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willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +01001 -------------------
Willy Tarreau94b45912006-05-31 06:40:15 +02002 HAProxy
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +01003 Reference Manual
4 -------------------
Willy Tarreau2272dc12006-09-03 10:19:38 +02005 version 1.3.2
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01006 willy tarreau
Willy Tarreau2272dc12006-09-03 10:19:38 +02007 2006/09/03
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01008
9============
10| Abstract |
11============
12
Willy Tarreau94b45912006-05-31 06:40:15 +020013HAProxy is a TCP/HTTP reverse proxy which is particularly suited for high
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +010014availability environments. Indeed, it can :
15 - route HTTP requests depending on statically assigned cookies ;
16 - spread the load among several servers while assuring server persistence
17 through the use of HTTP cookies ;
18 - switch to backup servers in the event a main one fails ;
19 - accept connections to special ports dedicated to service monitoring ;
20 - stop accepting connections without breaking existing ones ;
21 - add/modify/delete HTTP headers both ways ;
22 - block requests matching a particular pattern ;
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +020023 - hold clients to the right application server depending on application
24 cookies
willy tarreau481132e2006-05-21 21:43:10 +020025 - report detailed status as HTML pages to authenticated users from an URI
26 intercepted from the application.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +010027
28It needs very little resource. Its event-driven architecture allows it to easily
29handle thousands of simultaneous connections on hundreds of instances without
30risking the system's stability.
31
32====================
33| Start parameters |
34====================
35
36There are only a few command line options :
37
38 -f <configuration file>
39 -n <high limit for the total number of simultaneous connections>
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +020040 = 'maxconn' in 'global' section
41 -N <high limit for the per-listener number of simultaneous connections>
42 = 'maxconn' in 'listen' or 'default' sections
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +010043 -d starts in foregreound with debugging mode enabled
44 -D starts in daemon mode
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +010045 -q disable messages on output
46 -V displays messages on output even when -q or 'quiet' are specified.
47 -c only checks config file and exits with code 0 if no error was found, or
48 exits with code 1 if a syntax error was found.
willy tarreaufe2c5c12005-12-17 14:14:34 +010049 -p <pidfile> asks the process to write down each of its children's
50 pids to this file in daemon mode.
willy tarreau34f45302006-04-15 21:37:14 +020051 -sf specifies a list of pids to send a FINISH signal to after startup.
52 -st specifies a list of pids to send a TERMINATE signal to after startup.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +010053 -s shows statistics (only if compiled in)
54 -l shows even more statistics (implies '-s')
Willy Tarreaude99e992007-04-16 00:53:59 +020055 -dk disables use of kqueue()
56 -ds disables use of speculative epoll()
willy tarreau64a3cc32005-12-18 01:13:11 +010057 -de disables use of epoll()
58 -dp disables use of poll()
willy tarreau34f45302006-04-15 21:37:14 +020059 -db disables background mode (stays in foreground, useful for debugging)
60 -m <megs> enforces a memory usage limit to a maximum of <megs> megabytes.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +010061
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +020062The maximal number of connections per proxy instance is used as the default
63parameter for each instance for which the 'maxconn' paramter is not set in the
64'listen' section.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +010065
66The maximal number of total connections limits the number of connections used by
67the whole process if the 'maxconn' parameter is not set in the 'global' section.
68
69The debugging mode has the same effect as the 'debug' option in the 'global'
70section. When the proxy runs in this mode, it dumps every connections,
71disconnections, timestamps, and HTTP headers to stdout. This should NEVER
72be used in an init script since it will prevent the system from starting up.
73
willy tarreau34f45302006-04-15 21:37:14 +020074For debugging, the '-db' option is very useful as it temporarily disables
75daemon mode and multi-process mode. The service can then be stopped by simply
76pressing Ctrl-C, without having to edit the config nor run full debug.
77
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +010078Statistics are only available if compiled in with the 'STATTIME' option. It's
willy tarreau481132e2006-05-21 21:43:10 +020079only used during code optimization phases, and will soon disappear.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +010080
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +020081The '-st' and '-sf' options are used for hot reconfiguration (see below).
willy tarreau34f45302006-04-15 21:37:14 +020082
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +010083======================
84| Configuration file |
85======================
86
87Structure
88=========
89
90The configuration file parser ignores empty lines, spaces, tabs. Anything
91between a sharp ('#') not following a backslash ('\'), and the end of a line
92constitutes a comment and is ignored too.
93
94The configuration file is segmented in sections. A section begins whenever
95one of these 3 keywords are encountered :
96
97 - 'global'
98 - 'listen'
99 - 'defaults'
100
101Every parameter refer to the section beginning at the last one of these 3
102keywords.
103
104
1051) Global parameters
106====================
107
108Global parameters affect the whole process behaviour. They are all set in the
109'global' section. There may be several 'global' sections if needed, but their
110parameters will only be merged. Allowed parameters in 'global' section include
111the following ones :
112
113 - log <address> <facility> [max_level]
114 - maxconn <number>
115 - uid <user id>
116 - gid <group id>
Willy Tarreau95c20ac2007-03-25 15:39:23 +0200117 - user <user name>
118 - group <group name>
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100119 - chroot <directory>
120 - nbproc <number>
121 - daemon
122 - debug
Willy Tarreaude99e992007-04-16 00:53:59 +0200123 - nokqueue
124 - nosepoll
willy tarreau64a3cc32005-12-18 01:13:11 +0100125 - noepoll
126 - nopoll
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100127 - quiet
willy tarreaufe2c5c12005-12-17 14:14:34 +0100128 - pidfile <file>
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100129 - ulimit-n <number>
willy tarreau598da412005-12-18 01:07:29 +0100130 - stats
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100131
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100132
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001331.1) Event logging
134------------------
135Most events are logged : start, stop, servers going up and down, connections and
136errors. Each event generates a syslog message which can be sent to up to 2
137servers. The syntax is :
138
139 log <ip_address> <facility> [max_level]
140
141Connections are logged at level "info". Services initialization and servers
142going up are logged at level "notice", termination signals are logged at
143"warning", and definitive service termination, as well as loss of servers are
144logged at level "alert". The optional parameter <max_level> specifies above
145what level messages should be sent. Level can take one of these 8 values :
146
147 emerg, alert, crit, err, warning, notice, info, debug
148
149For backwards compatibility with versions 1.1.16 and earlier, the default level
150value is "debug" if not specified.
151
152Permitted facilities are :
153 kern, user, mail, daemon, auth, syslog, lpr, news,
154 uucp, cron, auth2, ftp, ntp, audit, alert, cron2,
155 local0, local1, local2, local3, local4, local5, local6, local7
156
157According to RFC3164, messages are truncated to 1024 bytes before being emitted.
158
159Example :
160---------
161 global
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100162 log 192.168.2.200 local3
163 log 127.0.0.1 local4 notice
164
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100165
1661.2) limiting the number of connections
167---------------------------------------
168It is possible and recommended to limit the global number of per-process
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100169connections using the 'maxconn' global keyword. Since one connection includes
170both a client and a server, it means that the max number of TCP sessions will
171be about the double of this number. It's important to understand this when
172trying to find best values for 'ulimit -n' before starting the proxy. To
173anticipate the number of sockets needed, all these parameters must be counted :
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100174
175 - 1 socket per incoming connection
176 - 1 socket per outgoing connection
177 - 1 socket per address/port/proxy tuple.
178 - 1 socket per server being health-checked
179 - 1 socket for all logs
180
181In simple configurations where each proxy only listens one one address/port,
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100182set the limit of file descriptors (ulimit -n) to
183(2 * maxconn + nbproxies + nbservers + 1). Starting with versions 1.1.32/1.2.6,
184it is now possible to set the limit in the configuration using the 'ulimit-n'
185global keyword, provided the proxy is started as root. This puts an end to the
186recurrent problem of ensuring that the system limits are adapted to the proxy
187values. Note that these limits are per-process.
188
189Example :
190---------
191 global
192 maxconn 32000
193 ulimit-n 65536
194
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100195
1961.3) Drop of priviledges
197------------------------
198In order to reduce the risk and consequences of attacks, in the event where a
199yet non-identified vulnerability would be successfully exploited, it's possible
200to lower the process priviledges and even isolate it in a riskless directory.
201
202In the 'global' section, the 'uid' parameter sets a numerical user identifier
203which the process will switch to after binding its listening sockets. The value
204'0', which normally represents the super-user, here indicates that the UID must
205not change during startup. It's the default behaviour. The 'gid' parameter does
Willy Tarreau95c20ac2007-03-25 15:39:23 +0200206the same for the group identifier. If setting an uid is not possible because of
207deployment constraints, it is possible to set a user name with the 'user'
208keyword followed by a valid user name. The same is true for the gid. It is
209possible to specify a group name after the 'group' keyword.
210
211It is particularly advised against use of generic accounts such as 'nobody'
212because it has the same consequences as using 'root' if other services use
213them.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100214
215The 'chroot' parameter makes the process isolate itself in an empty directory
216just before switching its UID. This type of isolation (chroot) can sometimes
217be worked around on certain OS (Linux, Solaris), provided that the attacker
218has gained 'root' priviledges and has the ability to use or create a directory.
219For this reason, it's capital to use a dedicated directory and not to share one
220between several services of different nature. To make isolation more resistant,
221it's recommended to use an empty directory without any right, and to change the
222UID of the process so that it cannot do anything there.
223
224Note: in the event where such a vulnerability would be exploited, it's most
225likely that first attempts would kill the process due to 'Segmentation Fault',
226'Bus Error' or 'Illegal Instruction' signals. Eventhough it's true that
227isolating the server reduces the risks of intrusion, it's sometimes useful to
228find why a process dies, via the analysis of a 'core' file, although very rare
229(the last bug of this sort was fixed in 1.1.9). For security reasons, most
230systems disable the generation of core file when a process changes its UID. So
231the two workarounds are either to start the process from a restricted user
232account, which will not be able to chroot itself, or start it as root and not
233change the UID. In both cases the core will be either in the start or the chroot
234directories. Do not forget to allow core dumps prior to start the process :
235
236# ulimit -c unlimited
237
238Example :
239---------
240
Willy Tarreau95c20ac2007-03-25 15:39:23 +0200241 # with uid/gid
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100242 global
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100243 uid 30000
244 gid 30000
245 chroot /var/chroot/haproxy
246
Willy Tarreau95c20ac2007-03-25 15:39:23 +0200247 # with user/group
248 global
249 user haproxy
250 group public
251 chroot /var/chroot/haproxy
252
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100253
2541.4) Startup modes
255------------------
willy tarreau34f45302006-04-15 21:37:14 +0200256The service can start in several different modes :
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100257 - foreground / background
258 - quiet / normal / debug
259
260The default mode is normal, foreground, which means that the program doesn't
261return once started. NEVER EVER use this mode in a system startup script, or
262the system won't boot. It needs to be started in background, so that it
263returns immediately after forking. That's accomplished by the 'daemon' option
264in the 'global' section, which is the equivalent of the '-D' command line
265argument.
266
willy tarreau34f45302006-04-15 21:37:14 +0200267The '-db' command line argument overrides the 'daemon' and 'nbproc' global
268options to make the process run in normal, foreground mode.
269
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100270Moreover, certain alert messages are still sent to the standard output even
271in 'daemon' mode. To make them disappear, simply add the 'quiet' option in the
272'global' section. This option has no command-line equivalent.
273
274Last, the 'debug' mode, enabled with the 'debug' option in the 'global' section,
275and which is equivalent of the '-d' option, allows deep TCP/HTTP analysis, with
276timestamped display of each connection, disconnection, and HTTP headers for both
277ways. This mode is incompatible with 'daemon' and 'quiet' modes for obvious
278reasons.
279
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100280
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002811.5) Increasing the overall processing power
282--------------------------------------------
283On multi-processor systems, it may seem to be a shame to use only one processor,
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +0100284eventhough the load needed to saturate a recent processor is far above common
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100285usage. Anyway, for very specific needs, the proxy can start several processes
286between which the operating system will spread the incoming connections. The
287number of processes is controlled by the 'nbproc' parameter in the 'global'
willy tarreau4302f492005-12-18 01:00:37 +0100288section. It defaults to 1, and obviously works only in 'daemon' mode. One
289typical usage of this parameter has been to workaround the default per-process
290file-descriptor limit that Solaris imposes to user processes.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100291
292Example :
293---------
294
295 global
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100296 daemon
297 quiet
298 nbproc 2
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100299
300
willy tarreaufe2c5c12005-12-17 14:14:34 +01003011.6) Helping process management
302-------------------------------
303Haproxy now supports the notion of pidfile. If the '-p' command line argument,
304or the 'pidfile' global option is followed with a file name, this file will be
305removed, then filled with all children's pids, one per line (only in daemon
306mode). This file is NOT within the chroot, which allows to work with a readonly
307 chroot. It will be owned by the user starting the process, and will have
308permissions 0644.
309
310Example :
311---------
312
313 global
314 daemon
315 quiet
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100316 nbproc 2
willy tarreaufe2c5c12005-12-17 14:14:34 +0100317 pidfile /var/run/haproxy-private.pid
318
319 # to stop only those processes among others :
320 # kill $(</var/run/haproxy-private.pid)
321
willy tarreau34f45302006-04-15 21:37:14 +0200322 # to reload a new configuration with minimal service impact and without
323 # breaking existing sessions :
324 # haproxy -f haproxy.cfg -p $(</var/run/haproxy-private.pid) -st $(</var/run/haproxy-private.pid)
willy tarreaufe2c5c12005-12-17 14:14:34 +0100325
willy tarreau64a3cc32005-12-18 01:13:11 +01003261.7) Polling mechanisms
327-----------------------
328Starting from version 1.2.5, haproxy supports the poll() and epoll() polling
329mechanisms. On systems where select() is limited by FD_SETSIZE (like Solaris),
330poll() can be an interesting alternative. Performance tests show that Solaris'
331poll() performance does not decay as fast as the numbers of sockets increase,
332making it a safe solution for high loads. However, Solaris already uses poll()
333to emulate select(), so as long as the number of sockets has no reason to go
334higher than FD_SETSIZE, poll() should not provide any better performance. On
335Linux systems with the epoll() patch (or any 2.6 version), haproxy will use
336epoll() which is extremely fast and non dependant on the number of sockets.
