template srv 1-3 google.com:80 check
7786
7787 # or
7788 server-template srv 3 google.com:80 check
7789
7790 # would be equivalent to:
7791 server srv1 google.com:80 check
7792 server srv2 google.com:80 check
7793 server srv3 google.com:80 check
7794
7795
7796
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007797source <addr>[:<port>] [usesrc { <addr2>[:<port2>] | client | clientip } ]
Willy Tarreaubce70882009-09-07 11:51:47 +02007798source <addr>[:<port>] [usesrc { <addr2>[:<port2>] | hdr_ip(<hdr>[,<occ>]) } ]
Willy Tarreaud53f96b2009-02-04 18:46:54 +01007799source <addr>[:<port>] [interface <name>]
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007800 Set the source address for outgoing connections
7801 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7802 yes | no | yes | yes
7803 Arguments :
7804 <addr> is the IPv4 address HAProxy will bind to before connecting to a
7805 server. This address is also used as a source for health checks.
Willy Tarreau24709282013-03-10 21:32:12 +01007806
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007807 The default value of 0.0.0.0 means that the system will select
Willy Tarreau24709282013-03-10 21:32:12 +01007808 the most appropriate address to reach its destination. Optionally
7809 an address family prefix may be used before the address to force
7810 the family regardless of the address format, which can be useful
7811 to specify a path to a unix socket with no slash ('/'). Currently
7812 supported prefixes are :
7813 - 'ipv4@' -> address is always IPv4
7814 - 'ipv6@' -> address is always IPv6
7815 - 'unix@' -> address is a path to a local unix socket
Willy Tarreauccfccef2014-05-10 01:49:15 +02007816 - 'abns@' -> address is in abstract namespace (Linux only)
Cyril Bonté307ee1e2015-09-28 23:16:06 +02007817 You may want to reference some environment variables in the
7818 address parameter, see section 2.3 about environment variables.
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007819
7820 <port> is an optional port. It is normally not needed but may be useful
7821 in some very specific contexts. The default value of zero means
Willy Tarreauc6f4ce82009-06-10 11:09:37 +02007822 the system will select a free port. Note that port ranges are not
7823 supported in the backend. If you want to force port ranges, you
7824 have to specify them on each "server" line.
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007825
7826 <addr2> is the IP address to present to the server when connections are
7827 forwarded in full transparent proxy mode. This is currently only
7828 supported on some patched Linux kernels. When this address is
7829 specified, clients connecting to the server will be presented
7830 with this address, while health checks will still use the address
7831 <addr>.
7832
7833 <port2> is the optional port to present to the server when connections
7834 are forwarded in full transparent proxy mode (see <addr2> above).
7835 The default value of zero means the system will select a free
7836 port.
7837
Willy Tarreaubce70882009-09-07 11:51:47 +02007838 <hdr> is the name of a HTTP header in which to fetch the IP to bind to.
7839 This is the name of a comma-separated header list which can
7840 contain multiple IP addresses. By default, the last occurrence is
7841 used. This is designed to work with the X-Forwarded-For header
Baptiste Assmannea3e73b2013-02-02 23:47:49 +01007842 and to automatically bind to the client's IP address as seen
Willy Tarreaubce70882009-09-07 11:51:47 +02007843 by previous proxy, typically Stunnel. In order to use another
7844 occurrence from the last one, please see the <occ> parameter
7845 below. When the header (or occurrence) is not found, no binding
7846 is performed so that the proxy's default IP address is used. Also
7847 keep in mind that the header name is case insensitive, as for any
7848 HTTP header.
7849
7850 <occ> is the occurrence number of a value to be used in a multi-value
7851 header. This is to be used in conjunction with "hdr_ip(<hdr>)",
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -04007852 in order to specify which occurrence to use for the source IP
Willy Tarreaubce70882009-09-07 11:51:47 +02007853 address. Positive values indicate a position from the first
7854 occurrence, 1 being the first one. Negative values indicate
7855 positions relative to the last one, -1 being the last one. This
7856 is helpful for situations where an X-Forwarded-For header is set
7857 at the entry point of an infrastructure and must be used several
7858 proxy layers away. When this value is not specified, -1 is
7859 assumed. Passing a zero here disables the feature.
7860
Willy Tarreaud53f96b2009-02-04 18:46:54 +01007861 <name> is an optional interface name to which to bind to for outgoing
7862 traffic. On systems supporting this features (currently, only
7863 Linux), this allows one to bind all traffic to the server to
7864 this interface even if it is not the one the system would select
7865 based on routing tables. This should be used with extreme care.
7866 Note that using this option requires root privileges.
7867
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007868 The "source" keyword is useful in complex environments where a specific
7869 address only is allowed to connect to the servers. It may be needed when a
7870 private address must be used through a public gateway for instance, and it is
7871 known that the system cannot determine the adequate source address by itself.
7872
7873 An extension which is available on certain patched Linux kernels may be used
7874 through the "usesrc" optional keyword. It makes it possible to connect to the
7875 servers with an IP address which does not belong to the system itself. This
7876 is called "full transparent proxy mode". For this to work, the destination
7877 servers have to route their traffic back to this address through the machine
7878 running HAProxy, and IP forwarding must generally be enabled on this machine.
7879
7880 In this "full transparent proxy" mode, it is possible to force a specific IP
7881 address to be presented to the servers. This is not much used in fact. A more
7882 common use is to tell HAProxy to present the client's IP address. For this,
7883 there are two methods :
7884
7885 - present the client's IP and port addresses. This is the most transparent
7886 mode, but it can cause problems when IP connection tracking is enabled on
7887 the machine, because a same connection may be seen twice with different
7888 states. However, this solution presents the huge advantage of not
7889 limiting the system to the 64k outgoing address+port couples, because all
7890 of the client ranges may be used.
7891
7892 - present only the client's IP address and select a spare port. This
7893 solution is still quite elegant but slightly less transparent (downstream
7894 firewalls logs will not match upstream's). It also presents the downside
7895 of limiting the number of concurrent connections to the usual 64k ports.
7896 However, since the upstream and downstream ports are different, local IP
7897 connection tracking on the machine will not be upset by the reuse of the
7898 same session.
7899
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007900 This option sets the default source for all servers in the backend. It may
7901 also be specified in a "defaults" section. Finer source address specification
7902 is possible at the server level using the "source" server option. Refer to
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02007903 section 5 for more information.
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007904
Baptiste Assmann91bd3372015-07-17 21:59:42 +02007905 In order to work, "usesrc" requires root privileges.
7906
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007907 Examples :
7908 backend private
7909 # Connect to the servers using our 192.168.1.200 source address
7910 source 192.168.1.200
7911
7912 backend transparent_ssl1
7913 # Connect to the SSL farm from the client's source address
7914 source 192.168.1.200 usesrc clientip
7915
7916 backend transparent_ssl2
7917 # Connect to the SSL farm from the client's source address and port
7918 # not recommended if IP conntrack is present on the local machine.
7919 source 192.168.1.200 usesrc client
7920
7921 backend transparent_ssl3
7922 # Connect to the SSL farm from the client's source address. It
7923 # is more conntrack-friendly.
7924 source 192.168.1.200 usesrc clientip
7925
7926 backend transparent_smtp
7927 # Connect to the SMTP farm from the client's source address/port
7928 # with Tproxy version 4.
7929 source 0.0.0.0 usesrc clientip
7930
Willy Tarreaubce70882009-09-07 11:51:47 +02007931 backend transparent_http
7932 # Connect to the servers using the client's IP as seen by previous
7933 # proxy.
7934 source 0.0.0.0 usesrc hdr_ip(x-forwarded-for,-1)
7935
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02007936 See also : the "source" server option in section 5, the Tproxy patches for
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01007937 the Linux kernel on www.balabit.com, the "bind" keyword.
7938
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki25b501a2008-01-06 16:36:16 +01007939
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +01007940srvtimeout <timeout> (deprecated)
7941 Set the maximum inactivity time on the server side.
7942 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
7943 yes | no | yes | yes
7944 Arguments :
7945 <timeout> is the timeout value specified in milliseconds by default, but
7946 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
7947 as explained at the top of this document.
7948
7949 The inactivity timeout applies when the server is expected to acknowledge or
7950 send data. In HTTP mode, this timeout is particularly important to consider
7951 during the first phase of the server's response, when it has to send the
7952 headers, as it directly represents the server's processing time for the
7953 request. To find out what value to put there, it's often good to start with
7954 what would be considered as unacceptable response times, then check the logs
7955 to observe the response time distribution, and adjust the value accordingly.
7956
7957 The value is specified in milliseconds by default, but can be in any other
7958 unit if the number is suffixed by the unit, as specified at the top of this
7959 document. In TCP mode (and to a lesser extent, in HTTP mode), it is highly
7960 recommended that the client timeout remains equal to the server timeout in
7961 order to avoid complex situations to debug. Whatever the expected server
Willy Tarreaud2a4aa22008-01-31 15:28:22 +01007962 response times, it is a good practice to cover at least one or several TCP
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +01007963 packet losses by specifying timeouts that are slightly above multiples of 3
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01007964 seconds (e.g. 4 or 5 seconds minimum).
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +01007965
7966 This parameter is specific to backends, but can be specified once for all in
7967 "defaults" sections. This is in fact one of the easiest solutions not to
7968 forget about it. An unspecified timeout results in an infinite timeout, which
7969 is not recommended. Such a usage is accepted and works but reports a warning
7970 during startup because it may results in accumulation of expired sessions in
7971 the system if the system's timeouts are not configured either.
7972
7973 This parameter is provided for compatibility but is currently deprecated.
7974 Please use "timeout server" instead.
7975
Willy Tarreauce887fd2012-05-12 12:50:00 +02007976 See also : "timeout server", "timeout tunnel", "timeout client" and
7977 "clitimeout".
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +01007978
7979
Cyril Bonté66c327d2010-10-12 00:14:37 +02007980stats admin { if | unless } <cond>
7981 Enable statistics admin level if/unless a condition is matched
7982 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreaued2119c2014-04-24 22:10:39 +02007983 no | yes | yes | yes
Cyril Bonté66c327d2010-10-12 00:14:37 +02007984
7985 This statement enables the statistics admin level if/unless a condition is
7986 matched.
7987
7988 The admin level allows to enable/disable servers from the web interface. By
7989 default, statistics page is read-only for security reasons.
7990
Cyril Bonté02ff8ef2010-12-14 22:48:49 +01007991 Note : Consider not using this feature in multi-process mode (nbproc > 1)
7992 unless you know what you do : memory is not shared between the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01007993 processes, which can result in random behaviors.
Cyril Bonté02ff8ef2010-12-14 22:48:49 +01007994
Cyril Bonté23b39d92011-02-10 22:54:44 +01007995 Currently, the POST request is limited to the buffer size minus the reserved
7996 buffer space, which means that if the list of servers is too long, the
7997 request won't be processed. It is recommended to alter few servers at a
7998 time.
Cyril Bonté66c327d2010-10-12 00:14:37 +02007999
8000 Example :
8001 # statistics admin level only for localhost
8002 backend stats_localhost
8003 stats enable
8004 stats admin if LOCALHOST
8005
8006 Example :
8007 # statistics admin level always enabled because of the authentication
8008 backend stats_auth
8009 stats enable
8010 stats auth admin:AdMiN123
8011 stats admin if TRUE
8012
8013 Example :
8014 # statistics admin level depends on the authenticated user
8015 userlist stats-auth
8016 group admin users admin
8017 user admin insecure-password AdMiN123
8018 group readonly users haproxy
8019 user haproxy insecure-password haproxy
8020
8021 backend stats_auth
8022 stats enable
8023 acl AUTH http_auth(stats-auth)
8024 acl AUTH_ADMIN http_auth_group(stats-auth) admin
8025 stats http-request auth unless AUTH
8026 stats admin if AUTH_ADMIN
8027
Cyril Bonté02ff8ef2010-12-14 22:48:49 +01008028 See also : "stats enable", "stats auth", "stats http-request", "nbproc",
8029 "bind-process", section 3.4 about userlists and section 7 about
8030 ACL usage.
Cyril Bonté66c327d2010-10-12 00:14:37 +02008031
8032
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008033stats auth <user>:<passwd>
8034 Enable statistics with authentication and grant access to an account
8035 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreaued2119c2014-04-24 22:10:39 +02008036 yes | yes | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008037 Arguments :
8038 <user> is a user name to grant access to
8039
8040 <passwd> is the cleartext password associated to this user
8041
8042 This statement enables statistics with default settings, and restricts access
8043 to declared users only. It may be repeated as many times as necessary to
8044 allow as many users as desired. When a user tries to access the statistics
8045 without a valid account, a "401 Forbidden" response will be returned so that
8046 the browser asks the user to provide a valid user and password. The real
8047 which will be returned to the browser is configurable using "stats realm".
8048
8049 Since the authentication method is HTTP Basic Authentication, the passwords
8050 circulate in cleartext on the network. Thus, it was decided that the
8051 configuration file would also use cleartext passwords to remind the users
Willy Tarreau3c92c5f2011-08-28 09:45:47 +02008052 that those ones should not be sensitive and not shared with any other account.
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008053
8054 It is also possible to reduce the scope of the proxies which appear in the
8055 report using "stats scope".
8056
8057 Though this statement alone is enough to enable statistics reporting, it is
8058 recommended to set all other settings in order to avoid relying on default
8059 unobvious parameters.
8060
8061 Example :
8062 # public access (limited to this backend only)
8063 backend public_www
8064 server srv1 192.168.0.1:80
8065 stats enable
8066 stats hide-version
8067 stats scope .
8068 stats uri /admin?stats
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008069 stats realm HAProxy\ Statistics
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008070 stats auth admin1:AdMiN123
8071 stats auth admin2:AdMiN321
8072
8073 # internal monitoring access (unlimited)
8074 backend private_monitoring
8075 stats enable
8076 stats uri /admin?stats
8077 stats refresh 5s
8078
8079 See also : "stats enable", "stats realm", "stats scope", "stats uri"
8080
8081
8082stats enable
8083 Enable statistics reporting with default settings
8084 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreaued2119c2014-04-24 22:10:39 +02008085 yes | yes | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008086 Arguments : none
8087
8088 This statement enables statistics reporting with default settings defined
8089 at build time. Unless stated otherwise, these settings are used :
8090 - stats uri : /haproxy?stats
8091 - stats realm : "HAProxy Statistics"
8092 - stats auth : no authentication
8093 - stats scope : no restriction
8094
8095 Though this statement alone is enough to enable statistics reporting, it is
8096 recommended to set all other settings in order to avoid relying on default
8097 unobvious parameters.
8098
8099 Example :
8100 # public access (limited to this backend only)
8101 backend public_www
8102 server srv1 192.168.0.1:80
8103 stats enable
8104 stats hide-version
8105 stats scope .
8106 stats uri /admin?stats
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008107 stats realm HAProxy\ Statistics
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008108 stats auth admin1:AdMiN123
8109 stats auth admin2:AdMiN321
8110
8111 # internal monitoring access (unlimited)
8112 backend private_monitoring
8113 stats enable
8114 stats uri /admin?stats
8115 stats refresh 5s
8116
8117 See also : "stats auth", "stats realm", "stats uri"
8118
8119
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008120stats hide-version
8121 Enable statistics and hide HAProxy version reporting
Willy Tarreau1d45b7c2009-08-16 10:29:18 +02008122 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreaued2119c2014-04-24 22:10:39 +02008123 yes | yes | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008124 Arguments : none
Willy Tarreau1d45b7c2009-08-16 10:29:18 +02008125
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008126 By default, the stats page reports some useful status information along with
8127 the statistics. Among them is HAProxy's version. However, it is generally
8128 considered dangerous to report precise version to anyone, as it can help them
8129 target known weaknesses with specific attacks. The "stats hide-version"
8130 statement removes the version from the statistics report. This is recommended
8131 for public sites or any site with a weak login/password.
Willy Tarreau1d45b7c2009-08-16 10:29:18 +02008132
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki48cb2ae2009-10-02 22:51:14 +02008133 Though this statement alone is enough to enable statistics reporting, it is
8134 recommended to set all other settings in order to avoid relying on default
8135 unobvious parameters.
8136
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008137 Example :
8138 # public access (limited to this backend only)
8139 backend public_www
8140 server srv1 192.168.0.1:80
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki48cb2ae2009-10-02 22:51:14 +02008141 stats enable
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008142 stats hide-version
8143 stats scope .
8144 stats uri /admin?stats
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008145 stats realm HAProxy\ Statistics
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008146 stats auth admin1:AdMiN123
8147 stats auth admin2:AdMiN321
Willy Tarreau1d45b7c2009-08-16 10:29:18 +02008148
Willy Tarreau1d45b7c2009-08-16 10:29:18 +02008149 # internal monitoring access (unlimited)
8150 backend private_monitoring
8151 stats enable
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008152 stats uri /admin?stats
8153 stats refresh 5s
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki15514c22010-01-04 16:03:09 +01008154
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008155 See also : "stats auth", "stats enable", "stats realm", "stats uri"
Willy Tarreau1d45b7c2009-08-16 10:29:18 +02008156
Willy Tarreau983e01e2010-01-11 18:42:06 +01008157
Cyril Bonté2be1b3f2010-09-30 23:46:30 +02008158stats http-request { allow | deny | auth [realm <realm>] }
8159 [ { if | unless } <condition> ]
8160 Access control for statistics
8161
8162 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
8163 no | no | yes | yes
8164
8165 As "http-request", these set of options allow to fine control access to
8166 statistics. Each option may be followed by if/unless and acl.
8167 First option with matched condition (or option without condition) is final.
8168 For "deny" a 403 error will be returned, for "allow" normal processing is
8169 performed, for "auth" a 401/407 error code is returned so the client
8170 should be asked to enter a username and password.
8171
8172 There is no fixed limit to the number of http-request statements per
8173 instance.
8174
8175 See also : "http-request", section 3.4 about userlists and section 7
8176 about ACL usage.
8177
8178
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008179stats realm <realm>
8180 Enable statistics and set authentication realm
8181 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreaued2119c2014-04-24 22:10:39 +02008182 yes | yes | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008183 Arguments :
8184 <realm> is the name of the HTTP Basic Authentication realm reported to
8185 the browser. The browser uses it to display it in the pop-up
8186 inviting the user to enter a valid username and password.
8187
8188 The realm is read as a single word, so any spaces in it should be escaped
8189 using a backslash ('\').
8190
8191 This statement is useful only in conjunction with "stats auth" since it is
8192 only related to authentication.
8193
8194 Though this statement alone is enough to enable statistics reporting, it is
8195 recommended to set all other settings in order to avoid relying on default
8196 unobvious parameters.
8197
8198 Example :
8199 # public access (limited to this backend only)
8200 backend public_www
8201 server srv1 192.168.0.1:80
8202 stats enable
8203 stats hide-version
8204 stats scope .
8205 stats uri /admin?stats
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008206 stats realm HAProxy\ Statistics
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008207 stats auth admin1:AdMiN123
8208 stats auth admin2:AdMiN321
8209
8210 # internal monitoring access (unlimited)
8211 backend private_monitoring
8212 stats enable
8213 stats uri /admin?stats
8214 stats refresh 5s
8215
8216 See also : "stats auth", "stats enable", "stats uri"
8217
8218
8219stats refresh <delay>
8220 Enable statistics with automatic refresh
8221 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreaued2119c2014-04-24 22:10:39 +02008222 yes | yes | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008223 Arguments :
8224 <delay> is the suggested refresh delay, specified in seconds, which will
8225 be returned to the browser consulting the report page. While the
8226 browser is free to apply any delay, it will generally respect it
8227 and refresh the page this every seconds. The refresh interval may
8228 be specified in any other non-default time unit, by suffixing the
8229 unit after the value, as explained at the top of this document.
8230
8231 This statement is useful on monitoring displays with a permanent page
8232 reporting the load balancer's activity. When set, the HTML report page will
8233 include a link "refresh"/"stop refresh" so that the user can select whether
8234 he wants automatic refresh of the page or not.
8235
8236 Though this statement alone is enough to enable statistics reporting, it is
8237 recommended to set all other settings in order to avoid relying on default
8238 unobvious parameters.
8239
8240 Example :
8241 # public access (limited to this backend only)
8242 backend public_www
8243 server srv1 192.168.0.1:80
8244 stats enable
8245 stats hide-version
8246 stats scope .
8247 stats uri /admin?stats
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008248 stats realm HAProxy\ Statistics
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008249 stats auth admin1:AdMiN123
8250 stats auth admin2:AdMiN321
8251
8252 # internal monitoring access (unlimited)
8253 backend private_monitoring
8254 stats enable
8255 stats uri /admin?stats
8256 stats refresh 5s
8257
8258 See also : "stats auth", "stats enable", "stats realm", "stats uri"
8259
8260
8261stats scope { <name> | "." }
8262 Enable statistics and limit access scope
8263 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreaued2119c2014-04-24 22:10:39 +02008264 yes | yes | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008265 Arguments :
8266 <name> is the name of a listen, frontend or backend section to be
8267 reported. The special name "." (a single dot) designates the
8268 section in which the statement appears.
8269
8270 When this statement is specified, only the sections enumerated with this
8271 statement will appear in the report. All other ones will be hidden. This
8272 statement may appear as many times as needed if multiple sections need to be
8273 reported. Please note that the name checking is performed as simple string
8274 comparisons, and that it is never checked that a give section name really
8275 exists.
8276
8277 Though this statement alone is enough to enable statistics reporting, it is
8278 recommended to set all other settings in order to avoid relying on default
8279 unobvious parameters.
8280
8281 Example :
8282 # public access (limited to this backend only)
8283 backend public_www
8284 server srv1 192.168.0.1:80
8285 stats enable
8286 stats hide-version
8287 stats scope .
8288 stats uri /admin?stats
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008289 stats realm HAProxy\ Statistics
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008290 stats auth admin1:AdMiN123
8291 stats auth admin2:AdMiN321
8292
8293 # internal monitoring access (unlimited)
8294 backend private_monitoring
8295 stats enable
8296 stats uri /admin?stats
8297 stats refresh 5s
8298
8299 See also : "stats auth", "stats enable", "stats realm", "stats uri"
8300
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008301
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +02008302stats show-desc [ <desc> ]
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008303 Enable reporting of a description on the statistics page.
8304 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreaued2119c2014-04-24 22:10:39 +02008305 yes | yes | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008306
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +02008307 <desc> is an optional description to be reported. If unspecified, the
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008308 description from global section is automatically used instead.
8309
8310 This statement is useful for users that offer shared services to their
8311 customers, where node or description should be different for each customer.
8312
8313 Though this statement alone is enough to enable statistics reporting, it is
8314 recommended to set all other settings in order to avoid relying on default
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008315 unobvious parameters. By default description is not shown.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008316
8317 Example :
8318 # internal monitoring access (unlimited)
8319 backend private_monitoring
8320 stats enable
8321 stats show-desc Master node for Europe, Asia, Africa
8322 stats uri /admin?stats
8323 stats refresh 5s
8324
8325 See also: "show-node", "stats enable", "stats uri" and "description" in
8326 global section.
8327
8328
8329stats show-legends
Willy Tarreaued2119c2014-04-24 22:10:39 +02008330 Enable reporting additional information on the statistics page
8331 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
8332 yes | yes | yes | yes
8333 Arguments : none
8334
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03008335 Enable reporting additional information on the statistics page :
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008336 - cap: capabilities (proxy)
8337 - mode: one of tcp, http or health (proxy)
8338 - id: SNMP ID (proxy, socket, server)
8339 - IP (socket, server)
8340 - cookie (backend, server)
8341
8342 Though this statement alone is enough to enable statistics reporting, it is
8343 recommended to set all other settings in order to avoid relying on default
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008344 unobvious parameters. Default behavior is not to show this information.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008345
8346 See also: "stats enable", "stats uri".
8347
8348
8349stats show-node [ <name> ]
8350 Enable reporting of a host name on the statistics page.
8351 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreaued2119c2014-04-24 22:10:39 +02008352 yes | yes | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008353 Arguments:
8354 <name> is an optional name to be reported. If unspecified, the
8355 node name from global section is automatically used instead.
8356
8357 This statement is useful for users that offer shared services to their
8358 customers, where node or description might be different on a stats page
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008359 provided for each customer. Default behavior is not to show host name.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008360
8361 Though this statement alone is enough to enable statistics reporting, it is
8362 recommended to set all other settings in order to avoid relying on default
8363 unobvious parameters.
8364
8365 Example:
8366 # internal monitoring access (unlimited)
8367 backend private_monitoring
8368 stats enable
8369 stats show-node Europe-1
8370 stats uri /admin?stats
8371 stats refresh 5s
8372
8373 See also: "show-desc", "stats enable", "stats uri", and "node" in global
8374 section.
8375
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008376
8377stats uri <prefix>
8378 Enable statistics and define the URI prefix to access them
8379 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreaued2119c2014-04-24 22:10:39 +02008380 yes | yes | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008381 Arguments :
8382 <prefix> is the prefix of any URI which will be redirected to stats. This
8383 prefix may contain a question mark ('?') to indicate part of a
8384 query string.
8385
8386 The statistics URI is intercepted on the relayed traffic, so it appears as a
8387 page within the normal application. It is strongly advised to ensure that the
8388 selected URI will never appear in the application, otherwise it will never be
8389 possible to reach it in the application.
8390
8391 The default URI compiled in haproxy is "/haproxy?stats", but this may be
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01008392 changed at build time, so it's better to always explicitly specify it here.
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008393 It is generally a good idea to include a question mark in the URI so that
8394 intermediate proxies refrain from caching the results. Also, since any string
8395 beginning with the prefix will be accepted as a stats request, the question
8396 mark helps ensuring that no valid URI will begin with the same words.
8397
8398 It is sometimes very convenient to use "/" as the URI prefix, and put that
8399 statement in a "listen" instance of its own. That makes it easy to dedicate
8400 an address or a port to statistics only.
8401
8402 Though this statement alone is enough to enable statistics reporting, it is
8403 recommended to set all other settings in order to avoid relying on default
8404 unobvious parameters.
8405
8406 Example :
8407 # public access (limited to this backend only)
8408 backend public_www
8409 server srv1 192.168.0.1:80
8410 stats enable
8411 stats hide-version
8412 stats scope .
8413 stats uri /admin?stats
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008414 stats realm HAProxy\ Statistics
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008415 stats auth admin1:AdMiN123
8416 stats auth admin2:AdMiN321
8417
8418 # internal monitoring access (unlimited)
8419 backend private_monitoring
8420 stats enable
8421 stats uri /admin?stats
8422 stats refresh 5s
8423
8424 See also : "stats auth", "stats enable", "stats realm"
8425
8426
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008427stick match <pattern> [table <table>] [{if | unless} <cond>]
8428 Define a request pattern matching condition to stick a user to a server
Willy Tarreaueabeafa2008-01-16 16:17:06 +01008429 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +01008430 no | no | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008431
8432 Arguments :
Willy Tarreaube722a22014-06-13 16:31:59 +02008433 <pattern> is a sample expression rule as described in section 7.3. It
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008434 describes what elements of the incoming request or connection
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008435 will be analyzed in the hope to find a matching entry in a
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008436 stickiness table. This rule is mandatory.
8437
8438 <table> is an optional stickiness table name. If unspecified, the same
8439 backend's table is used. A stickiness table is declared using
8440 the "stick-table" statement.
8441
8442 <cond> is an optional matching condition. It makes it possible to match
8443 on a certain criterion only when other conditions are met (or
8444 not met). For instance, it could be used to match on a source IP
8445 address except when a request passes through a known proxy, in
8446 which case we'd match on a header containing that IP address.
8447
8448 Some protocols or applications require complex stickiness rules and cannot
8449 always simply rely on cookies nor hashing. The "stick match" statement
8450 describes a rule to extract the stickiness criterion from an incoming request
8451 or connection. See section 7 for a complete list of possible patterns and
8452 transformation rules.
8453
8454 The table has to be declared using the "stick-table" statement. It must be of
8455 a type compatible with the pattern. By default it is the one which is present
8456 in the same backend. It is possible to share a table with other backends by
8457 referencing it using the "table" keyword. If another table is referenced,
8458 the server's ID inside the backends are used. By default, all server IDs
8459 start at 1 in each backend, so the server ordering is enough. But in case of
8460 doubt, it is highly recommended to force server IDs using their "id" setting.
8461
8462 It is possible to restrict the conditions where a "stick match" statement
8463 will apply, using "if" or "unless" followed by a condition. See section 7 for
8464 ACL based conditions.
8465
8466 There is no limit on the number of "stick match" statements. The first that
8467 applies and matches will cause the request to be directed to the same server
8468 as was used for the request which created the entry. That way, multiple
8469 matches can be used as fallbacks.
8470
8471 The stick rules are checked after the persistence cookies, so they will not
8472 affect stickiness if a cookie has already been used to select a server. That
8473 way, it becomes very easy to insert cookies and match on IP addresses in
8474 order to maintain stickiness between HTTP and HTTPS.
8475
Cyril Bonté02ff8ef2010-12-14 22:48:49 +01008476 Note : Consider not using this feature in multi-process mode (nbproc > 1)
8477 unless you know what you do : memory is not shared between the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008478 processes, which can result in random behaviors.
Cyril Bonté02ff8ef2010-12-14 22:48:49 +01008479
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008480 Example :
8481 # forward SMTP users to the same server they just used for POP in the
8482 # last 30 minutes
8483 backend pop
8484 mode tcp
8485 balance roundrobin
8486 stick store-request src
8487 stick-table type ip size 200k expire 30m
8488 server s1 192.168.1.1:110
8489 server s2 192.168.1.1:110
8490
8491 backend smtp
8492 mode tcp
8493 balance roundrobin
8494 stick match src table pop
8495 server s1 192.168.1.1:25
8496 server s2 192.168.1.1:25
8497
Cyril Bonté02ff8ef2010-12-14 22:48:49 +01008498 See also : "stick-table", "stick on", "nbproc", "bind-process" and section 7
Willy Tarreaube722a22014-06-13 16:31:59 +02008499 about ACLs and samples fetching.
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008500
8501
8502stick on <pattern> [table <table>] [{if | unless} <condition>]
8503 Define a request pattern to associate a user to a server
8504 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
8505 no | no | yes | yes
8506
8507 Note : This form is exactly equivalent to "stick match" followed by
8508 "stick store-request", all with the same arguments. Please refer
8509 to both keywords for details. It is only provided as a convenience
8510 for writing more maintainable configurations.
8511
Cyril Bonté02ff8ef2010-12-14 22:48:49 +01008512 Note : Consider not using this feature in multi-process mode (nbproc > 1)
8513 unless you know what you do : memory is not shared between the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008514 processes, which can result in random behaviors.
Cyril Bonté02ff8ef2010-12-14 22:48:49 +01008515
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008516 Examples :
8517 # The following form ...
Willy Tarreauec579d82010-02-26 19:15:04 +01008518 stick on src table pop if !localhost
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008519
8520 # ...is strictly equivalent to this one :
8521 stick match src table pop if !localhost
8522 stick store-request src table pop if !localhost
8523
8524
8525 # Use cookie persistence for HTTP, and stick on source address for HTTPS as
8526 # well as HTTP without cookie. Share the same table between both accesses.
8527 backend http
8528 mode http
8529 balance roundrobin
8530 stick on src table https
8531 cookie SRV insert indirect nocache
8532 server s1 192.168.1.1:80 cookie s1
8533 server s2 192.168.1.1:80 cookie s2
8534
8535 backend https
8536 mode tcp
8537 balance roundrobin
8538 stick-table type ip size 200k expire 30m
8539 stick on src
8540 server s1 192.168.1.1:443
8541 server s2 192.168.1.1:443
8542
Cyril Bonté02ff8ef2010-12-14 22:48:49 +01008543 See also : "stick match", "stick store-request", "nbproc" and "bind-process".
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008544
8545
8546stick store-request <pattern> [table <table>] [{if | unless} <condition>]
8547 Define a request pattern used to create an entry in a stickiness table
8548 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
8549 no | no | yes | yes
8550
8551 Arguments :
Willy Tarreaube722a22014-06-13 16:31:59 +02008552 <pattern> is a sample expression rule as described in section 7.3. It
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008553 describes what elements of the incoming request or connection
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008554 will be analyzed, extracted and stored in the table once a
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008555 server is selected.
8556
8557 <table> is an optional stickiness table name. If unspecified, the same
8558 backend's table is used. A stickiness table is declared using
8559 the "stick-table" statement.
8560
8561 <cond> is an optional storage condition. It makes it possible to store
8562 certain criteria only when some conditions are met (or not met).
8563 For instance, it could be used to store the source IP address
8564 except when the request passes through a known proxy, in which
8565 case we'd store a converted form of a header containing that IP
8566 address.
8567
8568 Some protocols or applications require complex stickiness rules and cannot
8569 always simply rely on cookies nor hashing. The "stick store-request" statement
8570 describes a rule to decide what to extract from the request and when to do
8571 it, in order to store it into a stickiness table for further requests to
8572 match it using the "stick match" statement. Obviously the extracted part must
8573 make sense and have a chance to be matched in a further request. Storing a
8574 client's IP address for instance often makes sense. Storing an ID found in a
8575 URL parameter also makes sense. Storing a source port will almost never make
8576 any sense because it will be randomly matched. See section 7 for a complete
8577 list of possible patterns and transformation rules.
8578
8579 The table has to be declared using the "stick-table" statement. It must be of
8580 a type compatible with the pattern. By default it is the one which is present
8581 in the same backend. It is possible to share a table with other backends by
8582 referencing it using the "table" keyword. If another table is referenced,
8583 the server's ID inside the backends are used. By default, all server IDs
8584 start at 1 in each backend, so the server ordering is enough. But in case of
8585 doubt, it is highly recommended to force server IDs using their "id" setting.
8586
8587 It is possible to restrict the conditions where a "stick store-request"
8588 statement will apply, using "if" or "unless" followed by a condition. This
8589 condition will be evaluated while parsing the request, so any criteria can be
8590 used. See section 7 for ACL based conditions.
8591
8592 There is no limit on the number of "stick store-request" statements, but
8593 there is a limit of 8 simultaneous stores per request or response. This
8594 makes it possible to store up to 8 criteria, all extracted from either the
8595 request or the response, regardless of the number of rules. Only the 8 first
8596 ones which match will be kept. Using this, it is possible to feed multiple
8597 tables at once in the hope to increase the chance to recognize a user on
Willy Tarreau9667a802013-12-09 12:52:13 +01008598 another protocol or access method. Using multiple store-request rules with
8599 the same table is possible and may be used to find the best criterion to rely
8600 on, by arranging the rules by decreasing preference order. Only the first
8601 extracted criterion for a given table will be stored. All subsequent store-
8602 request rules referencing the same table will be skipped and their ACLs will
8603 not be evaluated.
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008604
8605 The "store-request" rules are evaluated once the server connection has been
8606 established, so that the table will contain the real server that processed
8607 the request.
8608
Cyril Bonté02ff8ef2010-12-14 22:48:49 +01008609 Note : Consider not using this feature in multi-process mode (nbproc > 1)
8610 unless you know what you do : memory is not shared between the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008611 processes, which can result in random behaviors.
Cyril Bonté02ff8ef2010-12-14 22:48:49 +01008612
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008613 Example :
8614 # forward SMTP users to the same server they just used for POP in the
8615 # last 30 minutes
8616 backend pop
8617 mode tcp
8618 balance roundrobin
8619 stick store-request src
8620 stick-table type ip size 200k expire 30m
8621 server s1 192.168.1.1:110
8622 server s2 192.168.1.1:110
8623
8624 backend smtp
8625 mode tcp
8626 balance roundrobin
8627 stick match src table pop
8628 server s1 192.168.1.1:25
8629 server s2 192.168.1.1:25
8630
Cyril Bonté02ff8ef2010-12-14 22:48:49 +01008631 See also : "stick-table", "stick on", "nbproc", "bind-process" and section 7
Willy Tarreaube722a22014-06-13 16:31:59 +02008632 about ACLs and sample fetching.
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008633
8634
Emeric Brun7c6b82e2010-09-24 16:34:28 +02008635stick-table type {ip | integer | string [len <length>] | binary [len <length>]}
Emeric Brunf099e792010-09-27 12:05:28 +02008636 size <size> [expire <expire>] [nopurge] [peers <peersect>]
8637 [store <data_type>]*
Godbach64cef792013-12-04 16:08:22 +08008638 Configure the stickiness table for the current section
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008639 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreauc00cdc22010-06-06 16:48:26 +02008640 no | yes | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008641
8642 Arguments :
8643 ip a table declared with "type ip" will only store IPv4 addresses.
8644 This form is very compact (about 50 bytes per entry) and allows
8645 very fast entry lookup and stores with almost no overhead. This
8646 is mainly used to store client source IP addresses.
8647
David du Colombier9a6d3c92011-03-17 10:40:24 +01008648 ipv6 a table declared with "type ipv6" will only store IPv6 addresses.
8649 This form is very compact (about 60 bytes per entry) and allows
8650 very fast entry lookup and stores with almost no overhead. This
8651 is mainly used to store client source IP addresses.
8652
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008653 integer a table declared with "type integer" will store 32bit integers
8654 which can represent a client identifier found in a request for
8655 instance.
8656
8657 string a table declared with "type string" will store substrings of up
8658 to <len> characters. If the string provided by the pattern
8659 extractor is larger than <len>, it will be truncated before
8660 being stored. During matching, at most <len> characters will be
8661 compared between the string in the table and the extracted
8662 pattern. When not specified, the string is automatically limited
Emeric Brun7c6b82e2010-09-24 16:34:28 +02008663 to 32 characters.
8664
8665 binary a table declared with "type binary" will store binary blocks
8666 of <len> bytes. If the block provided by the pattern
8667 extractor is larger than <len>, it will be truncated before
Willy Tarreaube722a22014-06-13 16:31:59 +02008668 being stored. If the block provided by the sample expression
Emeric Brun7c6b82e2010-09-24 16:34:28 +02008669 is shorter than <len>, it will be padded by 0. When not
8670 specified, the block is automatically limited to 32 bytes.
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008671
8672 <length> is the maximum number of characters that will be stored in a
Emeric Brun7c6b82e2010-09-24 16:34:28 +02008673 "string" type table (See type "string" above). Or the number
8674 of bytes of the block in "binary" type table. Be careful when
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008675 changing this parameter as memory usage will proportionally
8676 increase.
8677
8678 <size> is the maximum number of entries that can fit in the table. This
Cyril Bonté78caf842010-03-10 22:41:43 +01008679 value directly impacts memory usage. Count approximately
8680 50 bytes per entry, plus the size of a string if any. The size
8681 supports suffixes "k", "m", "g" for 2^10, 2^20 and 2^30 factors.
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008682
8683 [nopurge] indicates that we refuse to purge older entries when the table
8684 is full. When not specified and the table is full when haproxy
8685 wants to store an entry in it, it will flush a few of the oldest
8686 entries in order to release some space for the new ones. This is
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008687 most often the desired behavior. In some specific cases, it
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008688 be desirable to refuse new entries instead of purging the older
8689 ones. That may be the case when the amount of data to store is
8690 far above the hardware limits and we prefer not to offer access
8691 to new clients than to reject the ones already connected. When
8692 using this parameter, be sure to properly set the "expire"
8693 parameter (see below).
8694
Emeric Brunf099e792010-09-27 12:05:28 +02008695 <peersect> is the name of the peers section to use for replication. Entries
8696 which associate keys to server IDs are kept synchronized with
8697 the remote peers declared in this section. All entries are also
8698 automatically learned from the local peer (old process) during a
8699 soft restart.
8700
Willy Tarreau1abc6732015-05-01 19:21:02 +02008701 NOTE : each peers section may be referenced only by tables
8702 belonging to the same unique process.
Cyril Bonté02ff8ef2010-12-14 22:48:49 +01008703
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008704 <expire> defines the maximum duration of an entry in the table since it
8705 was last created, refreshed or matched. The expiration delay is
8706 defined using the standard time format, similarly as the various
8707 timeouts. The maximum duration is slightly above 24 days. See
Jarno Huuskonene0ee0be2017-07-04 10:35:12 +03008708 section 2.4 for more information. If this delay is not specified,
Cyril Bontédc4d9032012-04-08 21:57:39 +02008709 the session won't automatically expire, but older entries will
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008710 be removed once full. Be sure not to use the "nopurge" parameter
8711 if not expiration delay is specified.
8712
Willy Tarreau08d5f982010-06-06 13:34:54 +02008713 <data_type> is used to store additional information in the stick-table. This
8714 may be used by ACLs in order to control various criteria related
8715 to the activity of the client matching the stick-table. For each
8716 item specified here, the size of each entry will be inflated so
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +02008717 that the additional data can fit. Several data types may be
8718 stored with an entry. Multiple data types may be specified after
8719 the "store" keyword, as a comma-separated list. Alternatively,
8720 it is possible to repeat the "store" keyword followed by one or
8721 several data types. Except for the "server_id" type which is
8722 automatically detected and enabled, all data types must be
8723 explicitly declared to be stored. If an ACL references a data
8724 type which is not stored, the ACL will simply not match. Some
8725 data types require an argument which must be passed just after
8726 the type between parenthesis. See below for the supported data
8727 types and their arguments.
8728
8729 The data types that can be stored with an entry are the following :
8730 - server_id : this is an integer which holds the numeric ID of the server a
8731 request was assigned to. It is used by the "stick match", "stick store",
8732 and "stick on" rules. It is automatically enabled when referenced.
8733
8734 - gpc0 : first General Purpose Counter. It is a positive 32-bit integer
8735 integer which may be used for anything. Most of the time it will be used
8736 to put a special tag on some entries, for instance to note that a
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008737 specific behavior was detected and must be known for future matches.
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +02008738
Willy Tarreauba2ffd12013-05-29 15:54:14 +02008739 - gpc0_rate(<period>) : increment rate of the first General Purpose Counter
8740 over a period. It is a positive 32-bit integer integer which may be used
8741 for anything. Just like <gpc0>, it counts events, but instead of keeping
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008742 a cumulative number, it maintains the rate at which the counter is
Willy Tarreauba2ffd12013-05-29 15:54:14 +02008743 incremented. Most of the time it will be used to measure the frequency of
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008744 occurrence of certain events (e.g. requests to a specific URL).
Willy Tarreauba2ffd12013-05-29 15:54:14 +02008745
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +02008746 - conn_cnt : Connection Count. It is a positive 32-bit integer which counts
8747 the absolute number of connections received from clients which matched
8748 this entry. It does not mean the connections were accepted, just that
8749 they were received.
8750
8751 - conn_cur : Current Connections. It is a positive 32-bit integer which
8752 stores the concurrent connection counts for the entry. It is incremented
8753 once an incoming connection matches the entry, and decremented once the
8754 connection leaves. That way it is possible to know at any time the exact
8755 number of concurrent connections for an entry.
8756
8757 - conn_rate(<period>) : frequency counter (takes 12 bytes). It takes an
8758 integer parameter <period> which indicates in milliseconds the length
8759 of the period over which the average is measured. It reports the average
8760 incoming connection rate over that period, in connections per period. The
8761 result is an integer which can be matched using ACLs.
8762
8763 - sess_cnt : Session Count. It is a positive 32-bit integer which counts
8764 the absolute number of sessions received from clients which matched this
8765 entry. A session is a connection that was accepted by the layer 4 rules.
8766
8767 - sess_rate(<period>) : frequency counter (takes 12 bytes). It takes an
8768 integer parameter <period> which indicates in milliseconds the length
8769 of the period over which the average is measured. It reports the average
8770 incoming session rate over that period, in sessions per period. The
8771 result is an integer which can be matched using ACLs.
8772
8773 - http_req_cnt : HTTP request Count. It is a positive 32-bit integer which
8774 counts the absolute number of HTTP requests received from clients which
8775 matched this entry. It does not matter whether they are valid requests or
8776 not. Note that this is different from sessions when keep-alive is used on
8777 the client side.
8778
8779 - http_req_rate(<period>) : frequency counter (takes 12 bytes). It takes an
8780 integer parameter <period> which indicates in milliseconds the length
8781 of the period over which the average is measured. It reports the average
8782 HTTP request rate over that period, in requests per period. The result is
8783 an integer which can be matched using ACLs. It does not matter whether
8784 they are valid requests or not. Note that this is different from sessions
8785 when keep-alive is used on the client side.
8786
8787 - http_err_cnt : HTTP Error Count. It is a positive 32-bit integer which
8788 counts the absolute number of HTTP requests errors induced by clients
8789 which matched this entry. Errors are counted on invalid and truncated
8790 requests, as well as on denied or tarpitted requests, and on failed
8791 authentications. If the server responds with 4xx, then the request is
8792 also counted as an error since it's an error triggered by the client
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008793 (e.g. vulnerability scan).
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +02008794
8795 - http_err_rate(<period>) : frequency counter (takes 12 bytes). It takes an
8796 integer parameter <period> which indicates in milliseconds the length
8797 of the period over which the average is measured. It reports the average
8798 HTTP request error rate over that period, in requests per period (see
8799 http_err_cnt above for what is accounted as an error). The result is an
8800 integer which can be matched using ACLs.
8801
8802 - bytes_in_cnt : client to server byte count. It is a positive 64-bit
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008803 integer which counts the cumulative number of bytes received from clients
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +02008804 which matched this entry. Headers are included in the count. This may be
8805 used to limit abuse of upload features on photo or video servers.
8806
8807 - bytes_in_rate(<period>) : frequency counter (takes 12 bytes). It takes an
8808 integer parameter <period> which indicates in milliseconds the length
8809 of the period over which the average is measured. It reports the average
8810 incoming bytes rate over that period, in bytes per period. It may be used
8811 to detect users which upload too much and too fast. Warning: with large
8812 uploads, it is possible that the amount of uploaded data will be counted
8813 once upon termination, thus causing spikes in the average transfer speed
8814 instead of having a smooth one. This may partially be smoothed with
8815 "option contstats" though this is not perfect yet. Use of byte_in_cnt is
8816 recommended for better fairness.
8817
8818 - bytes_out_cnt : server to client byte count. It is a positive 64-bit
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008819 integer which counts the cumulative number of bytes sent to clients which
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +02008820 matched this entry. Headers are included in the count. This may be used
8821 to limit abuse of bots sucking the whole site.
8822
8823 - bytes_out_rate(<period>) : frequency counter (takes 12 bytes). It takes
8824 an integer parameter <period> which indicates in milliseconds the length
8825 of the period over which the average is measured. It reports the average
8826 outgoing bytes rate over that period, in bytes per period. It may be used
8827 to detect users which download too much and too fast. Warning: with large
8828 transfers, it is possible that the amount of transferred data will be
8829 counted once upon termination, thus causing spikes in the average
8830 transfer speed instead of having a smooth one. This may partially be
8831 smoothed with "option contstats" though this is not perfect yet. Use of
8832 byte_out_cnt is recommended for better fairness.
Willy Tarreau08d5f982010-06-06 13:34:54 +02008833
Willy Tarreauc00cdc22010-06-06 16:48:26 +02008834 There is only one stick-table per proxy. At the moment of writing this doc,
8835 it does not seem useful to have multiple tables per proxy. If this happens
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008836 to be required, simply create a dummy backend with a stick-table in it and
8837 reference it.
8838
8839 It is important to understand that stickiness based on learning information
8840 has some limitations, including the fact that all learned associations are
Baptiste Assmann123ff042016-03-06 23:29:28 +01008841 lost upon restart unless peers are properly configured to transfer such
8842 information upon restart (recommended). In general it can be good as a
8843 complement but not always as an exclusive stickiness.
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008844
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +02008845 Last, memory requirements may be important when storing many data types.
8846 Indeed, storing all indicators above at once in each entry requires 116 bytes
8847 per entry, or 116 MB for a 1-million entries table. This is definitely not
8848 something that can be ignored.
8849
8850 Example:
8851 # Keep track of counters of up to 1 million IP addresses over 5 minutes
8852 # and store a general purpose counter and the average connection rate
8853 # computed over a sliding window of 30 seconds.
8854 stick-table type ip size 1m expire 5m store gpc0,conn_rate(30s)
8855
Jarno Huuskonene0ee0be2017-07-04 10:35:12 +03008856 See also : "stick match", "stick on", "stick store-request", section 2.4
David du Colombiera13d1b92011-03-17 10:40:22 +01008857 about time format and section 7 about ACLs.
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +01008858
8859
Emeric Brun6a1cefa2010-09-24 18:15:17 +02008860stick store-response <pattern> [table <table>] [{if | unless} <condition>]
Baptiste Assmann2f2d2ec2016-03-06 23:27:24 +01008861 Define a response pattern used to create an entry in a stickiness table
Emeric Brun6a1cefa2010-09-24 18:15:17 +02008862 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
8863 no | no | yes | yes
8864
8865 Arguments :
Willy Tarreaube722a22014-06-13 16:31:59 +02008866 <pattern> is a sample expression rule as described in section 7.3. It
Emeric Brun6a1cefa2010-09-24 18:15:17 +02008867 describes what elements of the response or connection will
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01008868 be analyzed, extracted and stored in the table once a
Emeric Brun6a1cefa2010-09-24 18:15:17 +02008869 server is selected.
8870
8871 <table> is an optional stickiness table name. If unspecified, the same
8872 backend's table is used. A stickiness table is declared using
8873 the "stick-table" statement.
8874
8875 <cond> is an optional storage condition. It makes it possible to store
8876 certain criteria only when some conditions are met (or not met).
8877 For instance, it could be used to store the SSL session ID only
8878 when the response is a SSL server hello.
8879
8880 Some protocols or applications require complex stickiness rules and cannot
8881 always simply rely on cookies nor hashing. The "stick store-response"
8882 statement describes a rule to decide what to extract from the response and
8883 when to do it, in order to store it into a stickiness table for further
8884 requests to match it using the "stick match" statement. Obviously the
8885 extracted part must make sense and have a chance to be matched in a further
Cyril Bonté108cf6e2012-04-21 23:30:29 +02008886 request. Storing an ID found in a header of a response makes sense.
Emeric Brun6a1cefa2010-09-24 18:15:17 +02008887 See section 7 for a complete list of possible patterns and transformation
8888 rules.
8889
8890 The table has to be declared using the "stick-table" statement. It must be of
8891 a type compatible with the pattern. By default it is the one which is present
8892 in the same backend. It is possible to share a table with other backends by
8893 referencing it using the "table" keyword. If another table is referenced,
8894 the server's ID inside the backends are used. By default, all server IDs
8895 start at 1 in each backend, so the server ordering is enough. But in case of
8896 doubt, it is highly recommended to force server IDs using their "id" setting.
8897
8898 It is possible to restrict the conditions where a "stick store-response"
8899 statement will apply, using "if" or "unless" followed by a condition. This
8900 condition will be evaluated while parsing the response, so any criteria can
8901 be used. See section 7 for ACL based conditions.
8902
8903 There is no limit on the number of "stick store-response" statements, but
8904 there is a limit of 8 simultaneous stores per request or response. This
8905 makes it possible to store up to 8 criteria, all extracted from either the
8906 request or the response, regardless of the number of rules. Only the 8 first
8907 ones which match will be kept. Using this, it is possible to feed multiple
8908 tables at once in the hope to increase the chance to recognize a user on
Willy Tarreau9667a802013-12-09 12:52:13 +01008909 another protocol or access method. Using multiple store-response rules with
8910 the same table is possible and may be used to find the best criterion to rely
8911 on, by arranging the rules by decreasing preference order. Only the first
8912 extracted criterion for a given table will be stored. All subsequent store-
8913 response rules referencing the same table will be skipped and their ACLs will
8914 not be evaluated. However, even if a store-request rule references a table, a
8915 store-response rule may also use the same table. This means that each table
8916 may learn exactly one element from the request and one element from the
8917 response at once.
Emeric Brun6a1cefa2010-09-24 18:15:17 +02008918
8919 The table will contain the real server that processed the request.
8920
8921 Example :
8922 # Learn SSL session ID from both request and response and create affinity.
8923 backend https
8924 mode tcp
8925 balance roundrobin
Cyril Bontédc4d9032012-04-08 21:57:39 +02008926 # maximum SSL session ID length is 32 bytes.
Emeric Brun6a1cefa2010-09-24 18:15:17 +02008927 stick-table type binary len 32 size 30k expire 30m
Cyril Bonté108cf6e2012-04-21 23:30:29 +02008928
Emeric Brun6a1cefa2010-09-24 18:15:17 +02008929 acl clienthello req_ssl_hello_type 1
8930 acl serverhello rep_ssl_hello_type 2
8931
8932 # use tcp content accepts to detects ssl client and server hello.
8933 tcp-request inspect-delay 5s
8934 tcp-request content accept if clienthello
8935
8936 # no timeout on response inspect delay by default.
8937 tcp-response content accept if serverhello
Cyril Bonté108cf6e2012-04-21 23:30:29 +02008938
Emeric Brun6a1cefa2010-09-24 18:15:17 +02008939 # SSL session ID (SSLID) may be present on a client or server hello.
8940 # Its length is coded on 1 byte at offset 43 and its value starts
8941 # at offset 44.
8942
8943 # Match and learn on request if client hello.
8944 stick on payload_lv(43,1) if clienthello
8945
8946 # Learn on response if server hello.
8947 stick store-response payload_lv(43,1) if serverhello
Cyril Bontédc4d9032012-04-08 21:57:39 +02008948
Emeric Brun6a1cefa2010-09-24 18:15:17 +02008949 server s1 192.168.1.1:443
8950 server s2 192.168.1.1:443
8951
8952 See also : "stick-table", "stick on", and section 7 about ACLs and pattern
8953 extraction.
8954
8955
Willy Tarreau938c7fe2014-04-25 14:21:39 +02008956tcp-check connect [params*]
8957 Opens a new connection
8958 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
8959 no | no | yes | yes
8960
8961 When an application lies on more than a single TCP port or when HAProxy
8962 load-balance many services in a single backend, it makes sense to probe all
8963 the services individually before considering a server as operational.
8964
8965 When there are no TCP port configured on the server line neither server port
8966 directive, then the 'tcp-check connect port <port>' must be the first step
8967 of the sequence.
8968
8969 In a tcp-check ruleset a 'connect' is required, it is also mandatory to start
8970 the ruleset with a 'connect' rule. Purpose is to ensure admin know what they
8971 do.
8972
8973 Parameters :
8974 They are optional and can be used to describe how HAProxy should open and
8975 use the TCP connection.
8976
8977 port if not set, check port or server port is used.
8978 It tells HAProxy where to open the connection to.
8979 <port> must be a valid TCP port source integer, from 1 to 65535.
8980
8981 send-proxy send a PROXY protocol string
8982
8983 ssl opens a ciphered connection
8984
8985 Examples:
8986 # check HTTP and HTTPs services on a server.
8987 # first open port 80 thanks to server line port directive, then
8988 # tcp-check opens port 443, ciphered and run a request on it:
8989 option tcp-check
8990 tcp-check connect
8991 tcp-check send GET\ /\ HTTP/1.0\r\n
8992 tcp-check send Host:\ haproxy.1wt.eu\r\n
8993 tcp-check send \r\n
8994 tcp-check expect rstring (2..|3..)
8995 tcp-check connect port 443 ssl
8996 tcp-check send GET\ /\ HTTP/1.0\r\n
8997 tcp-check send Host:\ haproxy.1wt.eu\r\n
8998 tcp-check send \r\n
8999 tcp-check expect rstring (2..|3..)
9000 server www 10.0.0.1 check port 80
9001
9002 # check both POP and IMAP from a single server:
9003 option tcp-check
9004 tcp-check connect port 110
9005 tcp-check expect string +OK\ POP3\ ready
9006 tcp-check connect port 143
9007 tcp-check expect string *\ OK\ IMAP4\ ready
9008 server mail 10.0.0.1 check
9009
9010 See also : "option tcp-check", "tcp-check send", "tcp-check expect"
9011
9012
9013tcp-check expect [!] <match> <pattern>
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009014 Specify data to be collected and analyzed during a generic health check
Willy Tarreau938c7fe2014-04-25 14:21:39 +02009015 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
9016 no | no | yes | yes
9017
9018 Arguments :
9019 <match> is a keyword indicating how to look for a specific pattern in the
9020 response. The keyword may be one of "string", "rstring" or
9021 binary.
9022 The keyword may be preceded by an exclamation mark ("!") to negate
9023 the match. Spaces are allowed between the exclamation mark and the
9024 keyword. See below for more details on the supported keywords.
9025
9026 <pattern> is the pattern to look for. It may be a string or a regular
9027 expression. If the pattern contains spaces, they must be escaped
9028 with the usual backslash ('\').
9029 If the match is set to binary, then the pattern must be passed as
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009030 a series of hexadecimal digits in an even number. Each sequence of
Willy Tarreau938c7fe2014-04-25 14:21:39 +02009031 two digits will represent a byte. The hexadecimal digits may be
9032 used upper or lower case.
9033
9034
9035 The available matches are intentionally similar to their http-check cousins :
9036
9037 string <string> : test the exact string matches in the response buffer.
9038 A health check response will be considered valid if the
9039 response's buffer contains this exact string. If the
9040 "string" keyword is prefixed with "!", then the response
9041 will be considered invalid if the body contains this
9042 string. This can be used to look for a mandatory pattern
9043 in a protocol response, or to detect a failure when a
9044 specific error appears in a protocol banner.
9045
9046 rstring <regex> : test a regular expression on the response buffer.
9047 A health check response will be considered valid if the
9048 response's buffer matches this expression. If the
9049 "rstring" keyword is prefixed with "!", then the response
9050 will be considered invalid if the body matches the
9051 expression.
9052
9053 binary <hexstring> : test the exact string in its hexadecimal form matches
9054 in the response buffer. A health check response will
9055 be considered valid if the response's buffer contains
9056 this exact hexadecimal string.
9057 Purpose is to match data on binary protocols.
9058
9059 It is important to note that the responses will be limited to a certain size
9060 defined by the global "tune.chksize" option, which defaults to 16384 bytes.
9061 Thus, too large responses may not contain the mandatory pattern when using
9062 "string", "rstring" or binary. If a large response is absolutely required, it
9063 is possible to change the default max size by setting the global variable.
9064 However, it is worth keeping in mind that parsing very large responses can
9065 waste some CPU cycles, especially when regular expressions are used, and that
9066 it is always better to focus the checks on smaller resources. Also, in its
9067 current state, the check will not find any string nor regex past a null
9068 character in the response. Similarly it is not possible to request matching
9069 the null character.
9070
9071 Examples :
9072 # perform a POP check
9073 option tcp-check
9074 tcp-check expect string +OK\ POP3\ ready
9075
9076 # perform an IMAP check
9077 option tcp-check
9078 tcp-check expect string *\ OK\ IMAP4\ ready
9079
9080 # look for the redis master server
9081 option tcp-check
9082 tcp-check send PING\r\n
Baptiste Assmanna3322992015-08-04 10:12:18 +02009083 tcp-check expect string +PONG
Willy Tarreau938c7fe2014-04-25 14:21:39 +02009084 tcp-check send info\ replication\r\n
9085 tcp-check expect string role:master
9086 tcp-check send QUIT\r\n
9087 tcp-check expect string +OK
9088
9089
9090 See also : "option tcp-check", "tcp-check connect", "tcp-check send",
9091 "tcp-check send-binary", "http-check expect", tune.chksize
9092
9093
9094tcp-check send <data>
9095 Specify a string to be sent as a question during a generic health check
9096 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
9097 no | no | yes | yes
9098
9099 <data> : the data to be sent as a question during a generic health check
9100 session. For now, <data> must be a string.
9101
9102 Examples :
9103 # look for the redis master server
9104 option tcp-check
9105 tcp-check send info\ replication\r\n
9106 tcp-check expect string role:master
9107
9108 See also : "option tcp-check", "tcp-check connect", "tcp-check expect",
9109 "tcp-check send-binary", tune.chksize
9110
9111
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009112tcp-check send-binary <hexstring>
9113 Specify a hex digits string to be sent as a binary question during a raw
Willy Tarreau938c7fe2014-04-25 14:21:39 +02009114 tcp health check
9115 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
9116 no | no | yes | yes
9117
9118 <data> : the data to be sent as a question during a generic health check
9119 session. For now, <data> must be a string.
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009120 <hexstring> : test the exact string in its hexadecimal form matches in the
Willy Tarreau938c7fe2014-04-25 14:21:39 +02009121 response buffer. A health check response will be considered
9122 valid if the response's buffer contains this exact
9123 hexadecimal string.
9124 Purpose is to send binary data to ask on binary protocols.
9125
9126 Examples :
9127 # redis check in binary
9128 option tcp-check
9129 tcp-check send-binary 50494e470d0a # PING\r\n
9130 tcp-check expect binary 2b504F4e47 # +PONG
9131
9132
9133 See also : "option tcp-check", "tcp-check connect", "tcp-check expect",
9134 "tcp-check send", tune.chksize
9135
9136
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009137tcp-request connection <action> [{if | unless} <condition>]
9138 Perform an action on an incoming connection depending on a layer 4 condition
Willy Tarreau1a687942010-05-23 22:40:30 +02009139 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
9140 no | yes | yes | no
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009141 Arguments :
Willy Tarreauc870bfd2015-09-28 18:47:38 +02009142 <action> defines the action to perform if the condition applies. See
9143 below.
Willy Tarreau1a687942010-05-23 22:40:30 +02009144
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009145 <condition> is a standard layer4-only ACL-based condition (see section 7).
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009146
9147 Immediately after acceptance of a new incoming connection, it is possible to
9148 evaluate some conditions to decide whether this connection must be accepted
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009149 or dropped or have its counters tracked. Those conditions cannot make use of
9150 any data contents because the connection has not been read from yet, and the
9151 buffers are not yet allocated. This is used to selectively and very quickly
9152 accept or drop connections from various sources with a very low overhead. If
9153 some contents need to be inspected in order to take the decision, the
9154 "tcp-request content" statements must be used instead.
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009155
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009156 The "tcp-request connection" rules are evaluated in their exact declaration
9157 order. If no rule matches or if there is no rule, the default action is to
9158 accept the incoming connection. There is no specific limit to the number of
9159 rules which may be inserted.
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009160
Willy Tarreaua9083d02015-05-08 15:27:59 +02009161 Four types of actions are supported :
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009162 - accept :
9163 accepts the connection if the condition is true (when used with "if")
9164 or false (when used with "unless"). The first such rule executed ends
9165 the rules evaluation.