337Tests have shown constant performance from 1 to 20000 simultaneous sessions.
Willy Tarreaude99e992007-04-16 00:53:59 +0200338Version 1.3.9 introduced kqueue() for FreeBSD/OpenBSD, and speculative epoll()
339which consists in trying to perform I/O before queuing the events via syscalls.
willy tarreau64a3cc32005-12-18 01:13:11 +0100340
Willy Tarreaude99e992007-04-16 00:53:59 +0200341Haproxy will use kqueue() or speculative epoll() when available, then epoll(),
342and will fall back to poll(), then to select(). However, if for any reason you
343need to disable epoll() or poll() (eg. because of a bug or just to compare
344performance), new global options have been created for this matter : 'nosepoll',
345'nokqueue', 'noepoll' and 'nopoll'.
willy tarreau64a3cc32005-12-18 01:13:11 +0100346
347Example :
348---------
349
350 global
351 # use only select()
352 noepoll
353 nopoll
354
355Note :
356------
357For the sake of configuration file portability, these options are accepted but
358ignored if the poll() or epoll() mechanisms have not been enabled at compile
359time.
360
Willy Tarreaude99e992007-04-16 00:53:59 +0200361To make debugging easier, the '-de' runtime argument disables epoll support,
362the '-dp' argument disables poll support, '-dk' disables kqueue and '-ds'
363disables speculative epoll(). They are respectively equivalent to 'noepoll',
364'nopoll', 'nokqueue' and 'nosepoll'.
willy tarreau64a3cc32005-12-18 01:13:11 +0100365
366
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01003672) Declaration of a listening service
368=====================================
369
370Service sections start with the 'listen' keyword :
371
372 listen <instance_name> [ <IP_address>:<port_range>[,...] ]
373
374- <instance_name> is the name of the instance. This name will be reported in
375 logs, so it is good to have it reflect the proxied service. No unicity test
376 is done on this name, and it's not mandatory for it to be unique, but highly
377 recommended.
378
379- <IP_address> is the IP address the proxy binds to. Empty address, '*' and
380 '0.0.0.0' all mean that the proxy listens to all valid addresses on the
381 system.
382
383- <port_range> is either a unique port, or a port range for which the proxy will
384 accept connections for the IP address specified above. This range can be :
385 - a numerical port (ex: '80')
386 - a dash-delimited ports range explicitly stating the lower and upper bounds
387 (ex: '2000-2100') which are included in the range.
388
389 Particular care must be taken against port ranges, because every <addr:port>
390 couple consumes one socket (=a file descriptor), so it's easy to eat lots of
391 descriptors with a simple range. The <addr:port> couple must be used only once
392 among all instances running on a same system. Please note that attaching to
393 ports lower than 1024 need particular priviledges to start the program, which
394 are independant of the 'uid' parameter.
395
396- the <IP_address>:<port_range> couple may be repeated indefinitely to require
397 the proxy to listen to other addresses and/or ports. To achieve this, simply
398 separate them with a coma.
399
400Examples :
401---------
402 listen http_proxy :80
403 listen x11_proxy 127.0.0.1:6000-6009
404 listen smtp_proxy 127.0.0.1:25,127.0.0.1:587
405 listen ldap_proxy :389,:663
406
407In the event that all addresses do not fit line width, it's preferable to
408detach secondary addresses on other lines with the 'bind' keyword. If this
409keyword is used, it's not even necessary to specify the first address on the
410'listen' line, which sometimes makes multiple configuration handling easier :
411
412 bind [ <IP_address>:<port_range>[,...] ]
413
414Examples :
415----------
416 listen http_proxy
417 bind :80,:443
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100418 bind 10.0.0.1:10080,10.0.0.1:10443
419
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100420
4212.1) Inhibiting a service
422-------------------------
423A service may be disabled for maintenance reasons, without needing to comment
424out the whole section, simply by specifying the 'disabled' keyword in the
425section to be disabled :
426
427 listen smtp_proxy 0.0.0.0:25
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100428 disabled
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100429
430Note: the 'enabled' keyword allows to enable a service which has been disabled
431 previously by a default configuration.
432
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100433
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01004342.2) Modes of operation
435-----------------------
436A service can work in 3 different distinct modes :
437 - TCP
438 - HTTP
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +0200439 - health
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100440
441TCP mode
442--------
443In this mode, the service relays TCP connections as soon as they're established,
444towards one or several servers. No processing is done on the stream. It's only
445an association of source(addr:port) -> destination(addr:port). To use this mode,
446you must specify 'mode tcp' in the 'listen' section. This is the default mode.
447
448Example :
449---------
450 listen smtp_proxy 0.0.0.0:25
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100451 mode tcp
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100452
453HTTP mode
454---------
455In this mode, the service relays TCP connections towards one or several servers,
456when it has enough informations to decide, which normally means that all HTTP
457headers have been read. Some of them may be scanned for a cookie or a pattern
458matching a regex. To use this mode, specify 'mode http' in the 'listen' section.
459
460Example :
461---------
462 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100463 mode http
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100464
465Health-checking mode
466--------------------
467This mode provides a way for external components to check the proxy's health.
468It is meant to be used with intelligent load-balancers which can use send/expect
469scripts to check for all of their servers' availability. This one simply accepts
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +0100470the connection, returns the word 'OK' and closes it. If the 'option httpchk' is
471set, then the reply will be 'HTTP/1.0 200 OK' with no data, so that it can be
472tested from a tool which supports HTTP health-checks. To enable it, simply
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100473specify 'health' as the working mode :
474
475Example :
476---------
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +0100477 # simple response : 'OK'
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100478 listen health_check 0.0.0.0:60000
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100479 mode health
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100480
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +0100481 # HTTP response : 'HTTP/1.0 200 OK'
482 listen http_health_check 0.0.0.0:60001
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100483 mode health
484 option httpchk
485
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02004862.2.1 Monitoring
487----------------
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100488Versions 1.1.32 and 1.2.6 provide a new solution to check the proxy's
489availability without perturbating the service. The 'monitor-net' keyword was
490created to specify a network of equipments which CANNOT use the service for
491anything but health-checks. This is particularly suited to TCP proxies, because
492it prevents the proxy from relaying the monitor's connection to the remote
493server.
494
495When used with TCP, the connection is accepted then closed and nothing is
496logged. This is enough for a front-end load-balancer to detect the service as
497available.
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +0100498
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100499When used with HTTP, the connection is accepted, nothing is logged, the
500following response is sent, then the session is closed : "HTTP/1.0 200 OK".
501This is normally enough for any front-end HTTP load-balancer to detect the
502service as available too, both with TCP and HTTP checks.
503
504Proxies using the "monitor-net" keyword can remove the "option dontlognull", as
505it will make them log empty connections from hosts outside the monitoring
506network.
507
508Example :
509---------
510
511 listen tse-proxy
512 bind :3389,:1494,:5900 # TSE, ICA and VNC at once.
513 mode tcp
514 balance roundrobin
515 server tse-farm 192.168.1.10
516 monitor-net 192.168.1.252/31 # L4 load-balancers on .252 and .253
517
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100518
Willy Tarreau1c47f852006-07-09 08:22:27 +0200519When the system executing the checks is located behind a proxy, the monitor-net
520keyword cannot be used because haproxy will always see the proxy's address. To
521overcome this limitation, version 1.2.15 brought the 'monitor-uri' keyword. It
522defines an URI which will not be forwarded nor logged, but for which haproxy
523will immediately send an "HTTP/1.0 200 OK" response. This makes it possible to
524check the validity of the reverse-proxy->haproxy chain with one request. It can
525be used in HTTPS checks in front of an stunnel -> haproxy combination for
526instance. Obviously, this keyword is only valid in HTTP mode, otherwise there
527is no notion of URI. Note that the method and HTTP versions are simply ignored.
528
529Example :
530---------
531
532 listen stunnel_backend :8080
533 mode http
534 balance roundrobin
535 server web1 192.168.1.10:80 check
536 server web2 192.168.1.11:80 check
537 monitor-uri /haproxy_test
538
539
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01005402.3) Limiting the number of simultaneous connections
541----------------------------------------------------
542The 'maxconn' parameter allows a proxy to refuse connections above a certain
543amount of simultaneous ones. When the limit is reached, it simply stops
544listening, but the system may still be accepting them because of the back log
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +0100545queue. These connections will be processed later when other ones have freed
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100546some slots. This provides a serialization effect which helps very fragile
willy tarreau34f45302006-04-15 21:37:14 +0200547servers resist to high loads. See further for system limitations.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100548
549Example :
550---------
551 listen tiny_server 0.0.0.0:80
552 maxconn 10
553
554
5552.4) Soft stop
556--------------
557It is possible to stop services without breaking existing connections by the
willy tarreau22739ef2006-01-20 20:43:32 +0100558sending of the SIGUSR1 signal to the process. All services are then put into
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100559soft-stop state, which means that they will refuse to accept new connections,
560except for those which have a non-zero value in the 'grace' parameter, in which
561case they will still accept connections for the specified amount of time, in
willy tarreau22739ef2006-01-20 20:43:32 +0100562milliseconds. This makes it possible to tell a load-balancer that the service
563is failing, while still doing the job during the time it needs to detect it.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100564
565Note: active connections are never killed. In the worst case, the user will have
566to wait for all of them to close or to time-out, or simply kill the process
willy tarreau22739ef2006-01-20 20:43:32 +0100567normally (SIGTERM). The default 'grace' value is '0'.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100568
569Example :
570---------
571 # enter soft stop after 'killall -USR1 haproxy'
572 # the service will still run 10 seconds after the signal
573 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100574 mode http
575 grace 10000
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100576
577 # this port is dedicated to a load-balancer, and must fail immediately
578 listen health_check 0.0.0.0:60000
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100579 mode health
580 grace 0
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100581
582
willy tarreau39df2dc2006-01-29 21:56:05 +0100583As of version 1.2.8, a new soft-reconfiguration mechanism has been introduced.
willy tarreau22739ef2006-01-20 20:43:32 +0100584It is now possible to "pause" all the proxies by sending a SIGTTOU signal to
585the processes. This will disable the listening socket without breaking existing
586connections. After that, sending a SIGTTIN signal to those processes enables
587the listening sockets again. This is very useful to try to load a new
588configuration or even a new version of haproxy without breaking existing
589connections. If the load succeeds, then simply send a SIGUSR1 which will make
590the previous proxies exit immediately once their sessions are closed ; and if
591the load fails, then simply send a SIGTTIN to restore the service immediately.
592Please note that the 'grace' parameter is ignored for SIGTTOU, as well as for
593SIGUSR1 when the process was in the pause mode. Please also note that it would
594be useful to save the pidfile before starting a new instance.
595
willy tarreau34f45302006-04-15 21:37:14 +0200596This mechanism fully exploited since 1.2.11 with the '-st' and '-sf' options
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +0200597(see below).
598
5992.4.1) Hot reconfiguration
600--------------------------
601The '-st' and '-sf' command line options are used to inform previously running
602processes that a configuration is being reloaded. They will receive the SIGTTOU
603signal to ask them to temporarily stop listening to the ports so that the new
604process can grab them. If anything wrong happens, the new process will send
605them a SIGTTIN to tell them to re-listen to the ports and continue their normal
606work. Otherwise, it will either ask them to finish (-sf) their work then softly
607exit, or immediately terminate (-st), breaking existing sessions. A typical use
608of this allows a configuration reload without service interruption :
609
610 # haproxy -p /var/run/haproxy.pid -sf $(cat /var/run/haproxy.pid)
611
willy tarreau22739ef2006-01-20 20:43:32 +0100612
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01006132.5) Connections expiration time
614--------------------------------
615It is possible (and recommended) to configure several time-outs on TCP
616connections. Three independant timers are adjustable with values specified
617in milliseconds. A session will be terminated if either one of these timers
618expire.
619
620 - the time we accept to wait for data from the client, or for the client to
621 accept data : 'clitimeout' :
622
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100623 # client time-out set to 2mn30.
624 clitimeout 150000
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100625
626 - the time we accept to wait for data from the server, or for the server to
627 accept data : 'srvtimeout' :
628
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100629 # server time-out set to 30s.
630 srvtimeout 30000
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100631
632 - the time we accept to wait for a connection to establish on a server :
633 'contimeout' :
634
635 # we give up if the connection does not complete within 4 seconds
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100636 contimeout 4000
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100637
638Notes :
639-------
640 - 'contimeout' and 'srvtimeout' have no sense on 'health' mode servers ;
641 - under high loads, or with a saturated or defective network, it's possible
642 that some packets get lost. Since the first TCP retransmit only happens
643 after 3 seconds, a time-out equal to, or lower than 3 seconds cannot
644 compensate for a packet loss. A 4 seconds time-out seems a reasonable
645 minimum which will considerably reduce connection failures.
646
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100647
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01006482.6) Attempts to reconnect
649--------------------------
650After a connection failure to a server, it is possible to retry, potentially
651on another server. This is useful if health-checks are too rare and you don't
652want the clients to see the failures. The number of attempts to reconnect is
653set by the 'retries' paramter.
654
655Example :
656---------
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100657 # we can retry 3 times max after a failure
658 retries 3
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100659
willy tarreau34f45302006-04-15 21:37:14 +0200660Please note that the reconnection attempt may lead to getting the connection
661sent to a new server if the original one died between connection attempts.
662
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100663
6642.7) Address of the dispatch server (deprecated)
665------------------------------------------------
666The server which will be sent all new connections is defined by the 'dispatch'
667parameter, in the form <address>:<port>. It generally is dedicated to unknown
668connections and will assign them a cookie, in case of HTTP persistence mode,
669or simply is a single server in case of generic TCP proxy. This old mode is only
670provided for backwards compatibility, but doesn't allow to check remote servers
671state, and has a rather limited usage. All new setups should switch to 'balance'
672mode. The principle of the dispatcher is to be able to perform the load
673balancing itself, but work only on new clients so that the server doesn't need
674to be a big machine.