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009166
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009167 - reject :
9168 rejects the connection if the condition is true (when used with "if")
9169 or false (when used with "unless"). The first such rule executed ends
9170 the rules evaluation. Rejected connections do not even become a
9171 session, which is why they are accounted separately for in the stats,
9172 as "denied connections". They are not considered for the session
9173 rate-limit and are not logged either. The reason is that these rules
9174 should only be used to filter extremely high connection rates such as
9175 the ones encountered during a massive DDoS attack. Under these extreme
9176 conditions, the simple action of logging each event would make the
9177 system collapse and would considerably lower the filtering capacity. If
9178 logging is absolutely desired, then "tcp-request content" rules should
Willy Tarreau4f614292016-10-21 17:49:36 +02009179 be used instead, as "tcp-request session" rules will not log either.
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009180
Willy Tarreau4f0d9192013-06-11 20:40:55 +02009181 - expect-proxy layer4 :
9182 configures the client-facing connection to receive a PROXY protocol
9183 header before any byte is read from the socket. This is equivalent to
9184 having the "accept-proxy" keyword on the "bind" line, except that using
9185 the TCP rule allows the PROXY protocol to be accepted only for certain
9186 IP address ranges using an ACL. This is convenient when multiple layers
9187 of load balancers are passed through by traffic coming from public
9188 hosts.
9189
Bertrand Jacquin90759682016-06-06 15:35:39 +01009190 - expect-netscaler-cip layer4 :
9191 configures the client-facing connection to receive a NetScaler Client
9192 IP insertion protocol header before any byte is read from the socket.
9193 This is equivalent to having the "accept-netscaler-cip" keyword on the
9194 "bind" line, except that using the TCP rule allows the PROXY protocol
9195 to be accepted only for certain IP address ranges using an ACL. This
9196 is convenient when multiple layers of load balancers are passed
9197 through by traffic coming from public hosts.
9198
Willy Tarreau18bf01e2014-06-13 16:18:52 +02009199 - capture <sample> len <length> :
9200 This only applies to "tcp-request content" rules. It captures sample
9201 expression <sample> from the request buffer, and converts it to a
9202 string of at most <len> characters. The resulting string is stored into
9203 the next request "capture" slot, so it will possibly appear next to
9204 some captured HTTP headers. It will then automatically appear in the
9205 logs, and it will be possible to extract it using sample fetch rules to
9206 feed it into headers or anything. The length should be limited given
9207 that this size will be allocated for each capture during the whole
Willy Tarreaua9083d02015-05-08 15:27:59 +02009208 session life. Please check section 7.3 (Fetching samples) and "capture
9209 request header" for more information.
Willy Tarreau18bf01e2014-06-13 16:18:52 +02009210
Willy Tarreaube4a3ef2013-06-17 15:04:07 +02009211 - { track-sc0 | track-sc1 | track-sc2 } <key> [table <table>] :
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009212 enables tracking of sticky counters from current connection. These
Willy Tarreau09448f72014-06-25 18:12:15 +02009213 rules do not stop evaluation and do not change default action. 3 sets
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009214 of counters may be simultaneously tracked by the same connection. The
Willy Tarreaube4a3ef2013-06-17 15:04:07 +02009215 first "track-sc0" rule executed enables tracking of the counters of the
9216 specified table as the first set. The first "track-sc1" rule executed
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009217 enables tracking of the counters of the specified table as the second
Willy Tarreaube4a3ef2013-06-17 15:04:07 +02009218 set. The first "track-sc2" rule executed enables tracking of the
9219 counters of the specified table as the third set. It is a recommended
9220 practice to use the first set of counters for the per-frontend counters
9221 and the second set for the per-backend ones. But this is just a
9222 guideline, all may be used everywhere.
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009223
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009224 These actions take one or two arguments :
Willy Tarreaube722a22014-06-13 16:31:59 +02009225 <key> is mandatory, and is a sample expression rule as described
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +02009226 in section 7.3. It describes what elements of the incoming
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009227 request or connection will be analyzed, extracted, combined,
Willy Tarreau5d5b5d82012-12-09 12:00:04 +01009228 and used to select which table entry to update the counters.
9229 Note that "tcp-request connection" cannot use content-based
9230 fetches.
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009231
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009232 <table> is an optional table to be used instead of the default one,
9233 which is the stick-table declared in the current proxy. All
9234 the counters for the matches and updates for the key will
9235 then be performed in that table until the session ends.
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009236
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009237 Once a "track-sc*" rule is executed, the key is looked up in the table
9238 and if it is not found, an entry is allocated for it. Then a pointer to
9239 that entry is kept during all the session's life, and this entry's
9240 counters are updated as often as possible, every time the session's
9241 counters are updated, and also systematically when the session ends.
Willy Tarreau5d5b5d82012-12-09 12:00:04 +01009242 Counters are only updated for events that happen after the tracking has
9243 been started. For example, connection counters will not be updated when
9244 tracking layer 7 information, since the connection event happens before
9245 layer7 information is extracted.
9246
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009247 If the entry tracks concurrent connection counters, one connection is
9248 counted for as long as the entry is tracked, and the entry will not
9249 expire during that time. Tracking counters also provides a performance
9250 advantage over just checking the keys, because only one table lookup is
9251 performed for all ACL checks that make use of it.
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009252
Thierry FOURNIERe0627bd2015-08-04 08:20:33 +02009253 - sc-inc-gpc0(<sc-id>):
9254 The "sc-inc-gpc0" increments the GPC0 counter according to the sticky
9255 counter designated by <sc-id>. If an error occurs, this action silently
9256 fails and the actions evaluation continues.
9257
Thierry FOURNIER236657b2015-08-19 08:25:14 +02009258 - sc-set-gpt0(<sc-id>) <int>:
9259 This action sets the GPT0 tag according to the sticky counter designated
9260 by <sc-id> and the value of <int>. The expected result is a boolean. If
9261 an error occurs, this action silently fails and the actions evaluation
9262 continues.
9263
William Lallemand2e785f22016-05-25 01:48:42 +02009264 - set-src <expr> :
9265 Is used to set the source IP address to the value of specified
9266 expression. Useful if you want to mask source IP for privacy.
9267 If you want to provide an IP from a HTTP header use "http-request
9268 set-src"
9269
9270 <expr> Is a standard HAProxy expression formed by a sample-fetch
9271 followed by some converters.
9272
9273 Example:
9274
9275 tcp-request connection set-src src,ipmask(24)
9276
Willy Tarreau0c630532016-10-21 17:52:58 +02009277 When possible, set-src preserves the original source port as long as the
9278 address family allows it, otherwise the source port is set to 0.
William Lallemand2e785f22016-05-25 01:48:42 +02009279
William Lallemand44be6402016-05-25 01:51:35 +02009280 - set-src-port <expr> :
9281 Is used to set the source port address to the value of specified
9282 expression.
9283
9284 <expr> Is a standard HAProxy expression formed by a sample-fetch
9285 followed by some converters.
9286
9287 Example:
9288
9289 tcp-request connection set-src-port int(4000)
9290
Willy Tarreau0c630532016-10-21 17:52:58 +02009291 When possible, set-src-port preserves the original source address as long
9292 as the address family supports a port, otherwise it forces the source
9293 address to IPv4 "0.0.0.0" before rewriting the port.
William Lallemand44be6402016-05-25 01:51:35 +02009294
William Lallemand13e9b0c2016-05-25 02:34:07 +02009295 - set-dst <expr> :
9296 Is used to set the destination IP address to the value of specified
9297 expression. Useful if you want to mask IP for privacy in log.
9298 If you want to provide an IP from a HTTP header use "http-request
9299 set-dst". If you want to connect to the new address/port, use
9300 '0.0.0.0:0' as a server address in the backend.
9301
9302 <expr> Is a standard HAProxy expression formed by a sample-fetch
9303 followed by some converters.
9304
9305 Example:
9306
9307 tcp-request connection set-dst dst,ipmask(24)
9308 tcp-request connection set-dst ipv4(10.0.0.1)
9309
Willy Tarreau0c630532016-10-21 17:52:58 +02009310 When possible, set-dst preserves the original destination port as long as
9311 the address family allows it, otherwise the destination port is set to 0.
9312
William Lallemand13e9b0c2016-05-25 02:34:07 +02009313 - set-dst-port <expr> :
9314 Is used to set the destination port address to the value of specified
9315 expression. If you want to connect to the new address/port, use
9316 '0.0.0.0:0' as a server address in the backend.
9317
9318
9319 <expr> Is a standard HAProxy expression formed by a sample-fetch
9320 followed by some converters.
9321
9322 Example:
9323
9324 tcp-request connection set-dst-port int(4000)
9325
Willy Tarreau0c630532016-10-21 17:52:58 +02009326 When possible, set-dst-port preserves the original destination address as
9327 long as the address family supports a port, otherwise it forces the
9328 destination address to IPv4 "0.0.0.0" before rewriting the port.
9329
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02009330 - "silent-drop" :
9331 This stops the evaluation of the rules and makes the client-facing
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009332 connection suddenly disappear using a system-dependent way that tries
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02009333 to prevent the client from being notified. The effect it then that the
9334 client still sees an established connection while there's none on
9335 HAProxy. The purpose is to achieve a comparable effect to "tarpit"
9336 except that it doesn't use any local resource at all on the machine
9337 running HAProxy. It can resist much higher loads than "tarpit", and
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009338 slow down stronger attackers. It is important to understand the impact
9339 of using this mechanism. All stateful equipment placed between the
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02009340 client and HAProxy (firewalls, proxies, load balancers) will also keep
9341 the established connection for a long time and may suffer from this
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009342 action. On modern Linux systems running with enough privileges, the
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02009343 TCP_REPAIR socket option is used to block the emission of a TCP
9344 reset. On other systems, the socket's TTL is reduced to 1 so that the
9345 TCP reset doesn't pass the first router, though it's still delivered to
9346 local networks. Do not use it unless you fully understand how it works.
9347
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009348 Note that the "if/unless" condition is optional. If no condition is set on
9349 the action, it is simply performed unconditionally. That can be useful for
9350 "track-sc*" actions as well as for changing the default action to a reject.
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009351
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009352 Example: accept all connections from white-listed hosts, reject too fast
9353 connection without counting them, and track accepted connections.
9354 This results in connection rate being capped from abusive sources.
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009355
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009356 tcp-request connection accept if { src -f /etc/haproxy/whitelist.lst }
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009357 tcp-request connection reject if { src_conn_rate gt 10 }
Willy Tarreaube4a3ef2013-06-17 15:04:07 +02009358 tcp-request connection track-sc0 src
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009359
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009360 Example: accept all connections from white-listed hosts, count all other
9361 connections and reject too fast ones. This results in abusive ones
9362 being blocked as long as they don't slow down.
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009363
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009364 tcp-request connection accept if { src -f /etc/haproxy/whitelist.lst }
Willy Tarreaube4a3ef2013-06-17 15:04:07 +02009365 tcp-request connection track-sc0 src
9366 tcp-request connection reject if { sc0_conn_rate gt 10 }
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009367
Willy Tarreau4f0d9192013-06-11 20:40:55 +02009368 Example: enable the PROXY protocol for traffic coming from all known proxies.
9369
9370 tcp-request connection expect-proxy layer4 if { src -f proxies.lst }
9371
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009372 See section 7 about ACL usage.
9373
Willy Tarreau4f614292016-10-21 17:49:36 +02009374 See also : "tcp-request session", "tcp-request content", "stick-table"
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009375
9376
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009377tcp-request content <action> [{if | unless} <condition>]
9378 Perform an action on a new session depending on a layer 4-7 condition
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009379 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreaufb356202010-08-03 14:02:05 +02009380 no | yes | yes | yes
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009381 Arguments :
Willy Tarreauc870bfd2015-09-28 18:47:38 +02009382 <action> defines the action to perform if the condition applies. See
9383 below.
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009384
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009385 <condition> is a standard layer 4-7 ACL-based condition (see section 7).
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009386
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009387 A request's contents can be analyzed at an early stage of request processing
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009388 called "TCP content inspection". During this stage, ACL-based rules are
9389 evaluated every time the request contents are updated, until either an
9390 "accept" or a "reject" rule matches, or the TCP request inspection delay
9391 expires with no matching rule.
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009392
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009393 The first difference between these rules and "tcp-request connection" rules
9394 is that "tcp-request content" rules can make use of contents to take a
9395 decision. Most often, these decisions will consider a protocol recognition or
9396 validity. The second difference is that content-based rules can be used in
Willy Tarreauf3338342014-01-28 21:40:28 +01009397 both frontends and backends. In case of HTTP keep-alive with the client, all
9398 tcp-request content rules are evaluated again, so haproxy keeps a record of
9399 what sticky counters were assigned by a "tcp-request connection" versus a
9400 "tcp-request content" rule, and flushes all the content-related ones after
9401 processing an HTTP request, so that they may be evaluated again by the rules
9402 being evaluated again for the next request. This is of particular importance
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03009403 when the rule tracks some L7 information or when it is conditioned by an
Willy Tarreauf3338342014-01-28 21:40:28 +01009404 L7-based ACL, since tracking may change between requests.
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009405
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009406 Content-based rules are evaluated in their exact declaration order. If no
9407 rule matches or if there is no rule, the default action is to accept the
9408 contents. There is no specific limit to the number of rules which may be
9409 inserted.
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009410
Thierry FOURNIER236657b2015-08-19 08:25:14 +02009411 Several types of actions are supported :
Willy Tarreau18bf01e2014-06-13 16:18:52 +02009412 - accept : the request is accepted
9413 - reject : the request is rejected and the connection is closed
9414 - capture : the specified sample expression is captured
Willy Tarreaube4a3ef2013-06-17 15:04:07 +02009415 - { track-sc0 | track-sc1 | track-sc2 } <key> [table <table>]
Thierry FOURNIERe0627bd2015-08-04 08:20:33 +02009416 - sc-inc-gpc0(<sc-id>)
Thierry Fournierb9125672016-03-29 19:34:37 +02009417 - sc-set-gpt0(<sc-id>) <int>
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02009418 - set-var(<var-name>) <expr>
Christopher Faulet85d79c92016-11-09 16:54:56 +01009419 - unset-var(<var-name>)
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02009420 - silent-drop
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009421 - send-spoe-group <engine-name> <group-name>
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009422
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009423 They have the same meaning as their counter-parts in "tcp-request connection"
9424 so please refer to that section for a complete description.
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009425
Willy Tarreauf3338342014-01-28 21:40:28 +01009426 While there is nothing mandatory about it, it is recommended to use the
9427 track-sc0 in "tcp-request connection" rules, track-sc1 for "tcp-request
9428 content" rules in the frontend, and track-sc2 for "tcp-request content"
9429 rules in the backend, because that makes the configuration more readable
9430 and easier to troubleshoot, but this is just a guideline and all counters
9431 may be used everywhere.
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009432
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01009433 Note that the "if/unless" condition is optional. If no condition is set on
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009434 the action, it is simply performed unconditionally. That can be useful for
9435 "track-sc*" actions as well as for changing the default action to a reject.
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009436
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009437 It is perfectly possible to match layer 7 contents with "tcp-request content"
Willy Tarreauc0239e02012-04-16 14:42:55 +02009438 rules, since HTTP-specific ACL matches are able to preliminarily parse the
9439 contents of a buffer before extracting the required data. If the buffered
9440 contents do not parse as a valid HTTP message, then the ACL does not match.
9441 The parser which is involved there is exactly the same as for all other HTTP
Willy Tarreauf3338342014-01-28 21:40:28 +01009442 processing, so there is no risk of parsing something differently. In an HTTP
9443 backend connected to from an HTTP frontend, it is guaranteed that HTTP
9444 contents will always be immediately present when the rule is evaluated first.
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009445
Willy Tarreau5d5b5d82012-12-09 12:00:04 +01009446 Tracking layer7 information is also possible provided that the information
Willy Tarreau4d54c7c2014-09-16 15:48:15 +02009447 are present when the rule is processed. The rule processing engine is able to
9448 wait until the inspect delay expires when the data to be tracked is not yet
9449 available.
Willy Tarreau5d5b5d82012-12-09 12:00:04 +01009450
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02009451 The "set-var" is used to set the content of a variable. The variable is
Willy Tarreau4f614292016-10-21 17:49:36 +02009452 declared inline. For "tcp-request session" rules, only session-level
9453 variables can be used, without any layer7 contents.
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02009454
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01009455 <var-name> The name of the variable starts with an indication about
9456 its scope. The scopes allowed are:
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +01009457 "proc" : the variable is shared with the whole process
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01009458 "sess" : the variable is shared with the whole session
9459 "txn" : the variable is shared with the transaction
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02009460 (request and response)
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01009461 "req" : the variable is shared only during request
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02009462 processing
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01009463 "res" : the variable is shared only during response
9464 processing
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02009465 This prefix is followed by a name. The separator is a '.'.
Christopher Fauletb71557a2016-10-31 10:49:03 +01009466 The name may only contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9',
9467 '.' and '_'.
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02009468
9469 <expr> Is a standard HAProxy expression formed by a sample-fetch
9470 followed by some converters.
9471
Christopher Faulet85d79c92016-11-09 16:54:56 +01009472 The "unset-var" is used to unset a variable. See above for details about
9473 <var-name>.
9474
Christopher Faulet76c09ef2017-09-21 11:03:52 +02009475 The "send-spoe-group" is used to trigger sending of a group of SPOE
9476 messages. To do so, the SPOE engine used to send messages must be defined, as
9477 well as the SPOE group to send. Of course, the SPOE engine must refer to an
9478 existing SPOE filter. If not engine name is provided on the SPOE filter line,
9479 the SPOE agent name must be used.
9480
9481 <engine-name> The SPOE engine name.
9482
9483 <group-name> The SPOE group name as specified in the engine configuration.
9484
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02009485 Example:
9486
9487 tcp-request content set-var(sess.my_var) src
Christopher Faulet85d79c92016-11-09 16:54:56 +01009488 tcp-request content unset-var(sess.my_var2)
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02009489
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009490 Example:
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009491 # Accept HTTP requests containing a Host header saying "example.com"
9492 # and reject everything else.
9493 acl is_host_com hdr(Host) -i example.com
9494 tcp-request inspect-delay 30s
Willy Tarreauc0239e02012-04-16 14:42:55 +02009495 tcp-request content accept if is_host_com
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009496 tcp-request content reject
9497
9498 Example:
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009499 # reject SMTP connection if client speaks first
9500 tcp-request inspect-delay 30s
9501 acl content_present req_len gt 0
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009502 tcp-request content reject if content_present
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009503
9504 # Forward HTTPS connection only if client speaks
9505 tcp-request inspect-delay 30s
9506 acl content_present req_len gt 0
Willy Tarreau68c03ab2010-08-06 15:08:45 +02009507 tcp-request content accept if content_present
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009508 tcp-request content reject
9509
Willy Tarreau5d5b5d82012-12-09 12:00:04 +01009510 Example:
Jarno Huuskonene5ae7022017-04-03 14:36:21 +03009511 # Track the last IP(stick-table type string) from X-Forwarded-For
Willy Tarreau5d5b5d82012-12-09 12:00:04 +01009512 tcp-request inspect-delay 10s
Willy Tarreau4d54c7c2014-09-16 15:48:15 +02009513 tcp-request content track-sc0 hdr(x-forwarded-for,-1)
Jarno Huuskonene5ae7022017-04-03 14:36:21 +03009514 # Or track the last IP(stick-table type ip|ipv6) from X-Forwarded-For
9515 tcp-request content track-sc0 req.hdr_ip(x-forwarded-for,-1)
Willy Tarreau5d5b5d82012-12-09 12:00:04 +01009516
9517 Example:
9518 # track request counts per "base" (concatenation of Host+URL)
9519 tcp-request inspect-delay 10s
Willy Tarreau4d54c7c2014-09-16 15:48:15 +02009520 tcp-request content track-sc0 base table req-rate
Willy Tarreau5d5b5d82012-12-09 12:00:04 +01009521
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009522 Example: track per-frontend and per-backend counters, block abusers at the
Jarno Huuskonene5ae7022017-04-03 14:36:21 +03009523 frontend when the backend detects abuse(and marks gpc0).
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009524
9525 frontend http
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009526 # Use General Purpose Counter 0 in SC0 as a global abuse counter
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009527 # protecting all our sites
9528 stick-table type ip size 1m expire 5m store gpc0
Willy Tarreaube4a3ef2013-06-17 15:04:07 +02009529 tcp-request connection track-sc0 src
9530 tcp-request connection reject if { sc0_get_gpc0 gt 0 }
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009531 ...
9532 use_backend http_dynamic if { path_end .php }
9533
9534 backend http_dynamic
9535 # if a source makes too fast requests to this dynamic site (tracked
Willy Tarreaube4a3ef2013-06-17 15:04:07 +02009536 # by SC1), block it globally in the frontend.
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009537 stick-table type ip size 1m expire 5m store http_req_rate(10s)
Willy Tarreaube4a3ef2013-06-17 15:04:07 +02009538 acl click_too_fast sc1_http_req_rate gt 10
Jarno Huuskonene5ae7022017-04-03 14:36:21 +03009539 acl mark_as_abuser sc0_inc_gpc0(http) gt 0
Willy Tarreaube4a3ef2013-06-17 15:04:07 +02009540 tcp-request content track-sc1 src
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +02009541 tcp-request content reject if click_too_fast mark_as_abuser
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009542
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +02009543 See section 7 about ACL usage.
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009544
Jarno Huuskonen95b012b2017-04-06 13:59:14 +03009545 See also : "tcp-request connection", "tcp-request session",
9546 "tcp-request inspect-delay", and "http-request".
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009547
9548
9549tcp-request inspect-delay <timeout>
9550 Set the maximum allowed time to wait for data during content inspection
9551 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreaufb356202010-08-03 14:02:05 +02009552 no | yes | yes | yes
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009553 Arguments :
9554 <timeout> is the timeout value specified in milliseconds by default, but
9555 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
9556 as explained at the top of this document.
9557
9558 People using haproxy primarily as a TCP relay are often worried about the
9559 risk of passing any type of protocol to a server without any analysis. In
9560 order to be able to analyze the request contents, we must first withhold
9561 the data then analyze them. This statement simply enables withholding of
9562 data for at most the specified amount of time.
9563
Willy Tarreaufb356202010-08-03 14:02:05 +02009564 TCP content inspection applies very early when a connection reaches a
9565 frontend, then very early when the connection is forwarded to a backend. This
9566 means that a connection may experience a first delay in the frontend and a
9567 second delay in the backend if both have tcp-request rules.
9568
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009569 Note that when performing content inspection, haproxy will evaluate the whole
9570 rules for every new chunk which gets in, taking into account the fact that
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +01009571 those data are partial. If no rule matches before the aforementioned delay,
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009572 a last check is performed upon expiration, this time considering that the
Willy Tarreaud869b242009-03-15 14:43:58 +01009573 contents are definitive. If no delay is set, haproxy will not wait at all
9574 and will immediately apply a verdict based on the available information.
9575 Obviously this is unlikely to be very useful and might even be racy, so such
9576 setups are not recommended.
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009577
9578 As soon as a rule matches, the request is released and continues as usual. If
9579 the timeout is reached and no rule matches, the default policy will be to let
9580 it pass through unaffected.
9581
9582 For most protocols, it is enough to set it to a few seconds, as most clients
9583 send the full request immediately upon connection. Add 3 or more seconds to
9584 cover TCP retransmits but that's all. For some protocols, it may make sense
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +01009585 to use large values, for instance to ensure that the client never talks
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009586 before the server (e.g. SMTP), or to wait for a client to talk before passing
9587 data to the server (e.g. SSL). Note that the client timeout must cover at
Willy Tarreaub824b002010-09-29 16:36:16 +02009588 least the inspection delay, otherwise it will expire first. If the client
9589 closes the connection or if the buffer is full, the delay immediately expires
9590 since the contents will not be able to change anymore.
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009591
Willy Tarreau55165fe2009-05-10 12:02:55 +02009592 See also : "tcp-request content accept", "tcp-request content reject",
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +02009593 "timeout client".
9594
9595
Emeric Brun0a3b67f2010-09-24 15:34:53 +02009596tcp-response content <action> [{if | unless} <condition>]
9597 Perform an action on a session response depending on a layer 4-7 condition
9598 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
9599 no | no | yes | yes
9600 Arguments :
Willy Tarreauc870bfd2015-09-28 18:47:38 +02009601 <action> defines the action to perform if the condition applies. See
9602 below.
Emeric Brun0a3b67f2010-09-24 15:34:53 +02009603
9604 <condition> is a standard layer 4-7 ACL-based condition (see section 7).
9605
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009606 Response contents can be analyzed at an early stage of response processing
Emeric Brun0a3b67f2010-09-24 15:34:53 +02009607 called "TCP content inspection". During this stage, ACL-based rules are
9608 evaluated every time the response contents are updated, until either an
Willy Tarreaucc1e04b2013-09-11 23:20:29 +02009609 "accept", "close" or a "reject" rule matches, or a TCP response inspection
9610 delay is set and expires with no matching rule.
Emeric Brun0a3b67f2010-09-24 15:34:53 +02009611
9612 Most often, these decisions will consider a protocol recognition or validity.
9613
9614 Content-based rules are evaluated in their exact declaration order. If no
9615 rule matches or if there is no rule, the default action is to accept the
9616 contents. There is no specific limit to the number of rules which may be
9617 inserted.
9618
Thierry FOURNIER236657b2015-08-19 08:25:14 +02009619 Several types of actions are supported :
Emeric Brun0a3b67f2010-09-24 15:34:53 +02009620 - accept :
9621 accepts the response if the condition is true (when used with "if")
9622 or false (when used with "unless"). The first such rule executed ends
9623 the rules evaluation.
9624
Willy Tarreaucc1e04b2013-09-11 23:20:29 +02009625 - close :
9626 immediately closes the connection with the server if the condition is
9627 true (when used with "if"), or false (when used with "unless"). The
9628 first such rule executed ends the rules evaluation. The main purpose of
9629 this action is to force a connection to be finished between a client
9630 and a server after an exchange when the application protocol expects
9631 some long time outs to elapse first. The goal is to eliminate idle
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +03009632 connections which take significant resources on servers with certain
Willy Tarreaucc1e04b2013-09-11 23:20:29 +02009633 protocols.
9634
Emeric Brun0a3b67f2010-09-24 15:34:53 +02009635 - reject :
9636 rejects the response if the condition is true (when used with "if")
9637 or false (when used with "unless"). The first such rule executed ends
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -04009638 the rules evaluation. Rejected session are immediately closed.
Emeric Brun0a3b67f2010-09-24 15:34:53 +02009639
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02009640 - set-var(<var-name>) <expr>
9641 Sets a variable.
9642
Christopher Faulet85d79c92016-11-09 16:54:56 +01009643 - unset-var(<var-name>)
9644 Unsets a variable.
9645
Thierry FOURNIERe0627bd2015-08-04 08:20:33 +02009646 - sc-inc-gpc0(<sc-id>):
9647 This action increments the GPC0 counter according to the sticky
9648 counter designated by <sc-id>. If an error occurs, this action fails
9649 silently and the actions evaluation continues.
9650
Thierry FOURNIER236657b2015-08-19 08:25:14 +02009651 - sc-set-gpt0(<sc-id>) <int> :
9652 This action sets the GPT0 tag according to the sticky counter designated
9653 by <sc-id> and the value of <int>. The expected result is a boolean. If
9654 an error occurs, this action silently fails and the actions evaluation
9655 continues.
9656
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02009657 - "silent-drop" :
9658 This stops the evaluation of the rules and makes the client-facing
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009659 connection suddenly disappear using a system-dependent way that tries
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02009660 to prevent the client from being notified. The effect it then that the
9661 client still sees an established connection while there's none on
9662 HAProxy. The purpose is to achieve a comparable effect to "tarpit"
9663 except that it doesn't use any local resource at all on the machine
9664 running HAProxy. It can resist much higher loads than "tarpit", and
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009665 slow down stronger attackers. It is important to understand the impact
9666 of using this mechanism. All stateful equipment placed between the
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02009667 client and HAProxy (firewalls, proxies, load balancers) will also keep
9668 the established connection for a long time and may suffer from this
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009669 action. On modern Linux systems running with enough privileges, the
Willy Tarreau2d392c22015-08-24 01:43:45 +02009670 TCP_REPAIR socket option is used to block the emission of a TCP
9671 reset. On other systems, the socket's TTL is reduced to 1 so that the
9672 TCP reset doesn't pass the first router, though it's still delivered to
9673 local networks. Do not use it unless you fully understand how it works.
9674
Christopher Faulet76c09ef2017-09-21 11:03:52 +02009675 - send-spoe-group <engine-name> <group-name>
9676 Send a group of SPOE messages.
9677
Emeric Brun0a3b67f2010-09-24 15:34:53 +02009678 Note that the "if/unless" condition is optional. If no condition is set on
9679 the action, it is simply performed unconditionally. That can be useful for
9680 for changing the default action to a reject.
9681
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -04009682 It is perfectly possible to match layer 7 contents with "tcp-response
9683 content" rules, but then it is important to ensure that a full response has
9684 been buffered, otherwise no contents will match. In order to achieve this,
9685 the best solution involves detecting the HTTP protocol during the inspection
Emeric Brun0a3b67f2010-09-24 15:34:53 +02009686 period.
9687
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02009688 The "set-var" is used to set the content of a variable. The variable is
9689 declared inline.
9690
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01009691 <var-name> The name of the variable starts with an indication about
9692 its scope. The scopes allowed are:
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +01009693 "proc" : the variable is shared with the whole process
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01009694 "sess" : the variable is shared with the whole session
9695 "txn" : the variable is shared with the transaction
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02009696 (request and response)
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01009697 "req" : the variable is shared only during request
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02009698 processing
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +01009699 "res" : the variable is shared only during response
9700 processing
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02009701 This prefix is followed by a name. The separator is a '.'.
Christopher Fauletb71557a2016-10-31 10:49:03 +01009702 The name may only contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9',
9703 '.' and '_'.
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +02009704
9705 <expr> Is a standard HAProxy expression formed by a sample-fetch
9706 followed by some converters.
9707
9708 Example:
9709
9710 tcp-request content set-var(sess.my_var) src
9711
Christopher Faulet85d79c92016-11-09 16:54:56 +01009712 The "unset-var" is used to unset a variable. See above for details about
9713 <var-name>.
9714
9715 Example:
9716
9717 tcp-request content unset-var(sess.my_var)
9718
Christopher Faulet76c09ef2017-09-21 11:03:52 +02009719 The "send-spoe-group" is used to trigger sending of a group of SPOE
9720 messages. To do so, the SPOE engine used to send messages must be defined, as
9721 well as the SPOE group to send. Of course, the SPOE engine must refer to an
9722 existing SPOE filter. If not engine name is provided on the SPOE filter line,
9723 the SPOE agent name must be used.
9724
9725 <engine-name> The SPOE engine name.
9726
9727 <group-name> The SPOE group name as specified in the engine configuration.
9728
Emeric Brun0a3b67f2010-09-24 15:34:53 +02009729 See section 7 about ACL usage.
9730
9731 See also : "tcp-request content", "tcp-response inspect-delay"
9732
9733
Willy Tarreau4f614292016-10-21 17:49:36 +02009734tcp-request session <action> [{if | unless} <condition>]
9735 Perform an action on a validated session depending on a layer 5 condition
9736 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
9737 no | yes | yes | no
9738 Arguments :
9739 <action> defines the action to perform if the condition applies. See
9740 below.
9741
9742 <condition> is a standard layer5-only ACL-based condition (see section 7).
9743
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009744 Once a session is validated, (i.e. after all handshakes have been completed),
Willy Tarreau4f614292016-10-21 17:49:36 +02009745 it is possible to evaluate some conditions to decide whether this session
9746 must be accepted or dropped or have its counters tracked. Those conditions
9747 cannot make use of any data contents because no buffers are allocated yet and
9748 the processing cannot wait at this stage. The main use case it to copy some
9749 early information into variables (since variables are accessible in the
9750 session), or to keep track of some information collected after the handshake,
9751 such as SSL-level elements (SNI, ciphers, client cert's CN) or information
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009752 from the PROXY protocol header (e.g. track a source forwarded this way). The
Willy Tarreau4f614292016-10-21 17:49:36 +02009753 extracted information can thus be copied to a variable or tracked using
9754 "track-sc" rules. Of course it is also possible to decide to accept/reject as
9755 with other rulesets. Most operations performed here could also be performed
9756 in "tcp-request content" rules, except that in HTTP these rules are evaluated
9757 for each new request, and that might not always be acceptable. For example a
9758 rule might increment a counter on each evaluation. It would also be possible
9759 that a country is resolved by geolocation from the source IP address,
9760 assigned to a session-wide variable, then the source address rewritten from
9761 an HTTP header for all requests. If some contents need to be inspected in
9762 order to take the decision, the "tcp-request content" statements must be used
9763 instead.
9764
9765 The "tcp-request session" rules are evaluated in their exact declaration
9766 order. If no rule matches or if there is no rule, the default action is to
9767 accept the incoming session. There is no specific limit to the number of
9768 rules which may be inserted.
9769
9770 Several types of actions are supported :
9771 - accept : the request is accepted
9772 - reject : the request is rejected and the connection is closed
9773 - { track-sc0 | track-sc1 | track-sc2 } <key> [table <table>]
9774 - sc-inc-gpc0(<sc-id>)
9775 - sc-set-gpt0(<sc-id>) <int>
9776 - set-var(<var-name>) <expr>
Christopher Faulet85d79c92016-11-09 16:54:56 +01009777 - unset-var(<var-name>)
Willy Tarreau4f614292016-10-21 17:49:36 +02009778 - silent-drop
9779
9780 These actions have the same meaning as their respective counter-parts in
9781 "tcp-request connection" and "tcp-request content", so please refer to these
9782 sections for a complete description.
9783
9784 Note that the "if/unless" condition is optional. If no condition is set on
9785 the action, it is simply performed unconditionally. That can be useful for
9786 "track-sc*" actions as well as for changing the default action to a reject.
9787
9788 Example: track the original source address by default, or the one advertised
9789 in the PROXY protocol header for connection coming from the local
9790 proxies. The first connection-level rule enables receipt of the
9791 PROXY protocol for these ones, the second rule tracks whatever
9792 address we decide to keep after optional decoding.
9793
9794 tcp-request connection expect-proxy layer4 if { src -f proxies.lst }
9795 tcp-request session track-sc0 src
9796
9797 Example: accept all sessions from white-listed hosts, reject too fast
9798 sessions without counting them, and track accepted sessions.
9799 This results in session rate being capped from abusive sources.
9800
9801 tcp-request session accept if { src -f /etc/haproxy/whitelist.lst }
9802 tcp-request session reject if { src_sess_rate gt 10 }
9803 tcp-request session track-sc0 src
9804
9805 Example: accept all sessions from white-listed hosts, count all other
9806 sessions and reject too fast ones. This results in abusive ones
9807 being blocked as long as they don't slow down.
9808
9809 tcp-request session accept if { src -f /etc/haproxy/whitelist.lst }
9810 tcp-request session track-sc0 src
9811 tcp-request session reject if { sc0_sess_rate gt 10 }
9812
9813 See section 7 about ACL usage.
9814
9815 See also : "tcp-request connection", "tcp-request content", "stick-table"
9816
9817
Emeric Brun0a3b67f2010-09-24 15:34:53 +02009818tcp-response inspect-delay <timeout>
9819 Set the maximum allowed time to wait for a response during content inspection
9820 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
9821 no | no | yes | yes
9822 Arguments :
9823 <timeout> is the timeout value specified in milliseconds by default, but
9824 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
9825 as explained at the top of this document.
9826
9827 See also : "tcp-response content", "tcp-request inspect-delay".
9828
9829
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki5259dfe2008-01-21 01:54:06 +01009830timeout check <timeout>
9831 Set additional check timeout, but only after a connection has been already
9832 established.
9833
9834 May be used in sections: defaults | frontend | listen | backend
9835 yes | no | yes | yes
9836 Arguments:
9837 <timeout> is the timeout value specified in milliseconds by default, but
9838 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
9839 as explained at the top of this document.
9840
9841 If set, haproxy uses min("timeout connect", "inter") as a connect timeout
9842 for check and "timeout check" as an additional read timeout. The "min" is
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009843 used so that people running with *very* long "timeout connect" (e.g. those
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki5259dfe2008-01-21 01:54:06 +01009844 who needed this due to the queue or tarpit) do not slow down their checks.
Willy Tarreaud7550a22010-02-10 05:10:19 +01009845 (Please also note that there is no valid reason to have such long connect
9846 timeouts, because "timeout queue" and "timeout tarpit" can always be used to
9847 avoid that).
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki5259dfe2008-01-21 01:54:06 +01009848
9849 If "timeout check" is not set haproxy uses "inter" for complete check
9850 timeout (connect + read) exactly like all <1.3.15 version.
9851
9852 In most cases check request is much simpler and faster to handle than normal
9853 requests and people may want to kick out laggy servers so this timeout should
Willy Tarreau41a340d2008-01-22 12:25:31 +01009854 be smaller than "timeout server".
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki5259dfe2008-01-21 01:54:06 +01009855
9856 This parameter is specific to backends, but can be specified once for all in
9857 "defaults" sections. This is in fact one of the easiest solutions not to
9858 forget about it.
9859
Willy Tarreau41a340d2008-01-22 12:25:31 +01009860 See also: "timeout connect", "timeout queue", "timeout server",
9861 "timeout tarpit".
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki5259dfe2008-01-21 01:54:06 +01009862
9863
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01009864timeout client <timeout>
9865timeout clitimeout <timeout> (deprecated)
9866 Set the maximum inactivity time on the client side.
9867 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
9868 yes | yes | yes | no
9869 Arguments :
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +01009870 <timeout> is the timeout value specified in milliseconds by default, but
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01009871 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
9872 as explained at the top of this document.
9873
9874 The inactivity timeout applies when the client is expected to acknowledge or
9875 send data. In HTTP mode, this timeout is particularly important to consider
9876 during the first phase, when the client sends the request, and during the
Baptiste Assmann2e1941e2016-03-06 23:24:12 +01009877 response while it is reading data sent by the server. That said, for the
9878 first phase, it is preferable to set the "timeout http-request" to better
9879 protect HAProxy from Slowloris like attacks. The value is specified in
9880 milliseconds by default, but can be in any other unit if the number is
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01009881 suffixed by the unit, as specified at the top of this document. In TCP mode
9882 (and to a lesser extent, in HTTP mode), it is highly recommended that the
9883 client timeout remains equal to the server timeout in order to avoid complex
Willy Tarreaud2a4aa22008-01-31 15:28:22 +01009884 situations to debug. It is a good practice to cover one or several TCP packet
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01009885 losses by specifying timeouts that are slightly above multiples of 3 seconds
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009886 (e.g. 4 or 5 seconds). If some long-lived sessions are mixed with short-lived
9887 sessions (e.g. WebSocket and HTTP), it's worth considering "timeout tunnel",
Willy Tarreau05cdd962014-05-10 14:30:07 +02009888 which overrides "timeout client" and "timeout server" for tunnels, as well as
9889 "timeout client-fin" for half-closed connections.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01009890
9891 This parameter is specific to frontends, but can be specified once for all in
9892 "defaults" sections. This is in fact one of the easiest solutions not to
9893 forget about it. An unspecified timeout results in an infinite timeout, which
9894 is not recommended. Such a usage is accepted and works but reports a warning
9895 during startup because it may results in accumulation of expired sessions in
9896 the system if the system's timeouts are not configured either.
9897
Willy Tarreau95c4e142017-11-26 12:18:55 +01009898 This also applies to HTTP/2 connections, which will be closed with GOAWAY.
Lukas Tribus75df9d72017-11-24 19:05:12 +01009899
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01009900 This parameter replaces the old, deprecated "clitimeout". It is recommended
9901 to use it to write new configurations. The form "timeout clitimeout" is
9902 provided only by backwards compatibility but its use is strongly discouraged.
9903
Baptiste Assmann2e1941e2016-03-06 23:24:12 +01009904 See also : "clitimeout", "timeout server", "timeout tunnel",
9905 "timeout http-request".
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01009906
9907
Willy Tarreau05cdd962014-05-10 14:30:07 +02009908timeout client-fin <timeout>
9909 Set the inactivity timeout on the client side for half-closed connections.
9910 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
9911 yes | yes | yes | no
9912 Arguments :
9913 <timeout> is the timeout value specified in milliseconds by default, but
9914 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
9915 as explained at the top of this document.
9916
9917 The inactivity timeout applies when the client is expected to acknowledge or
9918 send data while one direction is already shut down. This timeout is different
9919 from "timeout client" in that it only applies to connections which are closed
9920 in one direction. This is particularly useful to avoid keeping connections in
9921 FIN_WAIT state for too long when clients do not disconnect cleanly. This
9922 problem is particularly common long connections such as RDP or WebSocket.
9923 Note that this timeout can override "timeout tunnel" when a connection shuts
Willy Tarreau599391a2017-11-24 10:16:00 +01009924 down in one direction. It is applied to idle HTTP/2 connections once a GOAWAY
9925 frame was sent, often indicating an expectation that the connection quickly
9926 ends.
Willy Tarreau05cdd962014-05-10 14:30:07 +02009927
9928 This parameter is specific to frontends, but can be specified once for all in
9929 "defaults" sections. By default it is not set, so half-closed connections
9930 will use the other timeouts (timeout.client or timeout.tunnel).
9931
9932 See also : "timeout client", "timeout server-fin", and "timeout tunnel".
9933
9934
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01009935timeout connect <timeout>
9936timeout contimeout <timeout> (deprecated)
9937 Set the maximum time to wait for a connection attempt to a server to succeed.
9938 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
9939 yes | no | yes | yes
9940 Arguments :
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +01009941 <timeout> is the timeout value specified in milliseconds by default, but
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01009942 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
9943 as explained at the top of this document.
9944
9945 If the server is located on the same LAN as haproxy, the connection should be
Willy Tarreaud2a4aa22008-01-31 15:28:22 +01009946 immediate (less than a few milliseconds). Anyway, it is a good practice to
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +01009947 cover one or several TCP packet losses by specifying timeouts that are
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009948 slightly above multiples of 3 seconds (e.g. 4 or 5 seconds). By default, the
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki5259dfe2008-01-21 01:54:06 +01009949 connect timeout also presets both queue and tarpit timeouts to the same value
9950 if these have not been specified.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01009951
9952 This parameter is specific to backends, but can be specified once for all in
9953 "defaults" sections. This is in fact one of the easiest solutions not to
9954 forget about it. An unspecified timeout results in an infinite timeout, which
9955 is not recommended. Such a usage is accepted and works but reports a warning
9956 during startup because it may results in accumulation of failed sessions in
9957 the system if the system's timeouts are not configured either.
9958
9959 This parameter replaces the old, deprecated "contimeout". It is recommended
9960 to use it to write new configurations. The form "timeout contimeout" is
9961 provided only by backwards compatibility but its use is strongly discouraged.
9962
Willy Tarreau41a340d2008-01-22 12:25:31 +01009963 See also: "timeout check", "timeout queue", "timeout server", "contimeout",
9964 "timeout tarpit".
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +01009965
9966
Willy Tarreaub16a5742010-01-10 14:46:16 +01009967timeout http-keep-alive <timeout>
9968 Set the maximum allowed time to wait for a new HTTP request to appear
9969 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
9970 yes | yes | yes | yes
9971 Arguments :
9972 <timeout> is the timeout value specified in milliseconds by default, but
9973 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
9974 as explained at the top of this document.
9975
9976 By default, the time to wait for a new request in case of keep-alive is set
9977 by "timeout http-request". However this is not always convenient because some
9978 people want very short keep-alive timeouts in order to release connections
9979 faster, and others prefer to have larger ones but still have short timeouts
9980 once the request has started to present itself.
9981
9982 The "http-keep-alive" timeout covers these needs. It will define how long to
9983 wait for a new HTTP request to start coming after a response was sent. Once
9984 the first byte of request has been seen, the "http-request" timeout is used
9985 to wait for the complete request to come. Note that empty lines prior to a
9986 new request do not refresh the timeout and are not counted as a new request.
9987
9988 There is also another difference between the two timeouts : when a connection
9989 expires during timeout http-keep-alive, no error is returned, the connection
9990 just closes. If the connection expires in "http-request" while waiting for a
9991 connection to complete, a HTTP 408 error is returned.
9992
9993 In general it is optimal to set this value to a few tens to hundreds of
9994 milliseconds, to allow users to fetch all objects of a page at once but
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +01009995 without waiting for further clicks. Also, if set to a very small value (e.g.
Willy Tarreaub16a5742010-01-10 14:46:16 +01009996 1 millisecond) it will probably only accept pipelined requests but not the
9997 non-pipelined ones. It may be a nice trade-off for very large sites running
Patrick Mézard2382ad62010-05-09 10:43:32 +02009998 with tens to hundreds of thousands of clients.
Willy Tarreaub16a5742010-01-10 14:46:16 +01009999
10000 If this parameter is not set, the "http-request" timeout applies, and if both
10001 are not set, "timeout client" still applies at the lower level. It should be
10002 set in the frontend to take effect, unless the frontend is in TCP mode, in
10003 which case the HTTP backend's timeout will be used.
10004
Willy Tarreau95c4e142017-11-26 12:18:55 +010010005 When using HTTP/2 "timeout client" is applied instead. This is so we can keep
10006 using short keep-alive timeouts in HTTP/1.1 while using longer ones in HTTP/2
Lukas Tribus75df9d72017-11-24 19:05:12 +010010007 (where we only have one connection per client and a connection setup).
10008
Willy Tarreaub16a5742010-01-10 14:46:16 +010010009 See also : "timeout http-request", "timeout client".
10010
10011
Willy Tarreau036fae02008-01-06 13:24:40 +010010012timeout http-request <timeout>
10013 Set the maximum allowed time to wait for a complete HTTP request
10014 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreaucd7afc02009-07-12 10:03:17 +020010015 yes | yes | yes | yes
Willy Tarreau036fae02008-01-06 13:24:40 +010010016 Arguments :
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010017 <timeout> is the timeout value specified in milliseconds by default, but
Willy Tarreau036fae02008-01-06 13:24:40 +010010018 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
10019 as explained at the top of this document.
10020
10021 In order to offer DoS protection, it may be required to lower the maximum
10022 accepted time to receive a complete HTTP request without affecting the client
10023 timeout. This helps protecting against established connections on which
10024 nothing is sent. The client timeout cannot offer a good protection against
10025 this abuse because it is an inactivity timeout, which means that if the
10026 attacker sends one character every now and then, the timeout will not
10027 trigger. With the HTTP request timeout, no matter what speed the client
Willy Tarreau2705a612014-05-23 17:38:34 +020010028 types, the request will be aborted if it does not complete in time. When the
10029 timeout expires, an HTTP 408 response is sent to the client to inform it
10030 about the problem, and the connection is closed. The logs will report
10031 termination codes "cR". Some recent browsers are having problems with this
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010032 standard, well-documented behavior, so it might be needed to hide the 408
Willy Tarreau0f228a02015-05-01 15:37:53 +020010033 code using "option http-ignore-probes" or "errorfile 408 /dev/null". See
10034 more details in the explanations of the "cR" termination code in section 8.5.
Willy Tarreau036fae02008-01-06 13:24:40 +010010035
Baptiste Assmanneccdf432015-10-28 13:49:01 +010010036 By default, this timeout only applies to the header part of the request,
10037 and not to any data. As soon as the empty line is received, this timeout is
10038 not used anymore. When combined with "option http-buffer-request", this
10039 timeout also applies to the body of the request..
10040 It is used again on keep-alive connections to wait for a second
Willy Tarreaub16a5742010-01-10 14:46:16 +010010041 request if "timeout http-keep-alive" is not set.
Willy Tarreau036fae02008-01-06 13:24:40 +010010042
10043 Generally it is enough to set it to a few seconds, as most clients send the
10044 full request immediately upon connection. Add 3 or more seconds to cover TCP
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010045 retransmits but that's all. Setting it to very low values (e.g. 50 ms) will
Willy Tarreau036fae02008-01-06 13:24:40 +010010046 generally work on local networks as long as there are no packet losses. This
10047 will prevent people from sending bare HTTP requests using telnet.
10048
10049 If this parameter is not set, the client timeout still applies between each
Willy Tarreaucd7afc02009-07-12 10:03:17 +020010050 chunk of the incoming request. It should be set in the frontend to take
10051 effect, unless the frontend is in TCP mode, in which case the HTTP backend's
10052 timeout will be used.
Willy Tarreau036fae02008-01-06 13:24:40 +010010053
Willy Tarreau0f228a02015-05-01 15:37:53 +020010054 See also : "errorfile", "http-ignore-probes", "timeout http-keep-alive", and
Baptiste Assmanneccdf432015-10-28 13:49:01 +010010055 "timeout client", "option http-buffer-request".
Willy Tarreau036fae02008-01-06 13:24:40 +010010056
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010057
10058timeout queue <timeout>
10059 Set the maximum time to wait in the queue for a connection slot to be free
10060 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
10061 yes | no | yes | yes
10062 Arguments :
10063 <timeout> is the timeout value specified in milliseconds by default, but
10064 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
10065 as explained at the top of this document.
10066
10067 When a server's maxconn is reached, connections are left pending in a queue
10068 which may be server-specific or global to the backend. In order not to wait
10069 indefinitely, a timeout is applied to requests pending in the queue. If the
10070 timeout is reached, it is considered that the request will almost never be
10071 served, so it is dropped and a 503 error is returned to the client.
10072
10073 The "timeout queue" statement allows to fix the maximum time for a request to
10074 be left pending in a queue. If unspecified, the same value as the backend's
10075 connection timeout ("timeout connect") is used, for backwards compatibility
10076 with older versions with no "timeout queue" parameter.
10077
10078 See also : "timeout connect", "contimeout".
10079
10080
10081timeout server <timeout>
10082timeout srvtimeout <timeout> (deprecated)
10083 Set the maximum inactivity time on the server side.
10084 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
10085 yes | no | yes | yes
10086 Arguments :
10087 <timeout> is the timeout value specified in milliseconds by default, but
10088 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
10089 as explained at the top of this document.
10090
10091 The inactivity timeout applies when the server is expected to acknowledge or
10092 send data. In HTTP mode, this timeout is particularly important to consider
10093 during the first phase of the server's response, when it has to send the
10094 headers, as it directly represents the server's processing time for the
10095 request. To find out what value to put there, it's often good to start with
10096 what would be considered as unacceptable response times, then check the logs
10097 to observe the response time distribution, and adjust the value accordingly.
10098
10099 The value is specified in milliseconds by default, but can be in any other
10100 unit if the number is suffixed by the unit, as specified at the top of this
10101 document. In TCP mode (and to a lesser extent, in HTTP mode), it is highly
10102 recommended that the client timeout remains equal to the server timeout in
10103 order to avoid complex situations to debug. Whatever the expected server
Willy Tarreaud2a4aa22008-01-31 15:28:22 +010010104 response times, it is a good practice to cover at least one or several TCP
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010105 packet losses by specifying timeouts that are slightly above multiples of 3
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010106 seconds (e.g. 4 or 5 seconds minimum). If some long-lived sessions are mixed
10107 with short-lived sessions (e.g. WebSocket and HTTP), it's worth considering
Willy Tarreauce887fd2012-05-12 12:50:00 +020010108 "timeout tunnel", which overrides "timeout client" and "timeout server" for
10109 tunnels.
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010110
10111 This parameter is specific to backends, but can be specified once for all in
10112 "defaults" sections. This is in fact one of the easiest solutions not to
10113 forget about it. An unspecified timeout results in an infinite timeout, which
10114 is not recommended. Such a usage is accepted and works but reports a warning
10115 during startup because it may results in accumulation of expired sessions in
10116 the system if the system's timeouts are not configured either.
10117
10118 This parameter replaces the old, deprecated "srvtimeout". It is recommended
10119 to use it to write new configurations. The form "timeout srvtimeout" is
10120 provided only by backwards compatibility but its use is strongly discouraged.
10121
Willy Tarreauce887fd2012-05-12 12:50:00 +020010122 See also : "srvtimeout", "timeout client" and "timeout tunnel".
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010123
Willy Tarreau05cdd962014-05-10 14:30:07 +020010124
10125timeout server-fin <timeout>
10126 Set the inactivity timeout on the server side for half-closed connections.
10127 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
10128 yes | no | yes | yes
10129 Arguments :
10130 <timeout> is the timeout value specified in milliseconds by default, but
10131 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
10132 as explained at the top of this document.
10133
10134 The inactivity timeout applies when the server is expected to acknowledge or
10135 send data while one direction is already shut down. This timeout is different
10136 from "timeout server" in that it only applies to connections which are closed
10137 in one direction. This is particularly useful to avoid keeping connections in
10138 FIN_WAIT state for too long when a remote server does not disconnect cleanly.
10139 This problem is particularly common long connections such as RDP or WebSocket.
10140 Note that this timeout can override "timeout tunnel" when a connection shuts
10141 down in one direction. This setting was provided for completeness, but in most
10142 situations, it should not be needed.
10143
10144 This parameter is specific to backends, but can be specified once for all in
10145 "defaults" sections. By default it is not set, so half-closed connections
10146 will use the other timeouts (timeout.server or timeout.tunnel).
10147
10148 See also : "timeout client-fin", "timeout server", and "timeout tunnel".
10149
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010150
10151timeout tarpit <timeout>
Cyril Bonté78caf842010-03-10 22:41:43 +010010152 Set the duration for which tarpitted connections will be maintained
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010153 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
10154 yes | yes | yes | yes
10155 Arguments :
10156 <timeout> is the tarpit duration specified in milliseconds by default, but
10157 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
10158 as explained at the top of this document.
10159
Jarno Huuskonene5ae7022017-04-03 14:36:21 +030010160 When a connection is tarpitted using "http-request tarpit" or
10161 "reqtarpit", it is maintained open with no activity for a certain
10162 amount of time, then closed. "timeout tarpit" defines how long it will
10163 be maintained open.
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010164
10165 The value is specified in milliseconds by default, but can be in any other
10166 unit if the number is suffixed by the unit, as specified at the top of this
10167 document. If unspecified, the same value as the backend's connection timeout
10168 ("timeout connect") is used, for backwards compatibility with older versions
Cyril Bonté78caf842010-03-10 22:41:43 +010010169 with no "timeout tarpit" parameter.
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010170
10171 See also : "timeout connect", "contimeout".
10172
10173
Willy Tarreauce887fd2012-05-12 12:50:00 +020010174timeout tunnel <timeout>
10175 Set the maximum inactivity time on the client and server side for tunnels.
10176 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
10177 yes | no | yes | yes
10178 Arguments :
10179 <timeout> is the timeout value specified in milliseconds by default, but
10180 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
10181 as explained at the top of this document.
10182
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -040010183 The tunnel timeout applies when a bidirectional connection is established
Willy Tarreauce887fd2012-05-12 12:50:00 +020010184 between a client and a server, and the connection remains inactive in both
10185 directions. This timeout supersedes both the client and server timeouts once
10186 the connection becomes a tunnel. In TCP, this timeout is used as soon as no
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010187 analyzer remains attached to either connection (e.g. tcp content rules are
10188 accepted). In HTTP, this timeout is used when a connection is upgraded (e.g.
Willy Tarreauce887fd2012-05-12 12:50:00 +020010189 when switching to the WebSocket protocol, or forwarding a CONNECT request
10190 to a proxy), or after the first response when no keepalive/close option is
10191 specified.
10192
Willy Tarreau05cdd962014-05-10 14:30:07 +020010193 Since this timeout is usually used in conjunction with long-lived connections,
10194 it usually is a good idea to also set "timeout client-fin" to handle the
10195 situation where a client suddenly disappears from the net and does not
10196 acknowledge a close, or sends a shutdown and does not acknowledge pending
10197 data anymore. This can happen in lossy networks where firewalls are present,
10198 and is detected by the presence of large amounts of sessions in a FIN_WAIT
10199 state.
10200
Willy Tarreauce887fd2012-05-12 12:50:00 +020010201 The value is specified in milliseconds by default, but can be in any other
10202 unit if the number is suffixed by the unit, as specified at the top of this
10203 document. Whatever the expected normal idle time, it is a good practice to
10204 cover at least one or several TCP packet losses by specifying timeouts that
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010205 are slightly above multiples of 3 seconds (e.g. 4 or 5 seconds minimum).
Willy Tarreauce887fd2012-05-12 12:50:00 +020010206
10207 This parameter is specific to backends, but can be specified once for all in
10208 "defaults" sections. This is in fact one of the easiest solutions not to
10209 forget about it.
10210
10211 Example :
10212 defaults http
10213 option http-server-close
10214 timeout connect 5s
10215 timeout client 30s
Willy Tarreau05cdd962014-05-10 14:30:07 +020010216 timeout client-fin 30s
Willy Tarreauce887fd2012-05-12 12:50:00 +020010217 timeout server 30s
10218 timeout tunnel 1h # timeout to use with WebSocket and CONNECT
10219
Willy Tarreau05cdd962014-05-10 14:30:07 +020010220 See also : "timeout client", "timeout client-fin", "timeout server".
Willy Tarreauce887fd2012-05-12 12:50:00 +020010221
10222
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010223transparent (deprecated)
10224 Enable client-side transparent proxying
10225 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
Willy Tarreau4b1f8592008-12-23 23:13:55 +010010226 yes | no | yes | yes
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010227 Arguments : none
10228
10229 This keyword was introduced in order to provide layer 7 persistence to layer
10230 3 load balancers. The idea is to use the OS's ability to redirect an incoming
10231 connection for a remote address to a local process (here HAProxy), and let
10232 this process know what address was initially requested. When this option is
10233 used, sessions without cookies will be forwarded to the original destination
10234 IP address of the incoming request (which should match that of another
10235 equipment), while requests with cookies will still be forwarded to the
10236 appropriate server.
10237
10238 The "transparent" keyword is deprecated, use "option transparent" instead.
10239
10240 Note that contrary to a common belief, this option does NOT make HAProxy
10241 present the client's IP to the server when establishing the connection.
10242
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010243 See also: "option transparent"
10244
William Lallemanda73203e2012-03-12 12:48:57 +010010245unique-id-format <string>
10246 Generate a unique ID for each request.
10247 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
10248 yes | yes | yes | no
10249 Arguments :
10250 <string> is a log-format string.
10251
Cyril Bonté108cf6e2012-04-21 23:30:29 +020010252 This keyword creates a ID for each request using the custom log format. A
10253 unique ID is useful to trace a request passing through many components of
10254 a complex infrastructure. The newly created ID may also be logged using the
10255 %ID tag the log-format string.
William Lallemanda73203e2012-03-12 12:48:57 +010010256
Cyril Bonté108cf6e2012-04-21 23:30:29 +020010257 The format should be composed from elements that are guaranteed to be
10258 unique when combined together. For instance, if multiple haproxy instances
10259 are involved, it might be important to include the node name. It is often
10260 needed to log the incoming connection's source and destination addresses
10261 and ports. Note that since multiple requests may be performed over the same
10262 connection, including a request counter may help differentiate them.
10263 Similarly, a timestamp may protect against a rollover of the counter.
10264 Logging the process ID will avoid collisions after a service restart.
William Lallemanda73203e2012-03-12 12:48:57 +010010265
Cyril Bonté108cf6e2012-04-21 23:30:29 +020010266 It is recommended to use hexadecimal notation for many fields since it
10267 makes them more compact and saves space in logs.
William Lallemanda73203e2012-03-12 12:48:57 +010010268
Cyril Bonté108cf6e2012-04-21 23:30:29 +020010269 Example:
William Lallemanda73203e2012-03-12 12:48:57 +010010270
Julien Vehentf21be322014-03-07 08:27:34 -050010271 unique-id-format %{+X}o\ %ci:%cp_%fi:%fp_%Ts_%rt:%pid
William Lallemanda73203e2012-03-12 12:48:57 +010010272
10273 will generate:
10274
10275 7F000001:8296_7F00001E:1F90_4F7B0A69_0003:790A
10276
10277 See also: "unique-id-header"
10278
10279unique-id-header <name>
10280 Add a unique ID header in the HTTP request.
10281 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
10282 yes | yes | yes | no
10283 Arguments :
10284 <name> is the name of the header.
10285
Cyril Bonté108cf6e2012-04-21 23:30:29 +020010286 Add a unique-id header in the HTTP request sent to the server, using the
10287 unique-id-format. It can't work if the unique-id-format doesn't exist.
William Lallemanda73203e2012-03-12 12:48:57 +010010288
Cyril Bonté108cf6e2012-04-21 23:30:29 +020010289 Example:
William Lallemanda73203e2012-03-12 12:48:57 +010010290
Julien Vehentf21be322014-03-07 08:27:34 -050010291 unique-id-format %{+X}o\ %ci:%cp_%fi:%fp_%Ts_%rt:%pid
William Lallemanda73203e2012-03-12 12:48:57 +010010292 unique-id-header X-Unique-ID
10293
10294 will generate:
10295
10296 X-Unique-ID: 7F000001:8296_7F00001E:1F90_4F7B0A69_0003:790A
10297
10298 See also: "unique-id-format"
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010299
Willy Tarreauf51658d2014-04-23 01:21:56 +020010300use_backend <backend> [{if | unless} <condition>]
Willy Tarreau1d0dfb12009-07-07 15:10:31 +020010301 Switch to a specific backend if/unless an ACL-based condition is matched.
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010302 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
10303 no | yes | yes | no
10304 Arguments :
Bertrand Jacquin702d44f2013-11-19 11:43:06 +010010305 <backend> is the name of a valid backend or "listen" section, or a
10306 "log-format" string resolving to a backend name.
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010307
Willy Tarreauf51658d2014-04-23 01:21:56 +020010308 <condition> is a condition composed of ACLs, as described in section 7. If
10309 it is omitted, the rule is unconditionally applied.
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010310
10311 When doing content-switching, connections arrive on a frontend and are then
10312 dispatched to various backends depending on a number of conditions. The
10313 relation between the conditions and the backends is described with the
Willy Tarreau1d0dfb12009-07-07 15:10:31 +020010314 "use_backend" keyword. While it is normally used with HTTP processing, it can
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010315 also be used in pure TCP, either without content using stateless ACLs (e.g.
Willy Tarreau1d0dfb12009-07-07 15:10:31 +020010316 source address validation) or combined with a "tcp-request" rule to wait for
10317 some payload.
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010010318
10319 There may be as many "use_backend" rules as desired. All of these rules are
10320 evaluated in their declaration order, and the first one which matches will
10321 assign the backend.