675
676Example :
677---------
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100678 # all new connections go there
679 dispatch 192.168.1.2:80
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100680
681Note :
682------
683This parameter has no sense for 'health' servers, and is incompatible with
684'balance' mode.
685
686
6872.8) Outgoing source address
688----------------------------
689It is often necessary to bind to a particular address when connecting to some
690remote hosts. This is done via the 'source' parameter which is a per-proxy
691parameter. A newer version may allow to fix different sources to reach different
692servers. The syntax is 'source <address>[:<port>]', where <address> is a valid
693local address (or '0.0.0.0' or '*' or empty to let the system choose), and
694<port> is an optional parameter allowing the user to force the source port for
695very specific needs. If the port is not specified or is '0', the system will
696choose a free port. Note that as of version 1.1.18, the servers health checks
697are also performed from the same source.
698
699Examples :
700----------
701 listen http_proxy *:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100702 # all connections take 192.168.1.200 as source address
703 source 192.168.1.200:0
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100704
705 listen rlogin_proxy *:513
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100706 # use address 192.168.1.200 and the reserved port 900 (needs to be root)
707 source 192.168.1.200:900
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100708
709
7102.9) Setting the cookie name
711----------------------------
712In HTTP mode, it is possible to look for a particular cookie which will contain
713a server identifier which should handle the connection. The cookie name is set
714via the 'cookie' parameter.
715
716Example :
717---------
718 listen http_proxy :80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100719 mode http
720 cookie SERVERID
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100721
722It is possible to change the cookie behaviour to get a smarter persistence,
723depending on applications. It is notably possible to delete or modify a cookie
724emitted by a server, insert a cookie identifying the server in an HTTP response
725and even add a header to tell upstream caches not to cache this response.
726
727Examples :
728----------
729
730To remove the cookie for direct accesses (ie when the server matches the one
731which was specified in the client cookie) :
732
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100733 cookie SERVERID indirect
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100734
735To replace the cookie value with the one assigned to the server if any (no
736cookie will be created if the server does not provide one, nor if the
737configuration does not provide one). This lets the application put the cookie
738exactly on certain pages (eg: successful authentication) :
739
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100740 cookie SERVERID rewrite
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100741
742To create a new cookie and assign the server identifier to it (in this case, all
743servers should be associated with a valid cookie, since no cookie will simply
744delete the cookie from the client's browser) :
745
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100746 cookie SERVERID insert
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100747
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +0100748To reuse an existing application cookie and prefix it with the server's
749identifier, and remove it in the request, use the 'prefix' option. This allows
750to insert a haproxy in front of an application without risking to break clients
751which does not support more than one cookie :
752
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100753 cookie JSESSIONID prefix
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +0100754
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100755To insert a cookie and ensure that no upstream cache will store it, add the
756'nocache' option :
757
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100758 cookie SERVERID insert nocache
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100759
760To insert a cookie only after a POST request, add 'postonly' after 'insert'.
761This has the advantage that there's no risk of caching, and that all pages
762seen before the POST one can still be cached :
763
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100764 cookie SERVERID insert postonly
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100765
766Notes :
767-----------
768- it is possible to combine 'insert' with 'indirect' or 'rewrite' to adapt to
769 applications which already generate the cookie with an invalid content.
770
771- in the case where 'insert' and 'indirect' are both specified, the cookie is
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +0100772 never transmitted to the server, since it wouldn't understand it. This is the
773 most application-transparent mode.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100774
775- it is particularly recommended to use 'nocache' in 'insert' mode if any
776 upstream HTTP/1.0 cache is susceptible to cache the result, because this may
777 lead to many clients going to the same server, or even worse, some clients
778 having their server changed while retrieving a page from the cache.
779
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +0100780- the 'prefix' mode normally does not need 'indirect', 'nocache', nor
781 'postonly', because just as in the 'rewrite' mode, it relies on the
782 application to know when a cookie can be emitted. However, since it has to
783 fix the cookie name in every subsequent requests, you must ensure that the
784 proxy will be used without any "HTTP keep-alive". Use option "httpclose" if
785 unsure.
786
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100787- when the application is well known and controlled, the best method is to
788 only add the persistence cookie on a POST form because it's up to the
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +0100789 application to select which page it wants the upstream servers to cache. In
790 this case, you would use 'insert postonly indirect'.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100791
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100792
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01007932.10) Associating a cookie value with a server
794----------------------------------------------
795In HTTP mode, it's possible to associate a cookie value to each server. This
796was initially used in combination with 'dispatch' mode to handle direct accesses
797but it is now the standard way of doing the load balancing. The syntax is :
798
799 server <identifier> <address>:<port> cookie <value>
800
801- <identifier> is any name which can be used to identify the server in the logs.
802- <address>:<port> specifies where the server is bound.
803- <value> is the value to put in or to read from the cookie.
804
805Example : the 'SERVERID' cookie can be either 'server01' or 'server02'
806---------
807 listen http_proxy :80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100808 mode http
809 cookie SERVERID
810 dispatch 192.168.1.100:80
811 server web1 192.168.1.1:80 cookie server01
812 server web2 192.168.1.2:80 cookie server02
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100813
814Warning : the syntax has changed since version 1.0 !
815---------
816
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100817
willy tarreau598da412005-12-18 01:07:29 +01008182.11) Application Cookies
819-------------------------
820Since 1.2.4 it is possible to catch the cookie that comes from an
821application server in order to apply "application session stickyness".
822The server's response is searched for 'appsession' cookie, the first
823'len' bytes are used for matching and it is stored for a period of
824'timeout'.
825The syntax is:
826
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +0200827 appsession <session_cookie> len <match_length> timeout <holdtime>
willy tarreau598da412005-12-18 01:07:29 +0100828
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +0200829- <session_cookie> is the cookie, the server uses for it's session-handling
830- <match_length> how many bytes/characters should be used for matching equal
willy tarreau598da412005-12-18 01:07:29 +0100831 sessions
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +0200832- <holdtime> after this inactivaty time, in ms, the cookie will be deleted
willy tarreau598da412005-12-18 01:07:29 +0100833 from the sessionstore
834
835The appsession is only per 'listen' section possible.
836
837Example :
838---------
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +0200839 listen http_lb1 192.168.3.4:80
840 mode http
841 capture request header Cookie len 200
842 # Havind a ServerID cookie on the client allows him to reach
843 # the right server even after expiration of the appsession.
844 cookie ServerID insert nocache indirect
845 # Will memorize 52 bytes of the cookie 'JSESSIONID' and keep them
846 # for 3 hours. It will match it in the cookie and the URL field.
847 appsession JSESSIONID len 52 timeout 10800000
848 server first1 10.3.9.2:10805 check inter 3000 cookie first
849 server secon1 10.3.9.3:10805 check inter 3000 cookie secon
850 server first1 10.3.9.4:10805 check inter 3000 cookie first
851 server secon2 10.3.9.5:10805 check inter 3000 cookie secon
852 option httpchk GET /test.jsp
willy tarreau598da412005-12-18 01:07:29 +0100853
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100854
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01008553) Autonomous load balancer
856===========================
857
858The proxy can perform the load-balancing itself, both in TCP and in HTTP modes.
859This is the most interesting mode which obsoletes the old 'dispatch' mode
860described above. It has advantages such as server health monitoring, multiple
861port binding and port mapping. To use this mode, the 'balance' keyword is used,
willy tarreau34f45302006-04-15 21:37:14 +0200862followed by the selected algorithm. Up to version 1.2.11, only 'roundrobin' was
863available, which is also the default value if unspecified. Starting with
Willy Tarreau2fcb5002007-05-08 13:35:26 +0200864version 1.2.12, a new 'source' keyword appeared. A new 'uri' keyword was added
865in version 1.3.10. In this mode, there will be no dispatch address, but the
866proxy needs at least one server.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100867
868Example : same as the last one, with internal load balancer
869---------
870
871 listen http_proxy :80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100872 mode http
873 cookie SERVERID
874 balance roundrobin
875 server web1 192.168.1.1:80 cookie server01
876 server web2 192.168.1.2:80 cookie server02
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100877
878
879Since version 1.1.22, it is possible to automatically determine on which port
880the server will get the connection, depending on the port the client connected
881to. Indeed, there now are 4 possible combinations for the server's <port> field:
882
883 - unspecified or '0' :
884 the connection will be sent to the same port as the one on which the proxy
885 received the client connection itself.
886
887 - numerical value (the only one supported in versions earlier than 1.1.22) :
888 the connection will always be sent to the specified port.
889
890 - '+' followed by a numerical value :
891 the connection will be sent to the same port as the one on which the proxy
892 received the connection, plus this value.
893
894 - '-' followed by a numerical value :
895 the connection will be sent to the same port as the one on which the proxy
896 received the connection, minus this value.
897
898Examples :
899----------
900
901# same as previous example
902
903 listen http_proxy :80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100904 mode http
905 cookie SERVERID
906 balance roundrobin
907 server web1 192.168.1.1 cookie server01
908 server web2 192.168.1.2 cookie server02
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100909
910# simultaneous relaying of ports 80, 81 and 8080-8089
911
912 listen http_proxy :80,:81,:8080-8089
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100913 mode http
914 cookie SERVERID
915 balance roundrobin
916 server web1 192.168.1.1 cookie server01
917 server web2 192.168.1.2 cookie server02
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100918
919# relaying of TCP ports 25, 389 and 663 to ports 1025, 1389 and 1663
920
921 listen http_proxy :25,:389,:663
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +0100922 mode tcp
923 balance roundrobin
924 server srv1 192.168.1.1:+1000
925 server srv2 192.168.1.2:+1000
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100926
willy tarreau34f45302006-04-15 21:37:14 +0200927As previously stated, version 1.2.12 brought the 'source' keyword. When this
928keyword is used, the client's IP address is hashed and evenly distributed among
929the available servers so that a same source IP will always go to the same
930server as long as there are no change in the number of available servers. This
931can be used for instance to bind HTTP and HTTPS to the same server. It can also
932be used to improve stickyness when one part of the client population does not
933accept cookies. In this case, only those ones will be perturbated should a
934server fail.
935
936NOTE: It is important to consider the fact that many clients surf the net
937 through proxy farms which assign different IP addresses for each
938 request. Others use dialup connections with a different IP at each
939 connection. Thus, the 'source' parameter should be used with extreme
940 care.
941
942Examples :
943----------
944
945# make a same IP go to the same server whatever the service
946
947 listen http_proxy
948 bind :80,:443
949 mode http
950 balance source
951 server web1 192.168.1.1
952 server web2 192.168.1.2
953
954# try to improve client-server binding by using both source IP and cookie :
955
956 listen http_proxy :80
957 mode http
958 cookie SERVERID
959 balance source
960 server web1 192.168.1.1 cookie server01
961 server web2 192.168.1.2 cookie server02
962
Willy Tarreau2fcb5002007-05-08 13:35:26 +0200963As indicated above, the 'uri' keyword was introduced in version 1.3.10. It is
964useful when load-balancing between reverse proxy-caches, because it will hash
965the URI and use the hash result to select a server, thus optimizing the hit
966rate on the caches, because the same URI will always reach the same cache. This
967keyword is only allowed in HTTP mode.
968
969Example :
970---------
971
972# Always send a given URI to the same server
973
974 listen http_proxy
975 bind :3128
976 mode http
977 balance uri
978 server squid1 192.168.1.1
979 server squid2 192.168.1.2
980
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100981
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01009823.1) Server monitoring
983----------------------
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +0100984It is possible to check the servers status by trying to establish TCP
985connections or even sending HTTP requests to them. A server which fails to
986reply to health checks as expected will not be used by the load balancing
987algorithms. To enable monitoring, add the 'check' keyword on a server line.
988It is possible to specify the interval between tests (in milliseconds) with
989the 'inter' parameter, the number of failures supported before declaring that
990the server has fallen down with the 'fall' parameter, and the number of valid
991checks needed for the server to fully get up with the 'rise' parameter. Since
992version 1.1.22, it is also possible to send checks to a different port
993(mandatory when none is specified) with the 'port' parameter. The default
994values are the following ones :
995
996 - inter : 2000
997 - rise : 2
998 - fall : 3
999 - port : default server port
Willy Tarreau2ea3abb2007-03-25 16:45:16 +02001000 - addr : specific address for the test (default = address server)
1001
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001002The default mode consists in establishing TCP connections only. But in certain
1003types of application failures, it is often that the server continues to accept
1004connections because the system does it itself while the application is running
1005an endless loop, or is completely stuck. So in version 1.1.16 were introduced
1006HTTP health checks which only performed simple lightweight requests and analysed
1007the response. Now, as of version 1.1.23, it is possible to change the HTTP
1008method, the URI, and the HTTP version string (which even allows to send headers
1009with a dirty trick). To enable HTTP health-checks, use 'option httpchk'.
1010
1011By default, requests use the 'OPTIONS' method because it's very light and easy
1012to filter from logs, and does it on '/'. Only HTTP responses 2xx and 3xx are
1013considered valid ones, and only if they come before the time to send a new
1014request is reached ('inter' parameter). If some servers block this type of
1015request, 3 other forms help to forge a request :
1016
1017 - option httpchk -> OPTIONS / HTTP/1.0
1018 - option httpchk URI -> OPTIONS <URI> HTTP/1.0
1019 - option httpchk METH URI -> <METH> <URI> HTTP/1.0
1020 - option httpchk METH URI VER -> <METH> <URI> <VER>
1021
Willy Tarreauf3c69202006-07-09 16:42:34 +02001022Some people are using HAProxy to relay various TCP-based protocols such as
1023HTTPS, SMTP or LDAP, with the most common one being HTTPS. One problem commonly
1024encountered in data centers is the need to forward the traffic to far remote
1025servers while providing server fail-over. Often, TCP-only checks are not enough
1026because intermediate firewalls, load balancers or proxies might acknowledge the
1027connection before it reaches the real server. The only solution to this problem
1028is to send application-level health checks. Since the demand for HTTPS checks
1029is high, it has been implemented in 1.2.15 based on SSLv3 Client Hello packets.