10322
10323 In the first form, the backend will be used if the condition is met. In the
10324 second form, the backend will be used if the condition is not met. If no
10325 condition is valid, the backend defined with "default_backend" will be used.
10326 If no default backend is defined, either the servers in the same section are
10327 used (in case of a "listen" section) or, in case of a frontend, no server is
10328 used and a 503 service unavailable response is returned.
10329
Willy Tarreau51aecc72009-07-12 09:47:04 +020010330 Note that it is possible to switch from a TCP frontend to an HTTP backend. In
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +010010331 this case, either the frontend has already checked that the protocol is HTTP,
Willy Tarreau51aecc72009-07-12 09:47:04 +020010332 and backend processing will immediately follow, or the backend will wait for
10333 a complete HTTP request to get in. This feature is useful when a frontend
10334 must decode several protocols on a unique port, one of them being HTTP.
10335
Bertrand Jacquin702d44f2013-11-19 11:43:06 +010010336 When <backend> is a simple name, it is resolved at configuration time, and an
10337 error is reported if the specified backend does not exist. If <backend> is
10338 a log-format string instead, no check may be done at configuration time, so
10339 the backend name is resolved dynamically at run time. If the resulting
10340 backend name does not correspond to any valid backend, no other rule is
10341 evaluated, and the default_backend directive is applied instead. Note that
10342 when using dynamic backend names, it is highly recommended to use a prefix
10343 that no other backend uses in order to ensure that an unauthorized backend
10344 cannot be forced from the request.
10345
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030010346 It is worth mentioning that "use_backend" rules with an explicit name are
Bertrand Jacquin702d44f2013-11-19 11:43:06 +010010347 used to detect the association between frontends and backends to compute the
10348 backend's "fullconn" setting. This cannot be done for dynamic names.
10349
10350 See also: "default_backend", "tcp-request", "fullconn", "log-format", and
10351 section 7 about ACLs.
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +010010352
Willy Tarreau036fae02008-01-06 13:24:40 +010010353
Willy Tarreau4a5cade2012-04-05 21:09:48 +020010354use-server <server> if <condition>
10355use-server <server> unless <condition>
10356 Only use a specific server if/unless an ACL-based condition is matched.
10357 May be used in sections : defaults | frontend | listen | backend
10358 no | no | yes | yes
10359 Arguments :
Cyril Bonté108cf6e2012-04-21 23:30:29 +020010360 <server> is the name of a valid server in the same backend section.
Willy Tarreau4a5cade2012-04-05 21:09:48 +020010361
10362 <condition> is a condition composed of ACLs, as described in section 7.
10363
10364 By default, connections which arrive to a backend are load-balanced across
10365 the available servers according to the configured algorithm, unless a
10366 persistence mechanism such as a cookie is used and found in the request.
10367
10368 Sometimes it is desirable to forward a particular request to a specific
10369 server without having to declare a dedicated backend for this server. This
10370 can be achieved using the "use-server" rules. These rules are evaluated after
10371 the "redirect" rules and before evaluating cookies, and they have precedence
10372 on them. There may be as many "use-server" rules as desired. All of these
10373 rules are evaluated in their declaration order, and the first one which
10374 matches will assign the server.
10375
10376 If a rule designates a server which is down, and "option persist" is not used
10377 and no force-persist rule was validated, it is ignored and evaluation goes on
10378 with the next rules until one matches.
10379
10380 In the first form, the server will be used if the condition is met. In the
10381 second form, the server will be used if the condition is not met. If no
10382 condition is valid, the processing continues and the server will be assigned
10383 according to other persistence mechanisms.
10384
10385 Note that even if a rule is matched, cookie processing is still performed but
10386 does not assign the server. This allows prefixed cookies to have their prefix
10387 stripped.
10388
10389 The "use-server" statement works both in HTTP and TCP mode. This makes it
10390 suitable for use with content-based inspection. For instance, a server could
10391 be selected in a farm according to the TLS SNI field. And if these servers
10392 have their weight set to zero, they will not be used for other traffic.
10393
10394 Example :
10395 # intercept incoming TLS requests based on the SNI field
10396 use-server www if { req_ssl_sni -i www.example.com }
10397 server www 192.168.0.1:443 weight 0
10398 use-server mail if { req_ssl_sni -i mail.example.com }
10399 server mail 192.168.0.1:587 weight 0
10400 use-server imap if { req_ssl_sni -i imap.example.com }
Lukas Tribus98a3e3f2017-03-26 12:55:35 +000010401 server imap 192.168.0.1:993 weight 0
Willy Tarreau4a5cade2012-04-05 21:09:48 +020010402 # all the rest is forwarded to this server
10403 server default 192.168.0.2:443 check
10404
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030010405 See also: "use_backend", section 5 about server and section 7 about ACLs.
Willy Tarreau4a5cade2012-04-05 21:09:48 +020010406
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010407
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +0100104085. Bind and server options
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010409--------------------------
10410
10411The "bind", "server" and "default-server" keywords support a number of settings
10412depending on some build options and on the system HAProxy was built on. These
10413settings generally each consist in one word sometimes followed by a value,
10414written on the same line as the "bind" or "server" line. All these options are
10415described in this section.
10416
10417
104185.1. Bind options
10419-----------------
10420
10421The "bind" keyword supports a certain number of settings which are all passed
10422as arguments on the same line. The order in which those arguments appear makes
10423no importance, provided that they appear after the bind address. All of these
10424parameters are optional. Some of them consist in a single words (booleans),
10425while other ones expect a value after them. In this case, the value must be
10426provided immediately after the setting name.
10427
10428The currently supported settings are the following ones.
10429
Bertrand Jacquin93b227d2016-06-04 15:11:10 +010010430accept-netscaler-cip <magic number>
10431 Enforces the use of the NetScaler Client IP insertion protocol over any
10432 connection accepted by any of the TCP sockets declared on the same line. The
10433 NetScaler Client IP insertion protocol dictates the layer 3/4 addresses of
10434 the incoming connection to be used everywhere an address is used, with the
10435 only exception of "tcp-request connection" rules which will only see the
10436 real connection address. Logs will reflect the addresses indicated in the
10437 protocol, unless it is violated, in which case the real address will still
10438 be used. This keyword combined with support from external components can be
10439 used as an efficient and reliable alternative to the X-Forwarded-For
Bertrand Jacquin90759682016-06-06 15:35:39 +010010440 mechanism which is not always reliable and not even always usable. See also
10441 "tcp-request connection expect-netscaler-cip" for a finer-grained setting of
10442 which client is allowed to use the protocol.
Bertrand Jacquin93b227d2016-06-04 15:11:10 +010010443
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010444accept-proxy
10445 Enforces the use of the PROXY protocol over any connection accepted by any of
Willy Tarreau77992672014-06-14 11:06:17 +020010446 the sockets declared on the same line. Versions 1 and 2 of the PROXY protocol
10447 are supported and correctly detected. The PROXY protocol dictates the layer
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010448 3/4 addresses of the incoming connection to be used everywhere an address is
10449 used, with the only exception of "tcp-request connection" rules which will
10450 only see the real connection address. Logs will reflect the addresses
10451 indicated in the protocol, unless it is violated, in which case the real
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010452 address will still be used. This keyword combined with support from external
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010453 components can be used as an efficient and reliable alternative to the
10454 X-Forwarded-For mechanism which is not always reliable and not even always
Willy Tarreau4f0d9192013-06-11 20:40:55 +020010455 usable. See also "tcp-request connection expect-proxy" for a finer-grained
10456 setting of which client is allowed to use the protocol.
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010457
Olivier Houchardc2aae742017-09-22 18:26:28 +020010458allow-0rtt
10459 Allow receiving early data when using TLS 1.3. This is disabled by default,
10460 due to security considerations.
10461
Willy Tarreauab861d32013-04-02 02:30:41 +020010462alpn <protocols>
10463 This enables the TLS ALPN extension and advertises the specified protocol
10464 list as supported on top of ALPN. The protocol list consists in a comma-
10465 delimited list of protocol names, for instance: "http/1.1,http/1.0" (without
10466 quotes). This requires that the SSL library is build with support for TLS
10467 extensions enabled (check with haproxy -vv). The ALPN extension replaces the
Willy Tarreau95c4e142017-11-26 12:18:55 +010010468 initial NPN extension. ALPN is required to enable HTTP/2 on an HTTP frontend.
10469 Versions of OpenSSL prior to 1.0.2 didn't support ALPN and only supposed the
10470 now obsolete NPN extension. At the time of writing this, most browsers still
10471 support both ALPN and NPN for HTTP/2 so a fallback to NPN may still work for
10472 a while. But ALPN must be used whenever possible. If both HTTP/2 and HTTP/1.1
10473 are expected to be supported, both versions can be advertised, in order of
10474 preference, like below :
10475
10476 bind :443 ssl crt pub.pem alpn h2,http/1.1
Willy Tarreauab861d32013-04-02 02:30:41 +020010477
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010478backlog <backlog>
10479 Sets the socket's backlog to this value. If unspecified, the frontend's
10480 backlog is used instead, which generally defaults to the maxconn value.
10481
Emmanuel Hocdete7f2b732017-01-09 16:15:54 +010010482curves <curves>
10483 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It sets
10484 the string describing the list of elliptic curves algorithms ("curve suite")
10485 that are negotiated during the SSL/TLS handshake with ECDHE. The format of the
10486 string is a colon-delimited list of curve name.
10487 Example: "X25519:P-256" (without quote)
10488 When "curves" is set, "ecdhe" parameter is ignored.
10489
Emeric Brun7fb34422012-09-28 15:26:15 +020010490ecdhe <named curve>
10491 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It sets
Emeric Brun6924ef82013-03-06 14:08:53 +010010492 the named curve (RFC 4492) used to generate ECDH ephemeral keys. By default,
10493 used named curve is prime256v1.
Emeric Brun7fb34422012-09-28 15:26:15 +020010494
Emeric Brunfd33a262012-10-11 16:28:27 +020010495ca-file <cafile>
Emeric Brun1a073b42012-09-28 17:07:34 +020010496 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
10497 designates a PEM file from which to load CA certificates used to verify
10498 client's certificate.
10499
Emeric Brunb6dc9342012-09-28 17:55:37 +020010500ca-ignore-err [all|<errorID>,...]
10501 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in.
10502 Sets a comma separated list of errorIDs to ignore during verify at depth > 0.
10503 If set to 'all', all errors are ignored. SSL handshake is not aborted if an
10504 error is ignored.
10505
Christopher Faulet31af49d2015-06-09 17:29:50 +020010506ca-sign-file <cafile>
10507 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
10508 designates a PEM file containing both the CA certificate and the CA private
10509 key used to create and sign server's certificates. This is a mandatory
10510 setting when the dynamic generation of certificates is enabled. See
10511 'generate-certificates' for details.
10512
Bertrand Jacquind4d0a232016-11-13 16:37:12 +000010513ca-sign-pass <passphrase>
Christopher Faulet31af49d2015-06-09 17:29:50 +020010514 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It is
10515 the CA private key passphrase. This setting is optional and used only when
10516 the dynamic generation of certificates is enabled. See
10517 'generate-certificates' for details.
10518
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010519ciphers <ciphers>
10520 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It sets
10521 the string describing the list of cipher algorithms ("cipher suite") that are
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030010522 negotiated during the SSL/TLS handshake. The format of the string is defined
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010523 in "man 1 ciphers" from OpenSSL man pages, and can be for instance a string
10524 such as "AES:ALL:!aNULL:!eNULL:+RC4:@STRENGTH" (without quotes).
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010525 Depending on the compatibility and security requirements, the list of suitable
Daniel Schneller87e43022017-09-01 19:29:57 +020010526 ciphers depends on a variety of variables. For background information and
10527 recommendations see e. g. (https://wiki.mozilla.org/Security/Server_Side_TLS)
10528 and (https://mozilla.github.io/server-side-tls/ssl-config-generator/).
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010529
Emeric Brunfd33a262012-10-11 16:28:27 +020010530crl-file <crlfile>
Emeric Brun1a073b42012-09-28 17:07:34 +020010531 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
10532 designates a PEM file from which to load certificate revocation list used
10533 to verify client's certificate.
10534
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010535crt <cert>
Alex Davies0fbf0162013-03-02 16:04:50 +000010536 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
10537 designates a PEM file containing both the required certificates and any
10538 associated private keys. This file can be built by concatenating multiple
10539 PEM files into one (e.g. cat cert.pem key.pem > combined.pem). If your CA
10540 requires an intermediate certificate, this can also be concatenated into this
10541 file.
10542
10543 If the OpenSSL used supports Diffie-Hellman, parameters present in this file
10544 are loaded.
10545
10546 If a directory name is used instead of a PEM file, then all files found in
Cyril Bonté3180f7b2015-01-25 00:16:08 +010010547 that directory will be loaded in alphabetic order unless their name ends with
Janusz Dziemidowicz2c701b52015-03-07 23:03:59 +010010548 '.issuer', '.ocsp' or '.sctl' (reserved extensions). This directive may be
10549 specified multiple times in order to load certificates from multiple files or
10550 directories. The certificates will be presented to clients who provide a
10551 valid TLS Server Name Indication field matching one of their CN or alt
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010552 subjects. Wildcards are supported, where a wildcard character '*' is used
10553 instead of the first hostname component (e.g. *.example.org matches
Janusz Dziemidowicz2c701b52015-03-07 23:03:59 +010010554 www.example.org but not www.sub.example.org).
Alex Davies0fbf0162013-03-02 16:04:50 +000010555
10556 If no SNI is provided by the client or if the SSL library does not support
10557 TLS extensions, or if the client provides an SNI hostname which does not
10558 match any certificate, then the first loaded certificate will be presented.
10559 This means that when loading certificates from a directory, it is highly
Cyril Bonté3180f7b2015-01-25 00:16:08 +010010560 recommended to load the default one first as a file or to ensure that it will
10561 always be the first one in the directory.
Alex Davies0fbf0162013-03-02 16:04:50 +000010562
Emeric Brune032bfa2012-09-28 13:01:45 +020010563 Note that the same cert may be loaded multiple times without side effects.
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010564
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010565 Some CAs (such as GoDaddy) offer a drop down list of server types that do not
Alex Davies0fbf0162013-03-02 16:04:50 +000010566 include HAProxy when obtaining a certificate. If this happens be sure to
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010567 choose a web server that the CA believes requires an intermediate CA (for
10568 GoDaddy, selection Apache Tomcat will get the correct bundle, but many
Alex Davies0fbf0162013-03-02 16:04:50 +000010569 others, e.g. nginx, result in a wrong bundle that will not work for some
10570 clients).
10571
Emeric Brun4147b2e2014-06-16 18:36:30 +020010572 For each PEM file, haproxy checks for the presence of file at the same path
10573 suffixed by ".ocsp". If such file is found, support for the TLS Certificate
10574 Status Request extension (also known as "OCSP stapling") is automatically
10575 enabled. The content of this file is optional. If not empty, it must contain
10576 a valid OCSP Response in DER format. In order to be valid an OCSP Response
10577 must comply with the following rules: it has to indicate a good status,
10578 it has to be a single response for the certificate of the PEM file, and it
10579 has to be valid at the moment of addition. If these rules are not respected
10580 the OCSP Response is ignored and a warning is emitted. In order to identify
10581 which certificate an OCSP Response applies to, the issuer's certificate is
10582 necessary. If the issuer's certificate is not found in the PEM file, it will
10583 be loaded from a file at the same path as the PEM file suffixed by ".issuer"
10584 if it exists otherwise it will fail with an error.
10585
Janusz Dziemidowicz2c701b52015-03-07 23:03:59 +010010586 For each PEM file, haproxy also checks for the presence of file at the same
10587 path suffixed by ".sctl". If such file is found, support for Certificate
10588 Transparency (RFC6962) TLS extension is enabled. The file must contain a
10589 valid Signed Certificate Timestamp List, as described in RFC. File is parsed
10590 to check basic syntax, but no signatures are verified.
10591
yanbzhu6c25e9e2016-01-05 12:52:02 -050010592 There are cases where it is desirable to support multiple key types, e.g. RSA
10593 and ECDSA in the cipher suites offered to the clients. This allows clients
10594 that support EC certificates to be able to use EC ciphers, while
10595 simultaneously supporting older, RSA only clients.
yanbzhud19630c2015-12-14 15:10:25 -050010596
10597 In order to provide this functionality, multiple PEM files, each with a
10598 different key type, are required. To associate these PEM files into a
10599 "cert bundle" that is recognized by haproxy, they must be named in the
10600 following way: All PEM files that are to be bundled must have the same base
10601 name, with a suffix indicating the key type. Currently, three suffixes are
10602 supported: rsa, dsa and ecdsa. For example, if www.example.com has two PEM
10603 files, an RSA file and an ECDSA file, they must be named: "example.pem.rsa"
10604 and "example.pem.ecdsa". The first part of the filename is arbitrary; only the
10605 suffix matters. To load this bundle into haproxy, specify the base name only:
10606
10607 Example : bind :8443 ssl crt example.pem
10608
yanbzhu6c25e9e2016-01-05 12:52:02 -050010609 Note that the suffix is not given to haproxy; this tells haproxy to look for
yanbzhud19630c2015-12-14 15:10:25 -050010610 a cert bundle.
10611
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010612 HAProxy will load all PEM files in the bundle at the same time to try to
yanbzhud19630c2015-12-14 15:10:25 -050010613 support multiple key types. PEM files are combined based on Common Name
10614 (CN) and Subject Alternative Name (SAN) to support SNI lookups. This means
10615 that even if you give haproxy a cert bundle, if there are no shared CN/SAN
10616 entries in the certificates in that bundle, haproxy will not be able to
10617 provide multi-cert support.
10618
10619 Assuming bundle in the example above contained the following:
10620
10621 Filename | CN | SAN
10622 -------------------+-----------------+-------------------
10623 example.pem.rsa | www.example.com | rsa.example.com
yanbzhu6c25e9e2016-01-05 12:52:02 -050010624 -------------------+-----------------+-------------------
yanbzhud19630c2015-12-14 15:10:25 -050010625 example.pem.ecdsa | www.example.com | ecdsa.example.com
10626 -------------------+-----------------+-------------------
10627
10628 Users connecting with an SNI of "www.example.com" will be able
10629 to use both RSA and ECDSA cipher suites. Users connecting with an SNI of
10630 "rsa.example.com" will only be able to use RSA cipher suites, and users
10631 connecting with "ecdsa.example.com" will only be able to use ECDSA cipher
Emmanuel Hocdet84e417d2017-08-16 11:33:17 +020010632 suites. With BoringSSL and Openssl >= 1.1.1 multi-cert is natively supported,
10633 no need to bundle certificates. ECDSA certificate will be preferred if client
10634 support it.
yanbzhud19630c2015-12-14 15:10:25 -050010635
10636 If a directory name is given as the <cert> argument, haproxy will
10637 automatically search and load bundled files in that directory.
10638
10639 OSCP files (.ocsp) and issuer files (.issuer) are supported with multi-cert
10640 bundling. Each certificate can have its own .ocsp and .issuer file. At this
10641 time, sctl is not supported in multi-certificate bundling.
10642
Emeric Brunb6dc9342012-09-28 17:55:37 +020010643crt-ignore-err <errors>
Alex Davies0fbf0162013-03-02 16:04:50 +000010644 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. Sets a
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010645 comma separated list of errorIDs to ignore during verify at depth == 0. If
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030010646 set to 'all', all errors are ignored. SSL handshake is not aborted if an error
Alex Davies0fbf0162013-03-02 16:04:50 +000010647 is ignored.
Emeric Brunb6dc9342012-09-28 17:55:37 +020010648
Emmanuel Hocdetfe616562013-01-22 15:31:15 +010010649crt-list <file>
10650 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
Emmanuel Hocdet98263292016-12-29 18:26:15 +010010651 designates a list of PEM file with an optional ssl configuration and a SNI
10652 filter per certificate, with the following format for each line :
Emmanuel Hocdetfe616562013-01-22 15:31:15 +010010653
Emmanuel Hocdet98263292016-12-29 18:26:15 +010010654 <crtfile> [\[<sslbindconf> ...\]] [[!]<snifilter> ...]
10655
Emmanuel Hocdet174dfe52017-07-28 15:01:05 +020010656 sslbindconf support "npn", "alpn", "verify", "ca-file", "no-ca-names",
10657 crl-file", "ecdhe", "curves", "ciphers" configuration. With BoringSSL
Emmanuel Hocdet84e417d2017-08-16 11:33:17 +020010658 and Openssl >= 1.1.1 "ssl-min-ver" and "ssl-max-ver" are also supported.
Emmanuel Hocdet98263292016-12-29 18:26:15 +010010659 It override the configuration set in bind line for the certificate.
Emmanuel Hocdetfe616562013-01-22 15:31:15 +010010660
Emmanuel Hocdet7c41a1b2013-05-07 20:20:06 +020010661 Wildcards are supported in the SNI filter. Negative filter are also supported,
10662 only useful in combination with a wildcard filter to exclude a particular SNI.
10663 The certificates will be presented to clients who provide a valid TLS Server
10664 Name Indication field matching one of the SNI filters. If no SNI filter is
10665 specified, the CN and alt subjects are used. This directive may be specified
10666 multiple times. See the "crt" option for more information. The default
10667 certificate is still needed to meet OpenSSL expectations. If it is not used,
10668 the 'strict-sni' option may be used.
Emmanuel Hocdetfe616562013-01-22 15:31:15 +010010669
yanbzhu6c25e9e2016-01-05 12:52:02 -050010670 Multi-cert bundling (see "crt") is supported with crt-list, as long as only
Emmanuel Hocdetd294aea2016-05-13 11:14:06 +020010671 the base name is given in the crt-list. SNI filter will do the same work on
Emmanuel Hocdet84e417d2017-08-16 11:33:17 +020010672 all bundled certificates. With BoringSSL and Openssl >= 1.1.1 multi-cert is
10673 natively supported, avoid multi-cert bundling. RSA and ECDSA certificates can
10674 be declared in a row, and set different ssl and filter parameter.
yanbzhud19630c2015-12-14 15:10:25 -050010675
Emmanuel Hocdet98263292016-12-29 18:26:15 +010010676 crt-list file example:
10677 cert1.pem
Emmanuel Hocdet05942112017-02-20 16:11:50 +010010678 cert2.pem [alpn h2,http/1.1]
Emmanuel Hocdet98263292016-12-29 18:26:15 +010010679 certW.pem *.domain.tld !secure.domain.tld
Emmanuel Hocdet05942112017-02-20 16:11:50 +010010680 certS.pem [curves X25519:P-256 ciphers ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384] secure.domain.tld
Emmanuel Hocdet98263292016-12-29 18:26:15 +010010681
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010682defer-accept
10683 Is an optional keyword which is supported only on certain Linux kernels. It
10684 states that a connection will only be accepted once some data arrive on it,
10685 or at worst after the first retransmit. This should be used only on protocols
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010686 for which the client talks first (e.g. HTTP). It can slightly improve
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010687 performance by ensuring that most of the request is already available when
10688 the connection is accepted. On the other hand, it will not be able to detect
10689 connections which don't talk. It is important to note that this option is
10690 broken in all kernels up to 2.6.31, as the connection is never accepted until
10691 the client talks. This can cause issues with front firewalls which would see
10692 an established connection while the proxy will only see it in SYN_RECV. This
10693 option is only supported on TCPv4/TCPv6 sockets and ignored by other ones.
10694
William Lallemandf6975e92017-05-26 17:42:10 +020010695expose-fd listeners
10696 This option is only usable with the stats socket. It gives your stats socket
10697 the capability to pass listeners FD to another HAProxy process.
William Lallemande202b1e2017-06-01 17:38:56 +020010698 During a reload with the master-worker mode, the process is automatically
10699 reexecuted adding -x and one of the stats socket with this option.
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010700 See also "-x" in the management guide.
William Lallemandf6975e92017-05-26 17:42:10 +020010701
Emeric Brun2cb7ae52012-10-05 14:14:21 +020010702force-sslv3
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030010703 This option enforces use of SSLv3 only on SSL connections instantiated from
Emeric Brun2cb7ae52012-10-05 14:14:21 +020010704 this listener. SSLv3 is generally less expensive than the TLS counterparts
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010010705 for high connection rates. This option is also available on global statement
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020010706 "ssl-default-bind-options". See also "ssl-min-ver" and "ssl-max-ver".
Emeric Brun2cb7ae52012-10-05 14:14:21 +020010707
10708force-tlsv10
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030010709 This option enforces use of TLSv1.0 only on SSL connections instantiated from
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010010710 this listener. This option is also available on global statement
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020010711 "ssl-default-bind-options". See also "ssl-min-ver" and "ssl-max-ver".
Emeric Brun2cb7ae52012-10-05 14:14:21 +020010712
10713force-tlsv11
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030010714 This option enforces use of TLSv1.1 only on SSL connections instantiated from
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010010715 this listener. This option is also available on global statement
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020010716 "ssl-default-bind-options". See also "ssl-min-ver" and "ssl-max-ver".
Emeric Brun2cb7ae52012-10-05 14:14:21 +020010717
10718force-tlsv12
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030010719 This option enforces use of TLSv1.2 only on SSL connections instantiated from
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010010720 this listener. This option is also available on global statement
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020010721 "ssl-default-bind-options". See also "ssl-min-ver" and "ssl-max-ver".
Emeric Brun2cb7ae52012-10-05 14:14:21 +020010722
Emmanuel Hocdet42fb9802017-03-30 19:29:39 +020010723force-tlsv13
10724 This option enforces use of TLSv1.3 only on SSL connections instantiated from
10725 this listener. This option is also available on global statement
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020010726 "ssl-default-bind-options". See also "ssl-min-ver" and "ssl-max-ver".
Emmanuel Hocdet42fb9802017-03-30 19:29:39 +020010727
Christopher Faulet31af49d2015-06-09 17:29:50 +020010728generate-certificates
10729 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
10730 enables the dynamic SSL certificates generation. A CA certificate and its
10731 private key are necessary (see 'ca-sign-file'). When HAProxy is configured as
10732 a transparent forward proxy, SSL requests generate errors because of a common
10733 name mismatch on the certificate presented to the client. With this option
10734 enabled, HAProxy will try to forge a certificate using the SNI hostname
10735 indicated by the client. This is done only if no certificate matches the SNI
10736 hostname (see 'crt-list'). If an error occurs, the default certificate is
10737 used, else the 'strict-sni' option is set.
10738 It can also be used when HAProxy is configured as a reverse proxy to ease the
10739 deployment of an architecture with many backends.
10740
10741 Creating a SSL certificate is an expensive operation, so a LRU cache is used
10742 to store forged certificates (see 'tune.ssl.ssl-ctx-cache-size'). It
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010743 increases the HAProxy's memory footprint to reduce latency when the same
Christopher Faulet31af49d2015-06-09 17:29:50 +020010744 certificate is used many times.
10745
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010746gid <gid>
10747 Sets the group of the UNIX sockets to the designated system gid. It can also
10748 be set by default in the global section's "unix-bind" statement. Note that
10749 some platforms simply ignore this. This setting is equivalent to the "group"
10750 setting except that the group ID is used instead of its name. This setting is
10751 ignored by non UNIX sockets.
10752
10753group <group>
10754 Sets the group of the UNIX sockets to the designated system group. It can
10755 also be set by default in the global section's "unix-bind" statement. Note
10756 that some platforms simply ignore this. This setting is equivalent to the
10757 "gid" setting except that the group name is used instead of its gid. This
10758 setting is ignored by non UNIX sockets.
10759
10760id <id>
10761 Fixes the socket ID. By default, socket IDs are automatically assigned, but
10762 sometimes it is more convenient to fix them to ease monitoring. This value
10763 must be strictly positive and unique within the listener/frontend. This
10764 option can only be used when defining only a single socket.
10765
10766interface <interface>
Lukas Tribusfce2e962013-02-12 22:13:19 +010010767 Restricts the socket to a specific interface. When specified, only packets
10768 received from that particular interface are processed by the socket. This is
10769 currently only supported on Linux. The interface must be a primary system
10770 interface, not an aliased interface. It is also possible to bind multiple
10771 frontends to the same address if they are bound to different interfaces. Note
10772 that binding to a network interface requires root privileges. This parameter
10773 is only compatible with TCPv4/TCPv6 sockets.
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010774
Willy Tarreauabb175f2012-09-24 12:43:26 +020010775level <level>
10776 This setting is used with the stats sockets only to restrict the nature of
10777 the commands that can be issued on the socket. It is ignored by other
10778 sockets. <level> can be one of :
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010779 - "user" is the least privileged level; only non-sensitive stats can be
Willy Tarreauabb175f2012-09-24 12:43:26 +020010780 read, and no change is allowed. It would make sense on systems where it
10781 is not easy to restrict access to the socket.
10782 - "operator" is the default level and fits most common uses. All data can
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010783 be read, and only non-sensitive changes are permitted (e.g. clear max
Willy Tarreauabb175f2012-09-24 12:43:26 +020010784 counters).
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010785 - "admin" should be used with care, as everything is permitted (e.g. clear
Willy Tarreauabb175f2012-09-24 12:43:26 +020010786 all counters).
10787
Andjelko Iharosc4df59e2017-07-20 11:59:48 +020010788severity-output <format>
10789 This setting is used with the stats sockets only to configure severity
10790 level output prepended to informational feedback messages. Severity
10791 level of messages can range between 0 and 7, conforming to syslog
10792 rfc5424. Valid and successful socket commands requesting data
10793 (i.e. "show map", "get acl foo" etc.) will never have a severity level
10794 prepended. It is ignored by other sockets. <format> can be one of :
10795 - "none" (default) no severity level is prepended to feedback messages.
10796 - "number" severity level is prepended as a number.
10797 - "string" severity level is prepended as a string following the
10798 rfc5424 convention.
10799
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010800maxconn <maxconn>
10801 Limits the sockets to this number of concurrent connections. Extraneous
10802 connections will remain in the system's backlog until a connection is
10803 released. If unspecified, the limit will be the same as the frontend's
10804 maxconn. Note that in case of port ranges or multiple addresses, the same
10805 value will be applied to each socket. This setting enables different
10806 limitations on expensive sockets, for instance SSL entries which may easily
10807 eat all memory.
10808
10809mode <mode>
10810 Sets the octal mode used to define access permissions on the UNIX socket. It
10811 can also be set by default in the global section's "unix-bind" statement.
10812 Note that some platforms simply ignore this. This setting is ignored by non
10813 UNIX sockets.
10814
10815mss <maxseg>
10816 Sets the TCP Maximum Segment Size (MSS) value to be advertised on incoming
10817 connections. This can be used to force a lower MSS for certain specific
10818 ports, for instance for connections passing through a VPN. Note that this
10819 relies on a kernel feature which is theoretically supported under Linux but
10820 was buggy in all versions prior to 2.6.28. It may or may not work on other
10821 operating systems. It may also not change the advertised value but change the
10822 effective size of outgoing segments. The commonly advertised value for TCPv4
10823 over Ethernet networks is 1460 = 1500(MTU) - 40(IP+TCP). If this value is
10824 positive, it will be used as the advertised MSS. If it is negative, it will
10825 indicate by how much to reduce the incoming connection's advertised MSS for
10826 outgoing segments. This parameter is only compatible with TCP v4/v6 sockets.
10827
10828name <name>
10829 Sets an optional name for these sockets, which will be reported on the stats
10830 page.
10831
Willy Tarreaud72f0f32015-10-13 14:50:22 +020010832namespace <name>
10833 On Linux, it is possible to specify which network namespace a socket will
10834 belong to. This directive makes it possible to explicitly bind a listener to
10835 a namespace different from the default one. Please refer to your operating
10836 system's documentation to find more details about network namespaces.
10837
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010838nice <nice>
10839 Sets the 'niceness' of connections initiated from the socket. Value must be
10840 in the range -1024..1024 inclusive, and defaults to zero. Positive values
10841 means that such connections are more friendly to others and easily offer
10842 their place in the scheduler. On the opposite, negative values mean that
10843 connections want to run with a higher priority than others. The difference
10844 only happens under high loads when the system is close to saturation.
10845 Negative values are appropriate for low-latency or administration services,
10846 and high values are generally recommended for CPU intensive tasks such as SSL
10847 processing or bulk transfers which are less sensible to latency. For example,
10848 it may make sense to use a positive value for an SMTP socket and a negative
10849 one for an RDP socket.
10850
Emmanuel Hocdet174dfe52017-07-28 15:01:05 +020010851no-ca-names
10852 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
10853 prevents from send CA names in server hello message when ca-file is used.
10854
Emeric Brun9b3009b2012-10-05 11:55:06 +020010855no-sslv3
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010856 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030010857 disables support for SSLv3 on any sockets instantiated from the listener when
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010858 SSL is supported. Note that SSLv2 is forced disabled in the code and cannot
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010010859 be enabled using any configuration option. This option is also available on
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020010860 global statement "ssl-default-bind-options". Use "ssl-min-ver" and
10861 "ssl-max-ver" instead.
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010862
Emeric Brun90ad8722012-10-02 14:00:59 +020010863no-tls-tickets
10864 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
10865 disables the stateless session resumption (RFC 5077 TLS Ticket
10866 extension) and force to use stateful session resumption. Stateless
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010010867 session resumption is more expensive in CPU usage. This option is also
10868 available on global statement "ssl-default-bind-options".
Emeric Brun90ad8722012-10-02 14:00:59 +020010869
Emeric Brun9b3009b2012-10-05 11:55:06 +020010870no-tlsv10
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010871 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030010872 disables support for TLSv1.0 on any sockets instantiated from the listener
Emeric Brun2cb7ae52012-10-05 14:14:21 +020010873 when SSL is supported. Note that SSLv2 is forced disabled in the code and
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010010874 cannot be enabled using any configuration option. This option is also
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020010875 available on global statement "ssl-default-bind-options". Use "ssl-min-ver"
10876 and "ssl-max-ver" instead.
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010877
Emeric Brun9b3009b2012-10-05 11:55:06 +020010878no-tlsv11
Emeric Brunf5da4932012-09-28 19:42:54 +020010879 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030010880 disables support for TLSv1.1 on any sockets instantiated from the listener
Emeric Brun2cb7ae52012-10-05 14:14:21 +020010881 when SSL is supported. Note that SSLv2 is forced disabled in the code and
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010010882 cannot be enabled using any configuration option. This option is also
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020010883 available on global statement "ssl-default-bind-options". Use "ssl-min-ver"
10884 and "ssl-max-ver" instead.
Emeric Brunf5da4932012-09-28 19:42:54 +020010885
Emeric Brun9b3009b2012-10-05 11:55:06 +020010886no-tlsv12
Emeric Brunf5da4932012-09-28 19:42:54 +020010887 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030010888 disables support for TLSv1.2 on any sockets instantiated from the listener
Emeric Brun2cb7ae52012-10-05 14:14:21 +020010889 when SSL is supported. Note that SSLv2 is forced disabled in the code and
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010010890 cannot be enabled using any configuration option. This option is also
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020010891 available on global statement "ssl-default-bind-options". Use "ssl-min-ver"
10892 and "ssl-max-ver" instead.
Emeric Brunf5da4932012-09-28 19:42:54 +020010893
Emmanuel Hocdet42fb9802017-03-30 19:29:39 +020010894no-tlsv13
10895 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
10896 disables support for TLSv1.3 on any sockets instantiated from the listener
10897 when SSL is supported. Note that SSLv2 is forced disabled in the code and
10898 cannot be enabled using any configuration option. This option is also
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020010899 available on global statement "ssl-default-bind-options". Use "ssl-min-ver"
10900 and "ssl-max-ver" instead.
Emmanuel Hocdet42fb9802017-03-30 19:29:39 +020010901
Willy Tarreau6c9a3d52012-10-18 18:57:14 +020010902npn <protocols>
10903 This enables the NPN TLS extension and advertises the specified protocol list
10904 as supported on top of NPN. The protocol list consists in a comma-delimited
10905 list of protocol names, for instance: "http/1.1,http/1.0" (without quotes).
10906 This requires that the SSL library is build with support for TLS extensions
Willy Tarreauab861d32013-04-02 02:30:41 +020010907 enabled (check with haproxy -vv). Note that the NPN extension has been
Willy Tarreau95c4e142017-11-26 12:18:55 +010010908 replaced with the ALPN extension (see the "alpn" keyword), though this one is
10909 only available starting with OpenSSL 1.0.2. If HTTP/2 is desired on an older
10910 version of OpenSSL, NPN might still be used as most clients still support it
10911 at the time of writing this. It is possible to enable both NPN and ALPN
10912 though it probably doesn't make any sense out of testing.
Willy Tarreau6c9a3d52012-10-18 18:57:14 +020010913
Lukas Tribus53ae85c2017-05-04 15:45:40 +000010914prefer-client-ciphers
10915 Use the client's preference when selecting the cipher suite, by default
10916 the server's preference is enforced. This option is also available on
10917 global statement "ssl-default-bind-options".
10918
Christopher Fauletc644fa92017-11-23 22:44:11 +010010919process <process-set>[/<thread-set>]
10920 This restricts the list of processes and/or threads on which this listener is
10921 allowed to run. It does not enforce any process but eliminates those which do
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010922 not match. If the frontend uses a "bind-process" setting, the intersection
Christopher Fauletc644fa92017-11-23 22:44:11 +010010923 between the two is applied. If in the end the listener is not allowed to run
10924 on any remaining process, a warning is emitted, and the listener will either
10925 run on the first process of the listener if a single process was specified,
10926 or on all of its processes if multiple processes were specified. If a thread
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010927 set is specified, it limits the threads allowed to process incoming
Christopher Fauletc644fa92017-11-23 22:44:11 +010010928 connections for this listener, for the corresponding process set. For the
10929 unlikely case where several ranges are needed, this directive may be
10930 repeated. <process-set> and <thread-set> must use the format
10931
10932 all | odd | even | number[-[number]]
10933
10934 Ranges can be partially defined. The higher bound can be omitted. In such
10935 case, it is replaced by the corresponding maximum value. The main purpose of
10936 this directive is to be used with the stats sockets and have one different
10937 socket per process. The second purpose is to have multiple bind lines sharing
10938 the same IP:port but not the same process in a listener, so that the system
10939 can distribute the incoming connections into multiple queues and allow a
10940 smoother inter-process load balancing. Currently Linux 3.9 and above is known
10941 for supporting this. See also "bind-process" and "nbproc".
Willy Tarreau6ae1ba62014-05-07 19:01:58 +020010942
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010943ssl
10944 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030010945 enables SSL deciphering on connections instantiated from this listener. A
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010946 certificate is necessary (see "crt" above). All contents in the buffers will
10947 appear in clear text, so that ACLs and HTTP processing will only have access
Emmanuel Hocdetbd695fe2017-05-15 15:53:41 +020010948 to deciphered contents. SSLv3 is disabled per default, use "ssl-min-ver SSLv3"
10949 to enable it.
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020010950
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020010951ssl-max-ver [ SSLv3 | TLSv1.0 | TLSv1.1 | TLSv1.2 | TLSv1.3 ]
10952 This option enforces use of <version> or lower on SSL connections instantiated
10953 from this listener. This option is also available on global statement
10954 "ssl-default-bind-options". See also "ssl-min-ver".
10955
10956ssl-min-ver [ SSLv3 | TLSv1.0 | TLSv1.1 | TLSv1.2 | TLSv1.3 ]
10957 This option enforces use of <version> or upper on SSL connections instantiated
10958 from this listener. This option is also available on global statement
10959 "ssl-default-bind-options". See also "ssl-max-ver".
10960
Emmanuel Hocdet65623372013-01-24 17:17:15 +010010961strict-sni
10962 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. The
10963 SSL/TLS negotiation is allow only if the client provided an SNI which match
10964 a certificate. The default certificate is not used.
10965 See the "crt" option for more information.
10966
Willy Tarreau2af207a2015-02-04 00:45:58 +010010967tcp-ut <delay>
Tim Düsterhus4896c442016-11-29 02:15:19 +010010968 Sets the TCP User Timeout for all incoming connections instantiated from this
Willy Tarreau2af207a2015-02-04 00:45:58 +010010969 listening socket. This option is available on Linux since version 2.6.37. It
10970 allows haproxy to configure a timeout for sockets which contain data not
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010010971 receiving an acknowledgment for the configured delay. This is especially
Willy Tarreau2af207a2015-02-04 00:45:58 +010010972 useful on long-lived connections experiencing long idle periods such as
10973 remote terminals or database connection pools, where the client and server
10974 timeouts must remain high to allow a long period of idle, but where it is
10975 important to detect that the client has disappeared in order to release all
10976 resources associated with its connection (and the server's session). The
10977 argument is a delay expressed in milliseconds by default. This only works
10978 for regular TCP connections, and is ignored for other protocols.
10979
Willy Tarreau1c862c52012-10-05 16:21:00 +020010980tfo
Lukas Tribus0defb902013-02-13 23:35:39 +010010981 Is an optional keyword which is supported only on Linux kernels >= 3.7. It
Willy Tarreau1c862c52012-10-05 16:21:00 +020010982 enables TCP Fast Open on the listening socket, which means that clients which
10983 support this feature will be able to send a request and receive a response
10984 during the 3-way handshake starting from second connection, thus saving one
10985 round-trip after the first connection. This only makes sense with protocols
10986 that use high connection rates and where each round trip matters. This can
10987 possibly cause issues with many firewalls which do not accept data on SYN
10988 packets, so this option should only be enabled once well tested. This option
Lukas Tribus0999f762013-04-02 16:43:24 +020010989 is only supported on TCPv4/TCPv6 sockets and ignored by other ones. You may
10990 need to build HAProxy with USE_TFO=1 if your libc doesn't define
10991 TCP_FASTOPEN.
Willy Tarreau1c862c52012-10-05 16:21:00 +020010992
Nenad Merdanovic188ad3e2015-02-27 19:56:50 +010010993tls-ticket-keys <keyfile>
10994 Sets the TLS ticket keys file to load the keys from. The keys need to be 48
10995 bytes long, encoded with base64 (ex. openssl rand -base64 48). Number of keys
10996 is specified by the TLS_TICKETS_NO build option (default 3) and at least as
10997 many keys need to be present in the file. Last TLS_TICKETS_NO keys will be
10998 used for decryption and the penultimate one for encryption. This enables easy
10999 key rotation by just appending new key to the file and reloading the process.
11000 Keys must be periodically rotated (ex. every 12h) or Perfect Forward Secrecy
11001 is compromised. It is also a good idea to keep the keys off any permanent
11002 storage such as hard drives (hint: use tmpfs and don't swap those files).
11003 Lifetime hint can be changed using tune.ssl.timeout.
11004
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020011005transparent
11006 Is an optional keyword which is supported only on certain Linux kernels. It
11007 indicates that the addresses will be bound even if they do not belong to the
11008 local machine, and that packets targeting any of these addresses will be
11009 intercepted just as if the addresses were locally configured. This normally
11010 requires that IP forwarding is enabled. Caution! do not use this with the
11011 default address '*', as it would redirect any traffic for the specified port.
11012 This keyword is available only when HAProxy is built with USE_LINUX_TPROXY=1.
11013 This parameter is only compatible with TCPv4 and TCPv6 sockets, depending on
11014 kernel version. Some distribution kernels include backports of the feature,
11015 so check for support with your vendor.
11016
Willy Tarreau77e3af92012-11-24 15:07:23 +010011017v4v6
11018 Is an optional keyword which is supported only on most recent systems
11019 including Linux kernels >= 2.4.21. It is used to bind a socket to both IPv4
11020 and IPv6 when it uses the default address. Doing so is sometimes necessary
11021 on systems which bind to IPv6 only by default. It has no effect on non-IPv6
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030011022 sockets, and is overridden by the "v6only" option.
Willy Tarreau77e3af92012-11-24 15:07:23 +010011023
Willy Tarreau9b6700f2012-11-24 11:55:28 +010011024v6only
11025 Is an optional keyword which is supported only on most recent systems
11026 including Linux kernels >= 2.4.21. It is used to bind a socket to IPv6 only
11027 when it uses the default address. Doing so is sometimes preferred to doing it
Willy Tarreau77e3af92012-11-24 15:07:23 +010011028 system-wide as it is per-listener. It has no effect on non-IPv6 sockets and
11029 has precedence over the "v4v6" option.
Willy Tarreau9b6700f2012-11-24 11:55:28 +010011030
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +020011031uid <uid>
11032 Sets the owner of the UNIX sockets to the designated system uid. It can also
11033 be set by default in the global section's "unix-bind" statement. Note that
11034 some platforms simply ignore this. This setting is equivalent to the "user"
11035 setting except that the user numeric ID is used instead of its name. This
11036 setting is ignored by non UNIX sockets.
11037
11038user <user>
11039 Sets the owner of the UNIX sockets to the designated system user. It can also
11040 be set by default in the global section's "unix-bind" statement. Note that
11041 some platforms simply ignore this. This setting is equivalent to the "uid"
11042 setting except that the user name is used instead of its uid. This setting is
11043 ignored by non UNIX sockets.
11044
Emeric Brun1a073b42012-09-28 17:07:34 +020011045verify [none|optional|required]
11046 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. If set
11047 to 'none', client certificate is not requested. This is the default. In other
11048 cases, a client certificate is requested. If the client does not provide a
11049 certificate after the request and if 'verify' is set to 'required', then the
11050 handshake is aborted, while it would have succeeded if set to 'optional'. The
Emeric Brunfd33a262012-10-11 16:28:27 +020011051 certificate provided by the client is always verified using CAs from
11052 'ca-file' and optional CRLs from 'crl-file'. On verify failure the handshake
11053 is aborted, regardless of the 'verify' option, unless the error code exactly
11054 matches one of those listed with 'ca-ignore-err' or 'crt-ignore-err'.
Willy Tarreau4a5cade2012-04-05 21:09:48 +020011055
Willy Tarreaub6205fd2012-09-24 12:27:33 +0200110565.2. Server and default-server options
Cyril Bontéf0c60612010-02-06 14:44:47 +010011057------------------------------------
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020011058
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic6df0662010-01-05 16:38:49 +010011059The "server" and "default-server" keywords support a certain number of settings
11060which are all passed as arguments on the server line. The order in which those
11061arguments appear does not count, and they are all optional. Some of those
11062settings are single words (booleans) while others expect one or several values
11063after them. In this case, the values must immediately follow the setting name.
11064Except default-server, all those settings must be specified after the server's
11065address if they are used:
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020011066
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011067 server <name> <address>[:port] [settings ...]
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic6df0662010-01-05 16:38:49 +010011068 default-server [settings ...]
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020011069
Frédéric Lécailled2376272017-03-21 18:52:12 +010011070Note that all these settings are supported both by "server" and "default-server"
11071keywords, except "id" which is only supported by "server".
11072
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic53601c2010-01-06 10:50:42 +010011073The currently supported settings are the following ones.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +010011074
Willy Tarreauceb4ac92012-04-28 00:41:46 +020011075addr <ipv4|ipv6>
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011076 Using the "addr" parameter, it becomes possible to use a different IP address
Baptiste Assmann13f83532016-03-06 23:14:36 +010011077 to send health-checks or to probe the agent-check. On some servers, it may be
11078 desirable to dedicate an IP address to specific component able to perform
11079 complex tests which are more suitable to health-checks than the application.
11080 This parameter is ignored if the "check" parameter is not set. See also the
11081 "port" parameter.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020011082
Simon Hormand60d6912013-11-25 10:46:36 +090011083agent-check
11084 Enable an auxiliary agent check which is run independently of a regular
Willy Tarreau81f5d942013-12-09 20:51:51 +010011085 health check. An agent health check is performed by making a TCP connection
11086 to the port set by the "agent-port" parameter and reading an ASCII string.
11087 The string is made of a series of words delimited by spaces, tabs or commas
11088 in any order, optionally terminated by '\r' and/or '\n', each consisting of :
Simon Hormand60d6912013-11-25 10:46:36 +090011089
Willy Tarreau81f5d942013-12-09 20:51:51 +010011090 - An ASCII representation of a positive integer percentage, e.g. "75%".
Simon Hormand60d6912013-11-25 10:46:36 +090011091 Values in this format will set the weight proportional to the initial
Willy Tarreauc5af3a62014-10-07 15:27:33 +020011092 weight of a server as configured when haproxy starts. Note that a zero
11093 weight is reported on the stats page as "DRAIN" since it has the same
11094 effect on the server (it's removed from the LB farm).
Simon Hormand60d6912013-11-25 10:46:36 +090011095
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011096 - The string "maxconn:" followed by an integer (no space between). Values
11097 in this format will set the maxconn of a server. The maximum number of
11098 connections advertised needs to be multiplied by the number of load
11099 balancers and different backends that use this health check to get the
11100 total number of connections the server might receive. Example: maxconn:30
Nenad Merdanovic174dd372016-04-24 23:10:06 +020011101
Willy Tarreau81f5d942013-12-09 20:51:51 +010011102 - The word "ready". This will turn the server's administrative state to the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011103 READY mode, thus canceling any DRAIN or MAINT state
Simon Hormand60d6912013-11-25 10:46:36 +090011104
Willy Tarreau81f5d942013-12-09 20:51:51 +010011105 - The word "drain". This will turn the server's administrative state to the
11106 DRAIN mode, thus it will not accept any new connections other than those
11107 that are accepted via persistence.
Simon Hormand60d6912013-11-25 10:46:36 +090011108
Willy Tarreau81f5d942013-12-09 20:51:51 +010011109 - The word "maint". This will turn the server's administrative state to the
11110 MAINT mode, thus it will not accept any new connections at all, and health
11111 checks will be stopped.
Simon Hormand60d6912013-11-25 10:46:36 +090011112
Willy Tarreau81f5d942013-12-09 20:51:51 +010011113 - The words "down", "failed", or "stopped", optionally followed by a
11114 description string after a sharp ('#'). All of these mark the server's
11115 operating state as DOWN, but since the word itself is reported on the stats
11116 page, the difference allows an administrator to know if the situation was
11117 expected or not : the service may intentionally be stopped, may appear up
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011118 but fail some validity tests, or may be seen as down (e.g. missing process,
Willy Tarreau81f5d942013-12-09 20:51:51 +010011119 or port not responding).
Simon Hormand60d6912013-11-25 10:46:36 +090011120
Willy Tarreau81f5d942013-12-09 20:51:51 +010011121 - The word "up" sets back the server's operating state as UP if health checks
11122 also report that the service is accessible.
Simon Hormand60d6912013-11-25 10:46:36 +090011123
Willy Tarreau81f5d942013-12-09 20:51:51 +010011124 Parameters which are not advertised by the agent are not changed. For
11125 example, an agent might be designed to monitor CPU usage and only report a
11126 relative weight and never interact with the operating status. Similarly, an
11127 agent could be designed as an end-user interface with 3 radio buttons
11128 allowing an administrator to change only the administrative state. However,
11129 it is important to consider that only the agent may revert its own actions,
11130 so if a server is set to DRAIN mode or to DOWN state using the agent, the
11131 agent must implement the other equivalent actions to bring the service into
11132 operations again.
Simon Hormand60d6912013-11-25 10:46:36 +090011133
Simon Horman2f1f9552013-11-25 10:46:37 +090011134 Failure to connect to the agent is not considered an error as connectivity
11135 is tested by the regular health check which is enabled by the "check"
Willy Tarreau81f5d942013-12-09 20:51:51 +010011136 parameter. Warning though, it is not a good idea to stop an agent after it
11137 reports "down", since only an agent reporting "up" will be able to turn the
11138 server up again. Note that the CLI on the Unix stats socket is also able to
Willy Tarreau989222a2016-01-15 10:26:26 +010011139 force an agent's result in order to work around a bogus agent if needed.
Simon Horman2f1f9552013-11-25 10:46:37 +090011140
Willy Tarreau81f5d942013-12-09 20:51:51 +010011141 Requires the "agent-port" parameter to be set. See also the "agent-inter"
Frédéric Lécailled2376272017-03-21 18:52:12 +010011142 and "no-agent-check" parameters.
Simon Hormand60d6912013-11-25 10:46:36 +090011143
James Brown55f9ff12015-10-21 18:19:05 -070011144agent-send <string>
11145 If this option is specified, haproxy will send the given string (verbatim)
11146 to the agent server upon connection. You could, for example, encode
11147 the backend name into this string, which would enable your agent to send
11148 different responses based on the backend. Make sure to include a '\n' if
11149 you want to terminate your request with a newline.
11150
Simon Hormand60d6912013-11-25 10:46:36 +090011151agent-inter <delay>
11152 The "agent-inter" parameter sets the interval between two agent checks
11153 to <delay> milliseconds. If left unspecified, the delay defaults to 2000 ms.
11154
11155 Just as with every other time-based parameter, it may be entered in any
11156 other explicit unit among { us, ms, s, m, h, d }. The "agent-inter"
11157 parameter also serves as a timeout for agent checks "timeout check" is
11158 not set. In order to reduce "resonance" effects when multiple servers are
11159 hosted on the same hardware, the agent and health checks of all servers
11160 are started with a small time offset between them. It is also possible to
11161 add some random noise in the agent and health checks interval using the
11162 global "spread-checks" keyword. This makes sense for instance when a lot
11163 of backends use the same servers.
11164
11165 See also the "agent-check" and "agent-port" parameters.
11166
Misiek768d8602017-01-09 09:52:43 +010011167agent-addr <addr>
11168 The "agent-addr" parameter sets address for agent check.
11169
11170 You can offload agent-check to another target, so you can make single place
11171 managing status and weights of servers defined in haproxy in case you can't
11172 make self-aware and self-managing services. You can specify both IP or
11173 hostname, it will be resolved.
11174
Simon Hormand60d6912013-11-25 10:46:36 +090011175agent-port <port>
11176 The "agent-port" parameter sets the TCP port used for agent checks.
11177
11178 See also the "agent-check" and "agent-inter" parameters.
11179
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011180backup
11181 When "backup" is present on a server line, the server is only used in load
11182 balancing when all other non-backup servers are unavailable. Requests coming
11183 with a persistence cookie referencing the server will always be served
11184 though. By default, only the first operational backup server is used, unless
Frédéric Lécailled2376272017-03-21 18:52:12 +010011185 the "allbackups" option is set in the backend. See also the "no-backup" and
11186 "allbackups" options.
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic53601c2010-01-06 10:50:42 +010011187
Emeric Brunef42d922012-10-11 16:11:36 +020011188ca-file <cafile>
11189 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
11190 designates a PEM file from which to load CA certificates used to verify
11191 server's certificate.
11192
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011193check
11194 This option enables health checks on the server. By default, a server is
Patrick Mézardb7aeec62012-01-22 16:01:22 +010011195 always considered available. If "check" is set, the server is available when
11196 accepting periodic TCP connections, to ensure that it is really able to serve
11197 requests. The default address and port to send the tests to are those of the
11198 server, and the default source is the same as the one defined in the
11199 backend. It is possible to change the address using the "addr" parameter, the
11200 port using the "port" parameter, the source address using the "source"
11201 address, and the interval and timers using the "inter", "rise" and "fall"
Simon Hormanafc47ee2013-11-25 10:46:35 +090011202 parameters. The request method is define in the backend using the "httpchk",
11203 "smtpchk", "mysql-check", "pgsql-check" and "ssl-hello-chk" options. Please
Frédéric Lécailled2376272017-03-21 18:52:12 +010011204 refer to those options and parameters for more information. See also
11205 "no-check" option.
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic53601c2010-01-06 10:50:42 +010011206
Willy Tarreau6c16adc2012-10-05 00:04:16 +020011207check-send-proxy
11208 This option forces emission of a PROXY protocol line with outgoing health
11209 checks, regardless of whether the server uses send-proxy or not for the
11210 normal traffic. By default, the PROXY protocol is enabled for health checks
11211 if it is already enabled for normal traffic and if no "port" nor "addr"
11212 directive is present. However, if such a directive is present, the
11213 "check-send-proxy" option needs to be used to force the use of the
11214 protocol. See also the "send-proxy" option for more information.
11215
Olivier Houchard9130a962017-10-17 17:33:43 +020011216check-sni
11217 This option allows you to specify the SNI to be used when doing health checks
11218 over SSL.
11219
Willy Tarreau763a95b2012-10-04 23:15:39 +020011220check-ssl
11221 This option forces encryption of all health checks over SSL, regardless of
11222 whether the server uses SSL or not for the normal traffic. This is generally
11223 used when an explicit "port" or "addr" directive is specified and SSL health
11224 checks are not inherited. It is important to understand that this option
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030011225 inserts an SSL transport layer below the checks, so that a simple TCP connect
Willy Tarreau763a95b2012-10-04 23:15:39 +020011226 check becomes an SSL connect, which replaces the old ssl-hello-chk. The most
11227 common use is to send HTTPS checks by combining "httpchk" with SSL checks.
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011228 All SSL settings are common to health checks and traffic (e.g. ciphers).
Frédéric Lécailled2376272017-03-21 18:52:12 +010011229 See the "ssl" option for more information and "no-check-ssl" to disable
11230 this option.
Willy Tarreau763a95b2012-10-04 23:15:39 +020011231
Willy Tarreaua0ee1d02012-09-10 09:01:23 +020011232ciphers <ciphers>
11233 This option sets the string describing the list of cipher algorithms that is
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030011234 is negotiated during the SSL/TLS handshake with the server. The format of the
Willy Tarreaua0ee1d02012-09-10 09:01:23 +020011235 string is defined in "man 1 ciphers". When SSL is used to communicate with
11236 servers on the local network, it is common to see a weaker set of algorithms
11237 than what is used over the internet. Doing so reduces CPU usage on both the
11238 server and haproxy while still keeping it compatible with deployed software.
11239 Some algorithms such as RC4-SHA1 are reasonably cheap. If no security at all
11240 is needed and just connectivity, using DES can be appropriate.
11241
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011242cookie <value>
11243 The "cookie" parameter sets the cookie value assigned to the server to
11244 <value>. This value will be checked in incoming requests, and the first
11245 operational server possessing the same value will be selected. In return, in
11246 cookie insertion or rewrite modes, this value will be assigned to the cookie
11247 sent to the client. There is nothing wrong in having several servers sharing
11248 the same cookie value, and it is in fact somewhat common between normal and
11249 backup servers. See also the "cookie" keyword in backend section.
11250
Emeric Brunef42d922012-10-11 16:11:36 +020011251crl-file <crlfile>
11252 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
11253 designates a PEM file from which to load certificate revocation list used
11254 to verify server's certificate.
11255
Emeric Bruna7aa3092012-10-26 12:58:00 +020011256crt <cert>
11257 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in.
11258 It designates a PEM file from which to load both a certificate and the
11259 associated private key. This file can be built by concatenating both PEM
11260 files into one. This certificate will be sent if the server send a client
11261 certificate request.
11262
Willy Tarreau96839092010-03-29 10:02:24 +020011263disabled
11264 The "disabled" keyword starts the server in the "disabled" state. That means
11265 that it is marked down in maintenance mode, and no connection other than the
11266 ones allowed by persist mode will reach it. It is very well suited to setup
11267 new servers, because normal traffic will never reach them, while it is still
11268 possible to test the service by making use of the force-persist mechanism.
Frédéric Lécailled2376272017-03-21 18:52:12 +010011269 See also "enabled" setting.
Willy Tarreau96839092010-03-29 10:02:24 +020011270
Frédéric Lécailled2376272017-03-21 18:52:12 +010011271enabled
11272 This option may be used as 'server' setting to reset any 'disabled'
11273 setting which would have been inherited from 'default-server' directive as
11274 default value.
11275 It may also be used as 'default-server' setting to reset any previous
11276 'default-server' 'disabled' setting.
Willy Tarreau96839092010-03-29 10:02:24 +020011277
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic53601c2010-01-06 10:50:42 +010011278error-limit <count>
Willy Tarreau983e01e2010-01-11 18:42:06 +010011279 If health observing is enabled, the "error-limit" parameter specifies the
11280 number of consecutive errors that triggers event selected by the "on-error"
11281 option. By default it is set to 10 consecutive errors.
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki97f07b82009-12-15 22:31:24 +010011282
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic53601c2010-01-06 10:50:42 +010011283 See also the "check", "error-limit" and "on-error".
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki97f07b82009-12-15 22:31:24 +010011284
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic53601c2010-01-06 10:50:42 +010011285fall <count>
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011286 The "fall" parameter states that a server will be considered as dead after
11287 <count> consecutive unsuccessful health checks. This value defaults to 3 if
11288 unspecified. See also the "check", "inter" and "rise" parameters.
11289
Emeric Brun8694b9a2012-10-05 14:39:07 +020011290force-sslv3
11291 This option enforces use of SSLv3 only when SSL is used to communicate with
11292 the server. SSLv3 is generally less expensive than the TLS counterparts for
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010011293 high connection rates. This option is also available on global statement
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020011294 "ssl-default-server-options". See also "ssl-min-ver" and ssl-max-ver".
Emeric Brun8694b9a2012-10-05 14:39:07 +020011295
11296force-tlsv10
11297 This option enforces use of TLSv1.0 only when SSL is used to communicate with
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010011298 the server. This option is also available on global statement
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020011299 "ssl-default-server-options". See also "ssl-min-ver" and ssl-max-ver".
Emeric Brun8694b9a2012-10-05 14:39:07 +020011300
11301force-tlsv11
11302 This option enforces use of TLSv1.1 only when SSL is used to communicate with
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010011303 the server. This option is also available on global statement
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020011304 "ssl-default-server-options". See also "ssl-min-ver" and ssl-max-ver".
Emeric Brun8694b9a2012-10-05 14:39:07 +020011305
11306force-tlsv12
11307 This option enforces use of TLSv1.2 only when SSL is used to communicate with
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010011308 the server. This option is also available on global statement
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020011309 "ssl-default-server-options". See also "ssl-min-ver" and ssl-max-ver".
Emeric Brun8694b9a2012-10-05 14:39:07 +020011310
Emmanuel Hocdet42fb9802017-03-30 19:29:39 +020011311force-tlsv13
11312 This option enforces use of TLSv1.3 only when SSL is used to communicate with
11313 the server. This option is also available on global statement
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020011314 "ssl-default-server-options". See also "ssl-min-ver" and ssl-max-ver".
Emmanuel Hocdet42fb9802017-03-30 19:29:39 +020011315
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011316id <value>
Willy Tarreau53fb4ae2009-10-04 23:04:08 +020011317 Set a persistent ID for the server. This ID must be positive and unique for
11318 the proxy. An unused ID will automatically be assigned if unset. The first
11319 assigned value will be 1. This ID is currently only returned in statistics.