1030To enable it, use 'option ssl-hello-chk'. It will send SSL CLIENT HELLO packets
1031to the servers, announcing support for most common cipher suites. If the server
1032responds what looks like a SERVER HELLO or an ALERT (refuses the ciphers) then
1033the response is considered as valid. Note that Apache does not generate a log
1034when it receives only an HELLO message, which makes this type of message
1035perfectly suit this need.
1036
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001037See examples below.
1038
1039Since version 1.1.17, it is possible to specify backup servers. These servers
1040are only sollicited when no other server is available. This may only be useful
1041to serve a maintenance page, or define one active and one backup server (seldom
1042used in TCP mode). To make a server a backup one, simply add the 'backup' option
1043on its line. These servers also support cookies, so if a cookie is specified for
1044a backup server, clients assigned to this server will stick to it even when the
1045other ones come back. Conversely, if no cookie is assigned to such a server,
1046the clients will get their cookies removed (empty cookie = removal), and will
1047be balanced against other servers once they come back. Please note that there
Willy TARREAU3481c462006-03-01 22:37:57 +01001048is no load-balancing among backup servers by default. If there are several
1049backup servers, the second one will only be used when the first one dies, and
1050so on. To force load-balancing between backup servers, specify the 'allbackups'
1051option.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001052
Willy Tarreau2ea3abb2007-03-25 16:45:16 +02001053Since version 1.1.22, it is possible to send health checks to a different port
1054than the service. It is mainly needed in setups where the server does not have
1055any predefined port, for instance when the port is deduced from the listening
1056port. For this, use the 'port' parameter followed by the port number which must
1057respond to health checks. It is also possible to send health checks to a
1058different address than the service. It makes it easier to use a dedicated check
1059daemon on the servers, for instance, check return contents and stop several
1060farms at once in the event of an error anywhere.
1061
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001062Since version 1.1.17, it is also possible to visually check the status of all
1063servers at once. For this, you just have to send a SIGHUP signal to the proxy.
1064The servers status will be dumped into the logs at the 'notice' level, as well
1065as on <stderr> if not closed. For this reason, it's always a good idea to have
1066one local log server at the 'notice' level.
1067
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01001068Since version 1.1.28 and 1.2.1, if an instance loses all its servers, an
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +01001069emergency message will be sent in the logs to inform the administator that an
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01001070immediate action must be taken.
1071
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +01001072Since version 1.1.30 and 1.2.3, several servers can share the same cookie
1073value. This is particularly useful in backup mode, to select alternate paths
1074for a given server for example, to provide soft-stop, or to direct the clients
1075to a temporary page during an application restart. The principle is that when
1076a server is dead, the proxy will first look for another server which shares the
1077same cookie value for every client which presents the cookie. If there is no
1078standard server for this cookie, it will then look for a backup server which
1079shares the same name. Please consult the architecture guide for more information.
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01001080
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001081Examples :
1082----------
1083# same setup as in paragraph 3) with TCP monitoring
1084 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001085 mode http
1086 cookie SERVERID
1087 balance roundrobin
1088 server web1 192.168.1.1:80 cookie server01 check
1089 server web2 192.168.1.2:80 cookie server02 check inter 500 rise 1 fall 2
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001090
1091# same with HTTP monitoring via 'OPTIONS / HTTP/1.0'
1092 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001093 mode http
1094 cookie SERVERID
1095 balance roundrobin
1096 option httpchk
1097 server web1 192.168.1.1:80 cookie server01 check
1098 server web2 192.168.1.2:80 cookie server02 check inter 500 rise 1 fall 2
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001099
1100# same with HTTP monitoring via 'OPTIONS /index.html HTTP/1.0'
1101 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001102 mode http
1103 cookie SERVERID
1104 balance roundrobin
1105 option httpchk /index.html
1106 server web1 192.168.1.1:80 cookie server01 check
1107 server web2 192.168.1.2:80 cookie server02 check inter 500 rise 1 fall 2
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001108
1109# same with HTTP monitoring via 'HEAD /index.jsp? HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: www'
1110 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001111 mode http
1112 cookie SERVERID
1113 balance roundrobin
1114 option httpchk HEAD /index.jsp? HTTP/1.1\r\nHost:\ www
1115 server web1 192.168.1.1:80 cookie server01 check
1116 server web2 192.168.1.2:80 cookie server02 check inter 500 rise 1 fall 2
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001117
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +01001118# Load-balancing with 'prefixed cookie' persistence, and soft-stop using an
1119# alternate port 81 on the server for health-checks.
1120 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001121 mode http
1122 cookie JSESSIONID prefix
1123 balance roundrobin
1124 option httpchk HEAD /index.jsp? HTTP/1.1\r\nHost:\ www
1125 server web1-norm 192.168.1.1:80 cookie s1 check port 81
1126 server web2-norm 192.168.1.2:80 cookie s2 check port 81
1127 server web1-stop 192.168.1.1:80 cookie s1 check port 80 backup
1128 server web2-stop 192.168.1.2:80 cookie s2 check port 80 backup
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +01001129
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001130# automatic insertion of a cookie in the server's response, and automatic
1131# deletion of the cookie in the client request, while asking upstream caches
1132# not to cache replies.
1133 listen web_appl 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001134 mode http
1135 cookie SERVERID insert nocache indirect
1136 balance roundrobin
1137 server web1 192.168.1.1:80 cookie server01 check
1138 server web2 192.168.1.2:80 cookie server02 check
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001139
1140# same with off-site application backup and local error pages server
1141 listen web_appl 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001142 mode http
1143 cookie SERVERID insert nocache indirect
1144 balance roundrobin
1145 server web1 192.168.1.1:80 cookie server01 check
1146 server web2 192.168.1.2:80 cookie server02 check
1147 server web-backup 192.168.2.1:80 cookie server03 check backup
1148 server web-excuse 192.168.3.1:80 check backup
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001149
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001150# SMTP+TLS relaying with health-checks and backup servers
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001151
1152 listen http_proxy :25,:587
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001153 mode tcp
1154 balance roundrobin
1155 server srv1 192.168.1.1 check port 25 inter 30000 rise 1 fall 2
1156 server srv2 192.168.1.2 backup
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001157
Willy Tarreauf3c69202006-07-09 16:42:34 +02001158# HTTPS relaying with health-checks and backup servers
1159
1160 listen http_proxy :443
1161 mode tcp
1162 option ssl-hello-chk
1163 balance roundrobin
1164 server srv1 192.168.1.1 check inter 30000 rise 1 fall 2
1165 server srv2 192.168.1.2 backup
1166
Willy TARREAU3481c462006-03-01 22:37:57 +01001167# Load-balancing using a backup pool (requires haproxy 1.2.9)
1168 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:80
1169 mode http
1170 balance roundrobin
1171 option httpchk
1172 server inst1 192.168.1.1:80 cookie s1 check
1173 server inst2 192.168.1.2:80 cookie s2 check
1174 server inst3 192.168.1.3:80 cookie s3 check
1175 server back1 192.168.1.10:80 check backup
1176 server back2 192.168.1.11:80 check backup
1177 option allbackups # all backups will be used
1178
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001179
11803.2) Redistribute connections in case of failure
1181------------------------------------------------
1182In HTTP mode, if a server designated by a cookie does not respond, the clients
1183may definitely stick to it because they cannot flush the cookie, so they will
1184not be able to access the service anymore. Specifying 'redispatch' will allow
1185the proxy to break their persistence and redistribute them to working servers.
1186
1187Example :
1188---------
1189 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001190 mode http
1191 cookie SERVERID
1192 dispatch 192.168.1.100:80
1193 server web1 192.168.1.1:80 cookie server01
1194 server web2 192.168.1.2:80 cookie server02
1195 redispatch # send back to dispatch in case of connection failure
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001196
1197Up to, and including version 1.1.16, this parameter only applied to connection
1198failures. Since version 1.1.17, it also applies to servers which have been
1199detected as failed by the health check mechanism. Indeed, a server may be broken
1200but still accepting connections, which would not solve every case. But it is
1201possible to conserve the old behaviour, that is, make a client insist on trying
1202to connect to a server even if it is said to be down, by setting the 'persist'
1203option :
1204
1205 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001206 mode http
1207 option persist
1208 cookie SERVERID
1209 dispatch 192.168.1.100:80
1210 server web1 192.168.1.1:80 cookie server01
1211 server web2 192.168.1.2:80 cookie server02
1212 redispatch # send back to dispatch in case of connection failure
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001213
1214
willy tarreau34f45302006-04-15 21:37:14 +020012153.3) Assigning different weights to servers
1216-------------------------------------------
1217Sometimes you will need to bring new servers to increase your server farm's
1218capacity, but the new server will be either smaller (emergency use of anything
1219that fits) or bigger (when investing in new hardware). For this reason, it
1220might be wise to be able to send more clients to biggest servers. Till version
12211.2.11, it was necessary to replicate the same server multiple times in the
1222configuration. Starting with 1.2.12, the 'weight' option is available. HAProxy
1223then computes the most homogenous possible map of servers based on their
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001224weights so that the load gets distributed as smoothly as possible among them.
1225The weight, between 1 and 256, should reflect one server's capacity relative to
1226others. Weight 1 represents the lowest frequency and 256 the highest. This way,
1227if a server fails, the remaining capacities are still respected.
willy tarreau34f45302006-04-15 21:37:14 +02001228
1229Example :
1230---------
1231# fair distribution among two opterons and one old pentium3
1232
1233 listen web_appl 0.0.0.0:80
1234 mode http
1235 cookie SERVERID insert nocache indirect
1236 balance roundrobin
1237 server pentium3-800 192.168.1.1:80 cookie server01 weight 8 check
1238 server opteron-2.0G 192.168.1.2:80 cookie server02 weight 20 check
1239 server opteron-2.4G 192.168.1.3:80 cookie server03 weight 24 check
1240 server web-backup1 192.168.2.1:80 cookie server04 check backup
1241 server web-excuse 192.168.3.1:80 check backup
1242
1243Notes :
1244-------
1245 - if unspecified, the default weight is 1
1246
1247 - the weight does not impact health checks, so it is cleaner to use weights
1248 than replicating the same server several times
1249
1250 - weights also work on backup servers if the 'allbackups' option is used
1251
1252 - the weights also apply to the source address load balancing
1253 ('balance source').
1254
1255 - whatever the weights, the first server will always be assigned first. This
1256 is helpful for troubleshooting.
1257
1258 - for the purists, the map calculation algorithm gives precedence to first
1259 server, so the map is the most uniform when servers are declared in
1260 ascending order relative to their weights.
1261
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001262The load distribution will follow exactly this sequence :
1263
1264 Request| 1 1 1 1
1265 number | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3
1266 --------+---------------------------
1267 p3-800 | X . . . . . . X . . . . .
1268 opt-20 | . X . X . X . . . X . X .
1269 opt-24 | . . X . X . X . X . X . X
1270
1271
12723.4) Limiting the number of concurrent sessions on each server
1273--------------------------------------------------------------
1274Some pre-forked servers such as Apache suffer from too many concurrent
1275sessions, because it's very expensive to run hundreds or thousands of
1276processes on one system. One solution is to increase the number of servers
1277and load-balance between them, but it is a problem when the only goal is
1278to resist to short surges.
1279
1280To solve this problem, a new feature was implemented in HAProxy 1.2.13.
1281It's a per-server 'maxconn', associated with a per-server and a per-proxy
1282queue. This transforms haproxy into a request buffer between the thousands of
1283clients and the few servers. On many circumstances, lowering the maxconn value
1284will increase the server's performance and decrease the overall response times
1285because the servers will be less congested.
1286
1287When a request tries to reach any server, the first non-saturated server is
1288used, respective to the load balancing algorithm. If all servers are saturated,
1289then the request gets queued into the instance's global queue. It will be
1290dequeued once a server will have freed a session and all previously queued
1291requests have been processed.
1292
1293If a request references a particular server (eg: source hashing, or persistence
1294cookie), and if this server is full, then the request will be queued into the
1295server's dedicated queue. This queue has higher priority than the global queue,
1296so it's easier for already registered users to enter the site than for new
1297users.
1298
1299For this, the logs have been enhanced to show the number of sessions per
1300server, the request's position in the queue and the time spent in the queue.
1301This helps doing capacity planning. See the 'logs' section below for more info.
1302
1303Example :
1304---------
1305 # be nice with P3 which only has 256 MB of RAM.
1306 listen web_appl 0.0.0.0:80
1307 maxconn 10000
1308 mode http
1309 cookie SERVERID insert nocache indirect
1310 balance roundrobin
1311 server pentium3-800 192.168.1.1:80 cookie s1 weight 8 maxconn 100 check
1312 server opteron-2.0G 192.168.1.2:80 cookie s2 weight 20 maxconn 300 check
1313 server opteron-2.4G 192.168.1.3:80 cookie s3 weight 24 maxconn 300 check
1314 server web-backup1 192.168.2.1:80 cookie s4 check maxconn 200 backup
1315 server web-excuse 192.168.3.1:80 check backup
1316
willy tarreauf76e6ca2006-05-21 21:09:55 +02001317
1318This was so much efficient at reducing the server's response time that some
1319users wanted to use low values to improve their server's performance. However,
1320they were not able anymore to handle very large loads because it was not
1321possible anymore to saturate the servers. For this reason, version 1.2.14 has
1322brought dynamic limitation with the addition of the parameter 'minconn'. When
1323this parameter is set along with maxconn, it will enable dynamic limitation
1324based on the instance's load. The maximum number of concurrent sessions on a
1325server will be proportionnal to the number of sessions on the instance relative
1326to its maxconn. A minimum of <minconn> will be allowed whatever the load. This
1327will ensure that servers will perform at their best level under normal loads,
1328while still handling surges when needed. The dynamic limit is computed like
1329this :
1330
1331 srv.dyn_limit = max(srv.minconn, srv.maxconn * inst.sess / inst.maxconn)
1332
1333Example :
1334---------
1335 # be nice with P3 which only has 256 MB of RAM.