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011320
Willy Tarreau6a031d12016-11-07 19:42:35 +010011321init-addr {last | libc | none | <ip>},[...]*
11322 Indicate in what order the server's address should be resolved upon startup
11323 if it uses an FQDN. Attempts are made to resolve the address by applying in
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011324 turn each of the methods mentioned in the comma-delimited list. The first
Willy Tarreau6a031d12016-11-07 19:42:35 +010011325 method which succeeds is used. If the end of the list is reached without
11326 finding a working method, an error is thrown. Method "last" suggests to pick
11327 the address which appears in the state file (see "server-state-file"). Method
11328 "libc" uses the libc's internal resolver (gethostbyname() or getaddrinfo()
11329 depending on the operating system and build options). Method "none"
11330 specifically indicates that the server should start without any valid IP
11331 address in a down state. It can be useful to ignore some DNS issues upon
11332 startup, waiting for the situation to get fixed later. Finally, an IP address
11333 (IPv4 or IPv6) may be provided. It can be the currently known address of the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011334 server (e.g. filled by a configuration generator), or the address of a dummy
Willy Tarreau6a031d12016-11-07 19:42:35 +010011335 server used to catch old sessions and present them with a decent error
11336 message for example. When the "first" load balancing algorithm is used, this
11337 IP address could point to a fake server used to trigger the creation of new
11338 instances on the fly. This option defaults to "last,libc" indicating that the
11339 previous address found in the state file (if any) is used first, otherwise
11340 the libc's resolver is used. This ensures continued compatibility with the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011341 historic behavior.
Willy Tarreau6a031d12016-11-07 19:42:35 +010011342
11343 Example:
11344 defaults
11345 # never fail on address resolution
11346 default-server init-addr last,libc,none
11347
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic53601c2010-01-06 10:50:42 +010011348inter <delay>
11349fastinter <delay>
11350downinter <delay>
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011351 The "inter" parameter sets the interval between two consecutive health checks
11352 to <delay> milliseconds. If left unspecified, the delay defaults to 2000 ms.
11353 It is also possible to use "fastinter" and "downinter" to optimize delays
11354 between checks depending on the server state :
11355
Pieter Baauw44fc9df2015-09-17 21:30:46 +020011356 Server state | Interval used
11357 ----------------------------------------+----------------------------------
11358 UP 100% (non-transitional) | "inter"
11359 ----------------------------------------+----------------------------------
11360 Transitionally UP (going down "fall"), | "fastinter" if set,
11361 Transitionally DOWN (going up "rise"), | "inter" otherwise.
11362 or yet unchecked. |
11363 ----------------------------------------+----------------------------------
11364 DOWN 100% (non-transitional) | "downinter" if set,
11365 | "inter" otherwise.
11366 ----------------------------------------+----------------------------------
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +010011367
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011368 Just as with every other time-based parameter, they can be entered in any
11369 other explicit unit among { us, ms, s, m, h, d }. The "inter" parameter also
11370 serves as a timeout for health checks sent to servers if "timeout check" is
11371 not set. In order to reduce "resonance" effects when multiple servers are
Simon Hormand60d6912013-11-25 10:46:36 +090011372 hosted on the same hardware, the agent and health checks of all servers
11373 are started with a small time offset between them. It is also possible to
11374 add some random noise in the agent and health checks interval using the
11375 global "spread-checks" keyword. This makes sense for instance when a lot
11376 of backends use the same servers.
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011377
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic53601c2010-01-06 10:50:42 +010011378maxconn <maxconn>
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011379 The "maxconn" parameter specifies the maximal number of concurrent
11380 connections that will be sent to this server. If the number of incoming
11381 concurrent requests goes higher than this value, they will be queued, waiting
11382 for a connection to be released. This parameter is very important as it can
11383 save fragile servers from going down under extreme loads. If a "minconn"
11384 parameter is specified, the limit becomes dynamic. The default value is "0"
11385 which means unlimited. See also the "minconn" and "maxqueue" parameters, and
11386 the backend's "fullconn" keyword.
11387
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic53601c2010-01-06 10:50:42 +010011388maxqueue <maxqueue>
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011389 The "maxqueue" parameter specifies the maximal number of connections which
11390 will wait in the queue for this server. If this limit is reached, next
11391 requests will be redispatched to other servers instead of indefinitely
11392 waiting to be served. This will break persistence but may allow people to
11393 quickly re-log in when the server they try to connect to is dying. The
11394 default value is "0" which means the queue is unlimited. See also the
11395 "maxconn" and "minconn" parameters.
11396
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic53601c2010-01-06 10:50:42 +010011397minconn <minconn>
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011398 When the "minconn" parameter is set, the maxconn limit becomes a dynamic
11399 limit following the backend's load. The server will always accept at least
11400 <minconn> connections, never more than <maxconn>, and the limit will be on
11401 the ramp between both values when the backend has less than <fullconn>
11402 concurrent connections. This makes it possible to limit the load on the
11403 server during normal loads, but push it further for important loads without
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +010011404 overloading the server during exceptional loads. See also the "maxconn"
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011405 and "maxqueue" parameters, as well as the "fullconn" backend keyword.
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki97f07b82009-12-15 22:31:24 +010011406
Willy Tarreaud72f0f32015-10-13 14:50:22 +020011407namespace <name>
11408 On Linux, it is possible to specify which network namespace a socket will
11409 belong to. This directive makes it possible to explicitly bind a server to
11410 a namespace different from the default one. Please refer to your operating
11411 system's documentation to find more details about network namespaces.
11412
Frédéric Lécailled2376272017-03-21 18:52:12 +010011413no-agent-check
11414 This option may be used as "server" setting to reset any "agent-check"
11415 setting which would have been inherited from "default-server" directive as
11416 default value.
11417 It may also be used as "default-server" setting to reset any previous
11418 "default-server" "agent-check" setting.
11419
11420no-backup
11421 This option may be used as "server" setting to reset any "backup"
11422 setting which would have been inherited from "default-server" directive as
11423 default value.
11424 It may also be used as "default-server" setting to reset any previous
11425 "default-server" "backup" setting.
11426
11427no-check
11428 This option may be used as "server" setting to reset any "check"
11429 setting which would have been inherited from "default-server" directive as
11430 default value.
11431 It may also be used as "default-server" setting to reset any previous
11432 "default-server" "check" setting.
11433
11434no-check-ssl
11435 This option may be used as "server" setting to reset any "check-ssl"
11436 setting which would have been inherited from "default-server" directive as
11437 default value.
11438 It may also be used as "default-server" setting to reset any previous
11439 "default-server" "check-ssl" setting.
11440
Frédéric Lécailled2376272017-03-21 18:52:12 +010011441no-send-proxy
11442 This option may be used as "server" setting to reset any "send-proxy"
11443 setting which would have been inherited from "default-server" directive as
11444 default value.
11445 It may also be used as "default-server" setting to reset any previous
11446 "default-server" "send-proxy" setting.
11447
11448no-send-proxy-v2
11449 This option may be used as "server" setting to reset any "send-proxy-v2"
11450 setting which would have been inherited from "default-server" directive as
11451 default value.
11452 It may also be used as "default-server" setting to reset any previous
11453 "default-server" "send-proxy-v2" setting.
11454
11455no-send-proxy-v2-ssl
11456 This option may be used as "server" setting to reset any "send-proxy-v2-ssl"
11457 setting which would have been inherited from "default-server" directive as
11458 default value.
11459 It may also be used as "default-server" setting to reset any previous
11460 "default-server" "send-proxy-v2-ssl" setting.
11461
11462no-send-proxy-v2-ssl-cn
11463 This option may be used as "server" setting to reset any "send-proxy-v2-ssl-cn"
11464 setting which would have been inherited from "default-server" directive as
11465 default value.
11466 It may also be used as "default-server" setting to reset any previous
11467 "default-server" "send-proxy-v2-ssl-cn" setting.
11468
11469no-ssl
11470 This option may be used as "server" setting to reset any "ssl"
11471 setting which would have been inherited from "default-server" directive as
11472 default value.
11473 It may also be used as "default-server" setting to reset any previous
11474 "default-server" "ssl" setting.
11475
Willy Tarreau2a3fb1c2015-02-05 16:47:07 +010011476no-ssl-reuse
11477 This option disables SSL session reuse when SSL is used to communicate with
11478 the server. It will force the server to perform a full handshake for every
11479 new connection. It's probably only useful for benchmarking, troubleshooting,
11480 and for paranoid users.
11481
Emeric Brun9b3009b2012-10-05 11:55:06 +020011482no-sslv3
Willy Tarreaua0ee1d02012-09-10 09:01:23 +020011483 This option disables support for SSLv3 when SSL is used to communicate with
11484 the server. Note that SSLv2 is disabled in the code and cannot be enabled
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020011485 using any configuration option. Use "ssl-min-ver" and "ssl-max-ver" instead.
Willy Tarreaua0ee1d02012-09-10 09:01:23 +020011486
Emmanuel Hocdet6cb2d1e2017-03-30 14:43:31 +020011487 Supported in default-server: No
11488
Emeric Brunf9c5c472012-10-11 15:28:34 +020011489no-tls-tickets
11490 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. It
11491 disables the stateless session resumption (RFC 5077 TLS Ticket
11492 extension) and force to use stateful session resumption. Stateless
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010011493 session resumption is more expensive in CPU usage for servers. This option
11494 is also available on global statement "ssl-default-server-options".
Frédéric Lécailled2376272017-03-21 18:52:12 +010011495 See also "tls-tickets".
Emeric Brunf9c5c472012-10-11 15:28:34 +020011496
Emeric Brun9b3009b2012-10-05 11:55:06 +020011497no-tlsv10
Emeric Brun8694b9a2012-10-05 14:39:07 +020011498 This option disables support for TLSv1.0 when SSL is used to communicate with
Emeric Brunf5da4932012-09-28 19:42:54 +020011499 the server. Note that SSLv2 is disabled in the code and cannot be enabled
11500 using any configuration option. TLSv1 is more expensive than SSLv3 so it
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010011501 often makes sense to disable it when communicating with local servers. This
11502 option is also available on global statement "ssl-default-server-options".
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020011503 Use "ssl-min-ver" and "ssl-max-ver" instead.
Willy Tarreau763a95b2012-10-04 23:15:39 +020011504
Emmanuel Hocdet6cb2d1e2017-03-30 14:43:31 +020011505 Supported in default-server: No
11506
Emeric Brun9b3009b2012-10-05 11:55:06 +020011507no-tlsv11
Emeric Brun8694b9a2012-10-05 14:39:07 +020011508 This option disables support for TLSv1.1 when SSL is used to communicate with
Emeric Brunf5da4932012-09-28 19:42:54 +020011509 the server. Note that SSLv2 is disabled in the code and cannot be enabled
11510 using any configuration option. TLSv1 is more expensive than SSLv3 so it
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010011511 often makes sense to disable it when communicating with local servers. This
11512 option is also available on global statement "ssl-default-server-options".
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020011513 Use "ssl-min-ver" and "ssl-max-ver" instead.
Willy Tarreau763a95b2012-10-04 23:15:39 +020011514
Emmanuel Hocdet6cb2d1e2017-03-30 14:43:31 +020011515 Supported in default-server: No
11516
Emeric Brun9b3009b2012-10-05 11:55:06 +020011517no-tlsv12
Emeric Brun8694b9a2012-10-05 14:39:07 +020011518 This option disables support for TLSv1.2 when SSL is used to communicate with
Willy Tarreaua0ee1d02012-09-10 09:01:23 +020011519 the server. Note that SSLv2 is disabled in the code and cannot be enabled
11520 using any configuration option. TLSv1 is more expensive than SSLv3 so it
Emeric Brun2c86cbf2014-10-30 15:56:50 +010011521 often makes sense to disable it when communicating with local servers. This
11522 option is also available on global statement "ssl-default-server-options".
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020011523 Use "ssl-min-ver" and "ssl-max-ver" instead.
Emmanuel Hocdet42fb9802017-03-30 19:29:39 +020011524
11525 Supported in default-server: No
11526
11527no-tlsv13
11528 This option disables support for TLSv1.3 when SSL is used to communicate with
11529 the server. Note that SSLv2 is disabled in the code and cannot be enabled
11530 using any configuration option. TLSv1 is more expensive than SSLv3 so it
11531 often makes sense to disable it when communicating with local servers. This
11532 option is also available on global statement "ssl-default-server-options".
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020011533 Use "ssl-min-ver" and "ssl-max-ver" instead.
Willy Tarreaua0ee1d02012-09-10 09:01:23 +020011534
Emmanuel Hocdet6cb2d1e2017-03-30 14:43:31 +020011535 Supported in default-server: No
11536
Frédéric Lécailled2376272017-03-21 18:52:12 +010011537no-verifyhost
11538 This option may be used as "server" setting to reset any "verifyhost"
11539 setting which would have been inherited from "default-server" directive as
11540 default value.
11541 It may also be used as "default-server" setting to reset any previous
11542 "default-server" "verifyhost" setting.
Willy Tarreau763a95b2012-10-04 23:15:39 +020011543
Simon Hormanfa461682011-06-25 09:39:49 +090011544non-stick
11545 Never add connections allocated to this sever to a stick-table.
11546 This may be used in conjunction with backup to ensure that
11547 stick-table persistence is disabled for backup servers.
11548
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki97f07b82009-12-15 22:31:24 +010011549observe <mode>
11550 This option enables health adjusting based on observing communication with
11551 the server. By default this functionality is disabled and enabling it also
11552 requires to enable health checks. There are two supported modes: "layer4" and
11553 "layer7". In layer4 mode, only successful/unsuccessful tcp connections are
11554 significant. In layer7, which is only allowed for http proxies, responses
11555 received from server are verified, like valid/wrong http code, unparsable
Willy Tarreau150d1462012-03-10 08:19:02 +010011556 headers, a timeout, etc. Valid status codes include 100 to 499, 501 and 505.
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki97f07b82009-12-15 22:31:24 +010011557
11558 See also the "check", "on-error" and "error-limit".
11559
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic53601c2010-01-06 10:50:42 +010011560on-error <mode>
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki97f07b82009-12-15 22:31:24 +010011561 Select what should happen when enough consecutive errors are detected.
11562 Currently, four modes are available:
11563 - fastinter: force fastinter
11564 - fail-check: simulate a failed check, also forces fastinter (default)
11565 - sudden-death: simulate a pre-fatal failed health check, one more failed
11566 check will mark a server down, forces fastinter
11567 - mark-down: mark the server immediately down and force fastinter
11568
11569 See also the "check", "observe" and "error-limit".
11570
Simon Hormane0d1bfb2011-06-21 14:34:58 +090011571on-marked-down <action>
11572 Modify what occurs when a server is marked down.
11573 Currently one action is available:
Justin Karnegeseb2c24a2012-05-24 15:28:52 -070011574 - shutdown-sessions: Shutdown peer sessions. When this setting is enabled,
11575 all connections to the server are immediately terminated when the server
11576 goes down. It might be used if the health check detects more complex cases
11577 than a simple connection status, and long timeouts would cause the service
11578 to remain unresponsive for too long a time. For instance, a health check
11579 might detect that a database is stuck and that there's no chance to reuse
11580 existing connections anymore. Connections killed this way are logged with
11581 a 'D' termination code (for "Down").
Simon Hormane0d1bfb2011-06-21 14:34:58 +090011582
11583 Actions are disabled by default
11584
Justin Karnegeseb2c24a2012-05-24 15:28:52 -070011585on-marked-up <action>
11586 Modify what occurs when a server is marked up.
11587 Currently one action is available:
11588 - shutdown-backup-sessions: Shutdown sessions on all backup servers. This is
11589 done only if the server is not in backup state and if it is not disabled
11590 (it must have an effective weight > 0). This can be used sometimes to force
11591 an active server to take all the traffic back after recovery when dealing
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011592 with long sessions (e.g. LDAP, SQL, ...). Doing this can cause more trouble
11593 than it tries to solve (e.g. incomplete transactions), so use this feature
Justin Karnegeseb2c24a2012-05-24 15:28:52 -070011594 with extreme care. Sessions killed because a server comes up are logged
11595 with an 'U' termination code (for "Up").
11596
11597 Actions are disabled by default
11598
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic53601c2010-01-06 10:50:42 +010011599port <port>
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011600 Using the "port" parameter, it becomes possible to use a different port to
11601 send health-checks. On some servers, it may be desirable to dedicate a port
11602 to a specific component able to perform complex tests which are more suitable
11603 to health-checks than the application. It is common to run a simple script in
11604 inetd for instance. This parameter is ignored if the "check" parameter is not
11605 set. See also the "addr" parameter.
11606
11607redir <prefix>
11608 The "redir" parameter enables the redirection mode for all GET and HEAD
11609 requests addressing this server. This means that instead of having HAProxy
11610 forward the request to the server, it will send an "HTTP 302" response with
11611 the "Location" header composed of this prefix immediately followed by the
11612 requested URI beginning at the leading '/' of the path component. That means
11613 that no trailing slash should be used after <prefix>. All invalid requests
11614 will be rejected, and all non-GET or HEAD requests will be normally served by
11615 the server. Note that since the response is completely forged, no header
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +010011616 mangling nor cookie insertion is possible in the response. However, cookies in
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011617 requests are still analyzed, making this solution completely usable to direct
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011618 users to a remote location in case of local disaster. Main use consists in
11619 increasing bandwidth for static servers by having the clients directly
11620 connect to them. Note: never use a relative location here, it would cause a
11621 loop between the client and HAProxy!
11622
11623 Example : server srv1 192.168.1.1:80 redir http://image1.mydomain.com check
11624
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic53601c2010-01-06 10:50:42 +010011625rise <count>
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011626 The "rise" parameter states that a server will be considered as operational
11627 after <count> consecutive successful health checks. This value defaults to 2
11628 if unspecified. See also the "check", "inter" and "fall" parameters.
11629
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011630resolve-prefer <family>
11631 When DNS resolution is enabled for a server and multiple IP addresses from
11632 different families are returned, HAProxy will prefer using an IP address
11633 from the family mentioned in the "resolve-prefer" parameter.
11634 Available families: "ipv4" and "ipv6"
11635
Baptiste Assmannc4aabae2015-08-04 22:43:06 +020011636 Default value: ipv6
11637
Olivier Doucetaa1ea8a2016-08-05 17:15:20 +020011638 Example:
11639
11640 server s1 app1.domain.com:80 resolvers mydns resolve-prefer ipv6
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011641
Thierry Fournierac88cfe2016-02-17 22:05:30 +010011642resolve-net <network>[,<network[,...]]
11643 This options prioritize th choice of an ip address matching a network. This is
11644 useful with clouds to prefer a local ip. In some cases, a cloud high
Tim Düsterhus4896c442016-11-29 02:15:19 +010011645 availability service can be announced with many ip addresses on many
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011646 different datacenters. The latency between datacenter is not negligible, so
11647 this patch permits to prefer a local datacenter. If no address matches the
Thierry Fournierac88cfe2016-02-17 22:05:30 +010011648 configured network, another address is selected.
11649
Olivier Doucetaa1ea8a2016-08-05 17:15:20 +020011650 Example:
11651
11652 server s1 app1.domain.com:80 resolvers mydns resolve-net 10.0.0.0/8
Thierry Fournierac88cfe2016-02-17 22:05:30 +010011653
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011654resolvers <id>
11655 Points to an existing "resolvers" section to resolve current server's
11656 hostname.
11657
Olivier Doucetaa1ea8a2016-08-05 17:15:20 +020011658 Example:
11659
11660 server s1 app1.domain.com:80 check resolvers mydns
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011661
Olivier Doucetaa1ea8a2016-08-05 17:15:20 +020011662 See also section 5.3
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011663
Willy Tarreau5ab04ec2011-03-20 10:32:26 +010011664send-proxy
11665 The "send-proxy" parameter enforces use of the PROXY protocol over any
11666 connection established to this server. The PROXY protocol informs the other
11667 end about the layer 3/4 addresses of the incoming connection, so that it can
11668 know the client's address or the public address it accessed to, whatever the
Bertrand Jacquin93b227d2016-06-04 15:11:10 +010011669 upper layer protocol. For connections accepted by an "accept-proxy" or
11670 "accept-netscaler-cip" listener, the advertised address will be used. Only
11671 TCPv4 and TCPv6 address families are supported. Other families such as
11672 Unix sockets, will report an UNKNOWN family. Servers using this option can
11673 fully be chained to another instance of haproxy listening with an
11674 "accept-proxy" setting. This setting must not be used if the server isn't
11675 aware of the protocol. When health checks are sent to the server, the PROXY
11676 protocol is automatically used when this option is set, unless there is an
11677 explicit "port" or "addr" directive, in which case an explicit
11678 "check-send-proxy" directive would also be needed to use the PROXY protocol.
Frédéric Lécailled2376272017-03-21 18:52:12 +010011679 See also the "no-send-proxy" option of this section and "accept-proxy" and
11680 "accept-netscaler-cip" option of the "bind" keyword.
Willy Tarreau5ab04ec2011-03-20 10:32:26 +010011681
David Safb76832014-05-08 23:42:08 -040011682send-proxy-v2
11683 The "send-proxy-v2" parameter enforces use of the PROXY protocol version 2
11684 over any connection established to this server. The PROXY protocol informs
11685 the other end about the layer 3/4 addresses of the incoming connection, so
11686 that it can know the client's address or the public address it accessed to,
Emmanuel Hocdet404d9782017-10-24 10:55:14 +020011687 whatever the upper layer protocol. It also send ALPN information if an alpn
11688 have been negotiated. This setting must not be used if the server isn't aware
11689 of this version of the protocol. See also the "no-send-proxy-v2" option of
11690 this section and send-proxy" option of the "bind" keyword.
David Safb76832014-05-08 23:42:08 -040011691
11692send-proxy-v2-ssl
11693 The "send-proxy-v2-ssl" parameter enforces use of the PROXY protocol version
11694 2 over any connection established to this server. The PROXY protocol informs
11695 the other end about the layer 3/4 addresses of the incoming connection, so
11696 that it can know the client's address or the public address it accessed to,
11697 whatever the upper layer protocol. In addition, the SSL information extension
11698 of the PROXY protocol is added to the PROXY protocol header. This setting
11699 must not be used if the server isn't aware of this version of the protocol.
Frédéric Lécailled2376272017-03-21 18:52:12 +010011700 See also the "no-send-proxy-v2-ssl" option of this section and the
11701 "send-proxy-v2" option of the "bind" keyword.
David Safb76832014-05-08 23:42:08 -040011702
11703send-proxy-v2-ssl-cn
11704 The "send-proxy-v2-ssl" parameter enforces use of the PROXY protocol version
11705 2 over any connection established to this server. The PROXY protocol informs
11706 the other end about the layer 3/4 addresses of the incoming connection, so
11707 that it can know the client's address or the public address it accessed to,
11708 whatever the upper layer protocol. In addition, the SSL information extension
11709 of the PROXY protocol, along along with the Common Name from the subject of
11710 the client certificate (if any), is added to the PROXY protocol header. This
11711 setting must not be used if the server isn't aware of this version of the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011712 protocol. See also the "no-send-proxy-v2-ssl-cn" option of this section and
11713 the "send-proxy-v2" option of the "bind" keyword.
David Safb76832014-05-08 23:42:08 -040011714
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic53601c2010-01-06 10:50:42 +010011715slowstart <start_time_in_ms>
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011716 The "slowstart" parameter for a server accepts a value in milliseconds which
11717 indicates after how long a server which has just come back up will run at
11718 full speed. Just as with every other time-based parameter, it can be entered
11719 in any other explicit unit among { us, ms, s, m, h, d }. The speed grows
11720 linearly from 0 to 100% during this time. The limitation applies to two
11721 parameters :
11722
11723 - maxconn: the number of connections accepted by the server will grow from 1
11724 to 100% of the usual dynamic limit defined by (minconn,maxconn,fullconn).
11725
11726 - weight: when the backend uses a dynamic weighted algorithm, the weight
11727 grows linearly from 1 to 100%. In this case, the weight is updated at every
11728 health-check. For this reason, it is important that the "inter" parameter
11729 is smaller than the "slowstart", in order to maximize the number of steps.
11730
11731 The slowstart never applies when haproxy starts, otherwise it would cause
11732 trouble to running servers. It only applies when a server has been previously
11733 seen as failed.
11734
Willy Tarreau732eac42015-07-09 11:40:25 +020011735sni <expression>
11736 The "sni" parameter evaluates the sample fetch expression, converts it to a
11737 string and uses the result as the host name sent in the SNI TLS extension to
11738 the server. A typical use case is to send the SNI received from the client in
11739 a bridged HTTPS scenario, using the "ssl_fc_sni" sample fetch for the
Willy Tarreau2ab88672017-07-05 18:23:03 +020011740 expression, though alternatives such as req.hdr(host) can also make sense. If
11741 "verify required" is set (which is the recommended setting), the resulting
Willy Tarreauad92a9a2017-07-28 11:38:41 +020011742 name will also be matched against the server certificate's names. See the
11743 "verify" directive for more details.
Willy Tarreau732eac42015-07-09 11:40:25 +020011744
Willy Tarreauc6f4ce82009-06-10 11:09:37 +020011745source <addr>[:<pl>[-<ph>]] [usesrc { <addr2>[:<port2>] | client | clientip } ]
Willy Tarreaubce70882009-09-07 11:51:47 +020011746source <addr>[:<port>] [usesrc { <addr2>[:<port2>] | hdr_ip(<hdr>[,<occ>]) } ]
Willy Tarreauc6f4ce82009-06-10 11:09:37 +020011747source <addr>[:<pl>[-<ph>]] [interface <name>] ...
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011748 The "source" parameter sets the source address which will be used when
11749 connecting to the server. It follows the exact same parameters and principle
11750 as the backend "source" keyword, except that it only applies to the server
11751 referencing it. Please consult the "source" keyword for details.
11752
Willy Tarreauc6f4ce82009-06-10 11:09:37 +020011753 Additionally, the "source" statement on a server line allows one to specify a
11754 source port range by indicating the lower and higher bounds delimited by a
11755 dash ('-'). Some operating systems might require a valid IP address when a
11756 source port range is specified. It is permitted to have the same IP/range for
11757 several servers. Doing so makes it possible to bypass the maximum of 64k
11758 total concurrent connections. The limit will then reach 64k connections per
11759 server.
11760
Lukas Tribus7d56c6d2016-09-13 09:51:15 +000011761 Since Linux 4.2/libc 2.23 IP_BIND_ADDRESS_NO_PORT is set for connections
11762 specifying the source address without port(s).
11763
Willy Tarreaua0ee1d02012-09-10 09:01:23 +020011764ssl
Willy Tarreau44f65392013-06-25 07:56:20 +020011765 This option enables SSL ciphering on outgoing connections to the server. It
11766 is critical to verify server certificates using "verify" when using SSL to
11767 connect to servers, otherwise the communication is prone to trivial man in
11768 the-middle attacks rendering SSL useless. When this option is used, health
11769 checks are automatically sent in SSL too unless there is a "port" or an
11770 "addr" directive indicating the check should be sent to a different location.
Frédéric Lécailled2376272017-03-21 18:52:12 +010011771 See the "no-ssl" to disable "ssl" option and "check-ssl" option to force
11772 SSL health checks.
Willy Tarreau763a95b2012-10-04 23:15:39 +020011773
Emmanuel Hocdete1c722b2017-03-31 15:02:54 +020011774ssl-max-ver [ SSLv3 | TLSv1.0 | TLSv1.1 | TLSv1.2 | TLSv1.3 ]
11775 This option enforces use of <version> or lower when SSL is used to communicate
11776 with the server. This option is also available on global statement
11777 "ssl-default-server-options". See also "ssl-min-ver".
11778
11779ssl-min-ver [ SSLv3 | TLSv1.0 | TLSv1.1 | TLSv1.2 | TLSv1.3 ]
11780 This option enforces use of <version> or upper when SSL is used to communicate
11781 with the server. This option is also available on global statement
11782 "ssl-default-server-options". See also "ssl-max-ver".
11783
Frédéric Lécailled2376272017-03-21 18:52:12 +010011784ssl-reuse
11785 This option may be used as "server" setting to reset any "no-ssl-reuse"
11786 setting which would have been inherited from "default-server" directive as
11787 default value.
11788 It may also be used as "default-server" setting to reset any previous
11789 "default-server" "no-ssl-reuse" setting.
11790
11791stick
11792 This option may be used as "server" setting to reset any "non-stick"
11793 setting which would have been inherited from "default-server" directive as
11794 default value.
11795 It may also be used as "default-server" setting to reset any previous
11796 "default-server" "non-stick" setting.
Willy Tarreaua0ee1d02012-09-10 09:01:23 +020011797
Willy Tarreau163d4622015-10-13 16:16:41 +020011798tcp-ut <delay>
11799 Sets the TCP User Timeout for all outgoing connections to this server. This
11800 option is available on Linux since version 2.6.37. It allows haproxy to
11801 configure a timeout for sockets which contain data not receiving an
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011802 acknowledgment for the configured delay. This is especially useful on
Willy Tarreau163d4622015-10-13 16:16:41 +020011803 long-lived connections experiencing long idle periods such as remote
11804 terminals or database connection pools, where the client and server timeouts
11805 must remain high to allow a long period of idle, but where it is important to
11806 detect that the server has disappeared in order to release all resources
11807 associated with its connection (and the client's session). One typical use
11808 case is also to force dead server connections to die when health checks are
11809 too slow or during a soft reload since health checks are then disabled. The
11810 argument is a delay expressed in milliseconds by default. This only works for
11811 regular TCP connections, and is ignored for other protocols.
11812
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011813track [<proxy>/]<server>
Willy Tarreau32091232014-05-16 13:52:00 +020011814 This option enables ability to set the current state of the server by tracking
11815 another one. It is possible to track a server which itself tracks another
11816 server, provided that at the end of the chain, a server has health checks
11817 enabled. If <proxy> is omitted the current one is used. If disable-on-404 is
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011818 used, it has to be enabled on both proxies.
11819
Frédéric Lécailled2376272017-03-21 18:52:12 +010011820tls-tickets
11821 This option may be used as "server" setting to reset any "no-tls-tickets"
11822 setting which would have been inherited from "default-server" directive as
11823 default value.
11824 It may also be used as "default-server" setting to reset any previous
11825 "default-server" "no-tlsv-tickets" setting.
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic53601c2010-01-06 10:50:42 +010011826
Emeric Brunef42d922012-10-11 16:11:36 +020011827verify [none|required]
11828 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in. If set
Emeric Brun850efd52014-01-29 12:24:34 +010011829 to 'none', server certificate is not verified. In the other case, The
Willy Tarreauad92a9a2017-07-28 11:38:41 +020011830 certificate provided by the server is verified using CAs from 'ca-file' and
11831 optional CRLs from 'crl-file' after having checked that the names provided in
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011832 the certificate's subject and subjectAlternateNames attributes match either
Willy Tarreauad92a9a2017-07-28 11:38:41 +020011833 the name passed using the "sni" directive, or if not provided, the static
11834 host name passed using the "verifyhost" directive. When no name is found, the
11835 certificate's names are ignored. For this reason, without SNI it's important
11836 to use "verifyhost". On verification failure the handshake is aborted. It is
11837 critically important to verify server certificates when using SSL to connect
11838 to servers, otherwise the communication is prone to trivial man-in-the-middle
11839 attacks rendering SSL totally useless. Unless "ssl_server_verify" appears in
11840 the global section, "verify" is set to "required" by default.
Emeric Brunef42d922012-10-11 16:11:36 +020011841
Evan Broderbe554312013-06-27 00:05:25 -070011842verifyhost <hostname>
11843 This setting is only available when support for OpenSSL was built in, and
Willy Tarreauad92a9a2017-07-28 11:38:41 +020011844 only takes effect if 'verify required' is also specified. This directive sets
11845 a default static hostname to check the server's certificate against when no
11846 SNI was used to connect to the server. If SNI is not used, this is the only
11847 way to enable hostname verification. This static hostname, when set, will
11848 also be used for health checks (which cannot provide an SNI value). If none
11849 of the hostnames in the certificate match the specified hostname, the
11850 handshake is aborted. The hostnames in the server-provided certificate may
11851 include wildcards. See also "verify", "sni" and "no-verifyhost" options.
Evan Broderbe554312013-06-27 00:05:25 -070011852
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkic53601c2010-01-06 10:50:42 +010011853weight <weight>
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011854 The "weight" parameter is used to adjust the server's weight relative to
11855 other servers. All servers will receive a load proportional to their weight
11856 relative to the sum of all weights, so the higher the weight, the higher the
Willy Tarreau6704d672009-06-15 10:56:05 +020011857 load. The default weight is 1, and the maximal value is 256. A value of 0
11858 means the server will not participate in load-balancing but will still accept
11859 persistent connections. If this parameter is used to distribute the load
11860 according to server's capacity, it is recommended to start with values which
11861 can both grow and shrink, for instance between 10 and 100 to leave enough
11862 room above and below for later adjustments.
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020011863
11864
Cyril Bonté46175dd2015-07-02 22:45:32 +0200118655.3. Server IP address resolution using DNS
11866-------------------------------------------
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011867
Baptiste Assmann62b75b42015-09-09 01:11:36 +020011868HAProxy allows using a host name on the server line to retrieve its IP address
11869using name servers. By default, HAProxy resolves the name when parsing the
11870configuration file, at startup and cache the result for the process' life.
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011871This is not sufficient in some cases, such as in Amazon where a server's IP
11872can change after a reboot or an ELB Virtual IP can change based on current
11873workload.
11874This chapter describes how HAProxy can be configured to process server's name
11875resolution at run time.
11876Whether run time server name resolution has been enable or not, HAProxy will
11877carry on doing the first resolution when parsing the configuration.
11878
11879
Cyril Bonté46175dd2015-07-02 22:45:32 +0200118805.3.1. Global overview
11881----------------------
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011882
11883As we've seen in introduction, name resolution in HAProxy occurs at two
11884different steps of the process life:
11885
11886 1. when starting up, HAProxy parses the server line definition and matches a
11887 host name. It uses libc functions to get the host name resolved. This
11888 resolution relies on /etc/resolv.conf file.
11889
Christopher Faulet67957bd2017-09-27 11:00:59 +020011890 2. at run time, HAProxy performs periodically name resolutions for servers
11891 requiring DNS resolutions.
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011892
11893A few other events can trigger a name resolution at run time:
11894 - when a server's health check ends up in a connection timeout: this may be
11895 because the server has a new IP address. So we need to trigger a name
11896 resolution to know this new IP.
11897
Christopher Faulet67957bd2017-09-27 11:00:59 +020011898When using resolvers, the server name can either be a hostname, or a SRV label.
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011899HAProxy considers anything that starts with an underscore as a SRV label. If a
Christopher Faulet67957bd2017-09-27 11:00:59 +020011900SRV label is specified, then the corresponding SRV records will be retrieved
11901from the DNS server, and the provided hostnames will be used. The SRV label
11902will be checked periodically, and if any server are added or removed, haproxy
11903will automatically do the same.
Olivier Houchardecfa18d2017-08-07 17:30:03 +020011904
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011905A few things important to notice:
11906 - all the name servers are queried in the mean time. HAProxy will process the
11907 first valid response.
11908
11909 - a resolution is considered as invalid (NX, timeout, refused), when all the
11910 servers return an error.
11911
11912
Cyril Bonté46175dd2015-07-02 22:45:32 +0200119135.3.2. The resolvers section
11914----------------------------
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011915
11916This section is dedicated to host information related to name resolution in
Christopher Faulet67957bd2017-09-27 11:00:59 +020011917HAProxy. There can be as many as resolvers section as needed. Each section can
11918contain many name servers.
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011919
Baptiste Assmann62b75b42015-09-09 01:11:36 +020011920When multiple name servers are configured in a resolvers section, then HAProxy
11921uses the first valid response. In case of invalid responses, only the last one
11922is treated. Purpose is to give the chance to a slow server to deliver a valid
11923answer after a fast faulty or outdated server.
11924
11925When each server returns a different error type, then only the last error is
Christopher Faulet67957bd2017-09-27 11:00:59 +020011926used by HAProxy. The following processing is applied on this error:
Baptiste Assmann62b75b42015-09-09 01:11:36 +020011927
Christopher Faulet67957bd2017-09-27 11:00:59 +020011928 1. HAProxy retries the same DNS query with a new query type. The A queries are
11929 switch to AAAA or the opposite. SRV queries are not concerned here. Timeout
11930 errors are also excluded.
Baptiste Assmann62b75b42015-09-09 01:11:36 +020011931
Christopher Faulet67957bd2017-09-27 11:00:59 +020011932 2. When the fallback on the query type was done (or not applicable), HAProxy
11933 retries the original DNS query, with the preferred query type.
Baptiste Assmann62b75b42015-09-09 01:11:36 +020011934
Christopher Faulet67957bd2017-09-27 11:00:59 +020011935 3. HAProxy retries previous steps <resolve_retires> times. If no valid
11936 response is received after that, it stops the DNS resolution and reports
11937 the error.
Baptiste Assmann62b75b42015-09-09 01:11:36 +020011938
Christopher Faulet67957bd2017-09-27 11:00:59 +020011939For example, with 2 name servers configured in a resolvers section, the
11940following scenarios are possible:
11941
11942 - First response is valid and is applied directly, second response is
11943 ignored
11944
11945 - First response is invalid and second one is valid, then second response is
11946 applied
11947
11948 - First response is a NX domain and second one a truncated response, then
11949 HAProxy retries the query with a new type
11950
11951 - First response is a NX domain and second one is a timeout, then HAProxy
11952 retries the query with a new type
11953
11954 - Query timed out for both name servers, then HAProxy retries it with the
11955 same query type
Baptiste Assmann62b75b42015-09-09 01:11:36 +020011956
Olivier Houcharda8c6db82017-07-06 18:46:47 +020011957As a DNS server may not answer all the IPs in one DNS request, haproxy keeps
11958a cache of previous answers, an answer will be considered obsolete after
Christopher Faulet67957bd2017-09-27 11:00:59 +020011959<hold obsolete> seconds without the IP returned.
Olivier Houcharda8c6db82017-07-06 18:46:47 +020011960
Baptiste Assmann62b75b42015-09-09 01:11:36 +020011961
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011962resolvers <resolvers id>
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011963 Creates a new name server list labeled <resolvers id>
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011964
11965A resolvers section accept the following parameters:
11966
Baptiste Assmann2af08fe2017-08-14 00:13:01 +020011967accepted_payload_size <nb>
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010011968 Defines the maximum payload size accepted by HAProxy and announced to all the
Christopher Faulet67957bd2017-09-27 11:00:59 +020011969 name servers configured in this resolvers section.
Baptiste Assmann2af08fe2017-08-14 00:13:01 +020011970 <nb> is in bytes. If not set, HAProxy announces 512. (minimal value defined
11971 by RFC 6891)
11972
Baptiste Assmann9d8dbbc2017-08-18 23:35:08 +020011973 Note: to get bigger responses but still be sure that responses won't be
Baptiste Assmann2af08fe2017-08-14 00:13:01 +020011974 dropped on the wire, one can choose a value between 1280 and 1410.
11975
Baptiste Assmann9d8dbbc2017-08-18 23:35:08 +020011976 Note: the maximum allowed value is 8192.
11977
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011978nameserver <id> <ip>:<port>
11979 DNS server description:
11980 <id> : label of the server, should be unique
11981 <ip> : IP address of the server
11982 <port> : port where the DNS service actually runs
11983
11984hold <status> <period>
11985 Defines <period> during which the last name resolution should be kept based
11986 on last resolution <status>
Baptiste Assmann987e16d2016-11-02 22:23:31 +010011987 <status> : last name resolution status. Acceptable values are "nx",
Olivier Houcharda8c6db82017-07-06 18:46:47 +020011988 "other", "refused", "timeout", "valid", "obsolete".
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011989 <period> : interval between two successive name resolution when the last
11990 answer was in <status>. It follows the HAProxy time format.
11991 <period> is in milliseconds by default.
11992
Baptiste Assmann686408b2017-08-18 10:15:42 +020011993 Default value is 10s for "valid", 0s for "obsolete" and 30s for others.
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020011994
Christopher Faulet67957bd2017-09-27 11:00:59 +020011995resolution_pool_size <nb> (deprecated)
Baptiste Assmann201c07f2017-05-22 15:17:15 +020011996 Defines the number of resolutions available in the pool for this resolvers.
11997 If not defines, it defaults to 64. If your configuration requires more than
11998 <nb>, then HAProxy will return an error when parsing the configuration.
11999
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020012000resolve_retries <nb>
12001 Defines the number <nb> of queries to send to resolve a server name before
12002 giving up.
12003 Default value: 3
12004
Baptiste Assmann62b75b42015-09-09 01:11:36 +020012005 A retry occurs on name server timeout or when the full sequence of DNS query
12006 type failover is over and we need to start up from the default ANY query
12007 type.
12008
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020012009timeout <event> <time>
12010 Defines timeouts related to name resolution
12011 <event> : the event on which the <time> timeout period applies to.
12012 events available are:
Christopher Faulet67957bd2017-09-27 11:00:59 +020012013 - resolve : default time to trigger name resolutions when no
12014 other time applied.
12015 Default value: 1s
12016 - retry : time between two DNS queries, when no valid response
12017 have been received.
12018 Default value: 1s
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020012019 <time> : time related to the event. It follows the HAProxy time format.
12020 <time> is expressed in milliseconds.
12021
Olivier Doucetaa1ea8a2016-08-05 17:15:20 +020012022 Example:
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020012023
12024 resolvers mydns
12025 nameserver dns1 10.0.0.1:53
12026 nameserver dns2 10.0.0.2:53
12027 resolve_retries 3
Christopher Faulet67957bd2017-09-27 11:00:59 +020012028 timeout resolve 1s
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020012029 timeout retry 1s
Baptiste Assmann987e16d2016-11-02 22:23:31 +010012030 hold other 30s
12031 hold refused 30s
12032 hold nx 30s
12033 hold timeout 30s
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020012034 hold valid 10s
Olivier Houcharda8c6db82017-07-06 18:46:47 +020012035 hold obsolete 30s
Baptiste Assmann1fa66662015-04-14 00:28:47 +020012036
12037
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200120386. HTTP header manipulation
12039---------------------------
12040
12041In HTTP mode, it is possible to rewrite, add or delete some of the request and
12042response headers based on regular expressions. It is also possible to block a
12043request or a response if a particular header matches a regular expression,
12044which is enough to stop most elementary protocol attacks, and to protect
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +010012045against information leak from the internal network.
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020012046
Willy Tarreau70dffda2014-01-30 03:07:23 +010012047If HAProxy encounters an "Informational Response" (status code 1xx), it is able
12048to process all rsp* rules which can allow, deny, rewrite or delete a header,
12049but it will refuse to add a header to any such messages as this is not
12050HTTP-compliant. The reason for still processing headers in such responses is to
12051stop and/or fix any possible information leak which may happen, for instance
12052because another downstream equipment would unconditionally add a header, or if
12053a server name appears there. When such messages are seen, normal processing
12054still occurs on the next non-informational messages.
Willy Tarreau816b9792009-09-15 21:25:21 +020012055
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020012056This section covers common usage of the following keywords, described in detail
12057in section 4.2 :
12058
12059 - reqadd <string>
12060 - reqallow <search>
12061 - reqiallow <search>
12062 - reqdel <search>
12063 - reqidel <search>
12064 - reqdeny <search>
12065 - reqideny <search>
12066 - reqpass <search>
12067 - reqipass <search>
12068 - reqrep <search> <replace>
12069 - reqirep <search> <replace>
12070 - reqtarpit <search>
12071 - reqitarpit <search>
12072 - rspadd <string>
12073 - rspdel <search>
12074 - rspidel <search>
12075 - rspdeny <search>
12076 - rspideny <search>
12077 - rsprep <search> <replace>
12078 - rspirep <search> <replace>
12079
12080With all these keywords, the same conventions are used. The <search> parameter
12081is a POSIX extended regular expression (regex) which supports grouping through
12082parenthesis (without the backslash). Spaces and other delimiters must be
12083prefixed with a backslash ('\') to avoid confusion with a field delimiter.
12084Other characters may be prefixed with a backslash to change their meaning :
12085
12086 \t for a tab
12087 \r for a carriage return (CR)
12088 \n for a new line (LF)
12089 \ to mark a space and differentiate it from a delimiter
12090 \# to mark a sharp and differentiate it from a comment
12091 \\ to use a backslash in a regex
12092 \\\\ to use a backslash in the text (*2 for regex, *2 for haproxy)
12093 \xXX to write the ASCII hex code XX as in the C language
12094
12095The <replace> parameter contains the string to be used to replace the largest
12096portion of text matching the regex. It can make use of the special characters
12097above, and can reference a substring which is delimited by parenthesis in the
12098regex, by writing a backslash ('\') immediately followed by one digit from 0 to
120999 indicating the group position (0 designating the entire line). This practice
12100is very common to users of the "sed" program.
12101
12102The <string> parameter represents the string which will systematically be added
12103after the last header line. It can also use special character sequences above.
12104
12105Notes related to these keywords :
12106---------------------------------
12107 - these keywords are not always convenient to allow/deny based on header
12108 contents. It is strongly recommended to use ACLs with the "block" keyword
12109 instead, resulting in far more flexible and manageable rules.
12110
12111 - lines are always considered as a whole. It is not possible to reference
12112 a header name only or a value only. This is important because of the way
12113 headers are written (notably the number of spaces after the colon).
12114
12115 - the first line is always considered as a header, which makes it possible to
12116 rewrite or filter HTTP requests URIs or response codes, but in turn makes
12117 it harder to distinguish between headers and request line. The regex prefix
12118 ^[^\ \t]*[\ \t] matches any HTTP method followed by a space, and the prefix
12119 ^[^ \t:]*: matches any header name followed by a colon.
12120
12121 - for performances reasons, the number of characters added to a request or to
12122 a response is limited at build time to values between 1 and 4 kB. This
12123 should normally be far more than enough for most usages. If it is too short
12124 on occasional usages, it is possible to gain some space by removing some
12125 useless headers before adding new ones.
12126
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +010012127 - keywords beginning with "reqi" and "rspi" are the same as their counterpart
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020012128 without the 'i' letter except that they ignore case when matching patterns.
12129
12130 - when a request passes through a frontend then a backend, all req* rules
12131 from the frontend will be evaluated, then all req* rules from the backend
12132 will be evaluated. The reverse path is applied to responses.
12133
12134 - req* statements are applied after "block" statements, so that "block" is
12135 always the first one, but before "use_backend" in order to permit rewriting
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +010012136 before switching.
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020012137
12138
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +0200121397. Using ACLs and fetching samples
12140----------------------------------
12141
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012142HAProxy is capable of extracting data from request or response streams, from
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012143client or server information, from tables, environmental information etc...
12144The action of extracting such data is called fetching a sample. Once retrieved,
12145these samples may be used for various purposes such as a key to a stick-table,
12146but most common usages consist in matching them against predefined constant
12147data called patterns.
12148
12149
121507.1. ACL basics
12151---------------
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020012152
12153The use of Access Control Lists (ACL) provides a flexible solution to perform
12154content switching and generally to take decisions based on content extracted
12155from the request, the response or any environmental status. The principle is
12156simple :
12157
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012158 - extract a data sample from a stream, table or the environment
Willy Tarreaue6b11e42013-11-26 19:02:32 +010012159 - optionally apply some format conversion to the extracted sample
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012160 - apply one or multiple pattern matching methods on this sample
12161 - perform actions only when a pattern matches the sample
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020012162
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012163The actions generally consist in blocking a request, selecting a backend, or
12164adding a header.
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020012165
12166In order to define a test, the "acl" keyword is used. The syntax is :
12167
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012168 acl <aclname> <criterion> [flags] [operator] [<value>] ...
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020012169
12170This creates a new ACL <aclname> or completes an existing one with new tests.
12171Those tests apply to the portion of request/response specified in <criterion>
12172and may be adjusted with optional flags [flags]. Some criteria also support
Willy Tarreaue6b11e42013-11-26 19:02:32 +010012173an operator which may be specified before the set of values. Optionally some
12174conversion operators may be applied to the sample, and they will be specified
12175as a comma-delimited list of keywords just after the first keyword. The values
12176are of the type supported by the criterion, and are separated by spaces.
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020012177
12178ACL names must be formed from upper and lower case letters, digits, '-' (dash),
12179'_' (underscore) , '.' (dot) and ':' (colon). ACL names are case-sensitive,
12180which means that "my_acl" and "My_Acl" are two different ACLs.
12181
12182There is no enforced limit to the number of ACLs. The unused ones do not affect
12183performance, they just consume a small amount of memory.
12184
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012185The criterion generally is the name of a sample fetch method, or one of its ACL
12186specific declinations. The default test method is implied by the output type of
12187this sample fetch method. The ACL declinations can describe alternate matching
Willy Tarreaue6b11e42013-11-26 19:02:32 +010012188methods of a same sample fetch method. The sample fetch methods are the only
12189ones supporting a conversion.
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012190
12191Sample fetch methods return data which can be of the following types :
12192 - boolean
12193 - integer (signed or unsigned)
12194 - IPv4 or IPv6 address
12195 - string
12196 - data block
12197
Willy Tarreaue6b11e42013-11-26 19:02:32 +010012198Converters transform any of these data into any of these. For example, some
12199converters might convert a string to a lower-case string while other ones
12200would turn a string to an IPv4 address, or apply a netmask to an IP address.
12201The resulting sample is of the type of the last converter applied to the list,
12202which defaults to the type of the sample fetch method.
12203
Thierry FOURNIER2a06e392014-05-11 15:49:55 +020012204Each sample or converter returns data of a specific type, specified with its
12205keyword in this documentation. When an ACL is declared using a standard sample
12206fetch method, certain types automatically involved a default matching method
12207which are summarized in the table below :
12208
12209 +---------------------+-----------------+
12210 | Sample or converter | Default |
12211 | output type | matching method |
12212 +---------------------+-----------------+
12213 | boolean | bool |
12214 +---------------------+-----------------+
12215 | integer | int |
12216 +---------------------+-----------------+
12217 | ip | ip |
12218 +---------------------+-----------------+
12219 | string | str |
12220 +---------------------+-----------------+
12221 | binary | none, use "-m" |
12222 +---------------------+-----------------+
12223
12224Note that in order to match a binary samples, it is mandatory to specify a
12225matching method, see below.
12226
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012227The ACL engine can match these types against patterns of the following types :
12228 - boolean
12229 - integer or integer range
12230 - IP address / network
12231 - string (exact, substring, suffix, prefix, subdir, domain)
12232 - regular expression
12233 - hex block
12234
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020012235The following ACL flags are currently supported :
12236
Willy Tarreau2b5285d2010-05-09 23:45:24 +020012237 -i : ignore case during matching of all subsequent patterns.
12238 -f : load patterns from a file.
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012239 -m : use a specific pattern matching method
Thierry FOURNIERb7729c92014-02-11 16:24:41 +010012240 -n : forbid the DNS resolutions
Thierry FOURNIER9860c412014-01-29 14:23:29 +010012241 -M : load the file pointed by -f like a map file.
Thierry FOURNIER3534d882014-01-20 17:01:44 +010012242 -u : force the unique id of the ACL
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012243 -- : force end of flags. Useful when a string looks like one of the flags.
12244
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012245The "-f" flag is followed by the name of a file from which all lines will be
12246read as individual values. It is even possible to pass multiple "-f" arguments
12247if the patterns are to be loaded from multiple files. Empty lines as well as
12248lines beginning with a sharp ('#') will be ignored. All leading spaces and tabs
12249will be stripped. If it is absolutely necessary to insert a valid pattern
12250beginning with a sharp, just prefix it with a space so that it is not taken for
12251a comment. Depending on the data type and match method, haproxy may load the
12252lines into a binary tree, allowing very fast lookups. This is true for IPv4 and
12253exact string matching. In this case, duplicates will automatically be removed.
12254
Thierry FOURNIER9860c412014-01-29 14:23:29 +010012255The "-M" flag allows an ACL to use a map file. If this flag is set, the file is
12256parsed as two column file. The first column contains the patterns used by the
12257ACL, and the second column contain the samples. The sample can be used later by
12258a map. This can be useful in some rare cases where an ACL would just be used to
12259check for the existence of a pattern in a map before a mapping is applied.
12260
Thierry FOURNIER3534d882014-01-20 17:01:44 +010012261The "-u" flag forces the unique id of the ACL. This unique id is used with the
12262socket interface to identify ACL and dynamically change its values. Note that a
12263file is always identified by its name even if an id is set.
12264
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012265Also, note that the "-i" flag applies to subsequent entries and not to entries
12266loaded from files preceding it. For instance :
12267
12268 acl valid-ua hdr(user-agent) -f exact-ua.lst -i -f generic-ua.lst test
12269
12270In this example, each line of "exact-ua.lst" will be exactly matched against
12271the "user-agent" header of the request. Then each line of "generic-ua" will be
12272case-insensitively matched. Then the word "test" will be insensitively matched
12273as well.
12274
12275The "-m" flag is used to select a specific pattern matching method on the input
12276sample. All ACL-specific criteria imply a pattern matching method and generally
12277do not need this flag. However, this flag is useful with generic sample fetch
12278methods to describe how they're going to be matched against the patterns. This
12279is required for sample fetches which return data type for which there is no
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012280obvious matching method (e.g. string or binary). When "-m" is specified and
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012281followed by a pattern matching method name, this method is used instead of the
12282default one for the criterion. This makes it possible to match contents in ways
12283that were not initially planned, or with sample fetch methods which return a
12284string. The matching method also affects the way the patterns are parsed.
12285
Thierry FOURNIERb7729c92014-02-11 16:24:41 +010012286The "-n" flag forbids the dns resolutions. It is used with the load of ip files.
12287By default, if the parser cannot parse ip address it considers that the parsed
12288string is maybe a domain name and try dns resolution. The flag "-n" disable this
12289resolution. It is useful for detecting malformed ip lists. Note that if the DNS
12290server is not reachable, the haproxy configuration parsing may last many minutes
12291waiting fir the timeout. During this time no error messages are displayed. The
12292flag "-n" disable this behavior. Note also that during the runtime, this
12293function is disabled for the dynamic acl modifications.
12294
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012295There are some restrictions however. Not all methods can be used with all
12296sample fetch methods. Also, if "-m" is used in conjunction with "-f", it must
12297be placed first. The pattern matching method must be one of the following :
Willy Tarreau5adeda12013-03-31 22:13:34 +020012298
12299 - "found" : only check if the requested sample could be found in the stream,
12300 but do not compare it against any pattern. It is recommended not
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012301 to pass any pattern to avoid confusion. This matching method is
12302 particularly useful to detect presence of certain contents such
12303 as headers, cookies, etc... even if they are empty and without
12304 comparing them to anything nor counting them.
Willy Tarreau5adeda12013-03-31 22:13:34 +020012305
12306 - "bool" : check the value as a boolean. It can only be applied to fetches
12307 which return a boolean or integer value, and takes no pattern.
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012308 Value zero or false does not match, all other values do match.
Willy Tarreau5adeda12013-03-31 22:13:34 +020012309
12310 - "int" : match the value as an integer. It can be used with integer and
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012311 boolean samples. Boolean false is integer 0, true is integer 1.
Willy Tarreau5adeda12013-03-31 22:13:34 +020012312
12313 - "ip" : match the value as an IPv4 or IPv6 address. It is compatible
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012314 with IP address samples only, so it is implied and never needed.
Willy Tarreau5adeda12013-03-31 22:13:34 +020012315
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012316 - "bin" : match the contents against a hexadecimal string representing a
Willy Tarreau5adeda12013-03-31 22:13:34 +020012317 binary sequence. This may be used with binary or string samples.
12318
12319 - "len" : match the sample's length as an integer. This may be used with
12320 binary or string samples.
12321
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012322 - "str" : exact match : match the contents against a string. This may be
12323 used with binary or string samples.
Willy Tarreau5adeda12013-03-31 22:13:34 +020012324
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012325 - "sub" : substring match : check that the contents contain at least one of
12326 the provided string patterns. This may be used with binary or
12327 string samples.
Willy Tarreau5adeda12013-03-31 22:13:34 +020012328
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012329 - "reg" : regex match : match the contents against a list of regular
12330 expressions. This may be used with binary or string samples.
Willy Tarreau5adeda12013-03-31 22:13:34 +020012331
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012332 - "beg" : prefix match : check that the contents begin like the provided
12333 string patterns. This may be used with binary or string samples.
Willy Tarreau5adeda12013-03-31 22:13:34 +020012334
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012335 - "end" : suffix match : check that the contents end like the provided
12336 string patterns. This may be used with binary or string samples.
Willy Tarreau5adeda12013-03-31 22:13:34 +020012337
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012338 - "dir" : subdir match : check that a slash-delimited portion of the
12339 contents exactly matches one of the provided string patterns.
Willy Tarreau5adeda12013-03-31 22:13:34 +020012340 This may be used with binary or string samples.
12341
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012342 - "dom" : domain match : check that a dot-delimited portion of the contents
12343 exactly match one of the provided string patterns. This may be
12344 used with binary or string samples.
Willy Tarreau5adeda12013-03-31 22:13:34 +020012345
12346For example, to quickly detect the presence of cookie "JSESSIONID" in an HTTP
12347request, it is possible to do :
12348
12349 acl jsess_present cook(JSESSIONID) -m found
12350
12351In order to apply a regular expression on the 500 first bytes of data in the
12352buffer, one would use the following acl :
12353
12354 acl script_tag payload(0,500) -m reg -i <script>
12355
Willy Tarreaue6b11e42013-11-26 19:02:32 +010012356On systems where the regex library is much slower when using "-i", it is
12357possible to convert the sample to lowercase before matching, like this :
12358
12359 acl script_tag payload(0,500),lower -m reg <script>
12360
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012361All ACL-specific criteria imply a default matching method. Most often, these
12362criteria are composed by concatenating the name of the original sample fetch
12363method and the matching method. For example, "hdr_beg" applies the "beg" match
12364to samples retrieved using the "hdr" fetch method. Since all ACL-specific
12365criteria rely on a sample fetch method, it is always possible instead to use
12366the original sample fetch method and the explicit matching method using "-m".
Willy Tarreau2b5285d2010-05-09 23:45:24 +020012367
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012368If an alternate match is specified using "-m" on an ACL-specific criterion,
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030012369the matching method is simply applied to the underlying sample fetch method.
12370For example, all ACLs below are exact equivalent :
Willy Tarreau2b5285d2010-05-09 23:45:24 +020012371
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012372 acl short_form hdr_beg(host) www.
12373 acl alternate1 hdr_beg(host) -m beg www.
12374 acl alternate2 hdr_dom(host) -m beg www.
12375 acl alternate3 hdr(host) -m beg www.
Willy Tarreau2b5285d2010-05-09 23:45:24 +020012376
Willy Tarreau2b5285d2010-05-09 23:45:24 +020012377
Thierry FOURNIER2a06e392014-05-11 15:49:55 +020012378The table below summarizes the compatibility matrix between sample or converter
12379types and the pattern types to fetch against. It indicates for each compatible
12380combination the name of the matching method to be used, surrounded with angle
12381brackets ">" and "<" when the method is the default one and will work by
12382default without "-m".
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +010012383
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012384 +-------------------------------------------------+
12385 | Input sample type |
12386 +----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
Thierry FOURNIER2a06e392014-05-11 15:49:55 +020012387 | pattern type | boolean | integer | ip | string | binary |
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012388 +----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
12389 | none (presence only) | found | found | found | found | found |
12390 +----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
Thierry FOURNIER2a06e392014-05-11 15:49:55 +020012391 | none (boolean value) |> bool <| bool | | bool | |
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012392 +----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
Thierry FOURNIER2a06e392014-05-11 15:49:55 +020012393 | integer (value) | int |> int <| int | int | |
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012394 +----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
Thierry FOURNIERe3ded592013-12-06 15:36:54 +010012395 | integer (length) | len | len | len | len | len |
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012396 +----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
Thierry FOURNIER2a06e392014-05-11 15:49:55 +020012397 | IP address | | |> ip <| ip | ip |
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012398 +----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
Thierry FOURNIER2a06e392014-05-11 15:49:55 +020012399 | exact string | str | str | str |> str <| str |
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012400 +----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
Thierry FOURNIERe3ded592013-12-06 15:36:54 +010012401 | prefix | beg | beg | beg | beg | beg |
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012402 +----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
Thierry FOURNIERe3ded592013-12-06 15:36:54 +010012403 | suffix | end | end | end | end | end |
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012404 +----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
Thierry FOURNIERe3ded592013-12-06 15:36:54 +010012405 | substring | sub | sub | sub | sub | sub |
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012406 +----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
Thierry FOURNIERe3ded592013-12-06 15:36:54 +010012407 | subdir | dir | dir | dir | dir | dir |
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012408 +----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
Thierry FOURNIERe3ded592013-12-06 15:36:54 +010012409 | domain | dom | dom | dom | dom | dom |
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012410 +----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
Thierry FOURNIERe3ded592013-12-06 15:36:54 +010012411 | regex | reg | reg | reg | reg | reg |
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012412 +----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
12413 | hex block | | | | bin | bin |
12414 +----------------------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012415
12416
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +0200124177.1.1. Matching booleans
12418------------------------
12419
12420In order to match a boolean, no value is needed and all values are ignored.
12421Boolean matching is used by default for all fetch methods of type "boolean".
12422When boolean matching is used, the fetched value is returned as-is, which means
12423that a boolean "true" will always match and a boolean "false" will never match.
12424
12425Boolean matching may also be enforced using "-m bool" on fetch methods which
12426return an integer value. Then, integer value 0 is converted to the boolean
12427"false" and all other values are converted to "true".
12428
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012429
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +0200124307.1.2. Matching integers
12431------------------------
12432
12433Integer matching applies by default to integer fetch methods. It can also be
12434enforced on boolean fetches using "-m int". In this case, "false" is converted
12435to the integer 0, and "true" is converted to the integer 1.
12436
12437Integer matching also supports integer ranges and operators. Note that integer
12438matching only applies to positive values. A range is a value expressed with a
12439lower and an upper bound separated with a colon, both of which may be omitted.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012440
12441For instance, "1024:65535" is a valid range to represent a range of
12442unprivileged ports, and "1024:" would also work. "0:1023" is a valid
12443representation of privileged ports, and ":1023" would also work.
12444
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +020012445As a special case, some ACL functions support decimal numbers which are in fact
12446two integers separated by a dot. This is used with some version checks for
12447instance. All integer properties apply to those decimal numbers, including
12448ranges and operators.
12449
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012450For an easier usage, comparison operators are also supported. Note that using
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +010012451operators with ranges does not make much sense and is strongly discouraged.
12452Similarly, it does not make much sense to perform order comparisons with a set
12453of values.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012454
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +010012455Available operators for integer matching are :
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012456
12457 eq : true if the tested value equals at least one value
12458 ge : true if the tested value is greater than or equal to at least one value
12459 gt : true if the tested value is greater than at least one value
12460 le : true if the tested value is less than or equal to at least one value
12461 lt : true if the tested value is less than at least one value
12462
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +010012463For instance, the following ACL matches any negative Content-Length header :
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012464
12465 acl negative-length hdr_val(content-length) lt 0
12466
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +020012467This one matches SSL versions between 3.0 and 3.1 (inclusive) :
12468
12469 acl sslv3 req_ssl_ver 3:3.1
12470
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012471
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +0200124727.1.3. Matching strings
12473-----------------------
12474
12475String matching applies to string or binary fetch methods, and exists in 6
12476different forms :
12477
12478 - exact match (-m str) : the extracted string must exactly match the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012479 patterns;
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012480
12481 - substring match (-m sub) : the patterns are looked up inside the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012482 extracted string, and the ACL matches if any of them is found inside;
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012483
12484 - prefix match (-m beg) : the patterns are compared with the beginning of
12485 the extracted string, and the ACL matches if any of them matches.
12486
12487 - suffix match (-m end) : the patterns are compared with the end of the
12488 extracted string, and the ACL matches if any of them matches.
12489
Baptiste Assmann33db6002016-03-06 23:32:10 +010012490 - subdir match (-m dir) : the patterns are looked up inside the extracted
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012491 string, delimited with slashes ("/"), and the ACL matches if any of them
12492 matches.
12493
12494 - domain match (-m dom) : the patterns are looked up inside the extracted
12495 string, delimited with dots ("."), and the ACL matches if any of them
12496 matches.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012497
12498String matching applies to verbatim strings as they are passed, with the
12499exception of the backslash ("\") which makes it possible to escape some
12500characters such as the space. If the "-i" flag is passed before the first
12501string, then the matching will be performed ignoring the case. In order
12502to match the string "-i", either set it second, or pass the "--" flag
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +010012503before the first string. Same applies of course to match the string "--".
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012504
12505
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +0200125067.1.4. Matching regular expressions (regexes)
12507---------------------------------------------
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012508
12509Just like with string matching, regex matching applies to verbatim strings as
12510they are passed, with the exception of the backslash ("\") which makes it
12511possible to escape some characters such as the space. If the "-i" flag is
12512passed before the first regex, then the matching will be performed ignoring
12513the case. In order to match the string "-i", either set it second, or pass
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +010012514the "--" flag before the first string. Same principle applies of course to
12515match the string "--".
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012516
12517
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +0200125187.1.5. Matching arbitrary data blocks
12519-------------------------------------
12520
12521It is possible to match some extracted samples against a binary block which may
12522not safely be represented as a string. For this, the patterns must be passed as
12523a series of hexadecimal digits in an even number, when the match method is set
12524to binary. Each sequence of two digits will represent a byte. The hexadecimal
12525digits may be used upper or lower case.
12526
12527Example :
12528 # match "Hello\n" in the input stream (\x48 \x65 \x6c \x6c \x6f \x0a)
12529 acl hello payload(0,6) -m bin 48656c6c6f0a
12530
12531
125327.1.6. Matching IPv4 and IPv6 addresses
12533---------------------------------------
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012534
12535IPv4 addresses values can be specified either as plain addresses or with a
12536netmask appended, in which case the IPv4 address matches whenever it is
12537within the network. Plain addresses may also be replaced with a resolvable
Willy Tarreaud2a4aa22008-01-31 15:28:22 +010012538host name, but this practice is generally discouraged as it makes it more
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +010012539difficult to read and debug configurations. If hostnames are used, you should
12540at least ensure that they are present in /etc/hosts so that the configuration
12541does not depend on any random DNS match at the moment the configuration is
12542parsed.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012543
Daniel Schnellereba56342016-04-13 00:26:52 +020012544The dotted IPv4 address notation is supported in both regular as well as the
12545abbreviated form with all-0-octets omitted:
12546
12547 +------------------+------------------+------------------+
12548 | Example 1 | Example 2 | Example 3 |
12549 +------------------+------------------+------------------+
12550 | 192.168.0.1 | 10.0.0.12 | 127.0.0.1 |
12551 | 192.168.1 | 10.12 | 127.1 |
12552 | 192.168.0.1/22 | 10.0.0.12/8 | 127.0.0.1/8 |
12553 | 192.168.1/22 | 10.12/8 | 127.1/8 |
12554 +------------------+------------------+------------------+
12555
12556Notice that this is different from RFC 4632 CIDR address notation in which
12557192.168.42/24 would be equivalent to 192.168.42.0/24.
12558
Willy Tarreauceb4ac92012-04-28 00:41:46 +020012559IPv6 may be entered in their usual form, with or without a netmask appended.
12560Only bit counts are accepted for IPv6 netmasks. In order to avoid any risk of
12561trouble with randomly resolved IP addresses, host names are never allowed in
12562IPv6 patterns.
12563
12564HAProxy is also able to match IPv4 addresses with IPv6 addresses in the
12565following situations :
12566 - tested address is IPv4, pattern address is IPv4, the match applies
12567 in IPv4 using the supplied mask if any.
12568 - tested address is IPv6, pattern address is IPv6, the match applies
12569 in IPv6 using the supplied mask if any.
12570 - tested address is IPv6, pattern address is IPv4, the match applies in IPv4
12571 using the pattern's mask if the IPv6 address matches with 2002:IPV4::,
12572 ::IPV4 or ::ffff:IPV4, otherwise it fails.
12573 - tested address is IPv4, pattern address is IPv6, the IPv4 address is first
12574 converted to IPv6 by prefixing ::ffff: in front of it, then the match is
12575 applied in IPv6 using the supplied IPv6 mask.
12576
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012577
125787.2. Using ACLs to form conditions
12579----------------------------------
12580
12581Some actions are only performed upon a valid condition. A condition is a
12582combination of ACLs with operators. 3 operators are supported :
12583
12584 - AND (implicit)
12585 - OR (explicit with the "or" keyword or the "||" operator)
12586 - Negation with the exclamation mark ("!")
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012587
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012588A condition is formed as a disjunctive form:
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020012589
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012590 [!]acl1 [!]acl2 ... [!]acln { or [!]acl1 [!]acl2 ... [!]acln } ...
Willy Tarreaubef91e72013-03-31 23:14:46 +020012591
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012592Such conditions are generally used after an "if" or "unless" statement,
12593indicating when the condition will trigger the action.
Willy Tarreaubef91e72013-03-31 23:14:46 +020012594
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012595For instance, to block HTTP requests to the "*" URL with methods other than
12596"OPTIONS", as well as POST requests without content-length, and GET or HEAD
12597requests with a content-length greater than 0, and finally every request which
12598is not either GET/HEAD/POST/OPTIONS !
12599
12600 acl missing_cl hdr_cnt(Content-length) eq 0
Jarno Huuskonen84c51ec2017-04-03 14:20:34 +030012601 http-request deny if HTTP_URL_STAR !METH_OPTIONS || METH_POST missing_cl
12602 http-request deny if METH_GET HTTP_CONTENT
12603 http-request deny unless METH_GET or METH_POST or METH_OPTIONS
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012604
12605To select a different backend for requests to static contents on the "www" site
12606and to every request on the "img", "video", "download" and "ftp" hosts :
12607
12608 acl url_static path_beg /static /images /img /css
12609 acl url_static path_end .gif .png .jpg .css .js
12610 acl host_www hdr_beg(host) -i www
12611 acl host_static hdr_beg(host) -i img. video. download. ftp.
12612
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012613 # now use backend "static" for all static-only hosts, and for static URLs
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012614 # of host "www". Use backend "www" for the rest.
12615 use_backend static if host_static or host_www url_static
12616 use_backend www if host_www
12617
12618It is also possible to form rules using "anonymous ACLs". Those are unnamed ACL
12619expressions that are built on the fly without needing to be declared. They must
12620be enclosed between braces, with a space before and after each brace (because
12621the braces must be seen as independent words). Example :
12622
12623 The following rule :
12624
12625 acl missing_cl hdr_cnt(Content-length) eq 0
Jarno Huuskonen84c51ec2017-04-03 14:20:34 +030012626 http-request deny if METH_POST missing_cl
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012627
12628 Can also be written that way :
12629
Jarno Huuskonen84c51ec2017-04-03 14:20:34 +030012630 http-request deny if METH_POST { hdr_cnt(Content-length) eq 0 }
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012631
12632It is generally not recommended to use this construct because it's a lot easier
12633to leave errors in the configuration when written that way. However, for very
12634simple rules matching only one source IP address for instance, it can make more
12635sense to use them than to declare ACLs with random names. Another example of
12636good use is the following :
12637
12638 With named ACLs :
12639
12640 acl site_dead nbsrv(dynamic) lt 2
12641 acl site_dead nbsrv(static) lt 2
12642 monitor fail if site_dead
12643
12644 With anonymous ACLs :
12645
12646 monitor fail if { nbsrv(dynamic) lt 2 } || { nbsrv(static) lt 2 }
12647
Jarno Huuskonen84c51ec2017-04-03 14:20:34 +030012648See section 4.2 for detailed help on the "http-request deny" and "use_backend"
12649keywords.
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012650
12651
126527.3. Fetching samples
12653---------------------
12654
12655Historically, sample fetch methods were only used to retrieve data to match
12656against patterns using ACLs. With the arrival of stick-tables, a new class of
12657sample fetch methods was created, most often sharing the same syntax as their
12658ACL counterpart. These sample fetch methods are also known as "fetches". As
12659of now, ACLs and fetches have converged. All ACL fetch methods have been made
12660available as fetch methods, and ACLs may use any sample fetch method as well.
12661
12662This section details all available sample fetch methods and their output type.
12663Some sample fetch methods have deprecated aliases that are used to maintain
12664compatibility with existing configurations. They are then explicitly marked as
12665deprecated and should not be used in new setups.
12666
12667The ACL derivatives are also indicated when available, with their respective
12668matching methods. These ones all have a well defined default pattern matching
12669method, so it is never necessary (though allowed) to pass the "-m" option to
12670indicate how the sample will be matched using ACLs.
12671
12672As indicated in the sample type versus matching compatibility matrix above,
12673when using a generic sample fetch method in an ACL, the "-m" option is
12674mandatory unless the sample type is one of boolean, integer, IPv4 or IPv6. When
12675the same keyword exists as an ACL keyword and as a standard fetch method, the
12676ACL engine will automatically pick the ACL-only one by default.
12677
12678Some of these keywords support one or multiple mandatory arguments, and one or
12679multiple optional arguments. These arguments are strongly typed and are checked
12680when the configuration is parsed so that there is no risk of running with an
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012681incorrect argument (e.g. an unresolved backend name). Fetch function arguments
12682are passed between parenthesis and are delimited by commas. When an argument
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012683is optional, it will be indicated below between square brackets ('[ ]'). When
12684all arguments are optional, the parenthesis may be omitted.
12685
12686Thus, the syntax of a standard sample fetch method is one of the following :
12687 - name
12688 - name(arg1)
12689 - name(arg1,arg2)
12690
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020012691
126927.3.1. Converters
12693-----------------
12694
Willy Tarreaue6b11e42013-11-26 19:02:32 +010012695Sample fetch methods may be combined with transformations to be applied on top
12696of the fetched sample (also called "converters"). These combinations form what
12697is called "sample expressions" and the result is a "sample". Initially this
12698was only supported by "stick on" and "stick store-request" directives but this
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012699has now be extended to all places where samples may be used (ACLs, log-format,
Willy Tarreaue6b11e42013-11-26 19:02:32 +010012700unique-id-format, add-header, ...).
12701
12702These transformations are enumerated as a series of specific keywords after the
12703sample fetch method. These keywords may equally be appended immediately after
12704the fetch keyword's argument, delimited by a comma. These keywords can also
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012705support some arguments (e.g. a netmask) which must be passed in parenthesis.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +010012706
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010012707A certain category of converters are bitwise and arithmetic operators which
12708support performing basic operations on integers. Some bitwise operations are
12709supported (and, or, xor, cpl) and some arithmetic operations are supported
12710(add, sub, mul, div, mod, neg). Some comparators are provided (odd, even, not,
12711bool) which make it possible to report a match without having to write an ACL.
12712
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012713The currently available list of transformation keywords include :
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +010012714
Ben Shillitof25e8e52016-12-02 14:25:37 +00001271551d.single(<prop>[,<prop>*])
12716 Returns values for the properties requested as a string, where values are
12717 separated by the delimiter specified with "51degrees-property-separator".
12718 The device is identified using the User-Agent header passed to the
12719 converter. The function can be passed up to five property names, and if a
12720 property name can't be found, the value "NoData" is returned.
12721
12722 Example :
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012723 # Here the header "X-51D-DeviceTypeMobileTablet" is added to the request,
12724 # containing values for the three properties requested by using the
Ben Shillitof25e8e52016-12-02 14:25:37 +000012725 # User-Agent passed to the converter.
12726 frontend http-in
12727 bind *:8081
12728 default_backend servers
12729 http-request set-header X-51D-DeviceTypeMobileTablet \
12730 %[req.fhdr(User-Agent),51d.single(DeviceType,IsMobile,IsTablet)]
12731
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010012732add(<value>)
Thierry FOURNIER07ee64e2015-07-06 23:43:03 +020012733 Adds <value> to the input value of type signed integer, and returns the
Thierry FOURNIER5d86fae2015-07-07 21:10:16 +020012734 result as a signed integer. <value> can be a numeric value or a variable
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010012735 name. The name of the variable starts with an indication about its scope. The
12736 scopes allowed are:
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +010012737 "proc" : the variable is shared with the whole process
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010012738 "sess" : the variable is shared with the whole session
12739 "txn" : the variable is shared with the transaction (request and response)
12740 "req" : the variable is shared only during request processing
12741 "res" : the variable is shared only during response processing
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012742 This prefix is followed by a name. The separator is a '.'. The name may only
Christopher Fauletb71557a2016-10-31 10:49:03 +010012743 contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9', '.' and '_'.
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010012744
12745and(<value>)
Thierry FOURNIER07ee64e2015-07-06 23:43:03 +020012746 Performs a bitwise "AND" between <value> and the input value of type signed
Thierry FOURNIER5d86fae2015-07-07 21:10:16 +020012747 integer, and returns the result as an signed integer. <value> can be a
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010012748 numeric value or a variable name. The name of the variable starts with an
12749 indication about its scope. The scopes allowed are:
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +010012750 "proc" : the variable is shared with the whole process
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010012751 "sess" : the variable is shared with the whole session
12752 "txn" : the variable is shared with the transaction (request and response)
12753 "req" : the variable is shared only during request processing
12754 "res" : the variable is shared only during response processing
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012755 This prefix is followed by a name. The separator is a '.'. The name may only
Christopher Fauletb71557a2016-10-31 10:49:03 +010012756 contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9', '.' and '_'.
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010012757
Holger Just1bfc24b2017-05-06 00:56:53 +020012758b64dec
12759 Converts (decodes) a base64 encoded input string to its binary
12760 representation. It performs the inverse operation of base64().
12761
Emeric Brun53d1a982014-04-30 18:21:37 +020012762base64
12763 Converts a binary input sample to a base64 string. It is used to log or
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012764 transfer binary content in a way that can be reliably transferred (e.g.
Emeric Brun53d1a982014-04-30 18:21:37 +020012765 an SSL ID can be copied in a header).
12766
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010012767bool
Thierry FOURNIER07ee64e2015-07-06 23:43:03 +020012768 Returns a boolean TRUE if the input value of type signed integer is
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010012769 non-null, otherwise returns FALSE. Used in conjunction with and(), it can be
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012770 used to report true/false for bit testing on input values (e.g. verify the
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010012771 presence of a flag).
12772
Emeric Brun54c4ac82014-11-03 15:32:43 +010012773bytes(<offset>[,<length>])
12774 Extracts some bytes from an input binary sample. The result is a binary
12775 sample starting at an offset (in bytes) of the original sample and
Tim Düsterhus4896c442016-11-29 02:15:19 +010012776 optionally truncated at the given length.
Emeric Brun54c4ac82014-11-03 15:32:43 +010012777
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010012778cpl
Thierry FOURNIER07ee64e2015-07-06 23:43:03 +020012779 Takes the input value of type signed integer, applies a ones-complement
12780 (flips all bits) and returns the result as an signed integer.
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010012781
Willy Tarreau80599772015-01-20 19:35:24 +010012782crc32([<avalanche>])
12783 Hashes a binary input sample into an unsigned 32-bit quantity using the CRC32
12784 hash function. Optionally, it is possible to apply a full avalanche hash
12785 function to the output if the optional <avalanche> argument equals 1. This
12786 converter uses the same functions as used by the various hash-based load
12787 balancing algorithms, so it will provide exactly the same results. It is
12788 provided for compatibility with other software which want a CRC32 to be
12789 computed on some input keys, so it follows the most common implementation as
12790 found in Ethernet, Gzip, PNG, etc... It is slower than the other algorithms
12791 but may provide a better or at least less predictable distribution. It must
12792 not be used for security purposes as a 32-bit hash is trivial to break. See
12793 also "djb2", "sdbm", "wt6" and the "hash-type" directive.
12794
David Carlier29b3ca32015-09-25 14:09:21 +010012795da-csv-conv(<prop>[,<prop>*])
David Carlier4542b102015-06-01 13:54:29 +020012796 Asks the DeviceAtlas converter to identify the User Agent string passed on
12797 input, and to emit a string made of the concatenation of the properties
12798 enumerated in argument, delimited by the separator defined by the global
12799 keyword "deviceatlas-property-separator", or by default the pipe character
David Carlier840b0242016-03-16 10:09:55 +000012800 ('|'). There's a limit of 12 different properties imposed by the haproxy
David Carlier4542b102015-06-01 13:54:29 +020012801 configuration language.
12802
12803 Example:
12804 frontend www
Cyril Bonté307ee1e2015-09-28 23:16:06 +020012805 bind *:8881
12806 default_backend servers
David Carlier840b0242016-03-16 10:09:55 +000012807 http-request set-header X-DeviceAtlas-Data %[req.fhdr(User-Agent),da-csv(primaryHardwareType,osName,osVersion,browserName,browserVersion,browserRenderingEngine)]
David Carlier4542b102015-06-01 13:54:29 +020012808
Thierry FOURNIER9687c772015-05-07 15:46:29 +020012809debug
12810 This converter is used as debug tool. It dumps on screen the content and the
12811 type of the input sample. The sample is returned as is on its output. This
12812 converter only exists when haproxy was built with debugging enabled.
12813
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010012814div(<value>)
Thierry FOURNIER07ee64e2015-07-06 23:43:03 +020012815 Divides the input value of type signed integer by <value>, and returns the
12816 result as an signed integer. If <value> is null, the largest unsigned
Thierry FOURNIER5d86fae2015-07-07 21:10:16 +020012817 integer is returned (typically 2^63-1). <value> can be a numeric value or a
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010012818 variable name. The name of the variable starts with an indication about its
12819 scope. The scopes allowed are:
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +010012820 "proc" : the variable is shared with the whole process
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010012821 "sess" : the variable is shared with the whole session
12822 "txn" : the variable is shared with the transaction (request and response)
12823 "req" : the variable is shared only during request processing
12824 "res" : the variable is shared only during response processing
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012825 This prefix is followed by a name. The separator is a '.'. The name may only
Christopher Fauletb71557a2016-10-31 10:49:03 +010012826 contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9', '.' and '_'.
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010012827
Willy Tarreau23ec4ca2014-07-15 20:15:37 +020012828djb2([<avalanche>])
12829 Hashes a binary input sample into an unsigned 32-bit quantity using the DJB2
12830 hash function. Optionally, it is possible to apply a full avalanche hash
12831 function to the output if the optional <avalanche> argument equals 1. This
12832 converter uses the same functions as used by the various hash-based load
12833 balancing algorithms, so it will provide exactly the same results. It is
12834 mostly intended for debugging, but can be used as a stick-table entry to
12835 collect rough statistics. It must not be used for security purposes as a
Willy Tarreau80599772015-01-20 19:35:24 +010012836 32-bit hash is trivial to break. See also "crc32", "sdbm", "wt6" and the
12837 "hash-type" directive.
Willy Tarreau23ec4ca2014-07-15 20:15:37 +020012838
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010012839even
Thierry FOURNIER07ee64e2015-07-06 23:43:03 +020012840 Returns a boolean TRUE if the input value of type signed integer is even
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010012841 otherwise returns FALSE. It is functionally equivalent to "not,and(1),bool".
12842
Emeric Brunf399b0d2014-11-03 17:07:03 +010012843field(<index>,<delimiters>)
12844 Extracts the substring at the given index considering given delimiters from
12845 an input string. Indexes start at 1 and delimiters are a string formatted
12846 list of chars.
12847
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020012848hex
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012849 Converts a binary input sample to a hex string containing two hex digits per
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020012850 input byte. It is used to log or transfer hex dumps of some binary input data
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012851 in a way that can be reliably transferred (e.g. an SSL ID can be copied in a
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020012852 header).
Thierry FOURNIER2f49d6d2014-03-12 15:01:52 +010012853
Dragan Dosen3f957b22017-10-24 09:27:34 +020012854hex2i
12855 Converts a hex string containing two hex digits per input byte to an
12856 integer. If the input value can not be converted, then zero is returned.
12857
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020012858http_date([<offset>])
12859 Converts an integer supposed to contain a date since epoch to a string
12860 representing this date in a format suitable for use in HTTP header fields. If
12861 an offset value is specified, then it is a number of seconds that is added to
12862 the date before the conversion is operated. This is particularly useful to
12863 emit Date header fields, Expires values in responses when combined with a
12864 positive offset, or Last-Modified values when the offset is negative.
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020012865
Willy Tarreaud9f316a2014-07-10 14:03:38 +020012866in_table(<table>)
12867 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
12868 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, a boolean false
12869 is returned. Otherwise a boolean true is returned. This can be used to verify
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012870 the presence of a certain key in a table tracking some elements (e.g. whether
Willy Tarreaud9f316a2014-07-10 14:03:38 +020012871 or not a source IP address or an Authorization header was already seen).
12872
Tim Duesterhus1478aa72018-01-25 16:24:51 +010012873ipmask(<mask4>, [<mask6>])
12874 Apply a mask to an IP address, and use the result for lookups and storage.
Willy Tarreauffcb2e42014-07-10 16:29:08 +020012875 This can be used to make all hosts within a certain mask to share the same
Tim Duesterhus1478aa72018-01-25 16:24:51 +010012876 table entries and as such use the same server. The mask4 can be passed in
12877 dotted form (e.g. 255.255.255.0) or in CIDR form (e.g. 24). The mask6 can
12878 be passed in quadruplet form (e.g. ffff:ffff::) or in CIDR form (e.g. 64).
12879 If no mask6 is given IPv6 addresses will fail to convert for backwards
12880 compatibility reasons.
Willy Tarreauffcb2e42014-07-10 16:29:08 +020012881
Thierry FOURNIER317e1c42014-08-12 10:20:47 +020012882json([<input-code>])
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012883 Escapes the input string and produces an ASCII output string ready to use as a
Thierry FOURNIER317e1c42014-08-12 10:20:47 +020012884 JSON string. The converter tries to decode the input string according to the
Herve COMMOWICK8dfe8632016-08-05 12:01:20 +020012885 <input-code> parameter. It can be "ascii", "utf8", "utf8s", "utf8p" or
Thierry FOURNIER317e1c42014-08-12 10:20:47 +020012886 "utf8ps". The "ascii" decoder never fails. The "utf8" decoder detects 3 types
12887 of errors:
12888 - bad UTF-8 sequence (lone continuation byte, bad number of continuation
12889 bytes, ...)
12890 - invalid range (the decoded value is within a UTF-8 prohibited range),
12891 - code overlong (the value is encoded with more bytes than necessary).
12892
12893 The UTF-8 JSON encoding can produce a "too long value" error when the UTF-8
12894 character is greater than 0xffff because the JSON string escape specification
12895 only authorizes 4 hex digits for the value encoding. The UTF-8 decoder exists
12896 in 4 variants designated by a combination of two suffix letters : "p" for
12897 "permissive" and "s" for "silently ignore". The behaviors of the decoders
12898 are :
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012899 - "ascii" : never fails;
12900 - "utf8" : fails on any detected errors;
12901 - "utf8s" : never fails, but removes characters corresponding to errors;
Thierry FOURNIER317e1c42014-08-12 10:20:47 +020012902 - "utf8p" : accepts and fixes the overlong errors, but fails on any other
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012903 error;
Thierry FOURNIER317e1c42014-08-12 10:20:47 +020012904 - "utf8ps" : never fails, accepts and fixes the overlong errors, but removes
12905 characters corresponding to the other errors.
12906
12907 This converter is particularly useful for building properly escaped JSON for
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012908 logging to servers which consume JSON-formatted traffic logs.
Thierry FOURNIER317e1c42014-08-12 10:20:47 +020012909
12910 Example:
Thierry FOURNIER317e1c42014-08-12 10:20:47 +020012911 capture request header Host len 15
Herve COMMOWICK8dfe8632016-08-05 12:01:20 +020012912 capture request header user-agent len 150
12913 log-format '{"ip":"%[src]","user-agent":"%[capture.req.hdr(1),json(utf8s)]"}'
Thierry FOURNIER317e1c42014-08-12 10:20:47 +020012914
12915 Input request from client 127.0.0.1:
12916 GET / HTTP/1.0
12917 User-Agent: Very "Ugly" UA 1/2
12918
12919 Output log:
12920 {"ip":"127.0.0.1","user-agent":"Very \"Ugly\" UA 1\/2"}
12921
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020012922language(<value>[,<default>])
12923 Returns the value with the highest q-factor from a list as extracted from the
12924 "accept-language" header using "req.fhdr". Values with no q-factor have a
12925 q-factor of 1. Values with a q-factor of 0 are dropped. Only values which
12926 belong to the list of semi-colon delimited <values> will be considered. The
12927 argument <value> syntax is "lang[;lang[;lang[;...]]]". If no value matches the
12928 given list and a default value is provided, it is returned. Note that language
12929 names may have a variant after a dash ('-'). If this variant is present in the
12930 list, it will be matched, but if it is not, only the base language is checked.
12931 The match is case-sensitive, and the output string is always one of those
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012932 provided in arguments. The ordering of arguments is meaningless, only the
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020012933 ordering of the values in the request counts, as the first value among
12934 multiple sharing the same q-factor is used.
Thierry FOURNIERad903512014-04-11 17:51:01 +020012935
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020012936 Example :
Thierry FOURNIERad903512014-04-11 17:51:01 +020012937
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020012938 # this configuration switches to the backend matching a
12939 # given language based on the request :
Thierry FOURNIERad903512014-04-11 17:51:01 +020012940
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020012941 acl es req.fhdr(accept-language),language(es;fr;en) -m str es
12942 acl fr req.fhdr(accept-language),language(es;fr;en) -m str fr
12943 acl en req.fhdr(accept-language),language(es;fr;en) -m str en
12944 use_backend spanish if es
12945 use_backend french if fr
12946 use_backend english if en
12947 default_backend choose_your_language
Thierry FOURNIERad903512014-04-11 17:51:01 +020012948
Willy Tarreau60a2ee72017-12-15 07:13:48 +010012949length
Etienne Carriereed0d24e2017-12-13 13:41:34 +010012950 Get the length of the string. This can only be placed after a string
12951 sample fetch function or after a transformation keyword returning a string
12952 type. The result is of type integer.
12953
Willy Tarreauffcb2e42014-07-10 16:29:08 +020012954lower
12955 Convert a string sample to lower case. This can only be placed after a string
12956 sample fetch function or after a transformation keyword returning a string
12957 type. The result is of type string.
12958
Willy Tarreau0dbfdba2014-07-10 16:37:47 +020012959ltime(<format>[,<offset>])
12960 Converts an integer supposed to contain a date since epoch to a string
12961 representing this date in local time using a format defined by the <format>
12962 string using strftime(3). The purpose is to allow any date format to be used
12963 in logs. An optional <offset> in seconds may be applied to the input date
12964 (positive or negative). See the strftime() man page for the format supported
12965 by your operating system. See also the utime converter.
12966
12967 Example :
12968
12969 # Emit two colons, one with the local time and another with ip:port
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010012970 # e.g. 20140710162350 127.0.0.1:57325
Willy Tarreau0dbfdba2014-07-10 16:37:47 +020012971 log-format %[date,ltime(%Y%m%d%H%M%S)]\ %ci:%cp
12972
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020012973map(<map_file>[,<default_value>])
12974map_<match_type>(<map_file>[,<default_value>])
12975map_<match_type>_<output_type>(<map_file>[,<default_value>])
12976 Search the input value from <map_file> using the <match_type> matching method,
12977 and return the associated value converted to the type <output_type>. If the
12978 input value cannot be found in the <map_file>, the converter returns the
12979 <default_value>. If the <default_value> is not set, the converter fails and
12980 acts as if no input value could be fetched. If the <match_type> is not set, it
12981 defaults to "str". Likewise, if the <output_type> is not set, it defaults to
12982 "str". For convenience, the "map" keyword is an alias for "map_str" and maps a
12983 string to another string.
Thierry FOURNIERd5f624d2013-11-26 11:52:33 +010012984
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020012985 It is important to avoid overlapping between the keys : IP addresses and
12986 strings are stored in trees, so the first of the finest match will be used.
12987 Other keys are stored in lists, so the first matching occurrence will be used.
Thierry FOURNIERd5f624d2013-11-26 11:52:33 +010012988
Tim Düsterhus4896c442016-11-29 02:15:19 +010012989 The following array contains the list of all map functions available sorted by
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020012990 input type, match type and output type.
Thierry FOURNIERd5f624d2013-11-26 11:52:33 +010012991
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020012992 input type | match method | output type str | output type int | output type ip
12993 -----------+--------------+-----------------+-----------------+---------------
12994 str | str | map_str | map_str_int | map_str_ip
12995 -----------+--------------+-----------------+-----------------+---------------
Willy Tarreau787a4c02014-05-10 07:55:30 +020012996 str | beg | map_beg | map_beg_int | map_end_ip
12997 -----------+--------------+-----------------+-----------------+---------------
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020012998 str | sub | map_sub | map_sub_int | map_sub_ip
12999 -----------+--------------+-----------------+-----------------+---------------
13000 str | dir | map_dir | map_dir_int | map_dir_ip
13001 -----------+--------------+-----------------+-----------------+---------------
13002 str | dom | map_dom | map_dom_int | map_dom_ip
13003 -----------+--------------+-----------------+-----------------+---------------
13004 str | end | map_end | map_end_int | map_end_ip
13005 -----------+--------------+-----------------+-----------------+---------------
Ruoshan Huang3c5e3742016-12-02 16:25:31 +080013006 str | reg | map_reg | map_reg_int | map_reg_ip
13007 -----------+--------------+-----------------+-----------------+---------------
13008 str | reg | map_regm | map_reg_int | map_reg_ip
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020013009 -----------+--------------+-----------------+-----------------+---------------
13010 int | int | map_int | map_int_int | map_int_ip
13011 -----------+--------------+-----------------+-----------------+---------------
13012 ip | ip | map_ip | map_ip_int | map_ip_ip
13013 -----------+--------------+-----------------+-----------------+---------------
Thierry FOURNIERd5f624d2013-11-26 11:52:33 +010013014
Thierry Fournier8feaa662016-02-10 22:55:20 +010013015 The special map called "map_regm" expect matching zone in the regular
13016 expression and modify the output replacing back reference (like "\1") by
13017 the corresponding match text.
13018
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020013019 The file contains one key + value per line. Lines which start with '#' are
13020 ignored, just like empty lines. Leading tabs and spaces are stripped. The key
13021 is then the first "word" (series of non-space/tabs characters), and the value
13022 is what follows this series of space/tab till the end of the line excluding
13023 trailing spaces/tabs.
Thierry FOURNIERd5f624d2013-11-26 11:52:33 +010013024
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +020013025 Example :
13026
13027 # this is a comment and is ignored
13028 2.22.246.0/23 United Kingdom \n
13029 <-><-----------><--><------------><---->
13030 | | | | `- trailing spaces ignored
13031 | | | `---------- value
13032 | | `-------------------- middle spaces ignored
13033 | `---------------------------- key
13034 `------------------------------------ leading spaces ignored
13035
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010013036mod(<value>)
Thierry FOURNIER07ee64e2015-07-06 23:43:03 +020013037 Divides the input value of type signed integer by <value>, and returns the
13038 remainder as an signed integer. If <value> is null, then zero is returned.
Thierry FOURNIER5d86fae2015-07-07 21:10:16 +020013039 <value> can be a numeric value or a variable name. The name of the variable
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013040 starts with an indication about its scope. The scopes allowed are:
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +010013041 "proc" : the variable is shared with the whole process
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013042 "sess" : the variable is shared with the whole session
13043 "txn" : the variable is shared with the transaction (request and response)
13044 "req" : the variable is shared only during request processing
13045 "res" : the variable is shared only during response processing
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013046 This prefix is followed by a name. The separator is a '.'. The name may only
Christopher Fauletb71557a2016-10-31 10:49:03 +010013047 contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9', '.' and '_'.
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010013048
13049mul(<value>)
Thierry FOURNIER07ee64e2015-07-06 23:43:03 +020013050 Multiplies the input value of type signed integer by <value>, and returns
Thierry FOURNIER00c005c2015-07-08 01:10:21 +020013051 the product as an signed integer. In case of overflow, the largest possible
13052 value for the sign is returned so that the operation doesn't wrap around.
Thierry FOURNIER5d86fae2015-07-07 21:10:16 +020013053 <value> can be a numeric value or a variable name. The name of the variable
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013054 starts with an indication about its scope. The scopes allowed are:
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +010013055 "proc" : the variable is shared with the whole process
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013056 "sess" : the variable is shared with the whole session
13057 "txn" : the variable is shared with the transaction (request and response)
13058 "req" : the variable is shared only during request processing
13059 "res" : the variable is shared only during response processing
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013060 This prefix is followed by a name. The separator is a '.'. The name may only
Christopher Fauletb71557a2016-10-31 10:49:03 +010013061 contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9', '.' and '_'.
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010013062
Nenad Merdanovicb7e7c472017-03-12 21:56:55 +010013063nbsrv
13064 Takes an input value of type string, interprets it as a backend name and
13065 returns the number of usable servers in that backend. Can be used in places
13066 where we want to look up a backend from a dynamic name, like a result of a
13067 map lookup.
13068
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010013069neg
Thierry FOURNIER07ee64e2015-07-06 23:43:03 +020013070 Takes the input value of type signed integer, computes the opposite value,
13071 and returns the remainder as an signed integer. 0 is identity. This operator
13072 is provided for reversed subtracts : in order to subtract the input from a
13073 constant, simply perform a "neg,add(value)".
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010013074
13075not
Thierry FOURNIER07ee64e2015-07-06 23:43:03 +020013076 Returns a boolean FALSE if the input value of type signed integer is
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010013077 non-null, otherwise returns TRUE. Used in conjunction with and(), it can be
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013078 used to report true/false for bit testing on input values (e.g. verify the
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010013079 absence of a flag).
13080
13081odd
Thierry FOURNIER07ee64e2015-07-06 23:43:03 +020013082 Returns a boolean TRUE if the input value of type signed integer is odd
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010013083 otherwise returns FALSE. It is functionally equivalent to "and(1),bool".
13084
13085or(<value>)
Thierry FOURNIER07ee64e2015-07-06 23:43:03 +020013086 Performs a bitwise "OR" between <value> and the input value of type signed
Thierry FOURNIER5d86fae2015-07-07 21:10:16 +020013087 integer, and returns the result as an signed integer. <value> can be a
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013088 numeric value or a variable name. The name of the variable starts with an
13089 indication about its scope. The scopes allowed are:
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +010013090 "proc" : the variable is shared with the whole process
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013091 "sess" : the variable is shared with the whole session
13092 "txn" : the variable is shared with the transaction (request and response)
13093 "req" : the variable is shared only during request processing
13094 "res" : the variable is shared only during response processing
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013095 This prefix is followed by a name. The separator is a '.'. The name may only
Christopher Fauletb71557a2016-10-31 10:49:03 +010013096 contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9', '.' and '_'.
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010013097
Willy Tarreauc4dc3502015-01-23 20:39:28 +010013098regsub(<regex>,<subst>[,<flags>])
Willy Tarreau7eda8492015-01-20 19:47:06 +010013099 Applies a regex-based substitution to the input string. It does the same
13100 operation as the well-known "sed" utility with "s/<regex>/<subst>/". By
13101 default it will replace in the input string the first occurrence of the
13102 largest part matching the regular expression <regex> with the substitution
13103 string <subst>. It is possible to replace all occurrences instead by adding
13104 the flag "g" in the third argument <flags>. It is also possible to make the
13105 regex case insensitive by adding the flag "i" in <flags>. Since <flags> is a
13106 string, it is made up from the concatenation of all desired flags. Thus if
13107 both "i" and "g" are desired, using "gi" or "ig" will have the same effect.
13108 It is important to note that due to the current limitations of the
Baptiste Assmann66025d82016-03-06 23:36:48 +010013109 configuration parser, some characters such as closing parenthesis, closing
13110 square brackets or comma are not possible to use in the arguments. The first
13111 use of this converter is to replace certain characters or sequence of
13112 characters with other ones.
Willy Tarreau7eda8492015-01-20 19:47:06 +010013113
13114 Example :
13115
13116 # de-duplicate "/" in header "x-path".
13117 # input: x-path: /////a///b/c/xzxyz/
13118 # output: x-path: /a/b/c/xzxyz/
13119 http-request set-header x-path %[hdr(x-path),regsub(/+,/,g)]
13120
Thierry FOURNIER35ab2752015-05-28 13:22:03 +020013121capture-req(<id>)
13122 Capture the string entry in the request slot <id> and returns the entry as
13123 is. If the slot doesn't exist, the capture fails silently.
13124
13125 See also: "declare capture", "http-request capture",
Baptiste Assmann5ac425c2015-10-21 23:13:46 +020013126 "http-response capture", "capture.req.hdr" and
13127 "capture.res.hdr" (sample fetches).
Thierry FOURNIER35ab2752015-05-28 13:22:03 +020013128
13129capture-res(<id>)
13130 Capture the string entry in the response slot <id> and returns the entry as
13131 is. If the slot doesn't exist, the capture fails silently.
13132
13133 See also: "declare capture", "http-request capture",
Baptiste Assmann5ac425c2015-10-21 23:13:46 +020013134 "http-response capture", "capture.req.hdr" and
13135 "capture.res.hdr" (sample fetches).
Thierry FOURNIER35ab2752015-05-28 13:22:03 +020013136
Willy Tarreau23ec4ca2014-07-15 20:15:37 +020013137sdbm([<avalanche>])
13138 Hashes a binary input sample into an unsigned 32-bit quantity using the SDBM
13139 hash function. Optionally, it is possible to apply a full avalanche hash
13140 function to the output if the optional <avalanche> argument equals 1. This
13141 converter uses the same functions as used by the various hash-based load
13142 balancing algorithms, so it will provide exactly the same results. It is
13143 mostly intended for debugging, but can be used as a stick-table entry to
13144 collect rough statistics. It must not be used for security purposes as a
Willy Tarreau80599772015-01-20 19:35:24 +010013145 32-bit hash is trivial to break. See also "crc32", "djb2", "wt6" and the
13146 "hash-type" directive.
Willy Tarreau23ec4ca2014-07-15 20:15:37 +020013147
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +020013148set-var(<var name>)
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013149 Sets a variable with the input content and returns the content on the output
13150 as-is. The variable keeps the value and the associated input type. The name of
13151 the variable starts with an indication about its scope. The scopes allowed are:
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +010013152 "proc" : the variable is shared with the whole process
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013153 "sess" : the variable is shared with the whole session
13154 "txn" : the variable is shared with the transaction (request and
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +020013155 response),
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013156 "req" : the variable is shared only during request processing,
13157 "res" : the variable is shared only during response processing.
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +020013158 This prefix is followed by a name. The separator is a '.'. The name may only
Christopher Fauletb71557a2016-10-31 10:49:03 +010013159 contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9', '.' and '_'.
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +020013160
Dragan Dosen6e5a9ca2017-10-24 09:18:23 +020013161sha1
13162 Converts a binary input sample to a SHA1 digest. The result is a binary
13163 sample with length of 20 bytes.
13164
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010013165sub(<value>)
Thierry FOURNIER07ee64e2015-07-06 23:43:03 +020013166 Subtracts <value> from the input value of type signed integer, and returns
13167 the result as an signed integer. Note: in order to subtract the input from
Thierry FOURNIER5d86fae2015-07-07 21:10:16 +020013168 a constant, simply perform a "neg,add(value)". <value> can be a numeric value
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013169 or a variable name. The name of the variable starts with an indication about
13170 its scope. The scopes allowed are:
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +010013171 "proc" : the variable is shared with the whole process
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013172 "sess" : the variable is shared with the whole session
13173 "txn" : the variable is shared with the transaction (request and
Thierry FOURNIER5d86fae2015-07-07 21:10:16 +020013174 response),
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013175 "req" : the variable is shared only during request processing,
13176 "res" : the variable is shared only during response processing.
Thierry FOURNIER5d86fae2015-07-07 21:10:16 +020013177 This prefix is followed by a name. The separator is a '.'. The name may only
Christopher Fauletb71557a2016-10-31 10:49:03 +010013178 contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9', '.' and '_'.
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010013179
Willy Tarreaud9f316a2014-07-10 14:03:38 +020013180table_bytes_in_rate(<table>)
13181 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13182 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
13183 is returned. Otherwise the converter returns the average client-to-server
13184 bytes rate associated with the input sample in the designated table, measured
13185 in amount of bytes over the period configured in the table. See also the
13186 sc_bytes_in_rate sample fetch keyword.
13187
13188
13189table_bytes_out_rate(<table>)
13190 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13191 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
13192 is returned. Otherwise the converter returns the average server-to-client
13193 bytes rate associated with the input sample in the designated table, measured
13194 in amount of bytes over the period configured in the table. See also the
13195 sc_bytes_out_rate sample fetch keyword.
13196
13197table_conn_cnt(<table>)
13198 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13199 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013200 is returned. Otherwise the converter returns the cumulative number of incoming
Willy Tarreaud9f316a2014-07-10 14:03:38 +020013201 connections associated with the input sample in the designated table. See
13202 also the sc_conn_cnt sample fetch keyword.
13203
13204table_conn_cur(<table>)
13205 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13206 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
13207 is returned. Otherwise the converter returns the current amount of concurrent
13208 tracked connections associated with the input sample in the designated table.
13209 See also the sc_conn_cur sample fetch keyword.
13210
13211table_conn_rate(<table>)
13212 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13213 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
13214 is returned. Otherwise the converter returns the average incoming connection
13215 rate associated with the input sample in the designated table. See also the
13216 sc_conn_rate sample fetch keyword.
13217
Thierry FOURNIER236657b2015-08-19 08:25:14 +020013218table_gpt0(<table>)
13219 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13220 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, boolean value zero
13221 is returned. Otherwise the converter returns the current value of the first
13222 general purpose tag associated with the input sample in the designated table.
13223 See also the sc_get_gpt0 sample fetch keyword.
13224
Willy Tarreaud9f316a2014-07-10 14:03:38 +020013225table_gpc0(<table>)
13226 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13227 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
13228 is returned. Otherwise the converter returns the current value of the first
13229 general purpose counter associated with the input sample in the designated
13230 table. See also the sc_get_gpc0 sample fetch keyword.
13231
13232table_gpc0_rate(<table>)
13233 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13234 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
13235 is returned. Otherwise the converter returns the frequency which the gpc0
13236 counter was incremented over the configured period in the table, associated
13237 with the input sample in the designated table. See also the sc_get_gpc0_rate
13238 sample fetch keyword.
13239
13240table_http_err_cnt(<table>)
13241 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13242 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013243 is returned. Otherwise the converter returns the cumulative number of HTTP
Willy Tarreaud9f316a2014-07-10 14:03:38 +020013244 errors associated with the input sample in the designated table. See also the
13245 sc_http_err_cnt sample fetch keyword.
13246
13247table_http_err_rate(<table>)
13248 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13249 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
13250 is returned. Otherwise the average rate of HTTP errors associated with the
13251 input sample in the designated table, measured in amount of errors over the
13252 period configured in the table. See also the sc_http_err_rate sample fetch
13253 keyword.
13254
13255table_http_req_cnt(<table>)
13256 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13257 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013258 is returned. Otherwise the converter returns the cumulative number of HTTP
Willy Tarreaud9f316a2014-07-10 14:03:38 +020013259 requests associated with the input sample in the designated table. See also
13260 the sc_http_req_cnt sample fetch keyword.
13261
13262table_http_req_rate(<table>)
13263 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13264 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
13265 is returned. Otherwise the average rate of HTTP requests associated with the
13266 input sample in the designated table, measured in amount of requests over the
13267 period configured in the table. See also the sc_http_req_rate sample fetch
13268 keyword.
13269
13270table_kbytes_in(<table>)
13271 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13272 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013273 is returned. Otherwise the converter returns the cumulative number of client-
Willy Tarreaud9f316a2014-07-10 14:03:38 +020013274 to-server data associated with the input sample in the designated table,
13275 measured in kilobytes. The test is currently performed on 32-bit integers,
13276 which limits values to 4 terabytes. See also the sc_kbytes_in sample fetch
13277 keyword.
13278
13279table_kbytes_out(<table>)
13280 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13281 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013282 is returned. Otherwise the converter returns the cumulative number of server-
Willy Tarreaud9f316a2014-07-10 14:03:38 +020013283 to-client data associated with the input sample in the designated table,
13284 measured in kilobytes. The test is currently performed on 32-bit integers,
13285 which limits values to 4 terabytes. See also the sc_kbytes_out sample fetch
13286 keyword.
13287
13288table_server_id(<table>)
13289 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13290 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
13291 is returned. Otherwise the converter returns the server ID associated with
13292 the input sample in the designated table. A server ID is associated to a
13293 sample by a "stick" rule when a connection to a server succeeds. A server ID
13294 zero means that no server is associated with this key.
13295
13296table_sess_cnt(<table>)
13297 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13298 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013299 is returned. Otherwise the converter returns the cumulative number of incoming
Willy Tarreaud9f316a2014-07-10 14:03:38 +020013300 sessions associated with the input sample in the designated table. Note that
13301 a session here refers to an incoming connection being accepted by the
13302 "tcp-request connection" rulesets. See also the sc_sess_cnt sample fetch
13303 keyword.
13304
13305table_sess_rate(<table>)
13306 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13307 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
13308 is returned. Otherwise the converter returns the average incoming session
13309 rate associated with the input sample in the designated table. Note that a
13310 session here refers to an incoming connection being accepted by the
13311 "tcp-request connection" rulesets. See also the sc_sess_rate sample fetch
13312 keyword.
13313
13314table_trackers(<table>)
13315 Uses the string representation of the input sample to perform a look up in
13316 the specified table. If the key is not found in the table, integer value zero
13317 is returned. Otherwise the converter returns the current amount of concurrent
13318 connections tracking the same key as the input sample in the designated
13319 table. It differs from table_conn_cur in that it does not rely on any stored
13320 information but on the table's reference count (the "use" value which is
13321 returned by "show table" on the CLI). This may sometimes be more suited for
13322 layer7 tracking. It can be used to tell a server how many concurrent
13323 connections there are from a given address for example. See also the
13324 sc_trackers sample fetch keyword.
13325
Willy Tarreauffcb2e42014-07-10 16:29:08 +020013326upper
13327 Convert a string sample to upper case. This can only be placed after a string
13328 sample fetch function or after a transformation keyword returning a string
13329 type. The result is of type string.
13330
Thierry FOURNIER82ff3c92015-05-07 15:46:20 +020013331url_dec
13332 Takes an url-encoded string provided as input and returns the decoded
13333 version as output. The input and the output are of type string.
13334
Christopher Faulet85d79c92016-11-09 16:54:56 +010013335unset-var(<var name>)
13336 Unsets a variable if the input content is defined. The name of the variable
13337 starts with an indication about its scope. The scopes allowed are:
13338 "proc" : the variable is shared with the whole process
13339 "sess" : the variable is shared with the whole session
13340 "txn" : the variable is shared with the transaction (request and
13341 response),
13342 "req" : the variable is shared only during request processing,
13343 "res" : the variable is shared only during response processing.
13344 This prefix is followed by a name. The separator is a '.'. The name may only
13345 contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9', '.' and '_'.
13346
Willy Tarreau0dbfdba2014-07-10 16:37:47 +020013347utime(<format>[,<offset>])
13348 Converts an integer supposed to contain a date since epoch to a string
13349 representing this date in UTC time using a format defined by the <format>
13350 string using strftime(3). The purpose is to allow any date format to be used
13351 in logs. An optional <offset> in seconds may be applied to the input date
13352 (positive or negative). See the strftime() man page for the format supported
13353 by your operating system. See also the ltime converter.
13354
13355 Example :
13356
13357 # Emit two colons, one with the UTC time and another with ip:port
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013358 # e.g. 20140710162350 127.0.0.1:57325
Willy Tarreau0dbfdba2014-07-10 16:37:47 +020013359 log-format %[date,utime(%Y%m%d%H%M%S)]\ %ci:%cp
13360
Emeric Brunc9a0f6d2014-11-25 14:09:01 +010013361word(<index>,<delimiters>)
13362 Extracts the nth word considering given delimiters from an input string.
13363 Indexes start at 1 and delimiters are a string formatted list of chars.
13364
Willy Tarreau23ec4ca2014-07-15 20:15:37 +020013365wt6([<avalanche>])
13366 Hashes a binary input sample into an unsigned 32-bit quantity using the WT6
13367 hash function. Optionally, it is possible to apply a full avalanche hash
13368 function to the output if the optional <avalanche> argument equals 1. This
13369 converter uses the same functions as used by the various hash-based load
13370 balancing algorithms, so it will provide exactly the same results. It is
13371 mostly intended for debugging, but can be used as a stick-table entry to
13372 collect rough statistics. It must not be used for security purposes as a
Willy Tarreau80599772015-01-20 19:35:24 +010013373 32-bit hash is trivial to break. See also "crc32", "djb2", "sdbm", and the
13374 "hash-type" directive.
Willy Tarreau23ec4ca2014-07-15 20:15:37 +020013375
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010013376xor(<value>)
13377 Performs a bitwise "XOR" (exclusive OR) between <value> and the input value
Thierry FOURNIER07ee64e2015-07-06 23:43:03 +020013378 of type signed integer, and returns the result as an signed integer.
Thierry FOURNIER5d86fae2015-07-07 21:10:16 +020013379 <value> can be a numeric value or a variable name. The name of the variable
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013380 starts with an indication about its scope. The scopes allowed are:
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +010013381 "proc" : the variable is shared with the whole process
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013382 "sess" : the variable is shared with the whole session
13383 "txn" : the variable is shared with the transaction (request and
Thierry FOURNIER5d86fae2015-07-07 21:10:16 +020013384 response),
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013385 "req" : the variable is shared only during request processing,
13386 "res" : the variable is shared only during response processing.
Thierry FOURNIER5d86fae2015-07-07 21:10:16 +020013387 This prefix is followed by a name. The separator is a '.'. The name may only
Christopher Fauletb71557a2016-10-31 10:49:03 +010013388 contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9', '.' and '_'.
Willy Tarreau97707872015-01-27 15:12:13 +010013389
Thierry FOURNIER01e09742016-12-26 11:46:11 +010013390xxh32([<seed>])
13391 Hashes a binary input sample into an unsigned 32-bit quantity using the 32-bit
13392 variant of the XXHash hash function. This hash supports a seed which defaults
13393 to zero but a different value maybe passed as the <seed> argument. This hash
13394 is known to be very good and very fast so it can be used to hash URLs and/or
13395 URL parameters for use as stick-table keys to collect statistics with a low
13396 collision rate, though care must be taken as the algorithm is not considered
13397 as cryptographically secure.
13398
13399xxh64([<seed>])
13400 Hashes a binary input sample into a signed 64-bit quantity using the 64-bit
13401 variant of the XXHash hash function. This hash supports a seed which defaults
13402 to zero but a different value maybe passed as the <seed> argument. This hash
13403 is known to be very good and very fast so it can be used to hash URLs and/or
13404 URL parameters for use as stick-table keys to collect statistics with a low
13405 collision rate, though care must be taken as the algorithm is not considered
13406 as cryptographically secure.
13407
Thierry FOURNIERd5f624d2013-11-26 11:52:33 +010013408
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +0200134097.3.2. Fetching samples from internal states
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013410--------------------------------------------
13411
13412A first set of sample fetch methods applies to internal information which does
13413not even relate to any client information. These ones are sometimes used with
13414"monitor-fail" directives to report an internal status to external watchers.
13415The sample fetch methods described in this section are usable anywhere.
13416
13417always_false : boolean
13418 Always returns the boolean "false" value. It may be used with ACLs as a
13419 temporary replacement for another one when adjusting configurations.
13420
13421always_true : boolean
13422 Always returns the boolean "true" value. It may be used with ACLs as a
13423 temporary replacement for another one when adjusting configurations.
13424
13425avg_queue([<backend>]) : integer
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010013426 Returns the total number of queued connections of the designated backend
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013427 divided by the number of active servers. The current backend is used if no
13428 backend is specified. This is very similar to "queue" except that the size of
13429 the farm is considered, in order to give a more accurate measurement of the
13430 time it may take for a new connection to be processed. The main usage is with
13431 ACL to return a sorry page to new users when it becomes certain they will get
13432 a degraded service, or to pass to the backend servers in a header so that
13433 they decide to work in degraded mode or to disable some functions to speed up
13434 the processing a bit. Note that in the event there would not be any active
13435 server anymore, twice the number of queued connections would be considered as
13436 the measured value. This is a fair estimate, as we expect one server to get
13437 back soon anyway, but we still prefer to send new traffic to another backend
13438 if in better shape. See also the "queue", "be_conn", and "be_sess_rate"
13439 sample fetches.
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki346f76d2010-01-12 21:59:30 +010013440
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013441be_conn([<backend>]) : integer
Willy Tarreaua36af912009-10-10 12:02:45 +020013442 Applies to the number of currently established connections on the backend,
13443 possibly including the connection being evaluated. If no backend name is
13444 specified, the current one is used. But it is also possible to check another
13445 backend. It can be used to use a specific farm when the nominal one is full.
13446 See also the "fe_conn", "queue" and "be_sess_rate" criteria.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020013447
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013448be_sess_rate([<backend>]) : integer
13449 Returns an integer value corresponding to the sessions creation rate on the
13450 backend, in number of new sessions per second. This is used with ACLs to
13451 switch to an alternate backend when an expensive or fragile one reaches too
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013452 high a session rate, or to limit abuse of service (e.g. prevent sucking of an
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013453 online dictionary). It can also be useful to add this element to logs using a
13454 log-format directive.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010013455
13456 Example :
13457 # Redirect to an error page if the dictionary is requested too often
13458 backend dynamic
13459 mode http
13460 acl being_scanned be_sess_rate gt 100
13461 redirect location /denied.html if being_scanned
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +010013462
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013463bin(<hex>) : bin
Thierry FOURNIERcc103292015-06-06 19:30:17 +020013464 Returns a binary chain. The input is the hexadecimal representation
13465 of the string.
13466
13467bool(<bool>) : bool
13468 Returns a boolean value. <bool> can be 'true', 'false', '1' or '0'.
13469 'false' and '0' are the same. 'true' and '1' are the same.
13470
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013471connslots([<backend>]) : integer
13472 Returns an integer value corresponding to the number of connection slots
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030013473 still available in the backend, by totaling the maximum amount of
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013474 connections on all servers and the maximum queue size. This is probably only
13475 used with ACLs.
Tait Clarridge7896d522012-12-05 21:39:31 -050013476
Jeffrey 'jf' Lim5051d7b2008-09-04 01:03:03 +080013477 The basic idea here is to be able to measure the number of connection "slots"
Willy Tarreau55165fe2009-05-10 12:02:55 +020013478 still available (connection + queue), so that anything beyond that (intended
Jeffrey 'jf' Lim5051d7b2008-09-04 01:03:03 +080013479 usage; see "use_backend" keyword) can be redirected to a different backend.
13480
Willy Tarreau55165fe2009-05-10 12:02:55 +020013481 'connslots' = number of available server connection slots, + number of
13482 available server queue slots.
Jeffrey 'jf' Lim5051d7b2008-09-04 01:03:03 +080013483
Willy Tarreaua36af912009-10-10 12:02:45 +020013484 Note that while "fe_conn" may be used, "connslots" comes in especially
Willy Tarreau55165fe2009-05-10 12:02:55 +020013485 useful when you have a case of traffic going to one single ip, splitting into
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013486 multiple backends (perhaps using ACLs to do name-based load balancing) and
Willy Tarreau55165fe2009-05-10 12:02:55 +020013487 you want to be able to differentiate between different backends, and their
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013488 available "connslots". Also, whereas "nbsrv" only measures servers that are
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013489 actually *down*, this fetch is more fine-grained and looks into the number of
Willy Tarreaua36af912009-10-10 12:02:45 +020013490 available connection slots as well. See also "queue" and "avg_queue".
Jeffrey 'jf' Lim5051d7b2008-09-04 01:03:03 +080013491
Willy Tarreau55165fe2009-05-10 12:02:55 +020013492 OTHER CAVEATS AND NOTES: at this point in time, the code does not take care
13493 of dynamic connections. Also, if any of the server maxconn, or maxqueue is 0,
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013494 then this fetch clearly does not make sense, in which case the value returned
Willy Tarreau55165fe2009-05-10 12:02:55 +020013495 will be -1.
Jeffrey 'jf' Lim5051d7b2008-09-04 01:03:03 +080013496
Willy Tarreau6236d3a2013-07-25 14:28:25 +020013497date([<offset>]) : integer
13498 Returns the current date as the epoch (number of seconds since 01/01/1970).
13499 If an offset value is specified, then it is a number of seconds that is added
13500 to the current date before returning the value. This is particularly useful
13501 to compute relative dates, as both positive and negative offsets are allowed.
Willy Tarreau276fae92013-07-25 14:36:01 +020013502 It is useful combined with the http_date converter.
13503
13504 Example :
13505
13506 # set an expires header to now+1 hour in every response
13507 http-response set-header Expires %[date(3600),http_date]
Willy Tarreau6236d3a2013-07-25 14:28:25 +020013508
Etienne Carrierea792a0a2018-01-17 13:43:24 +010013509date_us : integer
13510 Return the microseconds part of the date (the "second" part is returned by
13511 date sample). This sample is coherent with the date sample as it is comes
13512 from the same timeval structure.
13513
Willy Tarreaud716f9b2017-10-13 11:03:15 +020013514distcc_body(<token>[,<occ>]) : binary
13515 Parses a distcc message and returns the body associated to occurrence #<occ>
13516 of the token <token>. Occurrences start at 1, and when unspecified, any may
13517 match though in practice only the first one is checked for now. This can be
13518 used to extract file names or arguments in files built using distcc through
13519 haproxy. Please refer to distcc's protocol documentation for the complete
13520 list of supported tokens.
13521
13522distcc_param(<token>[,<occ>]) : integer
13523 Parses a distcc message and returns the parameter associated to occurrence
13524 #<occ> of the token <token>. Occurrences start at 1, and when unspecified,
13525 any may match though in practice only the first one is checked for now. This
13526 can be used to extract certain information such as the protocol version, the
13527 file size or the argument in files built using distcc through haproxy.
13528 Another use case consists in waiting for the start of the preprocessed file
13529 contents before connecting to the server to avoid keeping idle connections.
13530 Please refer to distcc's protocol documentation for the complete list of
13531 supported tokens.
13532
13533 Example :
13534 # wait up to 20s for the pre-processed file to be uploaded
13535 tcp-request inspect-delay 20s
13536 tcp-request content accept if { distcc_param(DOTI) -m found }
13537 # send large files to the big farm
13538 use_backend big_farm if { distcc_param(DOTI) gt 1000000 }
13539
Willy Tarreau595ec542013-06-12 21:34:28 +020013540env(<name>) : string
13541 Returns a string containing the value of environment variable <name>. As a
13542 reminder, environment variables are per-process and are sampled when the
13543 process starts. This can be useful to pass some information to a next hop
13544 server, or with ACLs to take specific action when the process is started a
13545 certain way.
13546
13547 Examples :
13548 # Pass the Via header to next hop with the local hostname in it
13549 http-request add-header Via 1.1\ %[env(HOSTNAME)]
13550
13551 # reject cookie-less requests when the STOP environment variable is set
13552 http-request deny if !{ cook(SESSIONID) -m found } { env(STOP) -m found }
13553
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013554fe_conn([<frontend>]) : integer
13555 Returns the number of currently established connections on the frontend,
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010013556 possibly including the connection being evaluated. If no frontend name is
13557 specified, the current one is used. But it is also possible to check another
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013558 frontend. It can be used to return a sorry page before hard-blocking, or to
13559 use a specific backend to drain new requests when the farm is considered
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013560 full. This is mostly used with ACLs but can also be used to pass some
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013561 statistics to servers in HTTP headers. See also the "dst_conn", "be_conn",
13562 "fe_sess_rate" fetches.
Willy Tarreaua36af912009-10-10 12:02:45 +020013563
Nenad Merdanovicad9a7e92016-10-03 04:57:37 +020013564fe_req_rate([<frontend>]) : integer
13565 Returns an integer value corresponding to the number of HTTP requests per
13566 second sent to a frontend. This number can differ from "fe_sess_rate" in
13567 situations where client-side keep-alive is enabled.
13568
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013569fe_sess_rate([<frontend>]) : integer
13570 Returns an integer value corresponding to the sessions creation rate on the
13571 frontend, in number of new sessions per second. This is used with ACLs to
13572 limit the incoming session rate to an acceptable range in order to prevent
13573 abuse of service at the earliest moment, for example when combined with other
13574 layer 4 ACLs in order to force the clients to wait a bit for the rate to go
13575 down below the limit. It can also be useful to add this element to logs using
13576 a log-format directive. See also the "rate-limit sessions" directive for use
13577 in frontends.