1336 listen web_appl 0.0.0.0:80
1337 maxconn 10000
1338 mode http
1339 cookie SERVERID insert nocache indirect
1340 balance roundrobin
1341 server pentium3-800 192.168.1.1:80 cookie s1 weight 8 minconn 10 maxconn 100 check
1342 server opteron-2.0G 192.168.1.2:80 cookie s2 weight 20 minconn 30 maxconn 300 check
1343 server opteron-2.4G 192.168.1.3:80 cookie s3 weight 24 minconn 30 maxconn 300 check
1344 server web-backup1 192.168.2.1:80 cookie s4 check maxconn 200 backup
1345 server web-excuse 192.168.3.1:80 check backup
1346
1347In the example above, the server 'pentium3-800' will receive at most 100
1348simultaneous sessions when the proxy instance will reach 10000 sessions, and
1349will receive only 10 simultaneous sessions when the proxy will be under 1000
1350sessions.
1351
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001352Notes :
1353-------
1354 - The requests will not stay indefinitely in the queue, they follow the
1355 'contimeout' parameter, and if a request cannot be dequeued within this
1356 timeout because the server is saturated or because the queue is filled,
1357 the session will expire with a 503 error.
1358
willy tarreauf76e6ca2006-05-21 21:09:55 +02001359 - if only <minconn> is specified, it has the same effect as <maxconn>
1360
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001361 - setting too low values for maxconn might improve performance but might also
1362 allow slow users to block access to the server for other users.
1363
willy tarreau34f45302006-04-15 21:37:14 +02001364
willy tarreaue0bdd622006-05-21 20:51:54 +020013653.5) Dropping aborted requests
1366------------------------------
1367In presence of very high loads, the servers will take some time to respond. The
1368per-proxy's connection queue will inflate, and the response time will increase
1369respective to the size of the queue times the average per-session response
1370time. When clients will wait for more than a few seconds, they will often hit
1371the 'STOP' button on their browser, leaving a useless request in the queue, and
1372slowing down other users.
1373
1374As there is no way to distinguish between a full STOP and a simple
1375shutdown(SHUT_WR) on the client side, HTTP agents should be conservative and
1376consider that the client might only have closed its output channel while
1377waiting for the response. However, this introduces risks of congestion when
1378lots of users do the same, and is completely useless nowadays because probably
1379no client at all will close the session while waiting for the response. Some
1380HTTP agents support this (Squid, Apache, HAProxy), and others do not (TUX, most
1381hardware-based load balancers). So the probability for a closed input channel
1382to represent a user hitting the 'STOP' button is close to 100%, and it is very
1383tempting to be able to abort the session early without polluting the servers.
1384
1385For this reason, a new option "abortonclose" was introduced in version 1.2.14.
1386By default (without the option) the behaviour is HTTP-compliant. But when the
1387option is specified, a session with an incoming channel closed will be aborted
1388if it's still possible, which means that it's either waiting for a connect() to
1389establish or it is queued waiting for a connection slot. This considerably
1390reduces the queue size and the load on saturated servers when users are tempted
1391to click on STOP, which in turn reduces the response time for other users.
1392
1393Example :
1394---------
1395 listen web_appl 0.0.0.0:80
1396 maxconn 10000
1397 mode http
1398 cookie SERVERID insert nocache indirect
1399 balance roundrobin
1400 server web1 192.168.1.1:80 cookie s1 weight 10 maxconn 100 check
1401 server web2 192.168.1.2:80 cookie s2 weight 10 maxconn 100 check
1402 server web3 192.168.1.3:80 cookie s3 weight 10 maxconn 100 check
1403 server bck1 192.168.2.1:80 cookie s4 check maxconn 200 backup
1404 option abortonclose
1405
1406
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +010014074) Additionnal features
1408=======================
1409
willy tarreau481132e2006-05-21 21:43:10 +02001410Other features are available. They are transparent mode, event logging, header
1411rewriting/filtering, and the status as an HTML page.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001412
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001413
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +010014144.1) Network features
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001415---------------------
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +010014164.1.1) Transparent mode
1417-----------------------
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001418In HTTP mode, the 'transparent' keyword allows to intercept sessions which are
1419routed through the system hosting the proxy. This mode was implemented as a
1420replacement for the 'dispatch' mode, since connections without cookie will be
1421sent to the original address while known cookies will be sent to the servers.
1422This mode implies that the system can redirect sessions to a local port.
1423
1424Example :
1425---------
1426 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:65000
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001427 mode http
1428 transparent
1429 cookie SERVERID
1430 server server01 192.168.1.1:80
1431 server server02 192.168.1.2:80
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001432
1433 # iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp -d 192.168.1.100 \
1434 --dport 80 -j REDIRECT --to-ports 65000
1435
1436Note :
1437------
1438If the port is left unspecified on the server, the port the client connected to
1439will be used. This allows to relay a full port range without using transparent
1440mode nor thousands of file descriptors, provided that the system can redirect
1441sessions to local ports.
1442
1443Example :
1444---------
1445 # redirect all ports to local port 65000, then forward to the server on the
1446 # original port.
1447 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:65000
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001448 mode tcp
1449 server server01 192.168.1.1 check port 60000
1450 server server02 192.168.1.2 check port 60000
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001451
1452 # iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp -d 192.168.1.100 \
1453 -j REDIRECT --to-ports 65000
1454
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +010014554.1.2) Per-server source address binding
1456----------------------------------------
1457As of versions 1.1.30 and 1.2.3, it is possible to specify a particular source
1458to reach each server. This is useful when reaching backup servers from a
1459different LAN, or to use an alternate path to reach the same server. It is also
1460usable to provide source load-balancing for outgoing connections. Obviously,
1461the same source address is used to send health-checks.
1462
1463Example :
1464---------
1465 # use a particular source to reach both servers
1466 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:65000
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001467 mode http
1468 balance roundrobin
1469 server server01 192.168.1.1:80 source 192.168.2.13
1470 server server02 192.168.1.2:80 source 192.168.2.13
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +01001471
1472Example :
1473---------
1474 # use a particular source to reach each servers
1475 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:65000
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001476 mode http
1477 balance roundrobin
1478 server server01 192.168.1.1:80 source 192.168.1.1
1479 server server02 192.168.2.1:80 source 192.168.2.1
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +01001480
1481Example :
1482---------
1483 # provide source load-balancing to reach the same proxy through 2 WAN links
1484 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:65000
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001485 mode http
1486 balance roundrobin
1487 server remote-proxy-way1 192.168.1.1:3128 source 192.168.2.1
1488 server remote-proxy-way2 192.168.1.1:3128 source 192.168.3.1
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +01001489
1490Example :
1491---------
1492 # force a TCP connection to bind to a specific port
1493 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:2000
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001494 mode tcp
1495 balance roundrobin
1496 server srv1 192.168.1.1:80 source 192.168.2.1:20
1497 server srv2 192.168.1.2:80 source 192.168.2.1:20
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +01001498
willy tarreaub952e1d2005-12-18 01:31:20 +010014994.1.3) TCP keep-alive
1500---------------------
1501With version 1.2.7, it becomes possible to enable TCP keep-alives on both the
1502client and server sides. This makes it possible to prevent long sessions from
1503expiring on external layer 4 components such as firewalls and load-balancers.
1504It also allows the system to terminate dead sessions when no timeout has been
1505set (not recommanded). The proxy cannot set the keep-alive probes intervals nor
1506maximal count, consult your operating system manual for this. There are 3
1507options to enable TCP keep-alive :
1508
1509 option tcpka # enables keep-alive both on client and server side
1510 option clitcpka # enables keep-alive only on client side
1511 option srvtcpka # enables keep-alive only on server side
1512
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001513
15144.2) Event logging
1515------------------
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001516
1517HAProxy's strength certainly lies in its precise logs. It probably provides the
1518finest level of information available for such a product, which is very
1519important for troubleshooting complex environments. Standard log information
1520include client ports, TCP/HTTP state timers, precise session state at
1521termination and precise termination cause, information about decisions to
1522direct trafic to a server, and of course the ability to capture arbitrary
1523headers.
1524
1525In order to improve administrators reactivity, it offers a great transparency
1526about encountered problems, both internal and external, and it is possible to
1527send logs to different sources at the same time with different level filters :
1528
1529 - global process-level logs (system errors, start/stop, etc..)
1530 - per-listener system and internal errors (lack of resource, bugs, ...)
1531 - per-listener external troubles (servers up/down, max connections)
1532 - per-listener activity (client connections), either at the establishment or
1533 at the termination.
1534
1535The ability to distribute different levels of logs to different log servers
1536allow several production teams to interact and to fix their problems as soon
1537as possible. For example, the system team might monitor system-wide errors,
1538while the application team might be monitoring the up/down for their servers in
1539real time, and the security team might analyze the activity logs with one hour
1540delay.
1541
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +010015424.2.1) Log levels
1543-----------------
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01001544TCP and HTTP connections can be logged with informations such as date, time,
1545source IP address, destination address, connection duration, response times,
1546HTTP request, the HTTP return code, number of bytes transmitted, the conditions
1547in which the session ended, and even exchanged cookies values, to track a
1548particular user's problems for example. All messages are sent to up to two
1549syslog servers. Consult section 1.1 for more info about log facilities. The
1550syntax follows :
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001551
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01001552 log <address_1> <facility_1> [max_level_1]
1553 log <address_2> <facility_2> [max_level_2]
1554or
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001555 log global
1556
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01001557Note :
1558------
1559The particular syntax 'log global' means that the same log configuration as the
1560'global' section will be used.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001561
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01001562Example :
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001563---------
1564 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001565 mode http
1566 log 192.168.2.200 local3
1567 log 192.168.2.201 local4
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001568
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +010015694.2.2) Log format
1570-----------------
1571By default, connections are logged at the TCP level, as soon as the session
1572establishes between the client and the proxy. By enabling the 'tcplog' option,
1573the proxy will wait until the session ends to generate an enhanced log
1574containing more information such as session duration and its state during the
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001575disconnection. The number of remaining session after disconnection is also
1576indicated (for the server, the listener, and the process).
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +01001577
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001578Example of TCP logging :
1579------------------------
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01001580 listen relais-tcp 0.0.0.0:8000
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001581 mode tcp
1582 option tcplog
1583 log 192.168.2.200 local3
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01001584
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001585>>> haproxy[18989]: 127.0.0.1:34550 [15/Oct/2003:15:24:28] relais-tcp Srv1 0/0/5007 0 -- 1/1/1 0/0
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001586
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001587 Field Format Example
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001588
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001589 1 process_name '[' pid ']:' haproxy[18989]:
1590 2 client_ip ':' client_port 127.0.0.1:34550
1591 3 '[' date ']' [15/Oct/2003:15:24:28]
1592 4 listener_name relais-tcp
1593 5 server_name Srv1
1594 6 queue_time '/' connect_time '/' total_time 0/0/5007
1595 7 bytes_read 0
1596 8 termination_state --
1597 9 srv_conn '/' listener_conn '/' process_conn 1/1/1
1598 10 position in srv_queue / listener_queue 0/0
1599
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01001600
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +01001601Another option, 'httplog', provides more detailed information about HTTP
1602contents, such as the request and some cookies. In the event where an external
1603component would establish frequent connections to check the service, logs may be
1604full of useless lines. So it is possible not to log any session which didn't
1605transfer any data, by the setting of the 'dontlognull' option. This only has
1606effect on sessions which are established then closed.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001607
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001608Example of HTTP logging :
1609-------------------------
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001610 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001611 mode http
1612 option httplog
1613 option dontlognull
1614 log 192.168.2.200 local3
1615
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001616>>> haproxy[674]: 127.0.0.1:33319 [15/Oct/2003:08:31:57] relais-http Srv1 9/0/7/147/723 200 243 - - ---- 2/3/3 0/0 "HEAD / HTTP/1.0"
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001617
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001618More complete example
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001619 haproxy[18989]: 10.0.0.1:34552 [15/Oct/2003:15:26:31] relais-http Srv1 3183/-1/-1/-1/11215 503 0 - - SC-- 137/202/205 0/0 {w.ods.org|Mozilla} {} "HEAD / HTTP/1.0"
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001620
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001621 Field Format Example
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001622
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001623 1 process_name '[' pid ']:' haproxy[18989]:
1624 2 client_ip ':' client_port 10.0.0.1:34552
1625 3 '[' date ']' [15/Oct/2003:15:26:31]
1626 4 listener_name relais-http
1627 5 server_name Srv1
1628 6 Tq '/' Tw '/' Tc '/' Tr '/' Tt 3183/-1/-1/-1/11215
1629 7 HTTP_return_code 503
1630 8 bytes_read 0
1631 9 captured_request_cookie -
1632 10 captured_response_cookie -
1633 11 termination_state SC--
1634 12 srv_conn '/' listener_conn '/' process_conn 137/202/205
1635 13 position in srv_queue / listener_queue 0/0
1636 14 '{' captured_request_headers '}' {w.ods.org|Mozilla}
1637 15 '{' captured_response_headers '}' {}
1638 16 '"' HTTP_request '"' "HEAD / HTTP/1.0"
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001639
1640Note for log parsers: the URI is ALWAYS the end of the line starting with the
1641 first double quote '"'.
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01001642
1643The problem when logging at end of connection is that you have no clue about
1644what is happening during very long sessions. To workaround this problem, a
1645new option 'logasap' has been introduced in 1.1.28/1.2.1. When specified, the
1646proxy will log as soon as possible, just before data transfer begins. This means
1647that in case of TCP, it will still log the connection status to the server, and
1648in case of HTTP, it will log just after processing the server headers. In this
1649case, the number of bytes reported is the number of header bytes sent to the
1650client.
1651
1652In order to avoid confusion with normal logs, the total time field and the
1653number of bytes are prefixed with a '+' sign which mean that real numbers are
1654certainly bigger.