Willy Tarreau079ff0a2009-03-05 21:34:28 +010013578
13579 Example :
13580 # This frontend limits incoming mails to 10/s with a max of 100
13581 # concurrent connections. We accept any connection below 10/s, and
13582 # force excess clients to wait for 100 ms. Since clients are limited to
13583 # 100 max, there cannot be more than 10 incoming mails per second.
13584 frontend mail
13585 bind :25
13586 mode tcp
13587 maxconn 100
13588 acl too_fast fe_sess_rate ge 10
13589 tcp-request inspect-delay 100ms
13590 tcp-request content accept if ! too_fast
13591 tcp-request content accept if WAIT_END
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +010013592
Nenad Merdanovic807a6e72017-03-12 22:00:00 +010013593hostname : string
13594 Returns the system hostname.
13595
Thierry FOURNIER07ee64e2015-07-06 23:43:03 +020013596int(<integer>) : signed integer
13597 Returns a signed integer.
13598
Thierry FOURNIERcc103292015-06-06 19:30:17 +020013599ipv4(<ipv4>) : ipv4
13600 Returns an ipv4.
13601
13602ipv6(<ipv6>) : ipv6
13603 Returns an ipv6.
13604
13605meth(<method>) : method
13606 Returns a method.
13607
Willy Tarreau0f30d262014-11-24 16:02:05 +010013608nbproc : integer
13609 Returns an integer value corresponding to the number of processes that were
13610 started (it equals the global "nbproc" setting). This is useful for logging
13611 and debugging purposes.
13612
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013613nbsrv([<backend>]) : integer
13614 Returns an integer value corresponding to the number of usable servers of
13615 either the current backend or the named backend. This is mostly used with
13616 ACLs but can also be useful when added to logs. This is normally used to
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010013617 switch to an alternate backend when the number of servers is too low to
13618 to handle some load. It is useful to report a failure when combined with
13619 "monitor fail".
Willy Tarreau079ff0a2009-03-05 21:34:28 +010013620
Willy Tarreau0f30d262014-11-24 16:02:05 +010013621proc : integer
13622 Returns an integer value corresponding to the position of the process calling
13623 the function, between 1 and global.nbproc. This is useful for logging and
13624 debugging purposes.
13625
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013626queue([<backend>]) : integer
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010013627 Returns the total number of queued connections of the designated backend,
13628 including all the connections in server queues. If no backend name is
13629 specified, the current one is used, but it is also possible to check another
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013630 one. This is useful with ACLs or to pass statistics to backend servers. This
13631 can be used to take actions when queuing goes above a known level, generally
13632 indicating a surge of traffic or a massive slowdown on the servers. One
13633 possible action could be to reject new users but still accept old ones. See
13634 also the "avg_queue", "be_conn", and "be_sess_rate" fetches.
13635
Willy Tarreau84310e22014-02-14 11:59:04 +010013636rand([<range>]) : integer
13637 Returns a random integer value within a range of <range> possible values,
13638 starting at zero. If the range is not specified, it defaults to 2^32, which
13639 gives numbers between 0 and 4294967295. It can be useful to pass some values
13640 needed to take some routing decisions for example, or just for debugging
13641 purposes. This random must not be used for security purposes.
13642
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013643srv_conn([<backend>/]<server>) : integer
13644 Returns an integer value corresponding to the number of currently established
13645 connections on the designated server, possibly including the connection being
13646 evaluated. If <backend> is omitted, then the server is looked up in the
13647 current backend. It can be used to use a specific farm when one server is
13648 full, or to inform the server about our view of the number of active
13649 connections with it. See also the "fe_conn", "be_conn" and "queue" fetch
13650 methods.
13651
13652srv_is_up([<backend>/]<server>) : boolean
13653 Returns true when the designated server is UP, and false when it is either
13654 DOWN or in maintenance mode. If <backend> is omitted, then the server is
13655 looked up in the current backend. It is mainly used to take action based on
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013656 an external status reported via a health check (e.g. a geographical site's
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013657 availability). Another possible use which is more of a hack consists in
13658 using dummy servers as boolean variables that can be enabled or disabled from
13659 the CLI, so that rules depending on those ACLs can be tweaked in realtime.
13660
Willy Tarreauff2b7af2017-10-13 11:46:26 +020013661srv_queue([<backend>/]<server>) : integer
13662 Returns an integer value corresponding to the number of connections currently
13663 pending in the designated server's queue. If <backend> is omitted, then the
13664 server is looked up in the current backend. It can sometimes be used together
13665 with the "use-server" directive to force to use a known faster server when it
13666 is not much loaded. See also the "srv_conn", "avg_queue" and "queue" sample
13667 fetch methods.
13668
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013669srv_sess_rate([<backend>/]<server>) : integer
13670 Returns an integer corresponding to the sessions creation rate on the
13671 designated server, in number of new sessions per second. If <backend> is
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030013672 omitted, then the server is looked up in the current backend. This is mostly
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013673 used with ACLs but can make sense with logs too. This is used to switch to an
13674 alternate backend when an expensive or fragile one reaches too high a session
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013675 rate, or to limit abuse of service (e.g. prevent latent requests from
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013676 overloading servers).
13677
13678 Example :
13679 # Redirect to a separate back
13680 acl srv1_full srv_sess_rate(be1/srv1) gt 50
13681 acl srv2_full srv_sess_rate(be1/srv2) gt 50
13682 use_backend be2 if srv1_full or srv2_full
13683
Willy Tarreau0f30d262014-11-24 16:02:05 +010013684stopping : boolean
13685 Returns TRUE if the process calling the function is currently stopping. This
13686 can be useful for logging, or for relaxing certain checks or helping close
13687 certain connections upon graceful shutdown.
13688
Thierry FOURNIERcc103292015-06-06 19:30:17 +020013689str(<string>) : string
13690 Returns a string.
13691
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013692table_avl([<table>]) : integer
13693 Returns the total number of available entries in the current proxy's
13694 stick-table or in the designated stick-table. See also table_cnt.
13695
13696table_cnt([<table>]) : integer
13697 Returns the total number of entries currently in use in the current proxy's
13698 stick-table or in the designated stick-table. See also src_conn_cnt and
13699 table_avl for other entry counting methods.
13700
Christopher Faulet34adb2a2017-11-21 21:45:38 +010013701thread : integer
13702 Returns an integer value corresponding to the position of the thread calling
13703 the function, between 0 and (global.nbthread-1). This is useful for logging
13704 and debugging purposes.
13705
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +020013706var(<var-name>) : undefined
13707 Returns a variable with the stored type. If the variable is not set, the
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013708 sample fetch fails. The name of the variable starts with an indication
13709 about its scope. The scopes allowed are:
Christopher Fauletff2613e2016-11-09 11:36:17 +010013710 "proc" : the variable is shared with the whole process
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013711 "sess" : the variable is shared with the whole session
13712 "txn" : the variable is shared with the transaction (request and
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +020013713 response),
Daniel Schneller0b547052016-03-21 20:46:57 +010013714 "req" : the variable is shared only during request processing,
13715 "res" : the variable is shared only during response processing.
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +020013716 This prefix is followed by a name. The separator is a '.'. The name may only
Christopher Fauletb71557a2016-10-31 10:49:03 +010013717 contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9', '.' and '_'.
Thierry FOURNIER4834bc72015-06-06 19:29:07 +020013718
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +0200137197.3.3. Fetching samples at Layer 4
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013720----------------------------------
13721
13722The layer 4 usually describes just the transport layer which in haproxy is
13723closest to the connection, where no content is yet made available. The fetch
13724methods described here are usable as low as the "tcp-request connection" rule
13725sets unless they require some future information. Those generally include
13726TCP/IP addresses and ports, as well as elements from stick-tables related to
Willy Tarreau4d4149c2013-07-23 19:33:46 +020013727the incoming connection. For retrieving a value from a sticky counters, the
13728counter number can be explicitly set as 0, 1, or 2 using the pre-defined
13729"sc0_", "sc1_", or "sc2_" prefix, or it can be specified as the first integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013730argument when using the "sc_" prefix. An optional table may be specified with
13731the "sc*" form, in which case the currently tracked key will be looked up into
13732this alternate table instead of the table currently being tracked.
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013733
13734be_id : integer
13735 Returns an integer containing the current backend's id. It can be used in
13736 frontends with responses to check which backend processed the request.
13737
Marcin Deranekd2471c22016-12-12 14:08:05 +010013738be_name : string
13739 Returns a string containing the current backend's name. It can be used in
13740 frontends with responses to check which backend processed the request.
13741
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013742dst : ip
13743 This is the destination IPv4 address of the connection on the client side,
13744 which is the address the client connected to. It can be useful when running
13745 in transparent mode. It is of type IP and works on both IPv4 and IPv6 tables.
13746 On IPv6 tables, IPv4 address is mapped to its IPv6 equivalent, according to
13747 RFC 4291.
13748
13749dst_conn : integer
13750 Returns an integer value corresponding to the number of currently established
13751 connections on the same socket including the one being evaluated. It is
13752 normally used with ACLs but can as well be used to pass the information to
13753 servers in an HTTP header or in logs. It can be used to either return a sorry
13754 page before hard-blocking, or to use a specific backend to drain new requests
13755 when the socket is considered saturated. This offers the ability to assign
13756 different limits to different listening ports or addresses. See also the
13757 "fe_conn" and "be_conn" fetches.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010013758
Willy Tarreau16e01562016-08-09 16:46:18 +020013759dst_is_local : boolean
13760 Returns true if the destination address of the incoming connection is local
13761 to the system, or false if the address doesn't exist on the system, meaning
13762 that it was intercepted in transparent mode. It can be useful to apply
13763 certain rules by default to forwarded traffic and other rules to the traffic
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013764 targeting the real address of the machine. For example the stats page could
Willy Tarreau16e01562016-08-09 16:46:18 +020013765 be delivered only on this address, or SSH access could be locally redirected.
13766 Please note that the check involves a few system calls, so it's better to do
13767 it only once per connection.
13768
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013769dst_port : integer
13770 Returns an integer value corresponding to the destination TCP port of the
13771 connection on the client side, which is the port the client connected to.
13772 This might be used when running in transparent mode, when assigning dynamic
13773 ports to some clients for a whole application session, to stick all users to
13774 a same server, or to pass the destination port information to a server using
13775 an HTTP header.
13776
Willy Tarreau60ca10a2017-08-18 15:26:54 +020013777fc_http_major : integer
13778 Reports the front connection's HTTP major version encoding, which may be 1
13779 for HTTP/0.9 to HTTP/1.1 or 2 for HTTP/2. Note, this is based on the on-wire
13780 encoding and not on the version present in the request header.
13781
Emeric Brun4f603012017-01-05 15:11:44 +010013782fc_rcvd_proxy : boolean
13783 Returns true if the client initiated the connection with a PROXY protocol
13784 header.
13785
Thierry Fournier / OZON.IO6310bef2016-07-24 20:16:50 +020013786fc_rtt(<unit>) : integer
13787 Returns the Round Trip Time (RTT) measured by the kernel for the client
13788 connection. <unit> is facultative, by default the unit is milliseconds. <unit>
13789 can be set to "ms" for milliseconds or "us" for microseconds. If the server
13790 connection is not established, if the connection is not TCP or if the
13791 operating system does not support TCP_INFO, for example Linux kernels before
13792 2.4, the sample fetch fails.
13793
13794fc_rttvar(<unit>) : integer
13795 Returns the Round Trip Time (RTT) variance measured by the kernel for the
13796 client connection. <unit> is facultative, by default the unit is milliseconds.
13797 <unit> can be set to "ms" for milliseconds or "us" for microseconds. If the
13798 server connection is not established, if the connection is not TCP or if the
13799 operating system does not support TCP_INFO, for example Linux kernels before
13800 2.4, the sample fetch fails.
13801
Joe Williams30fcd392016-08-10 07:06:44 -070013802fc_unacked(<unit>) : integer
13803 Returns the unacked counter measured by the kernel for the client connection.
13804 If the server connection is not established, if the connection is not TCP or
13805 if the operating system does not support TCP_INFO, for example Linux kernels
13806 before 2.4, the sample fetch fails.
13807
13808fc_sacked(<unit>) : integer
13809 Returns the sacked counter measured by the kernel for the client connection.
13810 If the server connection is not established, if the connection is not TCP or
13811 if the operating system does not support TCP_INFO, for example Linux kernels
13812 before 2.4, the sample fetch fails.
13813
13814fc_retrans(<unit>) : integer
13815 Returns the retransmits counter measured by the kernel for the client
13816 connection. If the server connection is not established, if the connection is
13817 not TCP or if the operating system does not support TCP_INFO, for example
13818 Linux kernels before 2.4, the sample fetch fails.
13819
13820fc_fackets(<unit>) : integer
13821 Returns the fack counter measured by the kernel for the client
13822 connection. If the server connection is not established, if the connection is
13823 not TCP or if the operating system does not support TCP_INFO, for example
13824 Linux kernels before 2.4, the sample fetch fails.
13825
13826fc_lost(<unit>) : integer
13827 Returns the lost counter measured by the kernel for the client
13828 connection. If the server connection is not established, if the connection is
13829 not TCP or if the operating system does not support TCP_INFO, for example
13830 Linux kernels before 2.4, the sample fetch fails.
13831
13832fc_reordering(<unit>) : integer
13833 Returns the reordering counter measured by the kernel for the client
13834 connection. If the server connection is not established, if the connection is
13835 not TCP or if the operating system does not support TCP_INFO, for example
13836 Linux kernels before 2.4, the sample fetch fails.
13837
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013838fe_id : integer
13839 Returns an integer containing the current frontend's id. It can be used in
Marcin Deranek6e413ed2016-12-13 12:40:01 +010013840 backends to check from which frontend it was called, or to stick all users
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020013841 coming via a same frontend to the same server.
13842
Marcin Deranekd2471c22016-12-12 14:08:05 +010013843fe_name : string
13844 Returns a string containing the current frontend's name. It can be used in
13845 backends to check from which frontend it was called, or to stick all users
13846 coming via a same frontend to the same server.
13847
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020013848sc_bytes_in_rate(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013849sc0_bytes_in_rate([<table>]) : integer
13850sc1_bytes_in_rate([<table>]) : integer
13851sc2_bytes_in_rate([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020013852 Returns the average client-to-server bytes rate from the currently tracked
13853 counters, measured in amount of bytes over the period configured in the
13854 table. See also src_bytes_in_rate.
13855
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020013856sc_bytes_out_rate(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013857sc0_bytes_out_rate([<table>]) : integer
13858sc1_bytes_out_rate([<table>]) : integer
13859sc2_bytes_out_rate([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020013860 Returns the average server-to-client bytes rate from the currently tracked
13861 counters, measured in amount of bytes over the period configured in the
13862 table. See also src_bytes_out_rate.
13863
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020013864sc_clr_gpc0(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013865sc0_clr_gpc0([<table>]) : integer
13866sc1_clr_gpc0([<table>]) : integer
13867sc2_clr_gpc0([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreauf73cd112011-08-13 01:45:16 +020013868 Clears the first General Purpose Counter associated to the currently tracked
13869 counters, and returns its previous value. Before the first invocation, the
Willy Tarreau869948b2013-01-04 14:14:57 +010013870 stored value is zero, so first invocation will always return zero. This is
13871 typically used as a second ACL in an expression in order to mark a connection
13872 when a first ACL was verified :
Willy Tarreauf73cd112011-08-13 01:45:16 +020013873
Jarno Huuskonen676f6222017-03-30 09:19:45 +030013874 Example:
Willy Tarreauf73cd112011-08-13 01:45:16 +020013875 # block if 5 consecutive requests continue to come faster than 10 sess
13876 # per second, and reset the counter as soon as the traffic slows down.
Willy Tarreaube4a3ef2013-06-17 15:04:07 +020013877 acl abuse sc0_http_req_rate gt 10
13878 acl kill sc0_inc_gpc0 gt 5
13879 acl save sc0_clr_gpc0 ge 0
Willy Tarreauf73cd112011-08-13 01:45:16 +020013880 tcp-request connection accept if !abuse save
13881 tcp-request connection reject if abuse kill
13882
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020013883sc_conn_cnt(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013884sc0_conn_cnt([<table>]) : integer
13885sc1_conn_cnt([<table>]) : integer
13886sc2_conn_cnt([<table>]) : integer
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013887 Returns the cumulative number of incoming connections from currently tracked
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020013888 counters. See also src_conn_cnt.
13889
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020013890sc_conn_cur(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013891sc0_conn_cur([<table>]) : integer
13892sc1_conn_cur([<table>]) : integer
13893sc2_conn_cur([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020013894 Returns the current amount of concurrent connections tracking the same
13895 tracked counters. This number is automatically incremented when tracking
13896 begins and decremented when tracking stops. See also src_conn_cur.
13897
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020013898sc_conn_rate(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013899sc0_conn_rate([<table>]) : integer
13900sc1_conn_rate([<table>]) : integer
13901sc2_conn_rate([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020013902 Returns the average connection rate from the currently tracked counters,
13903 measured in amount of connections over the period configured in the table.
13904 See also src_conn_rate.
13905
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020013906sc_get_gpc0(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013907sc0_get_gpc0([<table>]) : integer
13908sc1_get_gpc0([<table>]) : integer
13909sc2_get_gpc0([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020013910 Returns the value of the first General Purpose Counter associated to the
Willy Tarreau4d4149c2013-07-23 19:33:46 +020013911 currently tracked counters. See also src_get_gpc0 and sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_inc_gpc0.
Willy Tarreauba2ffd12013-05-29 15:54:14 +020013912
Thierry FOURNIER236657b2015-08-19 08:25:14 +020013913sc_get_gpt0(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
13914sc0_get_gpt0([<table>]) : integer
13915sc1_get_gpt0([<table>]) : integer
13916sc2_get_gpt0([<table>]) : integer
13917 Returns the value of the first General Purpose Tag associated to the
13918 currently tracked counters. See also src_get_gpt0.
13919
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020013920sc_gpc0_rate(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013921sc0_gpc0_rate([<table>]) : integer
13922sc1_gpc0_rate([<table>]) : integer
13923sc2_gpc0_rate([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreauba2ffd12013-05-29 15:54:14 +020013924 Returns the average increment rate of the first General Purpose Counter
13925 associated to the currently tracked counters. It reports the frequency
13926 which the gpc0 counter was incremented over the configured period. See also
Willy Tarreau4d4149c2013-07-23 19:33:46 +020013927 src_gpc0_rate, sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_get_gpc0, and sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_inc_gpc0. Note
13928 that the "gpc0_rate" counter must be stored in the stick-table for a value to
13929 be returned, as "gpc0" only holds the event count.
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020013930
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020013931sc_http_err_cnt(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013932sc0_http_err_cnt([<table>]) : integer
13933sc1_http_err_cnt([<table>]) : integer
13934sc2_http_err_cnt([<table>]) : integer
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013935 Returns the cumulative number of HTTP errors from the currently tracked
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020013936 counters. This includes the both request errors and 4xx error responses.
13937 See also src_http_err_cnt.
13938
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020013939sc_http_err_rate(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013940sc0_http_err_rate([<table>]) : integer
13941sc1_http_err_rate([<table>]) : integer
13942sc2_http_err_rate([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020013943 Returns the average rate of HTTP errors from the currently tracked counters,
13944 measured in amount of errors over the period configured in the table. This
13945 includes the both request errors and 4xx error responses. See also
13946 src_http_err_rate.
13947
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020013948sc_http_req_cnt(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013949sc0_http_req_cnt([<table>]) : integer
13950sc1_http_req_cnt([<table>]) : integer
13951sc2_http_req_cnt([<table>]) : integer
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010013952 Returns the cumulative number of HTTP requests from the currently tracked
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020013953 counters. This includes every started request, valid or not. See also
13954 src_http_req_cnt.
13955
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020013956sc_http_req_rate(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013957sc0_http_req_rate([<table>]) : integer
13958sc1_http_req_rate([<table>]) : integer
13959sc2_http_req_rate([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020013960 Returns the average rate of HTTP requests from the currently tracked
13961 counters, measured in amount of requests over the period configured in
13962 the table. This includes every started request, valid or not. See also
13963 src_http_req_rate.
13964
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020013965sc_inc_gpc0(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013966sc0_inc_gpc0([<table>]) : integer
13967sc1_inc_gpc0([<table>]) : integer
13968sc2_inc_gpc0([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020013969 Increments the first General Purpose Counter associated to the currently
Willy Tarreau869948b2013-01-04 14:14:57 +010013970 tracked counters, and returns its new value. Before the first invocation,
13971 the stored value is zero, so first invocation will increase it to 1 and will
13972 return 1. This is typically used as a second ACL in an expression in order
13973 to mark a connection when a first ACL was verified :
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020013974
Jarno Huuskonen676f6222017-03-30 09:19:45 +030013975 Example:
Willy Tarreaube4a3ef2013-06-17 15:04:07 +020013976 acl abuse sc0_http_req_rate gt 10
13977 acl kill sc0_inc_gpc0 gt 0
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020013978 tcp-request connection reject if abuse kill
13979
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020013980sc_kbytes_in(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013981sc0_kbytes_in([<table>]) : integer
13982sc1_kbytes_in([<table>]) : integer
13983sc2_kbytes_in([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreaua01b9742014-07-10 15:29:24 +020013984 Returns the total amount of client-to-server data from the currently tracked
13985 counters, measured in kilobytes. The test is currently performed on 32-bit
13986 integers, which limits values to 4 terabytes. See also src_kbytes_in.
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020013987
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020013988sc_kbytes_out(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013989sc0_kbytes_out([<table>]) : integer
13990sc1_kbytes_out([<table>]) : integer
13991sc2_kbytes_out([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreaua01b9742014-07-10 15:29:24 +020013992 Returns the total amount of server-to-client data from the currently tracked
13993 counters, measured in kilobytes. The test is currently performed on 32-bit
13994 integers, which limits values to 4 terabytes. See also src_kbytes_out.
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020013995
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020013996sc_sess_cnt(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020013997sc0_sess_cnt([<table>]) : integer
13998sc1_sess_cnt([<table>]) : integer
13999sc2_sess_cnt([<table>]) : integer
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010014000 Returns the cumulative number of incoming connections that were transformed
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020014001 into sessions, which means that they were accepted by a "tcp-request
14002 connection" rule, from the currently tracked counters. A backend may count
14003 more sessions than connections because each connection could result in many
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -040014004 backend sessions if some HTTP keep-alive is performed over the connection
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020014005 with the client. See also src_sess_cnt.
14006
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020014007sc_sess_rate(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020014008sc0_sess_rate([<table>]) : integer
14009sc1_sess_rate([<table>]) : integer
14010sc2_sess_rate([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020014011 Returns the average session rate from the currently tracked counters,
14012 measured in amount of sessions over the period configured in the table. A
14013 session is a connection that got past the early "tcp-request connection"
14014 rules. A backend may count more sessions than connections because each
14015 connection could result in many backend sessions if some HTTP keep-alive is
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -040014016 performed over the connection with the client. See also src_sess_rate.
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020014017
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020014018sc_tracked(<ctr>[,<table>]) : boolean
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020014019sc0_tracked([<table>]) : boolean
14020sc1_tracked([<table>]) : boolean
14021sc2_tracked([<table>]) : boolean
Willy Tarreau6f1615f2013-06-03 15:15:22 +020014022 Returns true if the designated session counter is currently being tracked by
14023 the current session. This can be useful when deciding whether or not we want
14024 to set some values in a header passed to the server.
14025
Cyril Bonté62ba8702014-04-22 23:52:25 +020014026sc_trackers(<ctr>[,<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau0f791d42013-07-23 19:56:43 +020014027sc0_trackers([<table>]) : integer
14028sc1_trackers([<table>]) : integer
14029sc2_trackers([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreau2406db42012-12-09 12:16:43 +010014030 Returns the current amount of concurrent connections tracking the same
14031 tracked counters. This number is automatically incremented when tracking
Willy Tarreaube4a3ef2013-06-17 15:04:07 +020014032 begins and decremented when tracking stops. It differs from sc0_conn_cur in
Willy Tarreau2406db42012-12-09 12:16:43 +010014033 that it does not rely on any stored information but on the table's reference
14034 count (the "use" value which is returned by "show table" on the CLI). This
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014035 may sometimes be more suited for layer7 tracking. It can be used to tell a
14036 server how many concurrent connections there are from a given address for
14037 example.
Willy Tarreau2406db42012-12-09 12:16:43 +010014038
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014039so_id : integer
14040 Returns an integer containing the current listening socket's id. It is useful
14041 in frontends involving many "bind" lines, or to stick all users coming via a
14042 same socket to the same server.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010014043
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014044src : ip
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010014045 This is the source IPv4 address of the client of the session. It is of type
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014046 IP and works on both IPv4 and IPv6 tables. On IPv6 tables, IPv4 addresses are
14047 mapped to their IPv6 equivalent, according to RFC 4291. Note that it is the
14048 TCP-level source address which is used, and not the address of a client
Bertrand Jacquin93b227d2016-06-04 15:11:10 +010014049 behind a proxy. However if the "accept-proxy" or "accept-netscaler-cip" bind
14050 directive is used, it can be the address of a client behind another
14051 PROXY-protocol compatible component for all rule sets except
14052 "tcp-request connection" which sees the real address.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010014053
Thierry FOURNIERd5f624d2013-11-26 11:52:33 +010014054 Example:
14055 # add an HTTP header in requests with the originating address' country
14056 http-request set-header X-Country %[src,map_ip(geoip.lst)]
14057
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014058src_bytes_in_rate([<table>]) : integer
14059 Returns the average bytes rate from the incoming connection's source address
14060 in the current proxy's stick-table or in the designated stick-table, measured
14061 in amount of bytes over the period configured in the table. If the address is
Willy Tarreau4d4149c2013-07-23 19:33:46 +020014062 not found, zero is returned. See also sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_bytes_in_rate.
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014063
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014064src_bytes_out_rate([<table>]) : integer
14065 Returns the average bytes rate to the incoming connection's source address in
14066 the current proxy's stick-table or in the designated stick-table, measured in
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014067 amount of bytes over the period configured in the table. If the address is
Willy Tarreau4d4149c2013-07-23 19:33:46 +020014068 not found, zero is returned. See also sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_bytes_out_rate.
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014069
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014070src_clr_gpc0([<table>]) : integer
14071 Clears the first General Purpose Counter associated to the incoming
14072 connection's source address in the current proxy's stick-table or in the
14073 designated stick-table, and returns its previous value. If the address is not
14074 found, an entry is created and 0 is returned. This is typically used as a
14075 second ACL in an expression in order to mark a connection when a first ACL
14076 was verified :
Willy Tarreauf73cd112011-08-13 01:45:16 +020014077
Jarno Huuskonen676f6222017-03-30 09:19:45 +030014078 Example:
Willy Tarreauf73cd112011-08-13 01:45:16 +020014079 # block if 5 consecutive requests continue to come faster than 10 sess
14080 # per second, and reset the counter as soon as the traffic slows down.
14081 acl abuse src_http_req_rate gt 10
14082 acl kill src_inc_gpc0 gt 5
Willy Tarreau869948b2013-01-04 14:14:57 +010014083 acl save src_clr_gpc0 ge 0
Willy Tarreauf73cd112011-08-13 01:45:16 +020014084 tcp-request connection accept if !abuse save
14085 tcp-request connection reject if abuse kill
14086
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014087src_conn_cnt([<table>]) : integer
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010014088 Returns the cumulative number of connections initiated from the current
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014089 incoming connection's source address in the current proxy's stick-table or in
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014090 the designated stick-table. If the address is not found, zero is returned.
Willy Tarreau4d4149c2013-07-23 19:33:46 +020014091 See also sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_conn_cnt.
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014092
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014093src_conn_cur([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014094 Returns the current amount of concurrent connections initiated from the
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014095 current incoming connection's source address in the current proxy's
14096 stick-table or in the designated stick-table. If the address is not found,
Willy Tarreau4d4149c2013-07-23 19:33:46 +020014097 zero is returned. See also sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_conn_cur.
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014098
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014099src_conn_rate([<table>]) : integer
14100 Returns the average connection rate from the incoming connection's source
14101 address in the current proxy's stick-table or in the designated stick-table,
14102 measured in amount of connections over the period configured in the table. If
Willy Tarreau4d4149c2013-07-23 19:33:46 +020014103 the address is not found, zero is returned. See also sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_conn_rate.
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014104
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014105src_get_gpc0([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014106 Returns the value of the first General Purpose Counter associated to the
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014107 incoming connection's source address in the current proxy's stick-table or in
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014108 the designated stick-table. If the address is not found, zero is returned.
Willy Tarreau4d4149c2013-07-23 19:33:46 +020014109 See also sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_get_gpc0 and src_inc_gpc0.
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014110
Thierry FOURNIER236657b2015-08-19 08:25:14 +020014111src_get_gpt0([<table>]) : integer
14112 Returns the value of the first General Purpose Tag associated to the
14113 incoming connection's source address in the current proxy's stick-table or in
14114 the designated stick-table. If the address is not found, zero is returned.
14115 See also sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_get_gpt0.
14116
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014117src_gpc0_rate([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreauba2ffd12013-05-29 15:54:14 +020014118 Returns the average increment rate of the first General Purpose Counter
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014119 associated to the incoming connection's source address in the current proxy's
Willy Tarreauba2ffd12013-05-29 15:54:14 +020014120 stick-table or in the designated stick-table. It reports the frequency
14121 which the gpc0 counter was incremented over the configured period. See also
Willy Tarreau4d4149c2013-07-23 19:33:46 +020014122 sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_gpc0_rate, src_get_gpc0, and sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_inc_gpc0. Note
14123 that the "gpc0_rate" counter must be stored in the stick-table for a value to
14124 be returned, as "gpc0" only holds the event count.
Willy Tarreauba2ffd12013-05-29 15:54:14 +020014125
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014126src_http_err_cnt([<table>]) : integer
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010014127 Returns the cumulative number of HTTP errors from the incoming connection's
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014128 source address in the current proxy's stick-table or in the designated
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014129 stick-table. This includes the both request errors and 4xx error responses.
Willy Tarreau4d4149c2013-07-23 19:33:46 +020014130 See also sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_http_err_cnt. If the address is not found, zero is
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014131 returned.
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014132
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014133src_http_err_rate([<table>]) : integer
14134 Returns the average rate of HTTP errors from the incoming connection's source
14135 address in the current proxy's stick-table or in the designated stick-table,
14136 measured in amount of errors over the period configured in the table. This
14137 includes the both request errors and 4xx error responses. If the address is
Willy Tarreau4d4149c2013-07-23 19:33:46 +020014138 not found, zero is returned. See also sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_http_err_rate.
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014139
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014140src_http_req_cnt([<table>]) : integer
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010014141 Returns the cumulative number of HTTP requests from the incoming connection's
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014142 source address in the current proxy's stick-table or in the designated stick-
14143 table. This includes every started request, valid or not. If the address is
Willy Tarreau4d4149c2013-07-23 19:33:46 +020014144 not found, zero is returned. See also sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_http_req_cnt.
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014145
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014146src_http_req_rate([<table>]) : integer
14147 Returns the average rate of HTTP requests from the incoming connection's
14148 source address in the current proxy's stick-table or in the designated stick-
14149 table, measured in amount of requests over the period configured in the
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014150 table. This includes every started request, valid or not. If the address is
Willy Tarreau4d4149c2013-07-23 19:33:46 +020014151 not found, zero is returned. See also sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_http_req_rate.
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014152
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014153src_inc_gpc0([<table>]) : integer
14154 Increments the first General Purpose Counter associated to the incoming
14155 connection's source address in the current proxy's stick-table or in the
14156 designated stick-table, and returns its new value. If the address is not
Willy Tarreaube4a3ef2013-06-17 15:04:07 +020014157 found, an entry is created and 1 is returned. See also sc0/sc2/sc2_inc_gpc0.
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014158 This is typically used as a second ACL in an expression in order to mark a
14159 connection when a first ACL was verified :
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014160
Jarno Huuskonen676f6222017-03-30 09:19:45 +030014161 Example:
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014162 acl abuse src_http_req_rate gt 10
Willy Tarreau869948b2013-01-04 14:14:57 +010014163 acl kill src_inc_gpc0 gt 0
Willy Tarreaue9656522010-08-17 15:40:09 +020014164 tcp-request connection reject if abuse kill
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014165
Willy Tarreau16e01562016-08-09 16:46:18 +020014166src_is_local : boolean
14167 Returns true if the source address of the incoming connection is local to the
14168 system, or false if the address doesn't exist on the system, meaning that it
14169 comes from a remote machine. Note that UNIX addresses are considered local.
14170 It can be useful to apply certain access restrictions based on where the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010014171 client comes from (e.g. require auth or https for remote machines). Please
Willy Tarreau16e01562016-08-09 16:46:18 +020014172 note that the check involves a few system calls, so it's better to do it only
14173 once per connection.
14174
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014175src_kbytes_in([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreaua01b9742014-07-10 15:29:24 +020014176 Returns the total amount of data received from the incoming connection's
14177 source address in the current proxy's stick-table or in the designated
14178 stick-table, measured in kilobytes. If the address is not found, zero is
14179 returned. The test is currently performed on 32-bit integers, which limits
14180 values to 4 terabytes. See also sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_kbytes_in.
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014181
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014182src_kbytes_out([<table>]) : integer
Willy Tarreaua01b9742014-07-10 15:29:24 +020014183 Returns the total amount of data sent to the incoming connection's source
14184 address in the current proxy's stick-table or in the designated stick-table,
14185 measured in kilobytes. If the address is not found, zero is returned. The
14186 test is currently performed on 32-bit integers, which limits values to 4
14187 terabytes. See also sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_kbytes_out.
Willy Tarreaua975b8f2010-06-05 19:13:27 +020014188
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014189src_port : integer
14190 Returns an integer value corresponding to the TCP source port of the
14191 connection on the client side, which is the port the client connected from.
14192 Usage of this function is very limited as modern protocols do not care much
14193 about source ports nowadays.
Willy Tarreau079ff0a2009-03-05 21:34:28 +010014194
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014195src_sess_cnt([<table>]) : integer
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010014196 Returns the cumulative number of connections initiated from the incoming
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014197 connection's source IPv4 address in the current proxy's stick-table or in the
14198 designated stick-table, that were transformed into sessions, which means that
14199 they were accepted by "tcp-request" rules. If the address is not found, zero
Willy Tarreau4d4149c2013-07-23 19:33:46 +020014200 is returned. See also sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_sess_cnt.
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014201
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014202src_sess_rate([<table>]) : integer
14203 Returns the average session rate from the incoming connection's source
14204 address in the current proxy's stick-table or in the designated stick-table,
14205 measured in amount of sessions over the period configured in the table. A
14206 session is a connection that went past the early "tcp-request" rules. If the
Willy Tarreau4d4149c2013-07-23 19:33:46 +020014207 address is not found, zero is returned. See also sc/sc0/sc1/sc2_sess_rate.
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014208
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014209src_updt_conn_cnt([<table>]) : integer
14210 Creates or updates the entry associated to the incoming connection's source
14211 address in the current proxy's stick-table or in the designated stick-table.
14212 This table must be configured to store the "conn_cnt" data type, otherwise
14213 the match will be ignored. The current count is incremented by one, and the
14214 expiration timer refreshed. The updated count is returned, so this match
14215 can't return zero. This was used to reject service abusers based on their
14216 source address. Note: it is recommended to use the more complete "track-sc*"
14217 actions in "tcp-request" rules instead.
Willy Tarreaua975b8f2010-06-05 19:13:27 +020014218
14219 Example :
14220 # This frontend limits incoming SSH connections to 3 per 10 second for
14221 # each source address, and rejects excess connections until a 10 second
14222 # silence is observed. At most 20 addresses are tracked.
14223 listen ssh
14224 bind :22
14225 mode tcp
14226 maxconn 100
Willy Tarreauc9705a12010-07-27 20:05:50 +020014227 stick-table type ip size 20 expire 10s store conn_cnt
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014228 tcp-request content reject if { src_updt_conn_cnt gt 3 }
Willy Tarreaua975b8f2010-06-05 19:13:27 +020014229 server local 127.0.0.1:22
14230
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014231srv_id : integer
14232 Returns an integer containing the server's id when processing the response.
14233 While it's almost only used with ACLs, it may be used for logging or
14234 debugging.
Hervé COMMOWICKdaa824e2011-08-05 12:09:44 +020014235
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +0200142367.3.4. Fetching samples at Layer 5
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014237----------------------------------
Willy Tarreau0b1cd942010-05-16 22:18:27 +020014238
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014239The layer 5 usually describes just the session layer which in haproxy is
14240closest to the session once all the connection handshakes are finished, but
14241when no content is yet made available. The fetch methods described here are
14242usable as low as the "tcp-request content" rule sets unless they require some
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030014243future information. Those generally include the results of SSL negotiations.
Willy Tarreauc735a072011-03-29 00:57:02 +020014244
Ben Shillitof25e8e52016-12-02 14:25:37 +00001424551d.all(<prop>[,<prop>*]) : string
14246 Returns values for the properties requested as a string, where values are
14247 separated by the delimiter specified with "51degrees-property-separator".
14248 The device is identified using all the important HTTP headers from the
14249 request. The function can be passed up to five property names, and if a
14250 property name can't be found, the value "NoData" is returned.
14251
14252 Example :
14253 # Here the header "X-51D-DeviceTypeMobileTablet" is added to the request
14254 # containing the three properties requested using all relevant headers from
14255 # the request.
14256 frontend http-in
14257 bind *:8081
14258 default_backend servers
14259 http-request set-header X-51D-DeviceTypeMobileTablet \
14260 %[51d.all(DeviceType,IsMobile,IsTablet)]
14261
Emeric Brun645ae792014-04-30 14:21:06 +020014262ssl_bc : boolean
14263 Returns true when the back connection was made via an SSL/TLS transport
14264 layer and is locally deciphered. This means the outgoing connection was made
14265 other a server with the "ssl" option.
14266
14267ssl_bc_alg_keysize : integer
14268 Returns the symmetric cipher key size supported in bits when the outgoing
14269 connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer.
14270
14271ssl_bc_cipher : string
14272 Returns the name of the used cipher when the outgoing connection was made
14273 over an SSL/TLS transport layer.
14274
14275ssl_bc_protocol : string
14276 Returns the name of the used protocol when the outgoing connection was made
14277 over an SSL/TLS transport layer.
14278
Emeric Brunb73a9b02014-04-30 18:49:19 +020014279ssl_bc_unique_id : binary
Emeric Brun645ae792014-04-30 14:21:06 +020014280 When the outgoing connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer,
Emeric Brunb73a9b02014-04-30 18:49:19 +020014281 returns the TLS unique ID as defined in RFC5929 section 3. The unique id
14282 can be encoded to base64 using the converter: "ssl_bc_unique_id,base64".
Emeric Brun645ae792014-04-30 14:21:06 +020014283
14284ssl_bc_session_id : binary
14285 Returns the SSL ID of the back connection when the outgoing connection was
14286 made over an SSL/TLS transport layer. It is useful to log if we want to know
14287 if session was reused or not.
14288
14289ssl_bc_use_keysize : integer
14290 Returns the symmetric cipher key size used in bits when the outgoing
14291 connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer.
14292
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014293ssl_c_ca_err : integer
14294 When the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer,
14295 returns the ID of the first error detected during verification of the client
14296 certificate at depth > 0, or 0 if no error was encountered during this
14297 verification process. Please refer to your SSL library's documentation to
14298 find the exhaustive list of error codes.
Willy Tarreauc735a072011-03-29 00:57:02 +020014299
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014300ssl_c_ca_err_depth : integer
14301 When the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer,
14302 returns the depth in the CA chain of the first error detected during the
14303 verification of the client certificate. If no error is encountered, 0 is
14304 returned.
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +010014305
Emeric Brun43e79582014-10-29 19:03:26 +010014306ssl_c_der : binary
14307 Returns the DER formatted certificate presented by the client when the
14308 incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer. When used for
14309 an ACL, the value(s) to match against can be passed in hexadecimal form.
14310
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014311ssl_c_err : integer
14312 When the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer,
14313 returns the ID of the first error detected during verification at depth 0, or
14314 0 if no error was encountered during this verification process. Please refer
14315 to your SSL library's documentation to find the exhaustive list of error
14316 codes.
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +020014317
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014318ssl_c_i_dn([<entry>[,<occ>]]) : string
14319 When the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer,
14320 returns the full distinguished name of the issuer of the certificate
14321 presented by the client when no <entry> is specified, or the value of the
14322 first given entry found from the beginning of the DN. If a positive/negative
14323 occurrence number is specified as the optional second argument, it returns
14324 the value of the nth given entry value from the beginning/end of the DN.
14325 For instance, "ssl_c_i_dn(OU,2)" the second organization unit, and
14326 "ssl_c_i_dn(CN)" retrieves the common name.
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +020014327
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014328ssl_c_key_alg : string
14329 Returns the name of the algorithm used to generate the key of the certificate
14330 presented by the client when the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS
14331 transport layer.
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +020014332
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014333ssl_c_notafter : string
14334 Returns the end date presented by the client as a formatted string
14335 YYMMDDhhmmss[Z] when the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS
14336 transport layer.
Emeric Brunbede3d02009-06-30 17:54:00 +020014337
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014338ssl_c_notbefore : string
14339 Returns the start date presented by the client as a formatted string
14340 YYMMDDhhmmss[Z] when the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS
14341 transport layer.
Willy Tarreaub6672b52011-12-12 17:23:41 +010014342
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014343ssl_c_s_dn([<entry>[,<occ>]]) : string
14344 When the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer,
14345 returns the full distinguished name of the subject of the certificate
14346 presented by the client when no <entry> is specified, or the value of the
14347 first given entry found from the beginning of the DN. If a positive/negative
14348 occurrence number is specified as the optional second argument, it returns
14349 the value of the nth given entry value from the beginning/end of the DN.
14350 For instance, "ssl_c_s_dn(OU,2)" the second organization unit, and
14351 "ssl_c_s_dn(CN)" retrieves the common name.
Willy Tarreaub6672b52011-12-12 17:23:41 +010014352
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014353ssl_c_serial : binary
14354 Returns the serial of the certificate presented by the client when the
14355 incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer. When used for
14356 an ACL, the value(s) to match against can be passed in hexadecimal form.
Emeric Brun2525b6b2012-10-18 15:59:43 +020014357
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014358ssl_c_sha1 : binary
14359 Returns the SHA-1 fingerprint of the certificate presented by the client when
14360 the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer. This can be
14361 used to stick a client to a server, or to pass this information to a server.
Willy Tarreau2d0caa32014-07-02 19:01:22 +020014362 Note that the output is binary, so if you want to pass that signature to the
14363 server, you need to encode it in hex or base64, such as in the example below:
14364
Jarno Huuskonen676f6222017-03-30 09:19:45 +030014365 Example:
Willy Tarreau2d0caa32014-07-02 19:01:22 +020014366 http-request set-header X-SSL-Client-SHA1 %[ssl_c_sha1,hex]
Emeric Brun2525b6b2012-10-18 15:59:43 +020014367
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014368ssl_c_sig_alg : string
14369 Returns the name of the algorithm used to sign the certificate presented by
14370 the client when the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport
14371 layer.
Emeric Brun87855892012-10-17 17:39:35 +020014372
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014373ssl_c_used : boolean
14374 Returns true if current SSL session uses a client certificate even if current
14375 connection uses SSL session resumption. See also "ssl_fc_has_crt".
Emeric Brun7f56e742012-10-19 18:15:40 +020014376
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014377ssl_c_verify : integer
14378 Returns the verify result error ID when the incoming connection was made over
14379 an SSL/TLS transport layer, otherwise zero if no error is encountered. Please
14380 refer to your SSL library's documentation for an exhaustive list of error
14381 codes.
Emeric Brunce5ad802012-10-22 14:11:22 +020014382
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014383ssl_c_version : integer
14384 Returns the version of the certificate presented by the client when the
14385 incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer.
Emeric Brunce5ad802012-10-22 14:11:22 +020014386
Emeric Brun43e79582014-10-29 19:03:26 +010014387ssl_f_der : binary
14388 Returns the DER formatted certificate presented by the frontend when the
14389 incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer. When used for
14390 an ACL, the value(s) to match against can be passed in hexadecimal form.
14391
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014392ssl_f_i_dn([<entry>[,<occ>]]) : string
14393 When the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer,
14394 returns the full distinguished name of the issuer of the certificate
14395 presented by the frontend when no <entry> is specified, or the value of the
14396 first given entry found from the beginning of the DN. If a positive/negative
Emeric Brun87855892012-10-17 17:39:35 +020014397 occurrence number is specified as the optional second argument, it returns
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014398 the value of the nth given entry value from the beginning/end of the DN.
14399 For instance, "ssl_f_i_dn(OU,2)" the second organization unit, and
14400 "ssl_f_i_dn(CN)" retrieves the common name.
Emeric Brun87855892012-10-17 17:39:35 +020014401
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014402ssl_f_key_alg : string
14403 Returns the name of the algorithm used to generate the key of the certificate
14404 presented by the frontend when the incoming connection was made over an
14405 SSL/TLS transport layer.
Emeric Brun7f56e742012-10-19 18:15:40 +020014406
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014407ssl_f_notafter : string
14408 Returns the end date presented by the frontend as a formatted string
14409 YYMMDDhhmmss[Z] when the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS
14410 transport layer.
Emeric Brun2525b6b2012-10-18 15:59:43 +020014411
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014412ssl_f_notbefore : string
14413 Returns the start date presented by the frontend as a formatted string
14414 YYMMDDhhmmss[Z] when the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS
14415 transport layer.
Emeric Brun87855892012-10-17 17:39:35 +020014416
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014417ssl_f_s_dn([<entry>[,<occ>]]) : string
14418 When the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer,
14419 returns the full distinguished name of the subject of the certificate
14420 presented by the frontend when no <entry> is specified, or the value of the
14421 first given entry found from the beginning of the DN. If a positive/negative
14422 occurrence number is specified as the optional second argument, it returns
14423 the value of the nth given entry value from the beginning/end of the DN.
14424 For instance, "ssl_f_s_dn(OU,2)" the second organization unit, and
14425 "ssl_f_s_dn(CN)" retrieves the common name.
Emeric Brunce5ad802012-10-22 14:11:22 +020014426
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014427ssl_f_serial : binary
14428 Returns the serial of the certificate presented by the frontend when the
14429 incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer. When used for
14430 an ACL, the value(s) to match against can be passed in hexadecimal form.
Emeric Brun87855892012-10-17 17:39:35 +020014431
Emeric Brun55f4fa82014-04-30 17:11:25 +020014432ssl_f_sha1 : binary
14433 Returns the SHA-1 fingerprint of the certificate presented by the frontend
14434 when the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer. This
14435 can be used to know which certificate was chosen using SNI.
14436
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014437ssl_f_sig_alg : string
14438 Returns the name of the algorithm used to sign the certificate presented by
14439 the frontend when the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport
14440 layer.
Emeric Brun7f56e742012-10-19 18:15:40 +020014441
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014442ssl_f_version : integer
14443 Returns the version of the certificate presented by the frontend when the
14444 incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer.
14445
14446ssl_fc : boolean
Emeric Brun2525b6b2012-10-18 15:59:43 +020014447 Returns true when the front connection was made via an SSL/TLS transport
14448 layer and is locally deciphered. This means it has matched a socket declared
14449 with a "bind" line having the "ssl" option.
14450
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014451 Example :
14452 # This passes "X-Proto: https" to servers when client connects over SSL
14453 listen http-https
14454 bind :80
14455 bind :443 ssl crt /etc/haproxy.pem
14456 http-request add-header X-Proto https if { ssl_fc }
14457
14458ssl_fc_alg_keysize : integer
14459 Returns the symmetric cipher key size supported in bits when the incoming
14460 connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer.
14461
14462ssl_fc_alpn : string
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030014463 This extracts the Application Layer Protocol Negotiation field from an
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014464 incoming connection made via a TLS transport layer and locally deciphered by
14465 haproxy. The result is a string containing the protocol name advertised by
14466 the client. The SSL library must have been built with support for TLS
14467 extensions enabled (check haproxy -vv). Note that the TLS ALPN extension is
14468 not advertised unless the "alpn" keyword on the "bind" line specifies a
14469 protocol list. Also, nothing forces the client to pick a protocol from this
14470 list, any other one may be requested. The TLS ALPN extension is meant to
14471 replace the TLS NPN extension. See also "ssl_fc_npn".
14472
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014473ssl_fc_cipher : string
14474 Returns the name of the used cipher when the incoming connection was made
14475 over an SSL/TLS transport layer.
Willy Tarreauab861d32013-04-02 02:30:41 +020014476
Thierry FOURNIER5bf77322017-02-25 12:45:22 +010014477ssl_fc_cipherlist_bin : binary
14478 Returns the binary form of the client hello cipher list. The maximum returned
14479 value length is according with the value of
Emmanuel Hocdetaaee7502017-03-07 18:34:58 +010014480 "tune.ssl.capture-cipherlist-size".
Thierry FOURNIER5bf77322017-02-25 12:45:22 +010014481
14482ssl_fc_cipherlist_hex : string
14483 Returns the binary form of the client hello cipher list encoded as
14484 hexadecimal. The maximum returned value length is according with the value of
Emmanuel Hocdetaaee7502017-03-07 18:34:58 +010014485 "tune.ssl.capture-cipherlist-size".
Thierry FOURNIER5bf77322017-02-25 12:45:22 +010014486
14487ssl_fc_cipherlist_str : string
14488 Returns the decoded text form of the client hello cipher list. The maximum
14489 number of ciphers returned is according with the value of
14490 "tune.ssl.capture-cipherlist-size". Note that this sample-fetch is only
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010014491 available with OpenSSL >= 1.0.2. If the function is not enabled, this
Emmanuel Hocdetddcde192017-09-01 17:32:08 +020014492 sample-fetch returns the hash like "ssl_fc_cipherlist_xxh".
Thierry FOURNIER5bf77322017-02-25 12:45:22 +010014493
14494ssl_fc_cipherlist_xxh : integer
14495 Returns a xxh64 of the cipher list. This hash can be return only is the value
14496 "tune.ssl.capture-cipherlist-size" is set greater than 0, however the hash
Emmanuel Hocdetaaee7502017-03-07 18:34:58 +010014497 take in account all the data of the cipher list.
Thierry FOURNIER5bf77322017-02-25 12:45:22 +010014498
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014499ssl_fc_has_crt : boolean
Emeric Brun2525b6b2012-10-18 15:59:43 +020014500 Returns true if a client certificate is present in an incoming connection over
14501 SSL/TLS transport layer. Useful if 'verify' statement is set to 'optional'.
Emeric Brun9143d372012-12-20 15:44:16 +010014502 Note: on SSL session resumption with Session ID or TLS ticket, client
14503 certificate is not present in the current connection but may be retrieved
14504 from the cache or the ticket. So prefer "ssl_c_used" if you want to check if
14505 current SSL session uses a client certificate.
Emeric Brun2525b6b2012-10-18 15:59:43 +020014506
Olivier Houchardccaa7de2017-10-02 11:51:03 +020014507ssl_fc_has_early : boolean
14508 Returns true if early data were sent, and the handshake didn't happen yet. As
14509 it has security implications, it is useful to be able to refuse those, or
14510 wait until the handshake happened.
14511
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014512ssl_fc_has_sni : boolean
14513 This checks for the presence of a Server Name Indication TLS extension (SNI)
Willy Tarreauf7bc57c2012-10-03 00:19:48 +020014514 in an incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer. Returns
14515 true when the incoming connection presents a TLS SNI field. This requires
14516 that the SSL library is build with support for TLS extensions enabled (check
14517 haproxy -vv).
Willy Tarreau7875d092012-09-10 08:20:03 +020014518
Nenad Merdanovic1516fe32016-05-17 03:31:21 +020014519ssl_fc_is_resumed : boolean
Nenad Merdanovic26ea8222015-05-18 02:28:57 +020014520 Returns true if the SSL/TLS session has been resumed through the use of
Jérôme Magnin4a326cb2018-01-15 14:01:17 +010014521 SSL session cache or TLS tickets on an incoming connection over an SSL/TLS
14522 transport layer.
Nenad Merdanovic26ea8222015-05-18 02:28:57 +020014523
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014524ssl_fc_npn : string
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030014525 This extracts the Next Protocol Negotiation field from an incoming connection
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014526 made via a TLS transport layer and locally deciphered by haproxy. The result
14527 is a string containing the protocol name advertised by the client. The SSL
14528 library must have been built with support for TLS extensions enabled (check
14529 haproxy -vv). Note that the TLS NPN extension is not advertised unless the
14530 "npn" keyword on the "bind" line specifies a protocol list. Also, nothing
14531 forces the client to pick a protocol from this list, any other one may be
14532 requested. Please note that the TLS NPN extension was replaced with ALPN.
Willy Tarreaua33c6542012-10-15 13:19:06 +020014533
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014534ssl_fc_protocol : string
14535 Returns the name of the used protocol when the incoming connection was made
14536 over an SSL/TLS transport layer.
Willy Tarreau7875d092012-09-10 08:20:03 +020014537
Emeric Brunb73a9b02014-04-30 18:49:19 +020014538ssl_fc_unique_id : binary
David Sc1ad52e2014-04-08 18:48:47 -040014539 When the incoming connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer,
Emeric Brunb73a9b02014-04-30 18:49:19 +020014540 returns the TLS unique ID as defined in RFC5929 section 3. The unique id
14541 can be encoded to base64 using the converter: "ssl_bc_unique_id,base64".
David Sc1ad52e2014-04-08 18:48:47 -040014542
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014543ssl_fc_session_id : binary
14544 Returns the SSL ID of the front connection when the incoming connection was
14545 made over an SSL/TLS transport layer. It is useful to stick a given client to
14546 a server. It is important to note that some browsers refresh their session ID
14547 every few minutes.
Willy Tarreau7875d092012-09-10 08:20:03 +020014548
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014549ssl_fc_sni : string
14550 This extracts the Server Name Indication TLS extension (SNI) field from an
14551 incoming connection made via an SSL/TLS transport layer and locally
14552 deciphered by haproxy. The result (when present) typically is a string
14553 matching the HTTPS host name (253 chars or less). The SSL library must have
14554 been built with support for TLS extensions enabled (check haproxy -vv).
14555
14556 This fetch is different from "req_ssl_sni" above in that it applies to the
14557 connection being deciphered by haproxy and not to SSL contents being blindly
14558 forwarded. See also "ssl_fc_sni_end" and "ssl_fc_sni_reg" below. This
Cyril Bonté9c1eb1e2012-10-09 22:45:34 +020014559 requires that the SSL library is build with support for TLS extensions
14560 enabled (check haproxy -vv).
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +020014561
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014562 ACL derivatives :
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014563 ssl_fc_sni_end : suffix match
14564 ssl_fc_sni_reg : regex match
Emeric Brun589fcad2012-10-16 14:13:26 +020014565
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014566ssl_fc_use_keysize : integer
14567 Returns the symmetric cipher key size used in bits when the incoming
14568 connection was made over an SSL/TLS transport layer.
Willy Tarreaub6fb4202008-07-20 11:18:28 +020014569
Willy Tarreaub6fb4202008-07-20 11:18:28 +020014570
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +0200145717.3.5. Fetching samples from buffer contents (Layer 6)
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014572------------------------------------------------------
Willy Tarreaub6fb4202008-07-20 11:18:28 +020014573
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014574Fetching samples from buffer contents is a bit different from the previous
14575sample fetches above because the sampled data are ephemeral. These data can
14576only be used when they're available and will be lost when they're forwarded.
14577For this reason, samples fetched from buffer contents during a request cannot
14578be used in a response for example. Even while the data are being fetched, they
14579can change. Sometimes it is necessary to set some delays or combine multiple
14580sample fetch methods to ensure that the expected data are complete and usable,
14581for example through TCP request content inspection. Please see the "tcp-request
14582content" keyword for more detailed information on the subject.
Willy Tarreau62644772008-07-16 18:36:06 +020014583
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014584payload(<offset>,<length>) : binary (deprecated)
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010014585 This is an alias for "req.payload" when used in the context of a request (e.g.
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014586 "stick on", "stick match"), and for "res.payload" when used in the context of
14587 a response such as in "stick store response".
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +010014588
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014589payload_lv(<offset1>,<length>[,<offset2>]) : binary (deprecated)
14590 This is an alias for "req.payload_lv" when used in the context of a request
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010014591 (e.g. "stick on", "stick match"), and for "res.payload_lv" when used in the
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014592 context of a response such as in "stick store response".
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +010014593
Thierry FOURNIERd7d88812017-04-19 15:15:14 +020014594req.hdrs : string
14595 Returns the current request headers as string including the last empty line
14596 separating headers from the request body. The last empty line can be used to
14597 detect a truncated header block. This sample fetch is useful for some SPOE
14598 headers analyzers and for advanced logging.
14599
Thierry FOURNIER5617dce2017-04-09 05:38:19 +020014600req.hdrs_bin : binary
14601 Returns the current request headers contained in preparsed binary form. This
14602 is useful for offloading some processing with SPOE. Each string is described
14603 by a length followed by the number of bytes indicated in the length. The
14604 length is represented using the variable integer encoding detailed in the
14605 SPOE documentation. The end of the list is marked by a couple of empty header
14606 names and values (length of 0 for both).
14607
14608 *(<str:header-name><str:header-value>)<empty string><empty string>
14609
14610 int: refer to the SPOE documentation for the encoding
14611 str: <int:length><bytes>
14612
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014613req.len : integer
14614req_len : integer (deprecated)
14615 Returns an integer value corresponding to the number of bytes present in the
14616 request buffer. This is mostly used in ACL. It is important to understand
14617 that this test does not return false as long as the buffer is changing. This
14618 means that a check with equality to zero will almost always immediately match
14619 at the beginning of the session, while a test for more data will wait for
14620 that data to come in and return false only when haproxy is certain that no
14621 more data will come in. This test was designed to be used with TCP request
14622 content inspection.
Willy Tarreaua7ad50c2012-04-29 15:39:40 +020014623
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014624req.payload(<offset>,<length>) : binary
14625 This extracts a binary block of <length> bytes and starting at byte <offset>
Willy Tarreau00f00842013-08-02 11:07:32 +020014626 in the request buffer. As a special case, if the <length> argument is zero,
14627 the the whole buffer from <offset> to the end is extracted. This can be used
14628 with ACLs in order to check for the presence of some content in a buffer at
14629 any location.
Willy Tarreaua7ad50c2012-04-29 15:39:40 +020014630
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014631 ACL alternatives :
14632 payload(<offset>,<length>) : hex binary match
Willy Tarreaua7ad50c2012-04-29 15:39:40 +020014633
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014634req.payload_lv(<offset1>,<length>[,<offset2>]) : binary
14635 This extracts a binary block whose size is specified at <offset1> for <length>
14636 bytes, and which starts at <offset2> if specified or just after the length in
14637 the request buffer. The <offset2> parameter also supports relative offsets if
14638 prepended with a '+' or '-' sign.
Willy Tarreaua7ad50c2012-04-29 15:39:40 +020014639
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014640 ACL alternatives :
14641 payload_lv(<offset1>,<length>[,<offset2>]) : hex binary match
Willy Tarreaua7ad50c2012-04-29 15:39:40 +020014642
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014643 Example : please consult the example from the "stick store-response" keyword.
Willy Tarreaua7ad50c2012-04-29 15:39:40 +020014644
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014645req.proto_http : boolean
14646req_proto_http : boolean (deprecated)
14647 Returns true when data in the request buffer look like HTTP and correctly
14648 parses as such. It is the same parser as the common HTTP request parser which
14649 is used so there should be no surprises. The test does not match until the
14650 request is complete, failed or timed out. This test may be used to report the
14651 protocol in TCP logs, but the biggest use is to block TCP request analysis
14652 until a complete HTTP request is present in the buffer, for example to track
14653 a header.
Willy Tarreaua7ad50c2012-04-29 15:39:40 +020014654
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014655 Example:
14656 # track request counts per "base" (concatenation of Host+URL)
14657 tcp-request inspect-delay 10s
14658 tcp-request content reject if !HTTP
Willy Tarreaube4a3ef2013-06-17 15:04:07 +020014659 tcp-request content track-sc0 base table req-rate
Willy Tarreaua7ad50c2012-04-29 15:39:40 +020014660
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014661req.rdp_cookie([<name>]) : string
14662rdp_cookie([<name>]) : string (deprecated)
14663 When the request buffer looks like the RDP protocol, extracts the RDP cookie
14664 <name>, or any cookie if unspecified. The parser only checks for the first
14665 cookie, as illustrated in the RDP protocol specification. The cookie name is
14666 case insensitive. Generally the "MSTS" cookie name will be used, as it can
14667 contain the user name of the client connecting to the server if properly
14668 configured on the client. The "MSTSHASH" cookie is often used as well for
14669 session stickiness to servers.
Willy Tarreau04aa6a92012-04-06 18:57:55 +020014670
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014671 This differs from "balance rdp-cookie" in that any balancing algorithm may be
14672 used and thus the distribution of clients to backend servers is not linked to
14673 a hash of the RDP cookie. It is envisaged that using a balancing algorithm
14674 such as "balance roundrobin" or "balance leastconn" will lead to a more even
14675 distribution of clients to backend servers than the hash used by "balance
14676 rdp-cookie".
Willy Tarreau04aa6a92012-04-06 18:57:55 +020014677
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014678 ACL derivatives :
14679 req_rdp_cookie([<name>]) : exact string match
Willy Tarreau04aa6a92012-04-06 18:57:55 +020014680
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014681 Example :
14682 listen tse-farm
14683 bind 0.0.0.0:3389
14684 # wait up to 5s for an RDP cookie in the request
14685 tcp-request inspect-delay 5s
14686 tcp-request content accept if RDP_COOKIE
14687 # apply RDP cookie persistence
14688 persist rdp-cookie
14689 # Persist based on the mstshash cookie
14690 # This is only useful makes sense if
14691 # balance rdp-cookie is not used
14692 stick-table type string size 204800
14693 stick on req.rdp_cookie(mstshash)
14694 server srv1 1.1.1.1:3389
14695 server srv1 1.1.1.2:3389
Willy Tarreau04aa6a92012-04-06 18:57:55 +020014696
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014697 See also : "balance rdp-cookie", "persist rdp-cookie", "tcp-request" and the
14698 "req_rdp_cookie" ACL.
Willy Tarreau04aa6a92012-04-06 18:57:55 +020014699
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014700req.rdp_cookie_cnt([name]) : integer
14701rdp_cookie_cnt([name]) : integer (deprecated)
14702 Tries to parse the request buffer as RDP protocol, then returns an integer
14703 corresponding to the number of RDP cookies found. If an optional cookie name
14704 is passed, only cookies matching this name are considered. This is mostly
14705 used in ACL.
Willy Tarreau04aa6a92012-04-06 18:57:55 +020014706
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014707 ACL derivatives :
14708 req_rdp_cookie_cnt([<name>]) : integer match
Willy Tarreau04aa6a92012-04-06 18:57:55 +020014709
Nenad Merdanovic5fc7d7e2015-07-07 22:00:17 +020014710req.ssl_ec_ext : boolean
14711 Returns a boolean identifying if client sent the Supported Elliptic Curves
14712 Extension as defined in RFC4492, section 5.1. within the SSL ClientHello
Cyril Bonté307ee1e2015-09-28 23:16:06 +020014713 message. This can be used to present ECC compatible clients with EC
14714 certificate and to use RSA for all others, on the same IP address. Note that
14715 this only applies to raw contents found in the request buffer and not to
14716 contents deciphered via an SSL data layer, so this will not work with "bind"
14717 lines having the "ssl" option.
Nenad Merdanovic5fc7d7e2015-07-07 22:00:17 +020014718
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014719req.ssl_hello_type : integer
14720req_ssl_hello_type : integer (deprecated)
14721 Returns an integer value containing the type of the SSL hello message found
14722 in the request buffer if the buffer contains data that parse as a complete
14723 SSL (v3 or superior) client hello message. Note that this only applies to raw
14724 contents found in the request buffer and not to contents deciphered via an
14725 SSL data layer, so this will not work with "bind" lines having the "ssl"
14726 option. This is mostly used in ACL to detect presence of an SSL hello message
14727 that is supposed to contain an SSL session ID usable for stickiness.
Willy Tarreau04aa6a92012-04-06 18:57:55 +020014728
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014729req.ssl_sni : string
14730req_ssl_sni : string (deprecated)
14731 Returns a string containing the value of the Server Name TLS extension sent
14732 by a client in a TLS stream passing through the request buffer if the buffer
14733 contains data that parse as a complete SSL (v3 or superior) client hello
14734 message. Note that this only applies to raw contents found in the request
14735 buffer and not to contents deciphered via an SSL data layer, so this will not
14736 work with "bind" lines having the "ssl" option. SNI normally contains the
14737 name of the host the client tries to connect to (for recent browsers). SNI is
14738 useful for allowing or denying access to certain hosts when SSL/TLS is used
14739 by the client. This test was designed to be used with TCP request content
14740 inspection. If content switching is needed, it is recommended to first wait
14741 for a complete client hello (type 1), like in the example below. See also
14742 "ssl_fc_sni".
Willy Tarreau04aa6a92012-04-06 18:57:55 +020014743
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014744 ACL derivatives :
14745 req_ssl_sni : exact string match
Willy Tarreau04aa6a92012-04-06 18:57:55 +020014746
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014747 Examples :
14748 # Wait for a client hello for at most 5 seconds
14749 tcp-request inspect-delay 5s
14750 tcp-request content accept if { req_ssl_hello_type 1 }
14751 use_backend bk_allow if { req_ssl_sni -f allowed_sites }
14752 default_backend bk_sorry_page
Willy Tarreau04aa6a92012-04-06 18:57:55 +020014753
Pradeep Jindalbb2acf52015-09-29 10:12:57 +053014754req.ssl_st_ext : integer
14755 Returns 0 if the client didn't send a SessionTicket TLS Extension (RFC5077)
14756 Returns 1 if the client sent SessionTicket TLS Extension
14757 Returns 2 if the client also sent non-zero length TLS SessionTicket
14758 Note that this only applies to raw contents found in the request buffer and
14759 not to contents deciphered via an SSL data layer, so this will not work with
14760 "bind" lines having the "ssl" option. This can for example be used to detect
14761 whether the client sent a SessionTicket or not and stick it accordingly, if
14762 no SessionTicket then stick on SessionID or don't stick as there's no server
14763 side state is there when SessionTickets are in use.
14764
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014765req.ssl_ver : integer
14766req_ssl_ver : integer (deprecated)
14767 Returns an integer value containing the version of the SSL/TLS protocol of a
14768 stream present in the request buffer. Both SSLv2 hello messages and SSLv3
14769 messages are supported. TLSv1 is announced as SSL version 3.1. The value is
14770 composed of the major version multiplied by 65536, added to the minor
14771 version. Note that this only applies to raw contents found in the request
14772 buffer and not to contents deciphered via an SSL data layer, so this will not
14773 work with "bind" lines having the "ssl" option. The ACL version of the test
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010014774 matches against a decimal notation in the form MAJOR.MINOR (e.g. 3.1). This
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014775 fetch is mostly used in ACL.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010014776
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014777 ACL derivatives :
14778 req_ssl_ver : decimal match
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010014779
Willy Tarreau47e8eba2013-09-11 23:28:46 +020014780res.len : integer
14781 Returns an integer value corresponding to the number of bytes present in the
14782 response buffer. This is mostly used in ACL. It is important to understand
14783 that this test does not return false as long as the buffer is changing. This
14784 means that a check with equality to zero will almost always immediately match
14785 at the beginning of the session, while a test for more data will wait for
14786 that data to come in and return false only when haproxy is certain that no
14787 more data will come in. This test was designed to be used with TCP response
14788 content inspection.
14789
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014790res.payload(<offset>,<length>) : binary
14791 This extracts a binary block of <length> bytes and starting at byte <offset>
Willy Tarreau00f00842013-08-02 11:07:32 +020014792 in the response buffer. As a special case, if the <length> argument is zero,
14793 the the whole buffer from <offset> to the end is extracted. This can be used
14794 with ACLs in order to check for the presence of some content in a buffer at
14795 any location.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010014796
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014797res.payload_lv(<offset1>,<length>[,<offset2>]) : binary
14798 This extracts a binary block whose size is specified at <offset1> for <length>
14799 bytes, and which starts at <offset2> if specified or just after the length in
14800 the response buffer. The <offset2> parameter also supports relative offsets
14801 if prepended with a '+' or '-' sign.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010014802
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014803 Example : please consult the example from the "stick store-response" keyword.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010014804
Willy Tarreau971f7b62015-09-29 14:06:59 +020014805res.ssl_hello_type : integer
14806rep_ssl_hello_type : integer (deprecated)
14807 Returns an integer value containing the type of the SSL hello message found
14808 in the response buffer if the buffer contains data that parses as a complete
14809 SSL (v3 or superior) hello message. Note that this only applies to raw
14810 contents found in the response buffer and not to contents deciphered via an
14811 SSL data layer, so this will not work with "server" lines having the "ssl"
14812 option. This is mostly used in ACL to detect presence of an SSL hello message
14813 that is supposed to contain an SSL session ID usable for stickiness.
14814
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014815wait_end : boolean
14816 This fetch either returns true when the inspection period is over, or does
14817 not fetch. It is only used in ACLs, in conjunction with content analysis to
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010014818 avoid returning a wrong verdict early. It may also be used to delay some
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014819 actions, such as a delayed reject for some special addresses. Since it either
14820 stops the rules evaluation or immediately returns true, it is recommended to
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010014821 use this acl as the last one in a rule. Please note that the default ACL
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014822 "WAIT_END" is always usable without prior declaration. This test was designed
14823 to be used with TCP request content inspection.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010014824
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014825 Examples :
14826 # delay every incoming request by 2 seconds
14827 tcp-request inspect-delay 2s
14828 tcp-request content accept if WAIT_END
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010014829
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014830 # don't immediately tell bad guys they are rejected
14831 tcp-request inspect-delay 10s
14832 acl goodguys src 10.0.0.0/24
14833 acl badguys src 10.0.1.0/24
14834 tcp-request content accept if goodguys
14835 tcp-request content reject if badguys WAIT_END
14836 tcp-request content reject
14837
14838
Thierry FOURNIER060762e2014-04-23 13:29:15 +0200148397.3.6. Fetching HTTP samples (Layer 7)
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014840--------------------------------------
14841
14842It is possible to fetch samples from HTTP contents, requests and responses.
14843This application layer is also called layer 7. It is only possible to fetch the
14844data in this section when a full HTTP request or response has been parsed from
14845its respective request or response buffer. This is always the case with all
14846HTTP specific rules and for sections running with "mode http". When using TCP
14847content inspection, it may be necessary to support an inspection delay in order
14848to let the request or response come in first. These fetches may require a bit
14849more CPU resources than the layer 4 ones, but not much since the request and
14850response are indexed.
14851
14852base : string
14853 This returns the concatenation of the first Host header and the path part of
14854 the request, which starts at the first slash and ends before the question
14855 mark. It can be useful in virtual hosted environments to detect URL abuses as
14856 well as to improve shared caches efficiency. Using this with a limited size
14857 stick table also allows one to collect statistics about most commonly
14858 requested objects by host/path. With ACLs it can allow simple content
14859 switching rules involving the host and the path at the same time, such as
14860 "www.example.com/favicon.ico". See also "path" and "uri".
14861
14862 ACL derivatives :
14863 base : exact string match
14864 base_beg : prefix match
14865 base_dir : subdir match
14866 base_dom : domain match
14867 base_end : suffix match
14868 base_len : length match
14869 base_reg : regex match
14870 base_sub : substring match
14871
14872base32 : integer
14873 This returns a 32-bit hash of the value returned by the "base" fetch method
14874 above. This is useful to track per-URL activity on high traffic sites without
14875 having to store all URLs. Instead a shorter hash is stored, saving a lot of
Willy Tarreau23ec4ca2014-07-15 20:15:37 +020014876 memory. The output type is an unsigned integer. The hash function used is
14877 SDBM with full avalanche on the output. Technically, base32 is exactly equal
14878 to "base,sdbm(1)".
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014879
14880base32+src : binary
14881 This returns the concatenation of the base32 fetch above and the src fetch
14882 below. The resulting type is of type binary, with a size of 8 or 20 bytes
14883 depending on the source address family. This can be used to track per-IP,
14884 per-URL counters.
14885
William Lallemand65ad6e12014-01-31 15:08:02 +010014886capture.req.hdr(<idx>) : string
14887 This extracts the content of the header captured by the "capture request
14888 header", idx is the position of the capture keyword in the configuration.
14889 The first entry is an index of 0. See also: "capture request header".
14890
14891capture.req.method : string
14892 This extracts the METHOD of an HTTP request. It can be used in both request
14893 and response. Unlike "method", it can be used in both request and response
14894 because it's allocated.
14895
14896capture.req.uri : string
14897 This extracts the request's URI, which starts at the first slash and ends
14898 before the first space in the request (without the host part). Unlike "path"
14899 and "url", it can be used in both request and response because it's
14900 allocated.
14901
Willy Tarreau3c1b5ec2014-04-24 23:41:57 +020014902capture.req.ver : string
14903 This extracts the request's HTTP version and returns either "HTTP/1.0" or
14904 "HTTP/1.1". Unlike "req.ver", it can be used in both request, response, and
14905 logs because it relies on a persistent flag.
14906
William Lallemand65ad6e12014-01-31 15:08:02 +010014907capture.res.hdr(<idx>) : string
14908 This extracts the content of the header captured by the "capture response
14909 header", idx is the position of the capture keyword in the configuration.
14910 The first entry is an index of 0.
14911 See also: "capture response header"
14912
Willy Tarreau3c1b5ec2014-04-24 23:41:57 +020014913capture.res.ver : string
14914 This extracts the response's HTTP version and returns either "HTTP/1.0" or
14915 "HTTP/1.1". Unlike "res.ver", it can be used in logs because it relies on a
14916 persistent flag.
14917
Willy Tarreaua5910cc2015-05-02 00:46:08 +020014918req.body : binary
14919 This returns the HTTP request's available body as a block of data. It
14920 requires that the request body has been buffered made available using
14921 "option http-buffer-request". In case of chunked-encoded body, currently only
14922 the first chunk is analyzed.
14923
Thierry FOURNIER9826c772015-05-20 15:50:54 +020014924req.body_param([<name>) : string
14925 This fetch assumes that the body of the POST request is url-encoded. The user
14926 can check if the "content-type" contains the value
14927 "application/x-www-form-urlencoded". This extracts the first occurrence of the
14928 parameter <name> in the body, which ends before '&'. The parameter name is
14929 case-sensitive. If no name is given, any parameter will match, and the first
14930 one will be returned. The result is a string corresponding to the value of the
14931 parameter <name> as presented in the request body (no URL decoding is
14932 performed). Note that the ACL version of this fetch iterates over multiple
14933 parameters and will iteratively report all parameters values if no name is
14934 given.
14935
Willy Tarreaua5910cc2015-05-02 00:46:08 +020014936req.body_len : integer
14937 This returns the length of the HTTP request's available body in bytes. It may
14938 be lower than the advertised length if the body is larger than the buffer. It
14939 requires that the request body has been buffered made available using
14940 "option http-buffer-request".
14941
14942req.body_size : integer
14943 This returns the advertised length of the HTTP request's body in bytes. It
14944 will represent the advertised Content-Length header, or the size of the first
14945 chunk in case of chunked encoding. In order to parse the chunks, it requires
14946 that the request body has been buffered made available using
14947 "option http-buffer-request".
14948
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014949req.cook([<name>]) : string
14950cook([<name>]) : string (deprecated)
14951 This extracts the last occurrence of the cookie name <name> on a "Cookie"
14952 header line from the request, and returns its value as string. If no name is
14953 specified, the first cookie value is returned. When used with ACLs, all
14954 matching cookies are evaluated. Spaces around the name and the value are
14955 ignored as requested by the Cookie header specification (RFC6265). The cookie
14956 name is case-sensitive. Empty cookies are valid, so an empty cookie may very
14957 well return an empty value if it is present. Use the "found" match to detect
14958 presence. Use the res.cook() variant for response cookies sent by the server.
14959
14960 ACL derivatives :
14961 cook([<name>]) : exact string match
14962 cook_beg([<name>]) : prefix match
14963 cook_dir([<name>]) : subdir match
14964 cook_dom([<name>]) : domain match
14965 cook_end([<name>]) : suffix match
14966 cook_len([<name>]) : length match
14967 cook_reg([<name>]) : regex match
14968 cook_sub([<name>]) : substring match
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010014969
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014970req.cook_cnt([<name>]) : integer
14971cook_cnt([<name>]) : integer (deprecated)
14972 Returns an integer value representing the number of occurrences of the cookie
14973 <name> in the request, or all cookies if <name> is not specified.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010014974
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014975req.cook_val([<name>]) : integer
14976cook_val([<name>]) : integer (deprecated)
14977 This extracts the last occurrence of the cookie name <name> on a "Cookie"
14978 header line from the request, and converts its value to an integer which is
14979 returned. If no name is specified, the first cookie value is returned. When
14980 used in ACLs, all matching names are iterated over until a value matches.
Willy Tarreau0e698542011-09-16 08:32:32 +020014981
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014982cookie([<name>]) : string (deprecated)
14983 This extracts the last occurrence of the cookie name <name> on a "Cookie"
14984 header line from the request, or a "Set-Cookie" header from the response, and
14985 returns its value as a string. A typical use is to get multiple clients
14986 sharing a same profile use the same server. This can be similar to what
Willy Tarreau294d0f02015-08-10 19:40:12 +020014987 "appsession" did with the "request-learn" statement, but with support for
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014988 multi-peer synchronization and state keeping across restarts. If no name is
14989 specified, the first cookie value is returned. This fetch should not be used
14990 anymore and should be replaced by req.cook() or res.cook() instead as it
14991 ambiguously uses the direction based on the context where it is used.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010014992
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020014993hdr([<name>[,<occ>]]) : string
14994 This is equivalent to req.hdr() when used on requests, and to res.hdr() when
14995 used on responses. Please refer to these respective fetches for more details.
14996 In case of doubt about the fetch direction, please use the explicit ones.
14997 Note that contrary to the hdr() sample fetch method, the hdr_* ACL keywords
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030014998 unambiguously apply to the request headers.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010014999
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015000req.fhdr(<name>[,<occ>]) : string
15001 This extracts the last occurrence of header <name> in an HTTP request. When
15002 used from an ACL, all occurrences are iterated over until a match is found.
15003 Optionally, a specific occurrence might be specified as a position number.
15004 Positive values indicate a position from the first occurrence, with 1 being
15005 the first one. Negative values indicate positions relative to the last one,
15006 with -1 being the last one. It differs from req.hdr() in that any commas
15007 present in the value are returned and are not used as delimiters. This is
15008 sometimes useful with headers such as User-Agent.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010015009
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015010req.fhdr_cnt([<name>]) : integer
15011 Returns an integer value representing the number of occurrences of request
15012 header field name <name>, or the total number of header fields if <name> is
15013 not specified. Contrary to its req.hdr_cnt() cousin, this function returns
15014 the number of full line headers and does not stop on commas.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010015015
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015016req.hdr([<name>[,<occ>]]) : string
15017 This extracts the last occurrence of header <name> in an HTTP request. When
15018 used from an ACL, all occurrences are iterated over until a match is found.
15019 Optionally, a specific occurrence might be specified as a position number.
15020 Positive values indicate a position from the first occurrence, with 1 being
15021 the first one. Negative values indicate positions relative to the last one,
15022 with -1 being the last one. A typical use is with the X-Forwarded-For header
15023 once converted to IP, associated with an IP stick-table. The function
15024 considers any comma as a delimiter for distinct values. If full-line headers
Lukas Tribus23953682017-04-28 13:24:30 +000015025 are desired instead, use req.fhdr(). Please carefully check RFC7231 to know
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015026 how certain headers are supposed to be parsed. Also, some of them are case
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010015027 insensitive (e.g. Connection).
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010015028
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015029 ACL derivatives :
15030 hdr([<name>[,<occ>]]) : exact string match
15031 hdr_beg([<name>[,<occ>]]) : prefix match
15032 hdr_dir([<name>[,<occ>]]) : subdir match
15033 hdr_dom([<name>[,<occ>]]) : domain match
15034 hdr_end([<name>[,<occ>]]) : suffix match
15035 hdr_len([<name>[,<occ>]]) : length match
15036 hdr_reg([<name>[,<occ>]]) : regex match
15037 hdr_sub([<name>[,<occ>]]) : substring match
15038
15039req.hdr_cnt([<name>]) : integer
15040hdr_cnt([<header>]) : integer (deprecated)
15041 Returns an integer value representing the number of occurrences of request
15042 header field name <name>, or the total number of header field values if
15043 <name> is not specified. It is important to remember that one header line may
15044 count as several headers if it has several values. The function considers any
15045 comma as a delimiter for distinct values. If full-line headers are desired
15046 instead, req.fhdr_cnt() should be used instead. With ACLs, it can be used to
15047 detect presence, absence or abuse of a specific header, as well as to block
15048 request smuggling attacks by rejecting requests which contain more than one
15049 of certain headers. See "req.hdr" for more information on header matching.
15050
15051req.hdr_ip([<name>[,<occ>]]) : ip
15052hdr_ip([<name>[,<occ>]]) : ip (deprecated)
15053 This extracts the last occurrence of header <name> in an HTTP request,
15054 converts it to an IPv4 or IPv6 address and returns this address. When used
15055 with ACLs, all occurrences are checked, and if <name> is omitted, every value
15056 of every header is checked. Optionally, a specific occurrence might be
15057 specified as a position number. Positive values indicate a position from the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010015058 first occurrence, with 1 being the first one. Negative values indicate
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015059 positions relative to the last one, with -1 being the last one. A typical use
15060 is with the X-Forwarded-For and X-Client-IP headers.
15061
15062req.hdr_val([<name>[,<occ>]]) : integer
15063hdr_val([<name>[,<occ>]]) : integer (deprecated)
15064 This extracts the last occurrence of header <name> in an HTTP request, and
15065 converts it to an integer value. When used with ACLs, all occurrences are
15066 checked, and if <name> is omitted, every value of every header is checked.
15067 Optionally, a specific occurrence might be specified as a position number.
15068 Positive values indicate a position from the first occurrence, with 1 being
15069 the first one. Negative values indicate positions relative to the last one,
15070 with -1 being the last one. A typical use is with the X-Forwarded-For header.
15071
15072http_auth(<userlist>) : boolean
15073 Returns a boolean indicating whether the authentication data received from
15074 the client match a username & password stored in the specified userlist. This
15075 fetch function is not really useful outside of ACLs. Currently only http
15076 basic auth is supported.
15077
Thierry FOURNIER9eec0a62014-01-22 18:38:02 +010015078http_auth_group(<userlist>) : string
15079 Returns a string corresponding to the user name found in the authentication
15080 data received from the client if both the user name and password are valid
15081 according to the specified userlist. The main purpose is to use it in ACLs
15082 where it is then checked whether the user belongs to any group within a list.
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015083 This fetch function is not really useful outside of ACLs. Currently only http
15084 basic auth is supported.
15085
15086 ACL derivatives :
Thierry FOURNIER9eec0a62014-01-22 18:38:02 +010015087 http_auth_group(<userlist>) : group ...
15088 Returns true when the user extracted from the request and whose password is
15089 valid according to the specified userlist belongs to at least one of the
15090 groups.
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015091
15092http_first_req : boolean
Willy Tarreau7f18e522010-10-22 20:04:13 +020015093 Returns true when the request being processed is the first one of the
15094 connection. This can be used to add or remove headers that may be missing
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015095 from some requests when a request is not the first one, or to help grouping
15096 requests in the logs.
Willy Tarreau7f18e522010-10-22 20:04:13 +020015097
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015098method : integer + string
15099 Returns an integer value corresponding to the method in the HTTP request. For
15100 example, "GET" equals 1 (check sources to establish the matching). Value 9
15101 means "other method" and may be converted to a string extracted from the
15102 stream. This should not be used directly as a sample, this is only meant to
15103 be used from ACLs, which transparently convert methods from patterns to these
15104 integer + string values. Some predefined ACL already check for most common
15105 methods.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020015106
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015107 ACL derivatives :
15108 method : case insensitive method match
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020015109
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015110 Example :
15111 # only accept GET and HEAD requests
15112 acl valid_method method GET HEAD
15113 http-request deny if ! valid_method
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020015114
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015115path : string
15116 This extracts the request's URL path, which starts at the first slash and
15117 ends before the question mark (without the host part). A typical use is with
15118 prefetch-capable caches, and with portals which need to aggregate multiple
15119 information from databases and keep them in caches. Note that with outgoing
15120 caches, it would be wiser to use "url" instead. With ACLs, it's typically
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010015121 used to match exact file names (e.g. "/login.php"), or directory parts using
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015122 the derivative forms. See also the "url" and "base" fetch methods.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020015123
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015124 ACL derivatives :
15125 path : exact string match
15126 path_beg : prefix match
15127 path_dir : subdir match
15128 path_dom : domain match
15129 path_end : suffix match
15130 path_len : length match
15131 path_reg : regex match
15132 path_sub : substring match
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020015133
Willy Tarreau49ad95c2015-01-19 15:06:26 +010015134query : string
15135 This extracts the request's query string, which starts after the first
15136 question mark. If no question mark is present, this fetch returns nothing. If
15137 a question mark is present but nothing follows, it returns an empty string.
15138 This means it's possible to easily know whether a query string is present
Tim Düsterhus4896c442016-11-29 02:15:19 +010015139 using the "found" matching method. This fetch is the complement of "path"
Willy Tarreau49ad95c2015-01-19 15:06:26 +010015140 which stops before the question mark.
15141
Willy Tarreaueb27ec72015-02-20 13:55:29 +010015142req.hdr_names([<delim>]) : string
15143 This builds a string made from the concatenation of all header names as they
15144 appear in the request when the rule is evaluated. The default delimiter is
15145 the comma (',') but it may be overridden as an optional argument <delim>. In
15146 this case, only the first character of <delim> is considered.
15147
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015148req.ver : string
15149req_ver : string (deprecated)
15150 Returns the version string from the HTTP request, for example "1.1". This can
15151 be useful for logs, but is mostly there for ACL. Some predefined ACL already
15152 check for versions 1.0 and 1.1.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010015153
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015154 ACL derivatives :
15155 req_ver : exact string match
Willy Tarreau0e698542011-09-16 08:32:32 +020015156
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015157res.comp : boolean
15158 Returns the boolean "true" value if the response has been compressed by
15159 HAProxy, otherwise returns boolean "false". This may be used to add
15160 information in the logs.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020015161
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015162res.comp_algo : string
15163 Returns a string containing the name of the algorithm used if the response
15164 was compressed by HAProxy, for example : "deflate". This may be used to add
15165 some information in the logs.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010015166
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015167res.cook([<name>]) : string
15168scook([<name>]) : string (deprecated)
15169 This extracts the last occurrence of the cookie name <name> on a "Set-Cookie"
15170 header line from the response, and returns its value as string. If no name is
15171 specified, the first cookie value is returned.
Willy Tarreau0ce3aa02012-04-25 18:46:33 +020015172
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015173 ACL derivatives :
15174 scook([<name>] : exact string match
Willy Tarreau0ce3aa02012-04-25 18:46:33 +020015175
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015176res.cook_cnt([<name>]) : integer
15177scook_cnt([<name>]) : integer (deprecated)
15178 Returns an integer value representing the number of occurrences of the cookie
15179 <name> in the response, or all cookies if <name> is not specified. This is
15180 mostly useful when combined with ACLs to detect suspicious responses.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010015181
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015182res.cook_val([<name>]) : integer
15183scook_val([<name>]) : integer (deprecated)
15184 This extracts the last occurrence of the cookie name <name> on a "Set-Cookie"
15185 header line from the response, and converts its value to an integer which is
15186 returned. If no name is specified, the first cookie value is returned.
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010015187
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015188res.fhdr([<name>[,<occ>]]) : string
15189 This extracts the last occurrence of header <name> in an HTTP response, or of
15190 the last header if no <name> is specified. Optionally, a specific occurrence
15191 might be specified as a position number. Positive values indicate a position
15192 from the first occurrence, with 1 being the first one. Negative values
15193 indicate positions relative to the last one, with -1 being the last one. It
15194 differs from res.hdr() in that any commas present in the value are returned
15195 and are not used as delimiters. If this is not desired, the res.hdr() fetch
15196 should be used instead. This is sometimes useful with headers such as Date or
15197 Expires.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020015198
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015199res.fhdr_cnt([<name>]) : integer
15200 Returns an integer value representing the number of occurrences of response
15201 header field name <name>, or the total number of header fields if <name> is
15202 not specified. Contrary to its res.hdr_cnt() cousin, this function returns
15203 the number of full line headers and does not stop on commas. If this is not
15204 desired, the res.hdr_cnt() fetch should be used instead.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020015205
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015206res.hdr([<name>[,<occ>]]) : string
15207shdr([<name>[,<occ>]]) : string (deprecated)
15208 This extracts the last occurrence of header <name> in an HTTP response, or of
15209 the last header if no <name> is specified. Optionally, a specific occurrence
15210 might be specified as a position number. Positive values indicate a position
15211 from the first occurrence, with 1 being the first one. Negative values
15212 indicate positions relative to the last one, with -1 being the last one. This
15213 can be useful to learn some data into a stick-table. The function considers
15214 any comma as a delimiter for distinct values. If this is not desired, the
15215 res.fhdr() fetch should be used instead.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020015216
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015217 ACL derivatives :
15218 shdr([<name>[,<occ>]]) : exact string match
15219 shdr_beg([<name>[,<occ>]]) : prefix match
15220 shdr_dir([<name>[,<occ>]]) : subdir match
15221 shdr_dom([<name>[,<occ>]]) : domain match
15222 shdr_end([<name>[,<occ>]]) : suffix match
15223 shdr_len([<name>[,<occ>]]) : length match
15224 shdr_reg([<name>[,<occ>]]) : regex match
15225 shdr_sub([<name>[,<occ>]]) : substring match
15226
15227res.hdr_cnt([<name>]) : integer
15228shdr_cnt([<name>]) : integer (deprecated)
15229 Returns an integer value representing the number of occurrences of response
15230 header field name <name>, or the total number of header fields if <name> is
15231 not specified. The function considers any comma as a delimiter for distinct
15232 values. If this is not desired, the res.fhdr_cnt() fetch should be used
15233 instead.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020015234
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015235res.hdr_ip([<name>[,<occ>]]) : ip
15236shdr_ip([<name>[,<occ>]]) : ip (deprecated)
15237 This extracts the last occurrence of header <name> in an HTTP response,
15238 convert it to an IPv4 or IPv6 address and returns this address. Optionally, a
15239 specific occurrence might be specified as a position number. Positive values
15240 indicate a position from the first occurrence, with 1 being the first one.
15241 Negative values indicate positions relative to the last one, with -1 being
15242 the last one. This can be useful to learn some data into a stick table.
Willy Tarreau6a06a402007-07-15 20:15:28 +020015243
Willy Tarreaueb27ec72015-02-20 13:55:29 +010015244res.hdr_names([<delim>]) : string
15245 This builds a string made from the concatenation of all header names as they
15246 appear in the response when the rule is evaluated. The default delimiter is
15247 the comma (',') but it may be overridden as an optional argument <delim>. In
15248 this case, only the first character of <delim> is considered.
15249
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015250res.hdr_val([<name>[,<occ>]]) : integer
15251shdr_val([<name>[,<occ>]]) : integer (deprecated)
15252 This extracts the last occurrence of header <name> in an HTTP response, and
15253 converts it to an integer value. Optionally, a specific occurrence might be
15254 specified as a position number. Positive values indicate a position from the
15255 first occurrence, with 1 being the first one. Negative values indicate
15256 positions relative to the last one, with -1 being the last one. This can be
15257 useful to learn some data into a stick table.
Alexandre Cassen5eb1a902007-11-29 15:43:32 +010015258
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015259res.ver : string
15260resp_ver : string (deprecated)
15261 Returns the version string from the HTTP response, for example "1.1". This
15262 can be useful for logs, but is mostly there for ACL.
Willy Tarreau0e698542011-09-16 08:32:32 +020015263
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015264 ACL derivatives :
15265 resp_ver : exact string match
Alexandre Cassen5eb1a902007-11-29 15:43:32 +010015266
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015267set-cookie([<name>]) : string (deprecated)
15268 This extracts the last occurrence of the cookie name <name> on a "Set-Cookie"
15269 header line from the response and uses the corresponding value to match. This
Willy Tarreau294d0f02015-08-10 19:40:12 +020015270 can be comparable to what "appsession" did with default options, but with
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015271 support for multi-peer synchronization and state keeping across restarts.
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +010015272
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015273 This fetch function is deprecated and has been superseded by the "res.cook"
15274 fetch. This keyword will disappear soon.
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzki6b35ce12010-02-01 23:35:44 +010015275
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015276status : integer
15277 Returns an integer containing the HTTP status code in the HTTP response, for
15278 example, 302. It is mostly used within ACLs and integer ranges, for example,
15279 to remove any Location header if the response is not a 3xx.
Willy Tarreau25c1ebc2012-04-25 16:21:44 +020015280
Thierry Fournier0e00dca2016-04-07 15:47:40 +020015281unique-id : string
15282 Returns the unique-id attached to the request. The directive
15283 "unique-id-format" must be set. If it is not set, the unique-id sample fetch
15284 fails. Note that the unique-id is usually used with HTTP requests, however this
15285 sample fetch can be used with other protocols. Obviously, if it is used with
15286 other protocols than HTTP, the unique-id-format directive must not contain
15287 HTTP parts. See: unique-id-format and unique-id-header
15288
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015289url : string
15290 This extracts the request's URL as presented in the request. A typical use is
15291 with prefetch-capable caches, and with portals which need to aggregate
15292 multiple information from databases and keep them in caches. With ACLs, using
15293 "path" is preferred over using "url", because clients may send a full URL as
15294 is normally done with proxies. The only real use is to match "*" which does
15295 not match in "path", and for which there is already a predefined ACL. See
15296 also "path" and "base".
Willy Tarreau25c1ebc2012-04-25 16:21:44 +020015297
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015298 ACL derivatives :
15299 url : exact string match
15300 url_beg : prefix match
15301 url_dir : subdir match
15302 url_dom : domain match
15303 url_end : suffix match
15304 url_len : length match
15305 url_reg : regex match
15306 url_sub : substring match
Willy Tarreau25c1ebc2012-04-25 16:21:44 +020015307
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015308url_ip : ip
15309 This extracts the IP address from the request's URL when the host part is
15310 presented as an IP address. Its use is very limited. For instance, a
15311 monitoring system might use this field as an alternative for the source IP in
15312 order to test what path a given source address would follow, or to force an
15313 entry in a table for a given source address. With ACLs it can be used to
15314 restrict access to certain systems through a proxy, for example when combined
15315 with option "http_proxy".
Willy Tarreau25c1ebc2012-04-25 16:21:44 +020015316
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015317url_port : integer
15318 This extracts the port part from the request's URL. Note that if the port is
15319 not specified in the request, port 80 is assumed. With ACLs it can be used to
15320 restrict access to certain systems through a proxy, for example when combined
15321 with option "http_proxy".
Willy Tarreau25c1ebc2012-04-25 16:21:44 +020015322
Willy Tarreau1ede1da2015-05-07 16:06:18 +020015323urlp([<name>[,<delim>]]) : string
15324url_param([<name>[,<delim>]]) : string
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015325 This extracts the first occurrence of the parameter <name> in the query
15326 string, which begins after either '?' or <delim>, and which ends before '&',
Willy Tarreau1ede1da2015-05-07 16:06:18 +020015327 ';' or <delim>. The parameter name is case-sensitive. If no name is given,
15328 any parameter will match, and the first one will be returned. The result is
15329 a string corresponding to the value of the parameter <name> as presented in
15330 the request (no URL decoding is performed). This can be used for session
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015331 stickiness based on a client ID, to extract an application cookie passed as a
15332 URL parameter, or in ACLs to apply some checks. Note that the ACL version of
Willy Tarreau1ede1da2015-05-07 16:06:18 +020015333 this fetch iterates over multiple parameters and will iteratively report all
15334 parameters values if no name is given
Willy Tarreau25c1ebc2012-04-25 16:21:44 +020015335
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015336 ACL derivatives :
15337 urlp(<name>[,<delim>]) : exact string match
15338 urlp_beg(<name>[,<delim>]) : prefix match
15339 urlp_dir(<name>[,<delim>]) : subdir match
15340 urlp_dom(<name>[,<delim>]) : domain match
15341 urlp_end(<name>[,<delim>]) : suffix match
15342 urlp_len(<name>[,<delim>]) : length match
15343 urlp_reg(<name>[,<delim>]) : regex match
15344 urlp_sub(<name>[,<delim>]) : substring match
Willy Tarreau25c1ebc2012-04-25 16:21:44 +020015345
Willy Tarreau25c1ebc2012-04-25 16:21:44 +020015346
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015347 Example :
15348 # match http://example.com/foo?PHPSESSIONID=some_id
15349 stick on urlp(PHPSESSIONID)
15350 # match http://example.com/foo;JSESSIONID=some_id
15351 stick on urlp(JSESSIONID,;)
Willy Tarreau25c1ebc2012-04-25 16:21:44 +020015352
Jarno Huuskonen676f6222017-03-30 09:19:45 +030015353urlp_val([<name>[,<delim>]]) : integer
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +020015354 See "urlp" above. This one extracts the URL parameter <name> in the request
15355 and converts it to an integer value. This can be used for session stickiness
15356 based on a user ID for example, or with ACLs to match a page number or price.
Willy Tarreaua9fddca2012-07-31 07:51:48 +020015357
Dragan Dosen0070cd52016-06-16 12:19:49 +020015358url32 : integer
15359 This returns a 32-bit hash of the value obtained by concatenating the first
15360 Host header and the whole URL including parameters (not only the path part of
15361 the request, as in the "base32" fetch above). This is useful to track per-URL
15362 activity. A shorter hash is stored, saving a lot of memory. The output type
15363 is an unsigned integer.
15364
15365url32+src : binary
15366 This returns the concatenation of the "url32" fetch and the "src" fetch. The
15367 resulting type is of type binary, with a size of 8 or 20 bytes depending on
15368 the source address family. This can be used to track per-IP, per-URL counters.
15369
Willy Tarreau198a7442008-01-17 12:05:32 +010015370
Willy Tarreau74ca5042013-06-11 23:12:07 +0200153717.4. Pre-defined ACLs
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020015372---------------------
Willy Tarreauced27012008-01-17 20:35:34 +010015373
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020015374Some predefined ACLs are hard-coded so that they do not have to be declared in
15375every frontend which needs them. They all have their names in upper case in
Patrick Mézard2382ad62010-05-09 10:43:32 +020015376order to avoid confusion. Their equivalence is provided below.
Willy Tarreauced27012008-01-17 20:35:34 +010015377
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020015378ACL name Equivalent to Usage
15379---------------+-----------------------------+---------------------------------
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020015380FALSE always_false never match
Willy Tarreau2492d5b2009-07-11 00:06:00 +020015381HTTP req_proto_http match if protocol is valid HTTP
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020015382HTTP_1.0 req_ver 1.0 match HTTP version 1.0
15383HTTP_1.1 req_ver 1.1 match HTTP version 1.1
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010015384HTTP_CONTENT hdr_val(content-length) gt 0 match an existing content-length
15385HTTP_URL_ABS url_reg ^[^/:]*:// match absolute URL with scheme
15386HTTP_URL_SLASH url_beg / match URL beginning with "/"
15387HTTP_URL_STAR url * match URL equal to "*"
15388LOCALHOST src 127.0.0.1/8 match connection from local host
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020015389METH_CONNECT method CONNECT match HTTP CONNECT method
Daniel Schneller9ff96c72016-04-11 17:45:29 +020015390METH_DELETE method DELETE match HTTP DELETE method
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020015391METH_GET method GET HEAD match HTTP GET or HEAD method
15392METH_HEAD method HEAD match HTTP HEAD method
15393METH_OPTIONS method OPTIONS match HTTP OPTIONS method
15394METH_POST method POST match HTTP POST method
Daniel Schneller9ff96c72016-04-11 17:45:29 +020015395METH_PUT method PUT match HTTP PUT method
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020015396METH_TRACE method TRACE match HTTP TRACE method
Emeric Brunbede3d02009-06-30 17:54:00 +020015397RDP_COOKIE req_rdp_cookie_cnt gt 0 match presence of an RDP cookie
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020015398REQ_CONTENT req_len gt 0 match data in the request buffer
Willy Tarreaud63335a2010-02-26 12:56:52 +010015399TRUE always_true always match
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020015400WAIT_END wait_end wait for end of content analysis
15401---------------+-----------------------------+---------------------------------
Willy Tarreauced27012008-01-17 20:35:34 +010015402
Willy Tarreaub937b7e2010-01-12 15:27:54 +010015403
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200154048. Logging
15405----------
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010015406
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015407One of HAProxy's strong points certainly lies is its precise logs. It probably
15408provides the finest level of information available for such a product, which is
15409very important for troubleshooting complex environments. Standard information
15410provided in logs include client ports, TCP/HTTP state timers, precise session
15411state at termination and precise termination cause, information about decisions
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +010015412to direct traffic to a server, and of course the ability to capture arbitrary
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015413headers.
15414
15415In order to improve administrators reactivity, it offers a great transparency
15416about encountered problems, both internal and external, and it is possible to
15417send logs to different sources at the same time with different level filters :
15418
15419 - global process-level logs (system errors, start/stop, etc..)
15420 - per-instance system and internal errors (lack of resource, bugs, ...)
15421 - per-instance external troubles (servers up/down, max connections)
15422 - per-instance activity (client connections), either at the establishment or
15423 at the termination.
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010015424 - per-request control of log-level, e.g.
Jim Freeman9e8714b2015-05-26 09:16:34 -060015425 http-request set-log-level silent if sensitive_request
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015426
15427The ability to distribute different levels of logs to different log servers
15428allow several production teams to interact and to fix their problems as soon
15429as possible. For example, the system team might monitor system-wide errors,
15430while the application team might be monitoring the up/down for their servers in
15431real time, and the security team might analyze the activity logs with one hour
15432delay.
15433
15434
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200154358.1. Log levels
15436---------------
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015437
Simon Hormandf791f52011-05-29 15:01:10 +090015438TCP and HTTP connections can be logged with information such as the date, time,
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015439source IP address, destination address, connection duration, response times,
Simon Hormandf791f52011-05-29 15:01:10 +090015440HTTP request, HTTP return code, number of bytes transmitted, conditions
15441in which the session ended, and even exchanged cookies values. For example
15442track a particular user's problems. All messages may be sent to up to two
15443syslog servers. Check the "log" keyword in section 4.2 for more information
15444about log facilities.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015445
15446
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200154478.2. Log formats
15448----------------
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015449
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010015450HAProxy supports 5 log formats. Several fields are common between these formats
Simon Hormandf791f52011-05-29 15:01:10 +090015451and will be detailed in the following sections. A few of them may vary
15452slightly with the configuration, due to indicators specific to certain
15453options. The supported formats are as follows :
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015454
15455 - the default format, which is very basic and very rarely used. It only
15456 provides very basic information about the incoming connection at the moment
15457 it is accepted : source IP:port, destination IP:port, and frontend-name.
15458 This mode will eventually disappear so it will not be described to great
15459 extents.
15460
15461 - the TCP format, which is more advanced. This format is enabled when "option
15462 tcplog" is set on the frontend. HAProxy will then usually wait for the
15463 connection to terminate before logging. This format provides much richer
15464 information, such as timers, connection counts, queue size, etc... This
15465 format is recommended for pure TCP proxies.
15466
15467 - the HTTP format, which is the most advanced for HTTP proxying. This format
15468 is enabled when "option httplog" is set on the frontend. It provides the
15469 same information as the TCP format with some HTTP-specific fields such as
15470 the request, the status code, and captures of headers and cookies. This
15471 format is recommended for HTTP proxies.
15472
Emeric Brun3a058f32009-06-30 18:26:00 +020015473 - the CLF HTTP format, which is equivalent to the HTTP format, but with the
15474 fields arranged in the same order as the CLF format. In this mode, all
15475 timers, captures, flags, etc... appear one per field after the end of the
15476 common fields, in the same order they appear in the standard HTTP format.
15477
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010015478 - the custom log format, allows you to make your own log line.
15479
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015480Next sections will go deeper into details for each of these formats. Format
15481specification will be performed on a "field" basis. Unless stated otherwise, a
15482field is a portion of text delimited by any number of spaces. Since syslog
15483servers are susceptible of inserting fields at the beginning of a line, it is
15484always assumed that the first field is the one containing the process name and
15485identifier.
15486
15487Note : Since log lines may be quite long, the log examples in sections below
15488 might be broken into multiple lines. The example log lines will be
15489 prefixed with 3 closing angle brackets ('>>>') and each time a log is
15490 broken into multiple lines, each non-final line will end with a
15491 backslash ('\') and the next line will start indented by two characters.
15492
15493
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200154948.2.1. Default log format
15495-------------------------
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015496
15497This format is used when no specific option is set. The log is emitted as soon
15498as the connection is accepted. One should note that this currently is the only
15499format which logs the request's destination IP and ports.
15500
15501 Example :
15502 listen www
15503 mode http
15504 log global
15505 server srv1 127.0.0.1:8000
15506
15507 >>> Feb 6 12:12:09 localhost \
15508 haproxy[14385]: Connect from 10.0.1.2:33312 to 10.0.3.31:8012 \
15509 (www/HTTP)
15510
15511 Field Format Extract from the example above
15512 1 process_name '[' pid ']:' haproxy[14385]:
15513 2 'Connect from' Connect from
15514 3 source_ip ':' source_port 10.0.1.2:33312
15515 4 'to' to
15516 5 destination_ip ':' destination_port 10.0.3.31:8012
15517 6 '(' frontend_name '/' mode ')' (www/HTTP)
15518
15519Detailed fields description :
15520 - "source_ip" is the IP address of the client which initiated the connection.
15521 - "source_port" is the TCP port of the client which initiated the connection.
15522 - "destination_ip" is the IP address the client connected to.
15523 - "destination_port" is the TCP port the client connected to.
15524 - "frontend_name" is the name of the frontend (or listener) which received
15525 and processed the connection.
15526 - "mode is the mode the frontend is operating (TCP or HTTP).
15527
Willy Tarreauceb24bc2010-11-09 12:46:41 +010015528In case of a UNIX socket, the source and destination addresses are marked as
15529"unix:" and the ports reflect the internal ID of the socket which accepted the
15530connection (the same ID as reported in the stats).
15531
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015532It is advised not to use this deprecated format for newer installations as it
15533will eventually disappear.
15534
15535
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200155368.2.2. TCP log format
15537---------------------
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015538
15539The TCP format is used when "option tcplog" is specified in the frontend, and
15540is the recommended format for pure TCP proxies. It provides a lot of precious
15541information for troubleshooting. Since this format includes timers and byte
15542counts, the log is normally emitted at the end of the session. It can be
15543emitted earlier if "option logasap" is specified, which makes sense in most
15544environments with long sessions such as remote terminals. Sessions which match
15545the "monitor" rules are never logged. It is also possible not to emit logs for
15546sessions for which no data were exchanged between the client and the server, by
Willy Tarreauc9bd0cc2009-05-10 11:57:02 +020015547specifying "option dontlognull" in the frontend. Successful connections will
15548not be logged if "option dontlog-normal" is specified in the frontend. A few
15549fields may slightly vary depending on some configuration options, those are
15550marked with a star ('*') after the field name below.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015551
15552 Example :
15553 frontend fnt
15554 mode tcp
15555 option tcplog
15556 log global
15557 default_backend bck
15558
15559 backend bck
15560 server srv1 127.0.0.1:8000
15561
15562 >>> Feb 6 12:12:56 localhost \
15563 haproxy[14387]: 10.0.1.2:33313 [06/Feb/2009:12:12:51.443] fnt \
15564 bck/srv1 0/0/5007 212 -- 0/0/0/0/3 0/0
15565
15566 Field Format Extract from the example above
15567 1 process_name '[' pid ']:' haproxy[14387]:
15568 2 client_ip ':' client_port 10.0.1.2:33313
15569 3 '[' accept_date ']' [06/Feb/2009:12:12:51.443]
15570 4 frontend_name fnt
15571 5 backend_name '/' server_name bck/srv1
15572 6 Tw '/' Tc '/' Tt* 0/0/5007
15573 7 bytes_read* 212
15574 8 termination_state --
15575 9 actconn '/' feconn '/' beconn '/' srv_conn '/' retries* 0/0/0/0/3
15576 10 srv_queue '/' backend_queue 0/0
15577
15578Detailed fields description :
15579 - "client_ip" is the IP address of the client which initiated the TCP
Willy Tarreauceb24bc2010-11-09 12:46:41 +010015580 connection to haproxy. If the connection was accepted on a UNIX socket
15581 instead, the IP address would be replaced with the word "unix". Note that
15582 when the connection is accepted on a socket configured with "accept-proxy"
Bertrand Jacquin93b227d2016-06-04 15:11:10 +010015583 and the PROXY protocol is correctly used, or with a "accept-netscaler-cip"
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010015584 and the NetScaler Client IP insertion protocol is correctly used, then the
Bertrand Jacquin93b227d2016-06-04 15:11:10 +010015585 logs will reflect the forwarded connection's information.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015586
15587 - "client_port" is the TCP port of the client which initiated the connection.
Willy Tarreauceb24bc2010-11-09 12:46:41 +010015588 If the connection was accepted on a UNIX socket instead, the port would be
15589 replaced with the ID of the accepting socket, which is also reported in the
15590 stats interface.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015591
15592 - "accept_date" is the exact date when the connection was received by haproxy
15593 (which might be very slightly different from the date observed on the
15594 network if there was some queuing in the system's backlog). This is usually
15595 the same date which may appear in any upstream firewall's log.
15596
15597 - "frontend_name" is the name of the frontend (or listener) which received
15598 and processed the connection.
15599
15600 - "backend_name" is the name of the backend (or listener) which was selected
15601 to manage the connection to the server. This will be the same as the
15602 frontend if no switching rule has been applied, which is common for TCP
15603 applications.
15604
15605 - "server_name" is the name of the last server to which the connection was
15606 sent, which might differ from the first one if there were connection errors
15607 and a redispatch occurred. Note that this server belongs to the backend
15608 which processed the request. If the connection was aborted before reaching
15609 a server, "<NOSRV>" is indicated instead of a server name.
15610
15611 - "Tw" is the total time in milliseconds spent waiting in the various queues.
15612 It can be "-1" if the connection was aborted before reaching the queue.
15613 See "Timers" below for more details.
15614
15615 - "Tc" is the total time in milliseconds spent waiting for the connection to
15616 establish to the final server, including retries. It can be "-1" if the
15617 connection was aborted before a connection could be established. See
15618 "Timers" below for more details.
15619
15620 - "Tt" is the total time in milliseconds elapsed between the accept and the
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030015621 last close. It covers all possible processing. There is one exception, if
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015622 "option logasap" was specified, then the time counting stops at the moment
15623 the log is emitted. In this case, a '+' sign is prepended before the value,
15624 indicating that the final one will be larger. See "Timers" below for more
15625 details.
15626
15627 - "bytes_read" is the total number of bytes transmitted from the server to
15628 the client when the log is emitted. If "option logasap" is specified, the
15629 this value will be prefixed with a '+' sign indicating that the final one
15630 may be larger. Please note that this value is a 64-bit counter, so log
15631 analysis tools must be able to handle it without overflowing.
15632
15633 - "termination_state" is the condition the session was in when the session
15634 ended. This indicates the session state, which side caused the end of
15635 session to happen, and for what reason (timeout, error, ...). The normal
15636 flags should be "--", indicating the session was closed by either end with
15637 no data remaining in buffers. See below "Session state at disconnection"
15638 for more details.
15639
15640 - "actconn" is the total number of concurrent connections on the process when
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -040015641 the session was logged. It is useful to detect when some per-process system
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015642 limits have been reached. For instance, if actconn is close to 512 when
15643 multiple connection errors occur, chances are high that the system limits
15644 the process to use a maximum of 1024 file descriptors and that all of them
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020015645 are used. See section 3 "Global parameters" to find how to tune the system.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015646
15647 - "feconn" is the total number of concurrent connections on the frontend when
15648 the session was logged. It is useful to estimate the amount of resource
15649 required to sustain high loads, and to detect when the frontend's "maxconn"
15650 has been reached. Most often when this value increases by huge jumps, it is
15651 because there is congestion on the backend servers, but sometimes it can be
15652 caused by a denial of service attack.
15653
15654 - "beconn" is the total number of concurrent connections handled by the
15655 backend when the session was logged. It includes the total number of
15656 concurrent connections active on servers as well as the number of
15657 connections pending in queues. It is useful to estimate the amount of
15658 additional servers needed to support high loads for a given application.
15659 Most often when this value increases by huge jumps, it is because there is
15660 congestion on the backend servers, but sometimes it can be caused by a
15661 denial of service attack.
15662
15663 - "srv_conn" is the total number of concurrent connections still active on
15664 the server when the session was logged. It can never exceed the server's
15665 configured "maxconn" parameter. If this value is very often close or equal
15666 to the server's "maxconn", it means that traffic regulation is involved a
15667 lot, meaning that either the server's maxconn value is too low, or that
15668 there aren't enough servers to process the load with an optimal response
15669 time. When only one of the server's "srv_conn" is high, it usually means
15670 that this server has some trouble causing the connections to take longer to
15671 be processed than on other servers.
15672
15673 - "retries" is the number of connection retries experienced by this session
15674 when trying to connect to the server. It must normally be zero, unless a
15675 server is being stopped at the same moment the connection was attempted.
15676 Frequent retries generally indicate either a network problem between
15677 haproxy and the server, or a misconfigured system backlog on the server
15678 preventing new connections from being queued. This field may optionally be
15679 prefixed with a '+' sign, indicating that the session has experienced a
15680 redispatch after the maximal retry count has been reached on the initial
15681 server. In this case, the server name appearing in the log is the one the
15682 connection was redispatched to, and not the first one, though both may
15683 sometimes be the same in case of hashing for instance. So as a general rule
15684 of thumb, when a '+' is present in front of the retry count, this count
15685 should not be attributed to the logged server.
15686
15687 - "srv_queue" is the total number of requests which were processed before
15688 this one in the server queue. It is zero when the request has not gone
15689 through the server queue. It makes it possible to estimate the approximate
15690 server's response time by dividing the time spent in queue by the number of
15691 requests in the queue. It is worth noting that if a session experiences a
15692 redispatch and passes through two server queues, their positions will be
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010015693 cumulative. A request should not pass through both the server queue and the
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015694 backend queue unless a redispatch occurs.
15695
15696 - "backend_queue" is the total number of requests which were processed before
15697 this one in the backend's global queue. It is zero when the request has not
15698 gone through the global queue. It makes it possible to estimate the average
15699 queue length, which easily translates into a number of missing servers when
15700 divided by a server's "maxconn" parameter. It is worth noting that if a
15701 session experiences a redispatch, it may pass twice in the backend's queue,
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010015702 and then both positions will be cumulative. A request should not pass
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015703 through both the server queue and the backend queue unless a redispatch
15704 occurs.
15705
15706
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200157078.2.3. HTTP log format
15708----------------------
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015709
15710The HTTP format is the most complete and the best suited for HTTP proxies. It
15711is enabled by when "option httplog" is specified in the frontend. It provides
15712the same level of information as the TCP format with additional features which
15713are specific to the HTTP protocol. Just like the TCP format, the log is usually
15714emitted at the end of the session, unless "option logasap" is specified, which
15715generally only makes sense for download sites. A session which matches the
15716"monitor" rules will never logged. It is also possible not to log sessions for
15717which no data were sent by the client by specifying "option dontlognull" in the
Willy Tarreauc9bd0cc2009-05-10 11:57:02 +020015718frontend. Successful connections will not be logged if "option dontlog-normal"
15719is specified in the frontend.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015720
15721Most fields are shared with the TCP log, some being different. A few fields may
15722slightly vary depending on some configuration options. Those ones are marked
15723with a star ('*') after the field name below.
15724
15725 Example :
15726 frontend http-in
15727 mode http
15728 option httplog
15729 log global
15730 default_backend bck
15731
15732 backend static
15733 server srv1 127.0.0.1:8000
15734
15735 >>> Feb 6 12:14:14 localhost \
15736 haproxy[14389]: 10.0.1.2:33317 [06/Feb/2009:12:14:14.655] http-in \
15737 static/srv1 10/0/30/69/109 200 2750 - - ---- 1/1/1/1/0 0/0 {1wt.eu} \
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +010015738 {} "GET /index.html HTTP/1.1"
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015739
15740 Field Format Extract from the example above
15741 1 process_name '[' pid ']:' haproxy[14389]:
15742 2 client_ip ':' client_port 10.0.1.2:33317
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020015743 3 '[' request_date ']' [06/Feb/2009:12:14:14.655]
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015744 4 frontend_name http-in
15745 5 backend_name '/' server_name static/srv1
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020015746 6 TR '/' Tw '/' Tc '/' Tr '/' Ta* 10/0/30/69/109
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015747 7 status_code 200
15748 8 bytes_read* 2750
15749 9 captured_request_cookie -
15750 10 captured_response_cookie -
15751 11 termination_state ----
15752 12 actconn '/' feconn '/' beconn '/' srv_conn '/' retries* 1/1/1/1/0
15753 13 srv_queue '/' backend_queue 0/0
15754 14 '{' captured_request_headers* '}' {haproxy.1wt.eu}
15755 15 '{' captured_response_headers* '}' {}
15756 16 '"' http_request '"' "GET /index.html HTTP/1.1"
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +010015757
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015758Detailed fields description :
15759 - "client_ip" is the IP address of the client which initiated the TCP
Willy Tarreauceb24bc2010-11-09 12:46:41 +010015760 connection to haproxy. If the connection was accepted on a UNIX socket
15761 instead, the IP address would be replaced with the word "unix". Note that
15762 when the connection is accepted on a socket configured with "accept-proxy"
Bertrand Jacquin93b227d2016-06-04 15:11:10 +010015763 and the PROXY protocol is correctly used, or with a "accept-netscaler-cip"
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010015764 and the NetScaler Client IP insertion protocol is correctly used, then the
Bertrand Jacquin93b227d2016-06-04 15:11:10 +010015765 logs will reflect the forwarded connection's information.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015766
15767 - "client_port" is the TCP port of the client which initiated the connection.
Willy Tarreauceb24bc2010-11-09 12:46:41 +010015768 If the connection was accepted on a UNIX socket instead, the port would be
15769 replaced with the ID of the accepting socket, which is also reported in the
15770 stats interface.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015771
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020015772 - "request_date" is the exact date when the first byte of the HTTP request
15773 was received by haproxy (log field %tr).
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015774
15775 - "frontend_name" is the name of the frontend (or listener) which received
15776 and processed the connection.
15777
15778 - "backend_name" is the name of the backend (or listener) which was selected
15779 to manage the connection to the server. This will be the same as the
15780 frontend if no switching rule has been applied.
15781
15782 - "server_name" is the name of the last server to which the connection was
15783 sent, which might differ from the first one if there were connection errors
15784 and a redispatch occurred. Note that this server belongs to the backend
15785 which processed the request. If the request was aborted before reaching a
15786 server, "<NOSRV>" is indicated instead of a server name. If the request was
15787 intercepted by the stats subsystem, "<STATS>" is indicated instead.
15788
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020015789 - "TR" is the total time in milliseconds spent waiting for a full HTTP
15790 request from the client (not counting body) after the first byte was
15791 received. It can be "-1" if the connection was aborted before a complete
15792 request could be received or the a bad request was received. It should
15793 always be very small because a request generally fits in one single packet.
15794 Large times here generally indicate network issues between the client and
15795 haproxy or requests being typed by hand. See "Timers" below for more details.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015796
15797 - "Tw" is the total time in milliseconds spent waiting in the various queues.
15798 It can be "-1" if the connection was aborted before reaching the queue.
15799 See "Timers" below for more details.
15800
15801 - "Tc" is the total time in milliseconds spent waiting for the connection to
15802 establish to the final server, including retries. It can be "-1" if the
15803 request was aborted before a connection could be established. See "Timers"
15804 below for more details.
15805
15806 - "Tr" is the total time in milliseconds spent waiting for the server to send
15807 a full HTTP response, not counting data. It can be "-1" if the request was
15808 aborted before a complete response could be received. It generally matches
15809 the server's processing time for the request, though it may be altered by
15810 the amount of data sent by the client to the server. Large times here on
15811 "GET" requests generally indicate an overloaded server. See "Timers" below
15812 for more details.
15813
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020015814 - "Ta" is the time the request remained active in haproxy, which is the total
15815 time in milliseconds elapsed between the first byte of the request was
15816 received and the last byte of response was sent. It covers all possible
15817 processing except the handshake (see Th) and idle time (see Ti). There is
15818 one exception, if "option logasap" was specified, then the time counting
15819 stops at the moment the log is emitted. In this case, a '+' sign is
15820 prepended before the value, indicating that the final one will be larger.
15821 See "Timers" below for more details.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015822
15823 - "status_code" is the HTTP status code returned to the client. This status
15824 is generally set by the server, but it might also be set by haproxy when
15825 the server cannot be reached or when its response is blocked by haproxy.
15826
15827 - "bytes_read" is the total number of bytes transmitted to the client when
15828 the log is emitted. This does include HTTP headers. If "option logasap" is
15829 specified, the this value will be prefixed with a '+' sign indicating that
15830 the final one may be larger. Please note that this value is a 64-bit
15831 counter, so log analysis tools must be able to handle it without
15832 overflowing.
15833
15834 - "captured_request_cookie" is an optional "name=value" entry indicating that
15835 the client had this cookie in the request. The cookie name and its maximum
15836 length are defined by the "capture cookie" statement in the frontend
15837 configuration. The field is a single dash ('-') when the option is not
15838 set. Only one cookie may be captured, it is generally used to track session
15839 ID exchanges between a client and a server to detect session crossing
15840 between clients due to application bugs. For more details, please consult
15841 the section "Capturing HTTP headers and cookies" below.
15842
15843 - "captured_response_cookie" is an optional "name=value" entry indicating
15844 that the server has returned a cookie with its response. The cookie name
15845 and its maximum length are defined by the "capture cookie" statement in the
15846 frontend configuration. The field is a single dash ('-') when the option is
15847 not set. Only one cookie may be captured, it is generally used to track
15848 session ID exchanges between a client and a server to detect session
15849 crossing between clients due to application bugs. For more details, please
15850 consult the section "Capturing HTTP headers and cookies" below.
15851
15852 - "termination_state" is the condition the session was in when the session
15853 ended. This indicates the session state, which side caused the end of
15854 session to happen, for what reason (timeout, error, ...), just like in TCP
15855 logs, and information about persistence operations on cookies in the last
15856 two characters. The normal flags should begin with "--", indicating the
15857 session was closed by either end with no data remaining in buffers. See
15858 below "Session state at disconnection" for more details.
15859
15860 - "actconn" is the total number of concurrent connections on the process when
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -040015861 the session was logged. It is useful to detect when some per-process system
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015862 limits have been reached. For instance, if actconn is close to 512 or 1024
15863 when multiple connection errors occur, chances are high that the system
15864 limits the process to use a maximum of 1024 file descriptors and that all
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020015865 of them are used. See section 3 "Global parameters" to find how to tune the
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015866 system.
15867
15868 - "feconn" is the total number of concurrent connections on the frontend when
15869 the session was logged. It is useful to estimate the amount of resource
15870 required to sustain high loads, and to detect when the frontend's "maxconn"
15871 has been reached. Most often when this value increases by huge jumps, it is
15872 because there is congestion on the backend servers, but sometimes it can be
15873 caused by a denial of service attack.
15874
15875 - "beconn" is the total number of concurrent connections handled by the
15876 backend when the session was logged. It includes the total number of
15877 concurrent connections active on servers as well as the number of
15878 connections pending in queues. It is useful to estimate the amount of
15879 additional servers needed to support high loads for a given application.
15880 Most often when this value increases by huge jumps, it is because there is
15881 congestion on the backend servers, but sometimes it can be caused by a
15882 denial of service attack.
15883
15884 - "srv_conn" is the total number of concurrent connections still active on
15885 the server when the session was logged. It can never exceed the server's
15886 configured "maxconn" parameter. If this value is very often close or equal
15887 to the server's "maxconn", it means that traffic regulation is involved a
15888 lot, meaning that either the server's maxconn value is too low, or that
15889 there aren't enough servers to process the load with an optimal response
15890 time. When only one of the server's "srv_conn" is high, it usually means
15891 that this server has some trouble causing the requests to take longer to be
15892 processed than on other servers.