1655
1656Example :
1657---------
1658
1659 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001660 mode http
1661 option httplog
1662 option dontlognull
1663 option logasap
1664 log 192.168.2.200 local3
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01001665
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001666>>> haproxy[674]: 127.0.0.1:33320 [15/Oct/2003:08:32:17] relais-http Srv1 9/10/7/14/+30 200 +243 - - ---- 1/1/3 1/0 "GET /image.iso HTTP/1.0"
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01001667
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +010016684.2.3) Timing events
1669--------------------
1670Timers provide a great help in trouble shooting network problems. All values
1671are reported in milliseconds (ms). In HTTP mode, four control points are
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001672reported under the form 'Tq/Tw/Tc/Tr/Tt' :
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +01001673
1674 - Tq: total time to get the client request.
1675 It's the time elapsed between the moment the client connection was accepted
1676 and the moment the proxy received the last HTTP header. The value '-1'
1677 indicates that the end of headers (empty line) has never been seen.
1678
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001679 - Tw: total time spent in the queues waiting for a connection slot. It
1680 accounts for listener's queue as well as the server's queue, and depends
1681 on the queue size, and the time needed for the server to complete previous
1682 sessions. The value '-1' means that the request was killed before reaching
1683 the queue.
1684
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +01001685 - Tc: total time to establish the TCP connection to the server.
1686 It's the time elapsed between the moment the proxy sent the connection
1687 request, and the moment it was acknowledged, or between the TCP SYN packet
1688 and the matching SYN/ACK in return. The value '-1' means that the
1689 connection never established.
1690
1691 - Tr: server response time. It's the time elapsed between the moment the
1692 TCP connection was established to the server and the moment it send its
1693 complete response header. It purely shows its request processing time,
1694 without the network overhead due to the data transmission. The value '-1'
1695 means that the last the response header (empty line) was never seen.
1696
1697 - Tt: total session duration time, between the moment the proxy accepted it
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01001698 and the moment both ends were closed. The exception is when the 'logasap'
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001699 option is specified. In this case, it only equals (Tq+Tw+Tc+Tr), and is
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01001700 prefixed with a '+' sign. From this field, we can deduce Td, the data
1701 transmission time, by substracting other timers when valid :
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +01001702
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001703 Td = Tt - (Tq + Tw + Tc + Tr)
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +01001704
1705 Timers with '-1' values have to be excluded from this equation.
1706
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001707In TCP mode ('option tcplog'), only Tw, Tc and Tt are reported.
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +01001708
1709These timers provide precious indications on trouble causes. Since the TCP
1710protocol defines retransmit delays of 3, 6, 12... seconds, we know for sure
1711that timers close to multiples of 3s are nearly always related to packets lost
1712due to network problems (wires or negociation). Moreover, if <Tt> is close to
1713a timeout value specified in the configuration, it often means that a session
1714has been aborted on time-out.
1715
1716Most common cases :
1717
1718 - If Tq is close to 3000, a packet has probably been lost between the client
1719 and the proxy.
1720 - If Tc is close to 3000, a packet has probably been lost between the server
1721 and the proxy during the server connection phase. This one should always be
1722 very low (less than a few tens).
1723 - If Tr is nearly always lower than 3000 except some rare values which seem to
1724 be the average majored by 3000, there are probably some packets lost between
1725 the proxy and the server.
1726 - If Tt is often slightly higher than a time-out, it's often because the
1727 client and the server use HTTP keep-alive and the session is maintained
1728 after the response ends. Se further for how to disable HTTP keep-alive.
1729
1730Other cases ('xx' means any value to be ignored) :
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001731 -1/xx/xx/xx/Tt: the client was not able to send its complete request in time,
1732 or that it aborted it too early.
1733 Tq/-1/xx/xx/Tt: it was not possible to process the request, maybe because
1734 servers were out of order.
1735 Tq/Tw/-1/xx/Tt: the connection could not establish on the server. Either it
1736 refused it or it timed out after Tt-(Tq+Tw) ms.
1737 Tq/Tw/Tc/-1/Tt: the server has accepted the connection but did not return a
1738 complete response in time, or it closed its connexion
1739 unexpectedly, after Tt-(Tq+Tw+Tc) ms.
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +01001740
17414.2.4) Session state at disconnection
1742-------------------------------------
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001743TCP and HTTP logs provide a session completion indicator in the
1744<termination_state> field, just before the number of active
1745connections. It is 2-characters long in TCP, and 4-characters long in
1746HTTP, each of which has a special meaning :
1747
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01001748 - On the first character, a code reporting the first event which caused the
1749 session to terminate :
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001750
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001751 C : the TCP session was unexpectedly aborted by the client.
1752
1753 S : the TCP session was unexpectedly aborted by the server, or the
1754 server explicitly refused it.
1755
1756 P : the session was prematurely aborted by the proxy, because of a
1757 connection limit enforcement, because a DENY filter was matched,
1758 or because of a security check which detected and blocked a
1759 dangerous error in server response which might have caused
1760 information leak (eg: cacheable cookie).
1761
1762 R : a resource on the proxy has been exhausted (memory, sockets, source
1763 ports, ...). Usually, this appears during the connection phase, and
1764 system logs should contain a copy of the precise error.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001765
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001766 I : an internal error was identified by the proxy during a self-check.
1767 This should NEVER happen, and you are encouraged to report any log
1768 containing this, because this is a bug.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001769
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001770 c : the client-side time-out expired first.
1771
1772 s : the server-side time-out expired first.
1773
1774 - : normal session completion.
1775
1776 - on the second character, the TCP/HTTP session state when it was closed :
1777
1778 R : waiting for complete REQUEST from the client (HTTP only). Nothing
1779 was sent to any server.
1780
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02001781 Q : waiting in the QUEUE for a connection slot. This can only happen on
1782 servers which have a 'maxconn' parameter set. No connection attempt
1783 was made to any server.
1784
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001785 C : waiting for CONNECTION to establish on the server. The server might
1786 at most have noticed a connection attempt.
1787
1788 H : waiting for, receiving and processing server HEADERS (HTTP only).
1789
1790 D : the session was in the DATA phase.
1791
1792 L : the proxy was still transmitting LAST data to the client while the
1793 server had already finished.
1794
Willy Tarreau2272dc12006-09-03 10:19:38 +02001795 T : the request was tarpitted. It has been held open on with the client
Willy Tarreau08fa2e32006-09-03 10:47:37 +02001796 during the whole contimeout duration or untill the client closed.
Willy Tarreau2272dc12006-09-03 10:19:38 +02001797
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001798 - : normal session completion after end of data transfer.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001799
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01001800 - the third character tells whether the persistence cookie was provided by
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +01001801 the client (only in HTTP mode) :
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001802
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001803 N : the client provided NO cookie. This is usually the case on new
1804 connections.
1805
1806 I : the client provided an INVALID cookie matching no known
1807 server. This might be caused by a recent configuration change,
1808 mixed cookies between HTTP/HTTPS sites, or an attack.
1809
1810 D : the client provided a cookie designating a server which was DOWN,
1811 so either the 'persist' option was used and the client was sent to
1812 this server, or it was not set and the client was redispatched to
1813 another server.
1814
1815 V : the client provided a valid cookie, and was sent to the associated
1816 server.
1817
1818 - : does not apply (no cookie set in configuration).
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001819
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01001820 - the last character reports what operations were performed on the persistence
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +01001821 cookie returned by the server (only in HTTP mode) :
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001822
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001823 N : NO cookie was provided by the server, and none was inserted either.
1824
1825 I : no cookie was provided by the server, and the proxy INSERTED one.
1826
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01001827 P : a cookie was PROVIDED by the server and transmitted as-is.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001828
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001829 R : the cookie provided by the server was REWRITTEN by the proxy.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001830
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001831 D : the cookie provided by the server was DELETED by the proxy.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001832
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001833 - : does not apply (no cookie set in configuration).
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001834
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001835The combination of the two first flags give a lot of information about what was
1836happening when the session terminated. It can be helpful to detect server
1837saturation, network troubles, local system resource starvation, attacks, etc...
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001838
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001839The most common termination flags combinations are indicated here.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001840
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001841 Flags Reason
1842 CR The client aborted before sending a full request. Most probably the
1843 request was done by hand using a telnet client, and aborted early.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001844
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001845 cR The client timed out before sending a full request. This is sometimes
1846 caused by too large TCP MSS values on the client side for PPPoE
1847 networks which cannot transport full-sized packets, or by clients
1848 sending requests by hand and not typing fast enough.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001849
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001850 SC The server explicitly refused the connection (the proxy received a
1851 TCP RST or an ICMP in return). Under some circumstances, it can
1852 also be the network stack telling the proxy that the server is
1853 unreachable (eg: no route, or no ARP response on local network).
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01001854
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001855 sC The connection to the server did not complete during contimeout.
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01001856
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001857 PC The proxy refused to establish a connection to the server because the
1858 maxconn limit has been reached. The listener's maxconn parameter may
1859 be increased in the proxy configuration, as well as the global
1860 maxconn parameter.
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +01001861
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001862 RC A local resource has been exhausted (memory, sockets, source ports)
1863 preventing the connection to the server from establishing. The error
1864 logs will tell precisely what was missing. Anyway, this can only be
1865 solved by system tuning.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001866
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001867 cH The client timed out during a POST request. This is sometimes caused
1868 by too large TCP MSS values for PPPoE networks which cannot transport
1869 full-sized packets.
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +01001870
willy tarreau078c79a2006-05-13 12:23:58 +02001871 CH The client aborted while waiting for the server to start responding.
1872 It might be the server taking too long to respond or the client
1873 clicking the 'Stop' button too fast.
1874
1875 CQ The client aborted while its session was queued, waiting for a server
1876 with enough empty slots to accept it. It might be that either all the
1877 servers were saturated or the assigned server taking too long to
1878 respond.
1879
Willy Tarreau08fa2e32006-09-03 10:47:37 +02001880 CT The client aborted while its session was tarpitted.
1881
willy tarreau078c79a2006-05-13 12:23:58 +02001882 sQ The session spent too much time in queue and has been expired.
1883
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001884 SH The server aborted before sending its full headers, or it crashed.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01001885
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001886 sH The server failed to reply during the srvtimeout delay, which
1887 indicates too long transactions, probably caused by back-end
1888 saturation. The only solutions are to fix the problem on the
1889 application or to increase the 'srvtimeout' parameter to support
1890 longer delays (at the risk of the client giving up anyway).
1891
1892 PR The proxy blocked the client's request, either because of an invalid
1893 HTTP syntax, in which case it returned an HTTP 400 error to the
1894 client, or because a deny filter matched, in which case it returned
1895 an HTTP 403 error.
1896
1897 PH The proxy blocked the server's response, because it was invalid,
1898 incomplete, dangerous (cache control), or matched a security filter.
1899 In any case, an HTTP 502 error is sent to the client.
1900
Willy Tarreau2272dc12006-09-03 10:19:38 +02001901 PT The proxy blocked the client's request and has tarpitted its
1902 connection before returning it a 500 server error. Nothing was sent
1903 to the server.
1904
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001905 cD The client did not read any data for as long as the clitimeout delay.
1906 This is often caused by network failures on the client side.
1907
1908 CD The client unexpectedly aborted during data transfer. This is either
1909 caused by a browser crash, or by a keep-alive session between the
1910 server and the client terminated first by the client.
1911
1912 sD The server did nothing during the srvtimeout delay. This is often
1913 caused by too short timeouts on L4 equipements before the server
1914 (firewalls, load-balancers, ...).
1915
19164.2.5) Non-printable characters
willy tarreau4302f492005-12-18 01:00:37 +01001917-------------------------------
1918As of version 1.1.29, non-printable characters are not sent as-is into log
1919files, but are converted to their two-digits hexadecimal representation,
1920prefixed by the character '#'. The only characters that can now be logged
1921without being escaped are between 32 and 126 (inclusive). Obviously, the
1922escape character '#' is also encoded to avoid any ambiguity. It is the same for
1923the character '"', as well as '{', '|' and '}' when logging headers.
1924
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +010019254.2.6) Capturing HTTP headers and cookies
1926-----------------------------------------
1927Version 1.1.23 brought cookie capture, and 1.1.29 the header capture. All this
1928is performed using the 'capture' keyword.
1929
1930Cookie capture makes it easy to track a complete user session. The syntax is :
1931
1932 capture cookie <cookie_prefix> len <capture_length>
1933
1934This will enable cookie capture from both requests and responses. This way,
1935it's easy to detect when a user switches to a new session for example, because
1936the server will reassign it a new cookie.
1937
1938The FIRST cookie whose name starts with <cookie_prefix> will be captured, and
1939logged as 'NAME=value', without exceeding <capture_length> characters (64 max).
1940When the cookie name is fixed and known, it's preferable to suffix '=' to it to
1941ensure that no other cookie will be logged.
1942
1943Examples :
1944----------
1945 # capture the first cookie whose name starts with "ASPSESSION"
1946 capture cookie ASPSESSION len 32
1947
1948 # capture the first cookie whose name is exactly "vgnvisitor"
1949 capture cookie vgnvisitor= len 32
1950
1951In the logs, the field preceeding the completion indicator contains the cookie
1952value as sent by the server, preceeded by the cookie value as sent by the
1953client. Each of these field is replaced with '-' when no cookie was seen or
1954when the option is disabled.
1955
1956Header captures have a different goal. They are useful to track unique request
1957identifiers set by a previous proxy, virtual host names, user-agents, POST
1958content-length, referrers, etc. In the response, one can search for information
1959about the response length, how the server asked the cache to behave, or an
1960object location during a redirection. As for cookie captures, it is both
1961possible to include request headers and response headers at the same time. The
1962syntax is :
willy tarreau4302f492005-12-18 01:00:37 +01001963
1964 capture request header <name> len <max length>
1965 capture response header <name> len <max length>
1966
1967Note: Header names are not case-sensitive.
1968
1969Examples:
1970---------
1971 # keep the name of the virtual server
1972 capture request header Host len 20
1973 # keep the amount of data uploaded during a POST
1974 capture request header Content-Length len 10
1975
1976 # note the expected cache behaviour on the response
1977 capture response header Cache-Control len 8
1978 # note the URL location during a redirection
1979 capture response header Location len 20
1980
1981Non-existant headers are logged as empty strings, and if one header appears more
1982than once, only its last occurence will be kept. Request headers are grouped
1983within braces '{' and '}' in the same order as they were declared, and delimited
1984with a vertical bar '|' without any space. Response headers follow the same
1985representation, but are displayed after a space following the request headers
1986block. These blocks are displayed just before the HTTP request in the logs.
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001987
willy tarreau4302f492005-12-18 01:00:37 +01001988Example :
1989
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01001990 Config:
1991
1992 capture request header Host len 20
1993 capture request header Content-Length len 10
1994 capture request header Referer len 20
1995 capture response header Server len 20
1996 capture response header Content-Length len 10
1997 capture response header Cache-Control len 8
1998 capture response header Via len 20
1999 capture response header Location len 20
2000
2001 Log :
2002
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02002003 Aug 9 20:26:09 localhost haproxy[2022]: 127.0.0.1:34014 [09/Aug/2004:20:26:09] relais-http netcache 0/0/0/162/+162 200 +350 - - ---- 0/0/0 0/0 {fr.adserver.yahoo.co||http://fr.f416.mail.} {|864|private||} "GET http://fr.adserver.yahoo.com/"
2004 Aug 9 20:30:46 localhost haproxy[2022]: 127.0.0.1:34020 [09/Aug/2004:20:30:46] relais-http netcache 0/0/0/182/+182 200 +279 - - ---- 0/0/0 0/0 {w.ods.org||} {Formilux/0.1.8|3495|||} "GET http://w.ods.org/sytadin.html HTTP/1.1"
2005 Aug 9 20:30:46 localhost haproxy[2022]: 127.0.0.1:34028 [09/Aug/2004:20:30:46] relais-http netcache 0/0/2/126/+128 200 +223 - - ---- 0/0/0 0/0 {www.infotrafic.com||http://w.ods.org/syt} {Apache/2.0.40 (Red H|9068|||} "GET http://www.infotrafic.com/images/live/cartesidf/grandes/idf_ne.png HTTP/1.1"
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002006
2007
20084.2.7) Examples of logs
2009-----------------------
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02002010- haproxy[674]: 127.0.0.1:33319 [15/Oct/2003:08:31:57] relais-http Srv1 6559/0/7/147/6723 200 243 - - ---- 1/3/5 0/0 "HEAD / HTTP/1.0"
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002011 => long request (6.5s) entered by hand through 'telnet'. The server replied
2012 in 147 ms, and the session ended normally ('----')
2013
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02002014- haproxy[674]: 127.0.0.1:33319 [15/Oct/2003:08:31:57] relais-http Srv1 6559/1230/7/147/6870 200 243 - - ---- 99/239/324 0/9 "HEAD / HTTP/1.0"
2015 => Idem, but the request was queued in the global queue behind 9 other
2016 requests, and waited there for 1230 ms.
2017
2018- haproxy[674]: 127.0.0.1:33320 [15/Oct/2003:08:32:17] relais-http Srv1 9/0/7/14/+30 200 +243 - - ---- 1/3/3 0/0 "GET /image.iso HTTP/1.0"
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002019 => request for a long data transfer. The 'logasap' option was specified, so
2020 the log was produced just before transfering data. The server replied in
2021 14 ms, 243 bytes of headers were sent to the client, and total time from
2022 accept to first data byte is 30 ms.
2023
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02002024- haproxy[674]: 127.0.0.1:33320 [15/Oct/2003:08:32:17] relais-http Srv1 9/0/7/14/30 502 243 - - PH-- 0/2/3 0/0 "GET /cgi-bin/bug.cgi? HTTP/1.0"
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002025 => the proxy blocked a server response either because of an 'rspdeny' or
2026 'rspideny' filter, or because it blocked sensible information which risked
2027 being cached. In this case, the response is replaced with a '502 bad
2028 gateway'.
2029
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02002030- haproxy[18113]: 127.0.0.1:34548 [15/Oct/2003:15:18:55] relais-http <NOSRV> -1/-1/-1/-1/8490 -1 0 - - CR-- 0/2/2 0/0 ""
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002031 => the client never completed its request and aborted itself ('C---') after
2032 8.5s, while the proxy was waiting for the request headers ('-R--').
2033 Nothing was sent to the server.
2034
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02002035- haproxy[18113]: 127.0.0.1:34549 [15/Oct/2003:15:19:06] relais-http <NOSRV> -1/-1/-1/-1/50001 408 0 - - cR-- 2/2 0/0 ""
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002036 => The client never completed its request, which was aborted by the time-out
2037 ('c---') after 50s, while the proxy was waiting for the request headers ('-R--').
2038 Nothing was sent to the server, but the proxy could send a 408 return code
2039 to the client.
willy tarreau4302f492005-12-18 01:00:37 +01002040
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02002041- haproxy[18989]: 127.0.0.1:34550 [15/Oct/2003:15:24:28] relais-tcp Srv1 0/0/5007 0 cD 0/0/0 0/0
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002042 => This is a 'tcplog' entry. Client-side time-out ('c----') occured after 5s.
willy tarreau4302f492005-12-18 01:00:37 +01002043
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02002044- haproxy[18989]: 10.0.0.1:34552 [15/Oct/2003:15:26:31] relais-http Srv1 3183/-1/-1/-1/11215 503 0 - - SC-- 115/202/205 0/0 "HEAD / HTTP/1.0"
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002045 => The request took 3s to complete (probably a network problem), and the
2046 connection to the server failed ('SC--') after 4 attemps of 2 seconds
2047 (config says 'retries 3'), then a 503 error code was sent to the client.
willy tarreau532bb552006-05-13 18:40:37 +02002048 There were 115 connections on this server, 202 connections on this proxy,
2049 and 205 on the global process. It is possible that the server refused the
2050 connection because of too many already established.
willy tarreau4302f492005-12-18 01:00:37 +01002051
willy tarreau4302f492005-12-18 01:00:37 +01002052
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +010020534.3) HTTP header manipulation
2054-----------------------------
2055In HTTP mode, it is possible to rewrite, add or delete some of the request and
2056response headers based on regular expressions. It is also possible to block a
2057request or a response if a particular header matches a regular expression,
2058which is enough to stops most elementary protocol attacks, and to protect
2059against information leak from the internal network. But there is a limitation
2060to this : since haproxy's HTTP engine knows nothing about keep-alive, only
2061headers passed during the first request of a TCP session will be seen. All
2062subsequent headers will be considered data only and not analyzed. Furthermore,
2063haproxy doesn't touch data contents, it stops at the end of headers.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002064
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002065The syntax is :
2066 reqadd <string> to add a header to the request
2067 reqrep <search> <replace> to modify the request
2068 reqirep <search> <replace> same, but ignoring the case
2069 reqdel <search> to delete a header in the request
2070 reqidel <search> same, but ignoring the case
2071 reqallow <search> definitely allow a request if a header matches <search>
2072 reqiallow <search> same, but ignoring the case
2073 reqdeny <search> denies a request if a header matches <search>
2074 reqideny <search> same, but ignoring the case
2075 reqpass <search> ignore a header matching <search>
2076 reqipass <search> same, but ignoring the case
Willy Tarreau2272dc12006-09-03 10:19:38 +02002077 reqtarpit <search> tarpit a request matching <search>
2078 reqitarpit <search> same, but ignoring the case
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002079
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002080 rspadd <string> to add a header to the response
2081 rsprep <search> <replace> to modify the response
2082 rspirep <search> <replace> same, but ignoring the case
2083 rspdel <search> to delete the response
2084 rspidel <search> same, but ignoring the case
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01002085 rspdeny <search> replaces a response with a HTTP 502 if a header matches <search>
2086 rspideny <search> same, but ignoring the case
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002087
2088
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002089<search> is a POSIX regular expression (regex) which supports grouping through
2090parenthesis (without the backslash). Spaces and other delimiters must be
2091prefixed with a backslash ('\') to avoid confusion with a field delimiter.
2092Other characters may be prefixed with a backslash to change their meaning :
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002093
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002094 \t for a tab
2095 \r for a carriage return (CR)
2096 \n for a new line (LF)
2097 \ to mark a space and differentiate it from a delimiter
2098 \# to mark a sharp and differentiate it from a comment
2099 \\ to use a backslash in a regex
2100 \\\\ to use a backslash in the text (*2 for regex, *2 for haproxy)
2101 \xXX to write the ASCII hex code XX as in the C language
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002102
2103
Willy Tarreau2272dc12006-09-03 10:19:38 +02002104<replace> contains the string to be used to replace the largest portion of text
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002105matching the regex. It can make use of the special characters above, and can
2106reference a substring delimited by parenthesis in the regex, by the group
Willy Tarreau2272dc12006-09-03 10:19:38 +02002107numerical order from 0 to 9 (0 being the entire line). In this case, you would
2108write a backslash ('\') immediately followed by one digit indicating the group
2109position.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002110
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002111<string> represents the string which will systematically be added after the last
2112header line. It can also use special characters above.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002113
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002114Notes :
2115-------
2116 - the first line is considered as a header, which makes it possible to rewrite
2117 or filter HTTP requests URIs or response codes.
2118 - 'reqrep' is the equivalent of 'cliexp' in version 1.0, and 'rsprep' is the
2119 equivalent of 'srvexp' in 1.0. Those names are still supported but
2120 deprecated.
2121 - for performances reasons, the number of characters added to a request or to
2122 a response is limited to 4096 since version 1.1.5 (it was 256 before). This
2123 value is easy to modify in the code if needed (#define). If it is too short
2124 on occasional uses, it is possible to gain some space by removing some
2125 useless headers before adding new ones.
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01002126 - a denied request will generate an "HTTP 403 forbidden" response, while a
2127 denied response will generate an "HTTP 502 Bad gateway" response.
Willy Tarreau2272dc12006-09-03 10:19:38 +02002128 - a tarpitted request will be held open on the client side for a duration
Willy Tarreau08fa2e32006-09-03 10:47:37 +02002129 defined in the contimeout parameter, or untill the client aborts. Nothing
2130 will be sent to any server. When the timeout is reached, the proxy will
2131 reply with a 500 server error response so that the attacker does not
2132 suspect it has been tarpitted. The logs may report the 500, but the
2133 termination flags will indicate 'PT' in this case.
Willy Tarreau2272dc12006-09-03 10:19:38 +02002134
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002135
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002136Examples :
2137----------
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002138 ###### a few examples ######
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002139
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002140 # rewrite 'online.fr' instead of 'free.fr' for GET and POST requests
2141 reqrep ^(GET\ .*)(.free.fr)(.*) \1.online.fr\3
2142 reqrep ^(POST\ .*)(.free.fr)(.*) \1.online.fr\3
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002143
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002144 # force proxy connections to close
2145 reqirep ^Proxy-Connection:.* Proxy-Connection:\ close
2146 # rewrite locations
2147 rspirep ^(Location:\ )([^:]*://[^/]*)(.*) \1\3
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002148
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002149 ###### A full configuration being used on production ######
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002150
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002151 # Every header should end with a colon followed by one space.
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002152 reqideny ^[^:\ ]*[\ ]*$
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002153
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002154 # block Apache chunk exploit
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002155 reqideny ^Transfer-Encoding:[\ ]*chunked
2156 reqideny ^Host:\ apache-
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002157
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002158 # block annoying worms that fill the logs...
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002159 reqideny ^[^:\ ]*\ .*(\.|%2e)(\.|%2e)(%2f|%5c|/|\\\\)
2160 reqideny ^[^:\ ]*\ ([^\ ]*\ [^\ ]*\ |.*%00)
2161 reqideny ^[^:\ ]*\ .*<script
2162 reqideny ^[^:\ ]*\ .*/(root\.exe\?|cmd\.exe\?|default\.ida\?)
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002163
Willy Tarreau2272dc12006-09-03 10:19:38 +02002164 # tarpit attacks on the login page.
2165 reqtarpit ^[^:\ ]*\ .*\.php?login=[^0-9]
2166
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002167 # allow other syntactically valid requests, and block any other method
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002168 reqipass ^(GET|POST|HEAD|OPTIONS)\ /.*\ HTTP/1\.[01]$
2169 reqipass ^OPTIONS\ \\*\ HTTP/1\.[01]$
2170 reqideny ^[^:\ ]*\
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002171
2172 # force connection:close, thus disabling HTTP keep-alive
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002173 option httpclose
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002174
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002175 # change the server name
2176 rspidel ^Server:\
2177 rspadd Server:\ Formilux/0.1.8
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002178
2179
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01002180Also, the 'forwardfor' option creates an HTTP 'X-Forwarded-For' header which
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +01002181contains the client's IP address. This is useful to let the final web server
Willy Tarreau7ac51f62007-03-25 16:00:04 +02002182know what the client address was (eg for statistics on domains). Starting with
2183version 1.3.8, it is possible to specify the "except" keyword followed by a
2184source IP address or network for which no header will be added. This is very
2185useful when another reverse-proxy which already adds the header runs on the
2186same machine or in a known DMZ, the most common case being the local use of
2187stunnel on the same system.
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +01002188
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01002189Last, the 'httpclose' option removes any 'Connection' header both ways, and
2190adds a 'Connection: close' header in each direction. This makes it easier to
Willy TARREAU767ba712006-03-01 22:40:50 +01002191disable HTTP keep-alive than the previous 4-rules block.
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01002192
willy tarreauc1cae632005-12-17 14:12:23 +01002193Example :
2194---------
2195 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002196 mode http
2197 log global
2198 option httplog
2199 option dontlognull
Willy Tarreau7ac51f62007-03-25 16:00:04 +02002200 option forwardfor except 127.0.0.1/8
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002201 option httpclose
2202
Willy TARREAU767ba712006-03-01 22:40:50 +01002203Note that some HTTP servers do not necessarily close the connections when they
2204receive the 'Connection: close', and if the client does not close either, then
2205the connection will be maintained up to the time-out. This translates into high
2206number of simultaneous sessions and high global session times in the logs. To
2207workaround this, a new option 'forceclose' appeared in version 1.2.9 to enforce
2208the closing of the outgoing server channel as soon as the server begins to
2209reply and only if the request buffer is empty. Note that this should NOT be
2210used if CONNECT requests are expected between the client and the server. The
2211'forceclose' option implies the 'httpclose' option.