15893
15894 - "retries" is the number of connection retries experienced by this session
15895 when trying to connect to the server. It must normally be zero, unless a
15896 server is being stopped at the same moment the connection was attempted.
15897 Frequent retries generally indicate either a network problem between
15898 haproxy and the server, or a misconfigured system backlog on the server
15899 preventing new connections from being queued. This field may optionally be
15900 prefixed with a '+' sign, indicating that the session has experienced a
15901 redispatch after the maximal retry count has been reached on the initial
15902 server. In this case, the server name appearing in the log is the one the
15903 connection was redispatched to, and not the first one, though both may
15904 sometimes be the same in case of hashing for instance. So as a general rule
15905 of thumb, when a '+' is present in front of the retry count, this count
15906 should not be attributed to the logged server.
15907
15908 - "srv_queue" is the total number of requests which were processed before
15909 this one in the server queue. It is zero when the request has not gone
15910 through the server queue. It makes it possible to estimate the approximate
15911 server's response time by dividing the time spent in queue by the number of
15912 requests in the queue. It is worth noting that if a session experiences a
15913 redispatch and passes through two server queues, their positions will be
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010015914 cumulative. A request should not pass through both the server queue and the
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015915 backend queue unless a redispatch occurs.
15916
15917 - "backend_queue" is the total number of requests which were processed before
15918 this one in the backend's global queue. It is zero when the request has not
15919 gone through the global queue. It makes it possible to estimate the average
15920 queue length, which easily translates into a number of missing servers when
15921 divided by a server's "maxconn" parameter. It is worth noting that if a
15922 session experiences a redispatch, it may pass twice in the backend's queue,
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010015923 and then both positions will be cumulative. A request should not pass
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010015924 through both the server queue and the backend queue unless a redispatch
15925 occurs.
15926
15927 - "captured_request_headers" is a list of headers captured in the request due
15928 to the presence of the "capture request header" statement in the frontend.
15929 Multiple headers can be captured, they will be delimited by a vertical bar
15930 ('|'). When no capture is enabled, the braces do not appear, causing a
15931 shift of remaining fields. It is important to note that this field may
15932 contain spaces, and that using it requires a smarter log parser than when
15933 it's not used. Please consult the section "Capturing HTTP headers and
15934 cookies" below for more details.
15935
15936 - "captured_response_headers" is a list of headers captured in the response
15937 due to the presence of the "capture response header" statement in the
15938 frontend. Multiple headers can be captured, they will be delimited by a
15939 vertical bar ('|'). When no capture is enabled, the braces do not appear,
15940 causing a shift of remaining fields. It is important to note that this
15941 field may contain spaces, and that using it requires a smarter log parser
15942 than when it's not used. Please consult the section "Capturing HTTP headers
15943 and cookies" below for more details.
15944
15945 - "http_request" is the complete HTTP request line, including the method,
15946 request and HTTP version string. Non-printable characters are encoded (see
15947 below the section "Non-printable characters"). This is always the last
15948 field, and it is always delimited by quotes and is the only one which can
15949 contain quotes. If new fields are added to the log format, they will be
15950 added before this field. This field might be truncated if the request is
15951 huge and does not fit in the standard syslog buffer (1024 characters). This
15952 is the reason why this field must always remain the last one.
15953
15954
Cyril Bontédc4d9032012-04-08 21:57:39 +0200159558.2.4. Custom log format
15956------------------------
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010015957
Willy Tarreau2beef582012-12-20 17:22:52 +010015958The directive log-format allows you to customize the logs in http mode and tcp
William Lallemandbddd4fd2012-02-27 11:23:10 +010015959mode. It takes a string as argument.
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010015960
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010015961HAProxy understands some log format variables. % precedes log format variables.
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010015962Variables can take arguments using braces ('{}'), and multiple arguments are
15963separated by commas within the braces. Flags may be added or removed by
15964prefixing them with a '+' or '-' sign.
15965
15966Special variable "%o" may be used to propagate its flags to all other
15967variables on the same format string. This is particularly handy with quoted
Dragan Dosen835b9212016-02-12 13:23:03 +010015968("Q") and escaped ("E") string formats.
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010015969
Willy Tarreauc8368452012-12-21 00:09:23 +010015970If a variable is named between square brackets ('[' .. ']') then it is used
Willy Tarreaube722a22014-06-13 16:31:59 +020015971as a sample expression rule (see section 7.3). This it useful to add some
Willy Tarreauc8368452012-12-21 00:09:23 +010015972less common information such as the client's SSL certificate's DN, or to log
15973the key that would be used to store an entry into a stick table.
15974
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010015975Note: spaces must be escaped. A space character is considered as a separator.
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030015976In order to emit a verbatim '%', it must be preceded by another '%' resulting
Willy Tarreau06d97f92013-12-02 17:45:48 +010015977in '%%'. HAProxy will automatically merge consecutive separators.
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010015978
Dragan Dosen835b9212016-02-12 13:23:03 +010015979Note: when using the RFC5424 syslog message format, the characters '"',
15980'\' and ']' inside PARAM-VALUE should be escaped with '\' as prefix (see
15981https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5424#section-6.3.3 for more details). In
15982such cases, the use of the flag "E" should be considered.
15983
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010015984Flags are :
15985 * Q: quote a string
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -040015986 * X: hexadecimal representation (IPs, Ports, %Ts, %rt, %pid)
Dragan Dosen835b9212016-02-12 13:23:03 +010015987 * E: escape characters '"', '\' and ']' in a string with '\' as prefix
15988 (intended purpose is for the RFC5424 structured-data log formats)
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010015989
15990 Example:
15991
15992 log-format %T\ %t\ Some\ Text
15993 log-format %{+Q}o\ %t\ %s\ %{-Q}r
15994
Dragan Dosen835b9212016-02-12 13:23:03 +010015995 log-format-sd %{+Q,+E}o\ [exampleSDID@1234\ header=%[capture.req.hdr(0)]]
15996
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010015997At the moment, the default HTTP format is defined this way :
15998
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020015999 log-format "%ci:%cp [%tr] %ft %b/%s %TR/%Tw/%Tc/%Tr/%Ta %ST %B %CC \
16000 %CS %tsc %ac/%fc/%bc/%sc/%rc %sq/%bq %hr %hs %{+Q}r"
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010016001
William Lallemandbddd4fd2012-02-27 11:23:10 +010016002the default CLF format is defined this way :
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010016003
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016004 log-format "%{+Q}o %{-Q}ci - - [%trg] %r %ST %B \"\" \"\" %cp \
16005 %ms %ft %b %s %TR %Tw %Tc %Tr %Ta %tsc %ac %fc \
16006 %bc %sc %rc %sq %bq %CC %CS %hrl %hsl"
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010016007
William Lallemandbddd4fd2012-02-27 11:23:10 +010016008and the default TCP format is defined this way :
16009
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016010 log-format "%ci:%cp [%t] %ft %b/%s %Tw/%Tc/%Tt %B %ts \
16011 %ac/%fc/%bc/%sc/%rc %sq/%bq"
William Lallemandbddd4fd2012-02-27 11:23:10 +010016012
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010016013Please refer to the table below for currently defined variables :
16014
William Lallemandbddd4fd2012-02-27 11:23:10 +010016015 +---+------+-----------------------------------------------+-------------+
Willy Tarreauffc3fcd2012-10-12 20:17:54 +020016016 | R | var | field name (8.2.2 and 8.2.3 for description) | type |
William Lallemandbddd4fd2012-02-27 11:23:10 +010016017 +---+------+-----------------------------------------------+-------------+
16018 | | %o | special variable, apply flags on all next var | |
16019 +---+------+-----------------------------------------------+-------------+
Willy Tarreau2beef582012-12-20 17:22:52 +010016020 | | %B | bytes_read (from server to client) | numeric |
16021 | H | %CC | captured_request_cookie | string |
16022 | H | %CS | captured_response_cookie | string |
William Lallemand5f232402012-04-05 18:02:55 +020016023 | | %H | hostname | string |
Andrew Hayworth0ebc55f2015-04-27 21:37:03 +000016024 | H | %HM | HTTP method (ex: POST) | string |
16025 | H | %HP | HTTP request URI without query string (path) | string |
Andrew Hayworthe63ac872015-07-31 16:14:16 +000016026 | H | %HQ | HTTP request URI query string (ex: ?bar=baz) | string |
Andrew Hayworth0ebc55f2015-04-27 21:37:03 +000016027 | H | %HU | HTTP request URI (ex: /foo?bar=baz) | string |
16028 | H | %HV | HTTP version (ex: HTTP/1.0) | string |
William Lallemanda73203e2012-03-12 12:48:57 +010016029 | | %ID | unique-id | string |
Willy Tarreau4bf99632014-06-13 12:21:40 +020016030 | | %ST | status_code | numeric |
William Lallemand5f232402012-04-05 18:02:55 +020016031 | | %T | gmt_date_time | date |
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016032 | | %Ta | Active time of the request (from TR to end) | numeric |
William Lallemandbddd4fd2012-02-27 11:23:10 +010016033 | | %Tc | Tc | numeric |
Willy Tarreau27b639d2016-05-17 17:55:27 +020016034 | | %Td | Td = Tt - (Tq + Tw + Tc + Tr) | numeric |
Yuxans Yao4e25b012012-10-19 10:36:09 +080016035 | | %Tl | local_date_time | date |
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016036 | | %Th | connection handshake time (SSL, PROXY proto) | numeric |
16037 | H | %Ti | idle time before the HTTP request | numeric |
16038 | H | %Tq | Th + Ti + TR | numeric |
16039 | H | %TR | time to receive the full request from 1st byte| numeric |
16040 | H | %Tr | Tr (response time) | numeric |
William Lallemand5f232402012-04-05 18:02:55 +020016041 | | %Ts | timestamp | numeric |
William Lallemandbddd4fd2012-02-27 11:23:10 +010016042 | | %Tt | Tt | numeric |
16043 | | %Tw | Tw | numeric |
Willy Tarreau2beef582012-12-20 17:22:52 +010016044 | | %U | bytes_uploaded (from client to server) | numeric |
William Lallemandbddd4fd2012-02-27 11:23:10 +010016045 | | %ac | actconn | numeric |
16046 | | %b | backend_name | string |
Willy Tarreau2beef582012-12-20 17:22:52 +010016047 | | %bc | beconn (backend concurrent connections) | numeric |
16048 | | %bi | backend_source_ip (connecting address) | IP |
16049 | | %bp | backend_source_port (connecting address) | numeric |
William Lallemandbddd4fd2012-02-27 11:23:10 +010016050 | | %bq | backend_queue | numeric |
Willy Tarreau2beef582012-12-20 17:22:52 +010016051 | | %ci | client_ip (accepted address) | IP |
16052 | | %cp | client_port (accepted address) | numeric |
William Lallemandbddd4fd2012-02-27 11:23:10 +010016053 | | %f | frontend_name | string |
Willy Tarreau2beef582012-12-20 17:22:52 +010016054 | | %fc | feconn (frontend concurrent connections) | numeric |
16055 | | %fi | frontend_ip (accepting address) | IP |
16056 | | %fp | frontend_port (accepting address) | numeric |
Willy Tarreau773d65f2012-10-12 14:56:11 +020016057 | | %ft | frontend_name_transport ('~' suffix for SSL) | string |
Willy Tarreau7346acb2014-08-28 15:03:15 +020016058 | | %lc | frontend_log_counter | numeric |
Willy Tarreaud9ed3d22014-06-13 12:23:06 +020016059 | | %hr | captured_request_headers default style | string |
16060 | | %hrl | captured_request_headers CLF style | string list |
16061 | | %hs | captured_response_headers default style | string |
16062 | | %hsl | captured_response_headers CLF style | string list |
Willy Tarreau812c88e2015-08-09 10:56:35 +020016063 | | %ms | accept date milliseconds (left-padded with 0) | numeric |
William Lallemand5f232402012-04-05 18:02:55 +020016064 | | %pid | PID | numeric |
Willy Tarreauffc3fcd2012-10-12 20:17:54 +020016065 | H | %r | http_request | string |
William Lallemandbddd4fd2012-02-27 11:23:10 +010016066 | | %rc | retries | numeric |
Willy Tarreau1f0da242014-01-25 11:01:50 +010016067 | | %rt | request_counter (HTTP req or TCP session) | numeric |
William Lallemandbddd4fd2012-02-27 11:23:10 +010016068 | | %s | server_name | string |
Willy Tarreau2beef582012-12-20 17:22:52 +010016069 | | %sc | srv_conn (server concurrent connections) | numeric |
16070 | | %si | server_IP (target address) | IP |
16071 | | %sp | server_port (target address) | numeric |
William Lallemandbddd4fd2012-02-27 11:23:10 +010016072 | | %sq | srv_queue | numeric |
Willy Tarreauffc3fcd2012-10-12 20:17:54 +020016073 | S | %sslc| ssl_ciphers (ex: AES-SHA) | string |
16074 | S | %sslv| ssl_version (ex: TLSv1) | string |
Willy Tarreau2beef582012-12-20 17:22:52 +010016075 | | %t | date_time (with millisecond resolution) | date |
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016076 | H | %tr | date_time of HTTP request | date |
16077 | H | %trg | gmt_date_time of start of HTTP request | date |
16078 | H | %trl | locla_date_time of start of HTTP request | date |
William Lallemandbddd4fd2012-02-27 11:23:10 +010016079 | | %ts | termination_state | string |
Willy Tarreauffc3fcd2012-10-12 20:17:54 +020016080 | H | %tsc | termination_state with cookie status | string |
William Lallemandbddd4fd2012-02-27 11:23:10 +010016081 +---+------+-----------------------------------------------+-------------+
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010016082
Willy Tarreauffc3fcd2012-10-12 20:17:54 +020016083 R = Restrictions : H = mode http only ; S = SSL only
William Lallemand48940402012-01-30 16:47:22 +010016084
Willy Tarreau5f51e1a2012-12-03 18:40:10 +010016085
160868.2.5. Error log format
16087-----------------------
16088
16089When an incoming connection fails due to an SSL handshake or an invalid PROXY
16090protocol header, haproxy will log the event using a shorter, fixed line format.
16091By default, logs are emitted at the LOG_INFO level, unless the option
16092"log-separate-errors" is set in the backend, in which case the LOG_ERR level
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010016093will be used. Connections on which no data are exchanged (e.g. probes) are not
Willy Tarreau5f51e1a2012-12-03 18:40:10 +010016094logged if the "dontlognull" option is set.
16095
16096The format looks like this :
16097
16098 >>> Dec 3 18:27:14 localhost \
16099 haproxy[6103]: 127.0.0.1:56059 [03/Dec/2012:17:35:10.380] frt/f1: \
16100 Connection error during SSL handshake
16101
16102 Field Format Extract from the example above
16103 1 process_name '[' pid ']:' haproxy[6103]:
16104 2 client_ip ':' client_port 127.0.0.1:56059
16105 3 '[' accept_date ']' [03/Dec/2012:17:35:10.380]
16106 4 frontend_name "/" bind_name ":" frt/f1:
16107 5 message Connection error during SSL handshake
16108
16109These fields just provide minimal information to help debugging connection
16110failures.
16111
16112
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200161138.3. Advanced logging options
16114-----------------------------
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016115
16116Some advanced logging options are often looked for but are not easy to find out
16117just by looking at the various options. Here is an entry point for the few
16118options which can enable better logging. Please refer to the keywords reference
16119for more information about their usage.
16120
16121
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200161228.3.1. Disabling logging of external tests
16123------------------------------------------
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016124
16125It is quite common to have some monitoring tools perform health checks on
16126haproxy. Sometimes it will be a layer 3 load-balancer such as LVS or any
16127commercial load-balancer, and sometimes it will simply be a more complete
16128monitoring system such as Nagios. When the tests are very frequent, users often
16129ask how to disable logging for those checks. There are three possibilities :
16130
16131 - if connections come from everywhere and are just TCP probes, it is often
16132 desired to simply disable logging of connections without data exchange, by
16133 setting "option dontlognull" in the frontend. It also disables logging of
16134 port scans, which may or may not be desired.
16135
16136 - if the connection come from a known source network, use "monitor-net" to
16137 declare this network as monitoring only. Any host in this network will then
16138 only be able to perform health checks, and their requests will not be
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030016139 logged. This is generally appropriate to designate a list of equipment
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016140 such as other load-balancers.
16141
16142 - if the tests are performed on a known URI, use "monitor-uri" to declare
16143 this URI as dedicated to monitoring. Any host sending this request will
16144 only get the result of a health-check, and the request will not be logged.
16145
16146
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200161478.3.2. Logging before waiting for the session to terminate
16148----------------------------------------------------------
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016149
16150The problem with logging at end of connection is that you have no clue about
16151what is happening during very long sessions, such as remote terminal sessions
16152or large file downloads. This problem can be worked around by specifying
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010016153"option logasap" in the frontend. HAProxy will then log as soon as possible,
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016154just before data transfer begins. This means that in case of TCP, it will still
16155log the connection status to the server, and in case of HTTP, it will log just
16156after processing the server headers. In this case, the number of bytes reported
16157is the number of header bytes sent to the client. In order to avoid confusion
16158with normal logs, the total time field and the number of bytes are prefixed
16159with a '+' sign which means that real numbers are certainly larger.
16160
16161
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200161628.3.3. Raising log level upon errors
16163------------------------------------
Willy Tarreauc9bd0cc2009-05-10 11:57:02 +020016164
16165Sometimes it is more convenient to separate normal traffic from errors logs,
16166for instance in order to ease error monitoring from log files. When the option
16167"log-separate-errors" is used, connections which experience errors, timeouts,
16168retries, redispatches or HTTP status codes 5xx will see their syslog level
16169raised from "info" to "err". This will help a syslog daemon store the log in
16170a separate file. It is very important to keep the errors in the normal traffic
16171file too, so that log ordering is not altered. You should also be careful if
16172you already have configured your syslog daemon to store all logs higher than
16173"notice" in an "admin" file, because the "err" level is higher than "notice".
16174
16175
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200161768.3.4. Disabling logging of successful connections
16177--------------------------------------------------
Willy Tarreauc9bd0cc2009-05-10 11:57:02 +020016178
16179Although this may sound strange at first, some large sites have to deal with
16180multiple thousands of logs per second and are experiencing difficulties keeping
16181them intact for a long time or detecting errors within them. If the option
16182"dontlog-normal" is set on the frontend, all normal connections will not be
16183logged. In this regard, a normal connection is defined as one without any
16184error, timeout, retry nor redispatch. In HTTP, the status code is checked too,
16185and a response with a status 5xx is not considered normal and will be logged
16186too. Of course, doing is is really discouraged as it will remove most of the
16187useful information from the logs. Do this only if you have no other
16188alternative.
16189
16190
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200161918.4. Timing events
16192------------------
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016193
16194Timers provide a great help in troubleshooting network problems. All values are
16195reported in milliseconds (ms). These timers should be used in conjunction with
16196the session termination flags. In TCP mode with "option tcplog" set on the
16197frontend, 3 control points are reported under the form "Tw/Tc/Tt", and in HTTP
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016198mode, 5 control points are reported under the form "TR/Tw/Tc/Tr/Ta". In
16199addition, three other measures are provided, "Th", "Ti", and "Tq".
16200
Guillaume de Lafondf27cddc2016-12-23 17:32:43 +010016201Timings events in HTTP mode:
16202
16203 first request 2nd request
16204 |<-------------------------------->|<-------------- ...
16205 t tr t tr ...
16206 ---|----|----|----|----|----|----|----|----|--
16207 : Th Ti TR Tw Tc Tr Td : Ti ...
16208 :<---- Tq ---->: :
16209 :<-------------- Tt -------------->:
16210 :<--------- Ta --------->:
16211
16212Timings events in TCP mode:
16213
16214 TCP session
16215 |<----------------->|
16216 t t
16217 ---|----|----|----|----|---
16218 | Th Tw Tc Td |
16219 |<------ Tt ------->|
16220
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016221 - Th: total time to accept tcp connection and execute handshakes for low level
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010016222 protocols. Currently, these protocols are proxy-protocol and SSL. This may
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016223 only happen once during the whole connection's lifetime. A large time here
16224 may indicate that the client only pre-established the connection without
16225 speaking, that it is experiencing network issues preventing it from
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010016226 completing a handshake in a reasonable time (e.g. MTU issues), or that an
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016227 SSL handshake was very expensive to compute.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016228
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016229 - Ti: is the idle time before the HTTP request (HTTP mode only). This timer
16230 counts between the end of the handshakes and the first byte of the HTTP
16231 request. When dealing with a second request in keep-alive mode, it starts
16232 to count after the end of the transmission the previous response. Some
16233 browsers pre-establish connections to a server in order to reduce the
16234 latency of a future request, and keep them pending until they need it. This
16235 delay will be reported as the idle time. A value of -1 indicates that
16236 nothing was received on the connection.
16237
16238 - TR: total time to get the client request (HTTP mode only). It's the time
16239 elapsed between the first bytes received and the moment the proxy received
16240 the empty line marking the end of the HTTP headers. The value "-1"
16241 indicates that the end of headers has never been seen. This happens when
16242 the client closes prematurely or times out. This time is usually very short
16243 since most requests fit in a single packet. A large time may indicate a
16244 request typed by hand during a test.
16245
16246 - Tq: total time to get the client request from the accept date or since the
16247 emission of the last byte of the previous response (HTTP mode only). It's
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010016248 exactly equal to Th + Ti + TR unless any of them is -1, in which case it
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016249 returns -1 as well. This timer used to be very useful before the arrival of
16250 HTTP keep-alive and browsers' pre-connect feature. It's recommended to drop
16251 it in favor of TR nowadays, as the idle time adds a lot of noise to the
16252 reports.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016253
16254 - Tw: total time spent in the queues waiting for a connection slot. It
16255 accounts for backend queue as well as the server queues, and depends on the
16256 queue size, and the time needed for the server to complete previous
16257 requests. The value "-1" means that the request was killed before reaching
16258 the queue, which is generally what happens with invalid or denied requests.
16259
16260 - Tc: total time to establish the TCP connection to the server. It's the time
16261 elapsed between the moment the proxy sent the connection request, and the
16262 moment it was acknowledged by the server, or between the TCP SYN packet and
16263 the matching SYN/ACK packet in return. The value "-1" means that the
16264 connection never established.
16265
16266 - Tr: server response time (HTTP mode only). It's the time elapsed between
16267 the moment the TCP connection was established to the server and the moment
16268 the server sent its complete response headers. It purely shows its request
16269 processing time, without the network overhead due to the data transmission.
16270 It is worth noting that when the client has data to send to the server, for
16271 instance during a POST request, the time already runs, and this can distort
16272 apparent response time. For this reason, it's generally wise not to trust
16273 too much this field for POST requests initiated from clients behind an
16274 untrusted network. A value of "-1" here means that the last the response
16275 header (empty line) was never seen, most likely because the server timeout
16276 stroke before the server managed to process the request.
16277
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016278 - Ta: total active time for the HTTP request, between the moment the proxy
16279 received the first byte of the request header and the emission of the last
16280 byte of the response body. The exception is when the "logasap" option is
16281 specified. In this case, it only equals (TR+Tw+Tc+Tr), and is prefixed with
16282 a '+' sign. From this field, we can deduce "Td", the data transmission time,
16283 by subtracting other timers when valid :
16284
16285 Td = Ta - (TR + Tw + Tc + Tr)
16286
16287 Timers with "-1" values have to be excluded from this equation. Note that
16288 "Ta" can never be negative.
16289
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016290 - Tt: total session duration time, between the moment the proxy accepted it
16291 and the moment both ends were closed. The exception is when the "logasap"
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016292 option is specified. In this case, it only equals (Th+Ti+TR+Tw+Tc+Tr), and
16293 is prefixed with a '+' sign. From this field, we can deduce "Td", the data
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030016294 transmission time, by subtracting other timers when valid :
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016295
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016296 Td = Tt - (Th + Ti + TR + Tw + Tc + Tr)
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016297
16298 Timers with "-1" values have to be excluded from this equation. In TCP
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016299 mode, "Ti", "Tq" and "Tr" have to be excluded too. Note that "Tt" can never
16300 be negative and that for HTTP, Tt is simply equal to (Th+Ti+Ta).
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016301
16302These timers provide precious indications on trouble causes. Since the TCP
16303protocol defines retransmit delays of 3, 6, 12... seconds, we know for sure
16304that timers close to multiples of 3s are nearly always related to lost packets
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016305due to network problems (wires, negotiation, congestion). Moreover, if "Ta" or
16306"Tt" is close to a timeout value specified in the configuration, it often means
16307that a session has been aborted on timeout.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016308
16309Most common cases :
16310
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016311 - If "Th" or "Ti" are close to 3000, a packet has probably been lost between
16312 the client and the proxy. This is very rare on local networks but might
16313 happen when clients are on far remote networks and send large requests. It
16314 may happen that values larger than usual appear here without any network
16315 cause. Sometimes, during an attack or just after a resource starvation has
16316 ended, haproxy may accept thousands of connections in a few milliseconds.
16317 The time spent accepting these connections will inevitably slightly delay
16318 processing of other connections, and it can happen that request times in the
16319 order of a few tens of milliseconds are measured after a few thousands of
16320 new connections have been accepted at once. Using one of the keep-alive
16321 modes may display larger idle times since "Ti" measures the time spent
Patrick Mezard105faca2010-06-12 17:02:46 +020016322 waiting for additional requests.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016323
16324 - If "Tc" is close to 3000, a packet has probably been lost between the
16325 server and the proxy during the server connection phase. This value should
16326 always be very low, such as 1 ms on local networks and less than a few tens
16327 of ms on remote networks.
16328
Willy Tarreau55165fe2009-05-10 12:02:55 +020016329 - If "Tr" is nearly always lower than 3000 except some rare values which seem
16330 to be the average majored by 3000, there are probably some packets lost
16331 between the proxy and the server.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016332
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016333 - If "Ta" is large even for small byte counts, it generally is because
16334 neither the client nor the server decides to close the connection while
16335 haproxy is running in tunnel mode and both have agreed on a keep-alive
16336 connection mode. In order to solve this issue, it will be needed to specify
16337 one of the HTTP options to manipulate keep-alive or close options on either
16338 the frontend or the backend. Having the smallest possible 'Ta' or 'Tt' is
16339 important when connection regulation is used with the "maxconn" option on
16340 the servers, since no new connection will be sent to the server until
16341 another one is released.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016342
16343Other noticeable HTTP log cases ('xx' means any value to be ignored) :
16344
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016345 TR/Tw/Tc/Tr/+Ta The "option logasap" is present on the frontend and the log
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016346 was emitted before the data phase. All the timers are valid
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016347 except "Ta" which is shorter than reality.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016348
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016349 -1/xx/xx/xx/Ta The client was not able to send a complete request in time
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016350 or it aborted too early. Check the session termination flags
16351 then "timeout http-request" and "timeout client" settings.
16352
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016353 TR/-1/xx/xx/Ta It was not possible to process the request, maybe because
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016354 servers were out of order, because the request was invalid
16355 or forbidden by ACL rules. Check the session termination
16356 flags.
16357
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016358 TR/Tw/-1/xx/Ta The connection could not establish on the server. Either it
16359 actively refused it or it timed out after Ta-(TR+Tw) ms.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016360 Check the session termination flags, then check the
16361 "timeout connect" setting. Note that the tarpit action might
16362 return similar-looking patterns, with "Tw" equal to the time
16363 the client connection was maintained open.
16364
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016365 TR/Tw/Tc/-1/Ta The server has accepted the connection but did not return
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030016366 a complete response in time, or it closed its connection
Thierry FOURNIER / OZON.IO4cac3592016-07-28 17:19:45 +020016367 unexpectedly after Ta-(TR+Tw+Tc) ms. Check the session
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016368 termination flags, then check the "timeout server" setting.
16369
16370
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200163718.5. Session state at disconnection
16372-----------------------------------
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016373
16374TCP and HTTP logs provide a session termination indicator in the
16375"termination_state" field, just before the number of active connections. It is
163762-characters long in TCP mode, and is extended to 4 characters in HTTP mode,
16377each of which has a special meaning :
16378
16379 - On the first character, a code reporting the first event which caused the
16380 session to terminate :
16381
16382 C : the TCP session was unexpectedly aborted by the client.
16383
16384 S : the TCP session was unexpectedly aborted by the server, or the
16385 server explicitly refused it.
16386
16387 P : the session was prematurely aborted by the proxy, because of a
16388 connection limit enforcement, because a DENY filter was matched,
16389 because of a security check which detected and blocked a dangerous
16390 error in server response which might have caused information leak
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010016391 (e.g. cacheable cookie).
Willy Tarreau570f2212013-06-10 16:42:09 +020016392
16393 L : the session was locally processed by haproxy and was not passed to
16394 a server. This is what happens for stats and redirects.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016395
16396 R : a resource on the proxy has been exhausted (memory, sockets, source
16397 ports, ...). Usually, this appears during the connection phase, and
16398 system logs should contain a copy of the precise error. If this
16399 happens, it must be considered as a very serious anomaly which
16400 should be fixed as soon as possible by any means.
16401
16402 I : an internal error was identified by the proxy during a self-check.
16403 This should NEVER happen, and you are encouraged to report any log
16404 containing this, because this would almost certainly be a bug. It
16405 would be wise to preventively restart the process after such an
16406 event too, in case it would be caused by memory corruption.
16407
Simon Horman752dc4a2011-06-21 14:34:59 +090016408 D : the session was killed by haproxy because the server was detected
16409 as down and was configured to kill all connections when going down.
16410
Justin Karnegeseb2c24a2012-05-24 15:28:52 -070016411 U : the session was killed by haproxy on this backup server because an
16412 active server was detected as up and was configured to kill all
16413 backup connections when going up.
16414
Willy Tarreaua2a64e92011-09-07 23:01:56 +020016415 K : the session was actively killed by an admin operating on haproxy.
16416
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016417 c : the client-side timeout expired while waiting for the client to
16418 send or receive data.
16419
16420 s : the server-side timeout expired while waiting for the server to
16421 send or receive data.
16422
16423 - : normal session completion, both the client and the server closed
16424 with nothing left in the buffers.
16425
16426 - on the second character, the TCP or HTTP session state when it was closed :
16427
Willy Tarreauf7b30a92010-12-06 22:59:17 +010016428 R : the proxy was waiting for a complete, valid REQUEST from the client
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016429 (HTTP mode only). Nothing was sent to any server.
16430
16431 Q : the proxy was waiting in the QUEUE for a connection slot. This can
16432 only happen when servers have a 'maxconn' parameter set. It can
16433 also happen in the global queue after a redispatch consecutive to
16434 a failed attempt to connect to a dying server. If no redispatch is
16435 reported, then no connection attempt was made to any server.
16436
16437 C : the proxy was waiting for the CONNECTION to establish on the
16438 server. The server might at most have noticed a connection attempt.
16439
16440 H : the proxy was waiting for complete, valid response HEADERS from the
16441 server (HTTP only).
16442
16443 D : the session was in the DATA phase.
16444
16445 L : the proxy was still transmitting LAST data to the client while the
16446 server had already finished. This one is very rare as it can only
16447 happen when the client dies while receiving the last packets.
16448
16449 T : the request was tarpitted. It has been held open with the client
16450 during the whole "timeout tarpit" duration or until the client
16451 closed, both of which will be reported in the "Tw" timer.
16452
16453 - : normal session completion after end of data transfer.
16454
16455 - the third character tells whether the persistence cookie was provided by
16456 the client (only in HTTP mode) :
16457
16458 N : the client provided NO cookie. This is usually the case for new
16459 visitors, so counting the number of occurrences of this flag in the
16460 logs generally indicate a valid trend for the site frequentation.
16461
16462 I : the client provided an INVALID cookie matching no known server.
16463 This might be caused by a recent configuration change, mixed
Cyril Bontéa8e7bbc2010-04-25 22:29:29 +020016464 cookies between HTTP/HTTPS sites, persistence conditionally
16465 ignored, or an attack.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016466
16467 D : the client provided a cookie designating a server which was DOWN,
16468 so either "option persist" was used and the client was sent to
16469 this server, or it was not set and the client was redispatched to
16470 another server.
16471
Willy Tarreau996a92c2010-10-13 19:30:47 +020016472 V : the client provided a VALID cookie, and was sent to the associated
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016473 server.
16474
Willy Tarreau996a92c2010-10-13 19:30:47 +020016475 E : the client provided a valid cookie, but with a last date which was
16476 older than what is allowed by the "maxidle" cookie parameter, so
16477 the cookie is consider EXPIRED and is ignored. The request will be
16478 redispatched just as if there was no cookie.
16479
16480 O : the client provided a valid cookie, but with a first date which was
16481 older than what is allowed by the "maxlife" cookie parameter, so
16482 the cookie is consider too OLD and is ignored. The request will be
16483 redispatched just as if there was no cookie.
16484
Willy Tarreauc89ccb62012-04-05 21:18:22 +020016485 U : a cookie was present but was not used to select the server because
16486 some other server selection mechanism was used instead (typically a
16487 "use-server" rule).
16488
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016489 - : does not apply (no cookie set in configuration).
16490
16491 - the last character reports what operations were performed on the persistence
16492 cookie returned by the server (only in HTTP mode) :
16493
16494 N : NO cookie was provided by the server, and none was inserted either.
16495
16496 I : no cookie was provided by the server, and the proxy INSERTED one.
16497 Note that in "cookie insert" mode, if the server provides a cookie,
16498 it will still be overwritten and reported as "I" here.
16499
Willy Tarreau996a92c2010-10-13 19:30:47 +020016500 U : the proxy UPDATED the last date in the cookie that was presented by
16501 the client. This can only happen in insert mode with "maxidle". It
Jarno Huuskonen0e82b922014-04-12 18:22:19 +030016502 happens every time there is activity at a different date than the
Willy Tarreau996a92c2010-10-13 19:30:47 +020016503 date indicated in the cookie. If any other change happens, such as
16504 a redispatch, then the cookie will be marked as inserted instead.
16505
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016506 P : a cookie was PROVIDED by the server and transmitted as-is.
16507
16508 R : the cookie provided by the server was REWRITTEN by the proxy, which
16509 happens in "cookie rewrite" or "cookie prefix" modes.
16510
16511 D : the cookie provided by the server was DELETED by the proxy.
16512
16513 - : does not apply (no cookie set in configuration).
16514
Willy Tarreau996a92c2010-10-13 19:30:47 +020016515The combination of the two first flags gives a lot of information about what
16516was happening when the session terminated, and why it did terminate. It can be
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016517helpful to detect server saturation, network troubles, local system resource
16518starvation, attacks, etc...
16519
16520The most common termination flags combinations are indicated below. They are
16521alphabetically sorted, with the lowercase set just after the upper case for
16522easier finding and understanding.
16523
16524 Flags Reason
16525
16526 -- Normal termination.
16527
16528 CC The client aborted before the connection could be established to the
16529 server. This can happen when haproxy tries to connect to a recently
16530 dead (or unchecked) server, and the client aborts while haproxy is
16531 waiting for the server to respond or for "timeout connect" to expire.
16532
16533 CD The client unexpectedly aborted during data transfer. This can be
16534 caused by a browser crash, by an intermediate equipment between the
16535 client and haproxy which decided to actively break the connection,
16536 by network routing issues between the client and haproxy, or by a
16537 keep-alive session between the server and the client terminated first
16538 by the client.
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +010016539
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016540 cD The client did not send nor acknowledge any data for as long as the
16541 "timeout client" delay. This is often caused by network failures on
Cyril Bontédc4d9032012-04-08 21:57:39 +020016542 the client side, or the client simply leaving the net uncleanly.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016543
16544 CH The client aborted while waiting for the server to start responding.
16545 It might be the server taking too long to respond or the client
16546 clicking the 'Stop' button too fast.
16547
16548 cH The "timeout client" stroke while waiting for client data during a
16549 POST request. This is sometimes caused by too large TCP MSS values
16550 for PPPoE networks which cannot transport full-sized packets. It can
16551 also happen when client timeout is smaller than server timeout and
16552 the server takes too long to respond.
16553
16554 CQ The client aborted while its session was queued, waiting for a server
16555 with enough empty slots to accept it. It might be that either all the
16556 servers were saturated or that the assigned server was taking too
16557 long a time to respond.
16558
16559 CR The client aborted before sending a full HTTP request. Most likely
16560 the request was typed by hand using a telnet client, and aborted
16561 too early. The HTTP status code is likely a 400 here. Sometimes this
16562 might also be caused by an IDS killing the connection between haproxy
Willy Tarreau0f228a02015-05-01 15:37:53 +020016563 and the client. "option http-ignore-probes" can be used to ignore
16564 connections without any data transfer.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016565
16566 cR The "timeout http-request" stroke before the client sent a full HTTP
16567 request. This is sometimes caused by too large TCP MSS values on the
16568 client side for PPPoE networks which cannot transport full-sized
16569 packets, or by clients sending requests by hand and not typing fast
16570 enough, or forgetting to enter the empty line at the end of the
Willy Tarreau2705a612014-05-23 17:38:34 +020016571 request. The HTTP status code is likely a 408 here. Note: recently,
Willy Tarreau0f228a02015-05-01 15:37:53 +020016572 some browsers started to implement a "pre-connect" feature consisting
16573 in speculatively connecting to some recently visited web sites just
16574 in case the user would like to visit them. This results in many
16575 connections being established to web sites, which end up in 408
16576 Request Timeout if the timeout strikes first, or 400 Bad Request when
16577 the browser decides to close them first. These ones pollute the log
16578 and feed the error counters. Some versions of some browsers have even
16579 been reported to display the error code. It is possible to work
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010016580 around the undesirable effects of this behavior by adding "option
Willy Tarreau0f228a02015-05-01 15:37:53 +020016581 http-ignore-probes" in the frontend, resulting in connections with
16582 zero data transfer to be totally ignored. This will definitely hide
16583 the errors of people experiencing connectivity issues though.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016584
16585 CT The client aborted while its session was tarpitted. It is important to
16586 check if this happens on valid requests, in order to be sure that no
Willy Tarreau55165fe2009-05-10 12:02:55 +020016587 wrong tarpit rules have been written. If a lot of them happen, it
16588 might make sense to lower the "timeout tarpit" value to something
16589 closer to the average reported "Tw" timer, in order not to consume
16590 resources for just a few attackers.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016591
Willy Tarreau570f2212013-06-10 16:42:09 +020016592 LR The request was intercepted and locally handled by haproxy. Generally
16593 it means that this was a redirect or a stats request.
16594
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +010016595 SC The server or an equipment between it and haproxy explicitly refused
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016596 the TCP connection (the proxy received a TCP RST or an ICMP message
16597 in return). Under some circumstances, it can also be the network
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010016598 stack telling the proxy that the server is unreachable (e.g. no route,
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016599 or no ARP response on local network). When this happens in HTTP mode,
16600 the status code is likely a 502 or 503 here.
16601
16602 sC The "timeout connect" stroke before a connection to the server could
16603 complete. When this happens in HTTP mode, the status code is likely a
16604 503 or 504 here.
16605
16606 SD The connection to the server died with an error during the data
16607 transfer. This usually means that haproxy has received an RST from
16608 the server or an ICMP message from an intermediate equipment while
16609 exchanging data with the server. This can be caused by a server crash
16610 or by a network issue on an intermediate equipment.
16611
16612 sD The server did not send nor acknowledge any data for as long as the
16613 "timeout server" setting during the data phase. This is often caused
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010016614 by too short timeouts on L4 equipment before the server (firewalls,
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016615 load-balancers, ...), as well as keep-alive sessions maintained
16616 between the client and the server expiring first on haproxy.
16617
16618 SH The server aborted before sending its full HTTP response headers, or
16619 it crashed while processing the request. Since a server aborting at
16620 this moment is very rare, it would be wise to inspect its logs to
16621 control whether it crashed and why. The logged request may indicate a
16622 small set of faulty requests, demonstrating bugs in the application.
16623 Sometimes this might also be caused by an IDS killing the connection
16624 between haproxy and the server.
16625
16626 sH The "timeout server" stroke before the server could return its
16627 response headers. This is the most common anomaly, indicating too
16628 long transactions, probably caused by server or database saturation.
16629 The immediate workaround consists in increasing the "timeout server"
16630 setting, but it is important to keep in mind that the user experience
16631 will suffer from these long response times. The only long term
16632 solution is to fix the application.
16633
16634 sQ The session spent too much time in queue and has been expired. See
16635 the "timeout queue" and "timeout connect" settings to find out how to
16636 fix this if it happens too often. If it often happens massively in
16637 short periods, it may indicate general problems on the affected
16638 servers due to I/O or database congestion, or saturation caused by
16639 external attacks.
16640
16641 PC The proxy refused to establish a connection to the server because the
16642 process' socket limit has been reached while attempting to connect.
Cyril Bontédc4d9032012-04-08 21:57:39 +020016643 The global "maxconn" parameter may be increased in the configuration
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016644 so that it does not happen anymore. This status is very rare and
16645 might happen when the global "ulimit-n" parameter is forced by hand.
16646
Willy Tarreaued2fd2d2010-12-29 11:23:27 +010016647 PD The proxy blocked an incorrectly formatted chunked encoded message in
16648 a request or a response, after the server has emitted its headers. In
16649 most cases, this will indicate an invalid message from the server to
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010016650 the client. HAProxy supports chunk sizes of up to 2GB - 1 (2147483647
Willy Tarreauf3a3e132013-08-31 08:16:26 +020016651 bytes). Any larger size will be considered as an error.
Willy Tarreaued2fd2d2010-12-29 11:23:27 +010016652
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016653 PH The proxy blocked the server's response, because it was invalid,
16654 incomplete, dangerous (cache control), or matched a security filter.
16655 In any case, an HTTP 502 error is sent to the client. One possible
16656 cause for this error is an invalid syntax in an HTTP header name
Willy Tarreaued2fd2d2010-12-29 11:23:27 +010016657 containing unauthorized characters. It is also possible but quite
16658 rare, that the proxy blocked a chunked-encoding request from the
16659 client due to an invalid syntax, before the server responded. In this
16660 case, an HTTP 400 error is sent to the client and reported in the
16661 logs.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016662
16663 PR The proxy blocked the client's HTTP request, either because of an
16664 invalid HTTP syntax, in which case it returned an HTTP 400 error to
16665 the client, or because a deny filter matched, in which case it
16666 returned an HTTP 403 error.
16667
16668 PT The proxy blocked the client's request and has tarpitted its
16669 connection before returning it a 500 server error. Nothing was sent
16670 to the server. The connection was maintained open for as long as
16671 reported by the "Tw" timer field.
16672
16673 RC A local resource has been exhausted (memory, sockets, source ports)
16674 preventing the connection to the server from establishing. The error
16675 logs will tell precisely what was missing. This is very rare and can
16676 only be solved by proper system tuning.
16677
Willy Tarreau996a92c2010-10-13 19:30:47 +020016678The combination of the two last flags gives a lot of information about how
16679persistence was handled by the client, the server and by haproxy. This is very
16680important to troubleshoot disconnections, when users complain they have to
16681re-authenticate. The commonly encountered flags are :
16682
16683 -- Persistence cookie is not enabled.
16684
16685 NN No cookie was provided by the client, none was inserted in the
16686 response. For instance, this can be in insert mode with "postonly"
16687 set on a GET request.
16688
16689 II A cookie designating an invalid server was provided by the client,
16690 a valid one was inserted in the response. This typically happens when
Jamie Gloudonaaa21002012-08-25 00:18:33 -040016691 a "server" entry is removed from the configuration, since its cookie
Willy Tarreau996a92c2010-10-13 19:30:47 +020016692 value can be presented by a client when no other server knows it.
16693
16694 NI No cookie was provided by the client, one was inserted in the
16695 response. This typically happens for first requests from every user
16696 in "insert" mode, which makes it an easy way to count real users.
16697
16698 VN A cookie was provided by the client, none was inserted in the
16699 response. This happens for most responses for which the client has
16700 already got a cookie.
16701
16702 VU A cookie was provided by the client, with a last visit date which is
16703 not completely up-to-date, so an updated cookie was provided in
16704 response. This can also happen if there was no date at all, or if
16705 there was a date but the "maxidle" parameter was not set, so that the
16706 cookie can be switched to unlimited time.
16707
16708 EI A cookie was provided by the client, with a last visit date which is
16709 too old for the "maxidle" parameter, so the cookie was ignored and a
16710 new cookie was inserted in the response.
16711
16712 OI A cookie was provided by the client, with a first visit date which is
16713 too old for the "maxlife" parameter, so the cookie was ignored and a
16714 new cookie was inserted in the response.
16715
16716 DI The server designated by the cookie was down, a new server was
16717 selected and a new cookie was emitted in the response.
16718
16719 VI The server designated by the cookie was not marked dead but could not
16720 be reached. A redispatch happened and selected another one, which was
16721 then advertised in the response.
16722
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016723
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200167248.6. Non-printable characters
16725-----------------------------
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016726
16727In order not to cause trouble to log analysis tools or terminals during log
16728consulting, non-printable characters are not sent as-is into log files, but are
16729converted to the two-digits hexadecimal representation of their ASCII code,
16730prefixed by the character '#'. The only characters that can be logged without
16731being escaped are comprised between 32 and 126 (inclusive). Obviously, the
16732escape character '#' itself is also encoded to avoid any ambiguity ("#23"). It
16733is the same for the character '"' which becomes "#22", as well as '{', '|' and
16734'}' when logging headers.
16735
16736Note that the space character (' ') is not encoded in headers, which can cause
16737issues for tools relying on space count to locate fields. A typical header
16738containing spaces is "User-Agent".
16739
16740Last, it has been observed that some syslog daemons such as syslog-ng escape
16741the quote ('"') with a backslash ('\'). The reverse operation can safely be
16742performed since no quote may appear anywhere else in the logs.
16743
16744
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200167458.7. Capturing HTTP cookies
16746---------------------------
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016747
16748Cookie capture simplifies the tracking a complete user session. This can be
16749achieved using the "capture cookie" statement in the frontend. Please refer to
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020016750section 4.2 for more details. Only one cookie can be captured, and the same
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016751cookie will simultaneously be checked in the request ("Cookie:" header) and in
16752the response ("Set-Cookie:" header). The respective values will be reported in
16753the HTTP logs at the "captured_request_cookie" and "captured_response_cookie"
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020016754locations (see section 8.2.3 about HTTP log format). When either cookie is
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016755not seen, a dash ('-') replaces the value. This way, it's easy to detect when a
16756user switches to a new session for example, because the server will reassign it
16757a new cookie. It is also possible to detect if a server unexpectedly sets a
16758wrong cookie to a client, leading to session crossing.
16759
16760 Examples :
16761 # capture the first cookie whose name starts with "ASPSESSION"
16762 capture cookie ASPSESSION len 32
16763
16764 # capture the first cookie whose name is exactly "vgnvisitor"
16765 capture cookie vgnvisitor= len 32
16766
16767
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200167688.8. Capturing HTTP headers
16769---------------------------
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016770
16771Header captures are useful to track unique request identifiers set by an upper
16772proxy, virtual host names, user-agents, POST content-length, referrers, etc. In
16773the response, one can search for information about the response length, how the
16774server asked the cache to behave, or an object location during a redirection.
16775
16776Header captures are performed using the "capture request header" and "capture
16777response header" statements in the frontend. Please consult their definition in
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020016778section 4.2 for more details.
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016779
16780It is possible to include both request headers and response headers at the same
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +010016781time. Non-existent headers are logged as empty strings, and if one header
16782appears more than once, only its last occurrence will be logged. Request headers
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016783are grouped within braces '{' and '}' in the same order as they were declared,
16784and delimited with a vertical bar '|' without any space. Response headers
16785follow the same representation, but are displayed after a space following the
16786request headers block. These blocks are displayed just before the HTTP request
16787in the logs.
16788
Willy Tarreaud9ed3d22014-06-13 12:23:06 +020016789As a special case, it is possible to specify an HTTP header capture in a TCP
16790frontend. The purpose is to enable logging of headers which will be parsed in
16791an HTTP backend if the request is then switched to this HTTP backend.
16792
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016793 Example :
16794 # This instance chains to the outgoing proxy
16795 listen proxy-out
16796 mode http
16797 option httplog
16798 option logasap
16799 log global
16800 server cache1 192.168.1.1:3128
16801
16802 # log the name of the virtual server
16803 capture request header Host len 20
16804
16805 # log the amount of data uploaded during a POST
16806 capture request header Content-Length len 10
16807
16808 # log the beginning of the referrer
16809 capture request header Referer len 20
16810
16811 # server name (useful for outgoing proxies only)
16812 capture response header Server len 20
16813
16814 # logging the content-length is useful with "option logasap"
16815 capture response header Content-Length len 10
16816
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010016817 # log the expected cache behavior on the response
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016818 capture response header Cache-Control len 8
16819
16820 # the Via header will report the next proxy's name
16821 capture response header Via len 20
16822
16823 # log the URL location during a redirection
16824 capture response header Location len 20
16825
16826 >>> Aug 9 20:26:09 localhost \
16827 haproxy[2022]: 127.0.0.1:34014 [09/Aug/2004:20:26:09] proxy-out \
16828 proxy-out/cache1 0/0/0/162/+162 200 +350 - - ---- 0/0/0/0/0 0/0 \
16829 {fr.adserver.yahoo.co||http://fr.f416.mail.} {|864|private||} \
16830 "GET http://fr.adserver.yahoo.com/"
16831
16832 >>> Aug 9 20:30:46 localhost \
16833 haproxy[2022]: 127.0.0.1:34020 [09/Aug/2004:20:30:46] proxy-out \
16834 proxy-out/cache1 0/0/0/182/+182 200 +279 - - ---- 0/0/0/0/0 0/0 \
16835 {w.ods.org||} {Formilux/0.1.8|3495|||} \
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +010016836 "GET http://trafic.1wt.eu/ HTTP/1.1"
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016837
16838 >>> Aug 9 20:30:46 localhost \
16839 haproxy[2022]: 127.0.0.1:34028 [09/Aug/2004:20:30:46] proxy-out \
16840 proxy-out/cache1 0/0/2/126/+128 301 +223 - - ---- 0/0/0/0/0 0/0 \
16841 {www.sytadin.equipement.gouv.fr||http://trafic.1wt.eu/} \
16842 {Apache|230|||http://www.sytadin.} \
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +010016843 "GET http://www.sytadin.equipement.gouv.fr/ HTTP/1.1"
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016844
16845
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +0200168468.9. Examples of logs
16847---------------------
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016848
16849These are real-world examples of logs accompanied with an explanation. Some of
16850them have been made up by hand. The syslog part has been removed for better
16851reading. Their sole purpose is to explain how to decipher them.
16852
16853 >>> haproxy[674]: 127.0.0.1:33318 [15/Oct/2003:08:31:57.130] px-http \
16854 px-http/srv1 6559/0/7/147/6723 200 243 - - ---- 5/3/3/1/0 0/0 \
16855 "HEAD / HTTP/1.0"
16856
16857 => long request (6.5s) entered by hand through 'telnet'. The server replied
16858 in 147 ms, and the session ended normally ('----')
16859
16860 >>> haproxy[674]: 127.0.0.1:33319 [15/Oct/2003:08:31:57.149] px-http \
16861 px-http/srv1 6559/1230/7/147/6870 200 243 - - ---- 324/239/239/99/0 \
16862 0/9 "HEAD / HTTP/1.0"
16863
16864 => Idem, but the request was queued in the global queue behind 9 other
16865 requests, and waited there for 1230 ms.
16866
16867 >>> haproxy[674]: 127.0.0.1:33320 [15/Oct/2003:08:32:17.654] px-http \
16868 px-http/srv1 9/0/7/14/+30 200 +243 - - ---- 3/3/3/1/0 0/0 \
16869 "GET /image.iso HTTP/1.0"
16870
16871 => request for a long data transfer. The "logasap" option was specified, so
Krzysztof Piotr Oledzkif8645332009-12-13 21:55:50 +010016872 the log was produced just before transferring data. The server replied in
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016873 14 ms, 243 bytes of headers were sent to the client, and total time from
16874 accept to first data byte is 30 ms.
16875
16876 >>> haproxy[674]: 127.0.0.1:33320 [15/Oct/2003:08:32:17.925] px-http \
16877 px-http/srv1 9/0/7/14/30 502 243 - - PH-- 3/2/2/0/0 0/0 \
16878 "GET /cgi-bin/bug.cgi? HTTP/1.0"
16879
16880 => the proxy blocked a server response either because of an "rspdeny" or
16881 "rspideny" filter, or because the response was improperly formatted and
Willy Tarreau3c92c5f2011-08-28 09:45:47 +020016882 not HTTP-compliant, or because it blocked sensitive information which
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016883 risked being cached. In this case, the response is replaced with a "502
16884 bad gateway". The flags ("PH--") tell us that it was haproxy who decided
16885 to return the 502 and not the server.
16886
16887 >>> haproxy[18113]: 127.0.0.1:34548 [15/Oct/2003:15:18:55.798] px-http \
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +010016888 px-http/<NOSRV> -1/-1/-1/-1/8490 -1 0 - - CR-- 2/2/2/0/0 0/0 ""
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016889
16890 => the client never completed its request and aborted itself ("C---") after
16891 8.5s, while the proxy was waiting for the request headers ("-R--").
16892 Nothing was sent to any server.
16893
16894 >>> haproxy[18113]: 127.0.0.1:34549 [15/Oct/2003:15:19:06.103] px-http \
16895 px-http/<NOSRV> -1/-1/-1/-1/50001 408 0 - - cR-- 2/2/2/0/0 0/0 ""
16896
16897 => The client never completed its request, which was aborted by the
16898 time-out ("c---") after 50s, while the proxy was waiting for the request
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010016899 headers ("-R--"). Nothing was sent to any server, but the proxy could
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016900 send a 408 return code to the client.
16901
16902 >>> haproxy[18989]: 127.0.0.1:34550 [15/Oct/2003:15:24:28.312] px-tcp \
16903 px-tcp/srv1 0/0/5007 0 cD 0/0/0/0/0 0/0
16904
16905 => This log was produced with "option tcplog". The client timed out after
16906 5 seconds ("c----").
16907
16908 >>> haproxy[18989]: 10.0.0.1:34552 [15/Oct/2003:15:26:31.462] px-http \
16909 px-http/srv1 3183/-1/-1/-1/11215 503 0 - - SC-- 205/202/202/115/3 \
Willy Tarreaud72758d2010-01-12 10:42:19 +010016910 0/0 "HEAD / HTTP/1.0"
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016911
16912 => The request took 3s to complete (probably a network problem), and the
Willy Tarreauc57f0e22009-05-10 13:12:33 +020016913 connection to the server failed ('SC--') after 4 attempts of 2 seconds
Willy Tarreaucc6c8912009-02-22 10:53:55 +010016914 (config says 'retries 3'), and no redispatch (otherwise we would have
16915 seen "/+3"). Status code 503 was returned to the client. There were 115
16916 connections on this server, 202 connections on this proxy, and 205 on
16917 the global process. It is possible that the server refused the
16918 connection because of too many already established.
Willy Tarreau844e3c52008-01-11 16:28:18 +010016919
Willy Tarreau52b2d222011-09-07 23:48:48 +020016920
Christopher Fauletc3fe5332016-04-07 15:30:10 +0200169219. Supported filters
16922--------------------
16923
16924Here are listed officially supported filters with the list of parameters they
16925accept. Depending on compile options, some of these filters might be
16926unavailable. The list of available filters is reported in haproxy -vv.
16927
16928See also : "filter"
16929
169309.1. Trace
16931----------
16932
Christopher Faulet31bfe1f2016-12-09 17:42:38 +010016933filter trace [name <name>] [random-parsing] [random-forwarding] [hexdump]
Christopher Fauletc3fe5332016-04-07 15:30:10 +020016934
16935 Arguments:
16936 <name> is an arbitrary name that will be reported in
16937 messages. If no name is provided, "TRACE" is used.
16938
16939 <random-parsing> enables the random parsing of data exchanged between
16940 the client and the server. By default, this filter
16941 parses all available data. With this parameter, it
16942 only parses a random amount of the available data.
16943
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010016944 <random-forwarding> enables the random forwarding of parsed data. By
Christopher Fauletc3fe5332016-04-07 15:30:10 +020016945 default, this filter forwards all previously parsed
16946 data. With this parameter, it only forwards a random
16947 amount of the parsed data.
16948
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010016949 <hexdump> dumps all forwarded data to the server and the client.
Christopher Faulet31bfe1f2016-12-09 17:42:38 +010016950
Christopher Fauletc3fe5332016-04-07 15:30:10 +020016951This filter can be used as a base to develop new filters. It defines all
16952callbacks and print a message on the standard error stream (stderr) with useful
16953information for all of them. It may be useful to debug the activity of other
16954filters or, quite simply, HAProxy's activity.
16955
16956Using <random-parsing> and/or <random-forwarding> parameters is a good way to
16957tests the behavior of a filter that parses data exchanged between a client and
16958a server by adding some latencies in the processing.
16959
16960
169619.2. HTTP compression
16962---------------------
16963
16964filter compression
16965
16966The HTTP compression has been moved in a filter in HAProxy 1.7. "compression"
16967keyword must still be used to enable and configure the HTTP compression. And
16968when no other filter is used, it is enough. But it is mandatory to explicitly
16969use a filter line to enable the HTTP compression when two or more filters are
16970used for the same listener/frontend/backend. This is important to know the
16971filters evaluation order.
16972
16973See also : "compression"
16974
16975
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200169769.3. Stream Processing Offload Engine (SPOE)
16977--------------------------------------------
16978
16979filter spoe [engine <name>] config <file>
16980
16981 Arguments :
16982
16983 <name> is the engine name that will be used to find the right scope in
16984 the configuration file. If not provided, all the file will be
16985 parsed.
16986
16987 <file> is the path of the engine configuration file. This file can
16988 contain configuration of several engines. In this case, each
16989 part must be placed in its own scope.
16990
16991The Stream Processing Offload Engine (SPOE) is a filter communicating with
16992external components. It allows the offload of some specifics processing on the
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010016993streams in tiered applications. These external components and information
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +020016994exchanged with them are configured in dedicated files, for the main part. It
16995also requires dedicated backends, defined in HAProxy configuration.
16996
16997SPOE communicates with external components using an in-house binary protocol,
16998the Stream Processing Offload Protocol (SPOP).
16999
Tim Düsterhus4896c442016-11-29 02:15:19 +010017000For all information about the SPOE configuration and the SPOP specification, see
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +020017001"doc/SPOE.txt".
17002
17003Important note:
17004 The SPOE filter is highly experimental for now and was not heavily
17005 tested. It is really not production ready. So use it carefully.
17006
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +01001700710. Cache
17008---------
17009
17010HAProxy provides a cache, which was designed to perform cache on small objects
17011(favicon, css...). This is a minimalist low-maintenance cache which runs in
17012RAM.
17013
17014The cache is based on a memory which is shared between processes and threads,
Cyril Bonté7b888f12017-11-26 22:24:31 +010017015this memory is split in blocks of 1k.
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +010017016
17017If an object is not used anymore, it can be deleted to store a new object
17018independently of its expiration date. The oldest objects are deleted first
17019when we try to allocate a new one.
17020
Cyril Bonté7b888f12017-11-26 22:24:31 +010017021The cache uses a hash of the host header and the URI as the key.
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +010017022
17023It's possible to view the status of a cache using the Unix socket command
17024"show cache" consult section 9.3 "Unix Socket commands" of Management Guide
17025for more details.
17026
17027When an object is delivered from the cache, the server name in the log is
17028replaced by "<CACHE>".
17029
Cyril Bonté7b888f12017-11-26 22:24:31 +01001703010.1. Limitation
17031----------------
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +010017032
17033The cache won't store and won't deliver objects in these cases:
17034
17035- If the response is not a 200
17036- If the response contains a Vary header
17037- If the response does not contain a Content-Length header or if the
17038 Content-Length + the headers size is greater than a buffer size - the
17039 reserve.
17040- If the response is not cacheable
17041
17042- If the request is not a GET
17043- If the HTTP version of the request is smaller than 1.1
17044
17045Caution!: Due to the current limitation of the filters, it is not recommended
17046to use the cache with other filters. Using them can cause undefined behavior
Cyril Bonté7b888f12017-11-26 22:24:31 +010017047if they modify the response (compression for example).
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +010017048
Cyril Bonté7b888f12017-11-26 22:24:31 +01001704910.2. Setup
17050-----------
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +010017051
17052To setup a cache, you must define a cache section and use it in a proxy with
17053the corresponding http-request and response actions.
17054
Cyril Bonté7b888f12017-11-26 22:24:31 +01001705510.2.1. Cache section
17056---------------------
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +010017057
17058cache <name>
17059 Declare a cache section, allocate a shared cache memory named <name>, the
17060 size of cache is mandatory.
17061
17062total-max-size <megabytes>
Davor Ocelice9ed2812017-12-25 17:49:28 +010017063 Define the size in RAM of the cache in megabytes. This size is split in
17064 blocks of 1kB which are used by the cache entries.
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +010017065
17066max-age <seconds>
17067 Define the maximum expiration duration. The expiration is set has the lowest
17068 value between the s-maxage or max-age (in this order) directive in the
17069 Cache-Control response header and this value. The default value is 60
17070 seconds, which means that you can't cache an object more than 60 seconds by
17071 default.
17072
Cyril Bonté7b888f12017-11-26 22:24:31 +01001707310.2.2. Proxy section
17074---------------------
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +010017075
17076http-request cache-use <name>
17077 Try to deliver a cached object from the cache <name>. This directive is also
17078 mandatory to store the cache as it calculates the cache hash. If you want to
17079 use a condition for both storage and delivering that's a good idea to put it
17080 after this one.
17081
17082http-response cache-store <name>
17083 Store an http-response within the cache. The storage of the response headers
17084 is done at this step, which means you can use others http-response actions
17085 to modify headers before or after the storage of the response. This action
17086 is responsible for the setup of the cache storage filter.
17087
17088
17089Example:
17090
17091 backend bck1
17092 mode http
17093
17094 http-request cache-use foobar
17095 http-response cache-store foobar
17096 server srv1 127.0.0.1:80
17097
17098 cache foobar
17099 total-max-size 4
17100 max-age 240
17101
Willy Tarreau0ba27502007-12-24 16:55:16 +010017102/*
17103 * Local variables:
17104 * fill-column: 79
17105 * End:
17106 */