2212
2213Example :
2214---------
2215 listen http_proxy 0.0.0.0:80
2216 mode http
2217 log global
2218 option httplog
2219 option dontlognull
2220 option forwardfor
2221 option forceclose
2222
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002223
22244.4) Load balancing with persistence
2225------------------------------------
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002226Combining cookie insertion with internal load balancing allows to transparently
2227bring persistence to applications. The principle is quite simple :
2228 - assign a cookie value to each server
2229 - enable the load balancing between servers
2230 - insert a cookie into responses resulting from the balancing algorithm
2231 (indirect accesses), end ensure that no upstream proxy will cache it.
2232 - remove the cookie in the request headers so that the application never sees
2233 it.
2234
2235Example :
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002236---------
2237 listen application 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002238 mode http
2239 cookie SERVERID insert nocache indirect
2240 balance roundrobin
2241 server srv1 192.168.1.1:80 cookie server01 check
2242 server srv2 192.168.1.2:80 cookie server02 check
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002243
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +01002244The other solution brought by versions 1.1.30 and 1.2.3 is to reuse a cookie
2245from the server, and prefix the server's name to it. In this case, don't forget
2246to force "httpclose" mode so that you can be assured that every subsequent
2247request will have its cookie fixed.
2248
2249 listen application 0.0.0.0:80
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002250 mode http
2251 cookie JSESSIONID prefix
2252 balance roundrobin
2253 server srv1 192.168.1.1:80 cookie srv1 check
2254 server srv2 192.168.1.2:80 cookie srv2 check
2255 option httpclose
willy tarreau0174f312005-12-18 01:02:42 +01002256
2257
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +010022584.5) Protection against information leak from the servers
2259---------------------------------------------------------
2260In versions 1.1.28/1.2.1, a new option 'checkcache' was created. It carefully
2261checks 'Cache-control', 'Pragma' and 'Set-cookie' headers in server response
2262to check if there's a risk of caching a cookie on a client-side proxy. When this
2263option is enabled, the only responses which can be delivered to the client are :
2264 - all those without 'Set-Cookie' header ;
2265 - all those with a return code other than 200, 203, 206, 300, 301, 410,
2266 provided that the server has not set a 'Cache-control: public' header ;
2267 - all those that come from a POST request, provided that the server has not
2268 set a 'Cache-Control: public' header ;
2269 - those with a 'Pragma: no-cache' header
2270 - those with a 'Cache-control: private' header
2271 - those with a 'Cache-control: no-store' header
2272 - those with a 'Cache-control: max-age=0' header
2273 - those with a 'Cache-control: s-maxage=0' header
2274 - those with a 'Cache-control: no-cache' header
2275 - those with a 'Cache-control: no-cache="set-cookie"' header
2276 - those with a 'Cache-control: no-cache="set-cookie,' header
2277 (allowing other fields after set-cookie)
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002278
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01002279If a response doesn't respect these requirements, then it will be blocked just
2280as if it was from an 'rspdeny' filter, with an "HTTP 502 bad gateway". The
2281session state shows "PH--" meaning that the proxy blocked the response during
2282headers processing. Additionnaly, an alert will be sent in the logs so that
2283admins are told that there's something to be done.
2284
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002285
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +010022864.6) Customizing errors
2287-----------------------
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002288Some situations can make haproxy return an HTTP error code to the client :
2289 - invalid or too long request => HTTP 400
2290 - request not completely sent in time => HTTP 408
2291 - forbidden request (matches a deny filter) => HTTP 403
2292 - internal error in haproxy => HTTP 500
2293 - the server returned an invalid or incomplete response => HTTP 502
2294 - no server was available to handle the request => HTTP 503
2295 - the server failed to reply in time => HTTP 504
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002296
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002297A succint error message taken from the RFC accompanies these return codes.
2298But depending on the clients knowledge, it may be better to return custom, user
2299friendly, error pages. This is made possible through the use of the 'errorloc'
2300command :
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002301
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002302 errorloc <HTTP_code> <location>
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002303
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002304Instead of generating an HTTP error <HTTP_code> among those above, the proxy
2305will return a temporary redirection code (HTTP 302) towards the address
2306specified in <location>. This address may be either relative to the site or
2307absolute. Since this request will be handled by the client's browser, it's
2308mandatory that the returned address be reachable from the outside.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002309
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002310Example :
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002311---------
2312 listen application 0.0.0.0:80
2313 errorloc 400 /badrequest.html
2314 errorloc 403 /forbidden.html
2315 errorloc 408 /toolong.html
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002316 errorloc 500 http://haproxy.domain.net/bugreport.html
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002317 errorloc 502 http://192.168.114.58/error50x.html
2318 errorloc 503 http://192.168.114.58/error50x.html
2319 errorloc 504 http://192.168.114.58/error50x.html
2320
willy tarreauc1f47532005-12-18 01:08:26 +01002321Note: RFC2616 says that a client must reuse the same method to fetch the
2322Location returned by a 302, which causes problems with the POST method.
2323The return code 303 was designed explicitly to force the client to fetch the
2324Location URL with the GET method, but there are some browsers pre-dating
2325HTTP/1.1 which don't support it. Anyway, most browsers still behave with 302 as
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002326if it was a 303. In order to allow the user to chose, versions 1.1.31 and 1.2.5
2327bring two new keywords to replace 'errorloc' : 'errorloc302' and 'errorloc303'.
willy tarreauc1f47532005-12-18 01:08:26 +01002328
2329They are preffered over errorloc (which still does 302). Consider using
2330errorloc303 everytime you know that your clients support HTTP 303 responses..
2331
2332
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +010023334.7) Modifying default values
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002334-----------------------------
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002335Version 1.1.22 introduced the notion of default values, which eliminates the
2336pain of often repeating common parameters between many instances, such as
2337logs, timeouts, modes, etc...
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002338
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002339Default values are set in a 'defaults' section. Each of these section clears
2340all previously set default parameters, so there may be as many default
2341parameters as needed. Only the last one before a 'listen' section will be
2342used for this section. The 'defaults' section uses the same syntax as the
2343'listen' section, for the supported parameters. The 'defaults' keyword ignores
2344everything on its command line, so that fake instance names can be specified
2345there for better clarity.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002346
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01002347In version 1.1.28/1.2.1, only those parameters can be preset in the 'default'
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002348section :
2349 - log (the first and second one)
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002350 - mode { tcp, http, health }
2351 - balance { roundrobin }
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002352 - disabled (to disable every further instances)
2353 - enabled (to enable every further instances, this is the default)
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002354 - contimeout, clitimeout, srvtimeout, grace, retries, maxconn
willy tarreau982249e2005-12-18 00:57:06 +01002355 - option { redispatch, transparent, keepalive, forwardfor, logasap, httpclose,
2356 checkcache, httplog, tcplog, dontlognull, persist, httpchk }
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002357 - redispatch, redisp, transparent, source { addr:port }
2358 - cookie, capture
2359 - errorloc
2360
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002361As of 1.1.24, it is not possible to put certain parameters in a 'defaults'
2362section, mainly regular expressions and server configurations :
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002363 - dispatch, server,
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002364 - req*, rsp*
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002365
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002366Last, there's no way yet to change a boolean option from its assigned default
2367value. So if an 'option' statement is set in a 'defaults' section, the only
2368way to flush it is to redefine a new 'defaults' section without this 'option'.
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002369
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002370Examples :
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002371----------
2372 defaults applications TCP
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002373 log global
2374 mode tcp
2375 balance roundrobin
2376 clitimeout 180000
2377 srvtimeout 180000
2378 contimeout 4000
2379 retries 3
2380 redispatch
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002381
2382 listen app_tcp1 10.0.0.1:6000-6063
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002383 server srv1 192.168.1.1 check port 6000 inter 10000
2384 server srv2 192.168.1.2 backup
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002385
2386 listen app_tcp2 10.0.0.2:6000-6063
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002387 server srv1 192.168.2.1 check port 6000 inter 10000
2388 server srv2 192.168.2.2 backup
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002389
2390 defaults applications HTTP
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002391 log global
2392 mode http
2393 option httplog
2394 option forwardfor
2395 option dontlognull
2396 balance roundrobin
2397 clitimeout 20000
2398 srvtimeout 20000
2399 contimeout 4000
2400 retries 3
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002401
2402 listen app_http1 10.0.0.1:80-81
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002403 cookie SERVERID postonly insert indirect
2404 capture cookie userid= len 10
2405 server srv1 192.168.1.1:+8000 cookie srv1 check port 8080 inter 1000
2406 server srv1 192.168.1.2:+8000 cookie srv2 check port 8080 inter 1000
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002407
2408 defaults
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002409 # this empty section voids all default parameters
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002410
willy tarreau481132e2006-05-21 21:43:10 +02002411
24124.8) Status report in HTML page
2413-------------------------------
2414Starting with 1.2.14, it is possible for HAProxy to intercept requests for a
2415particular URI and return a full report of the proxy's activity and servers
2416statistics. This is available through the 'stats' keyword, associated to any
2417such options :
2418
2419 - stats enable
2420 - stats uri <uri prefix>
2421 - stats realm <authentication realm>
2422 - stats auth <user:password>
2423 - stats scope <proxy_id> | '.'
2424
2425By default, the status report is disabled. Specifying any combination above
2426enables it for the proxy instance referencing it. The easiest solution is to
2427use "stats enable" which will enable the report with default parameters :
2428
2429 - default URI : "/haproxy?stats" (CONFIG_STATS_DEFAULT_URI)
2430 - default auth : unspecified (no authentication)
2431 - default realm : "HAProxy Statistics" (CONFIG_STATS_DEFAULT_REALM)
2432 - default scope : unspecified (access to all instances)
2433
2434The "stats uri <uri_prefix>" option allows one to intercept another URI prefix.
2435Note that any URI that BEGINS with this string will match. For instance, one
2436proxy instance might be dedicated to status page only and would reply to any
2437URI.
2438
2439Example :
2440---------
2441 # catches any URI and returns the status page.
2442 listen stats :8080
2443 mode http
2444 stats uri /
2445
2446The "stats auth <user:password>" option enables Basic authentication and adds a
2447valid user:password combination to the list of authorized accounts. The user
2448and password are passed in the configuration file as clear text, and since this
2449is HTTP Basic authentication, you should be aware that it transits as clear
2450text on the network, so you must not use any sensible account. The list is
2451unlimited in order to provide easy accesses to developpers or customers.
2452
2453The "stats realm <realm>" option defines the "realm" name which is displayed
2454in the popup box when the browser asks for a password. It's important to ensure
2455that this one is not used by the application, otherwise the browser will try to
2456use a cached one from the application. Note that any space in the realm name
2457should be escaped with a backslash ('\').
2458
2459The "stats scope <proxy_id>" option limits the scope of the status report. By
2460default, all proxy instances are listed. But under some circumstances, it would
2461be better to limit the listing to some proxies or only to the current one. This
2462is what this option does. The special proxy name "." (a single dot) references
2463the current proxy. The proxy name can be repeated multiple times, even for
2464proxies defined later in the configuration or some which do not exist. The name
2465is the one which appears after the 'listen' keyword.
2466
2467Example :
2468---------
2469 # simple application with authenticated embedded status report
2470 listen app1 192.168.1.100:80
2471 mode http
willy tarreaud4ba08d2006-05-21 21:54:14 +02002472 option httpclose
willy tarreau481132e2006-05-21 21:43:10 +02002473 balance roundrobin
2474 cookie SERVERID postonly insert indirect
2475 server srv1 192.168.1.1:8080 cookie srv1 check inter 1000
2476 server srv1 192.168.1.2:8080 cookie srv2 check inter 1000
2477 stats uri /my_stats
willy tarreaud4ba08d2006-05-21 21:54:14 +02002478 stats realm Statistics\ for\ MyApp1-2
2479 stats auth guest:guest
2480 stats auth admin:AdMiN123
2481 stats scope .
2482 stats scope app2
willy tarreau481132e2006-05-21 21:43:10 +02002483
2484 # simple application with anonymous embedded status report
2485 listen app2 192.168.2.100:80
2486 mode http
willy tarreaud4ba08d2006-05-21 21:54:14 +02002487 option httpclose
willy tarreau481132e2006-05-21 21:43:10 +02002488 balance roundrobin
2489 cookie SERVERID postonly insert indirect
2490 server srv1 192.168.2.1:8080 cookie srv1 check inter 1000
2491 server srv1 192.168.2.2:8080 cookie srv2 check inter 1000
2492 stats uri /my_stats
willy tarreaud4ba08d2006-05-21 21:54:14 +02002493 stats realm Statistics\ for\ MyApp2
2494 stats scope .
willy tarreau481132e2006-05-21 21:43:10 +02002495
2496 listen admin_page :8080
2497 mode http
2498 stats uri /my_stats
willy tarreaud4ba08d2006-05-21 21:54:14 +02002499 stats realm Global\ statistics
2500 stats auth admin:AdMiN123
willy tarreau481132e2006-05-21 21:43:10 +02002501
2502Notes :
2503-------
2504 - The 'stats' options can also be specified in the 'defaults' section, in
2505 which case it will provide the exact same configuration to all further
2506 instances (hence the usefulness of the scope "."). However, if an instance
2507 redefines any 'stats' parameter, defaults will not be used for this
2508 instance.
2509
2510 - HTTP Basic authentication is very basic and unsecure from snooping. No
2511 sensible password should be used, and be aware that there is no way to
2512 remove it from the browser so it will be sent to the whole application
2513 upon further accesses.
2514
willy tarreaud4ba08d2006-05-21 21:54:14 +02002515 - It is very important that the 'option httpclose' is specified, otherwise
2516 the proxy will not be able to detect the URI within keep-alive sessions
2517 maintained between the browser and the servers, so the stats URI will be
2518 forwarded unmodified to the server as if the option was not set.
2519
willy tarreau481132e2006-05-21 21:43:10 +02002520
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002521=========================
2522| System-specific setup |
2523=========================
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002524
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002525Linux 2.4
2526=========
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002527
2528-- cut here --
2529#!/bin/sh
2530# set this to about 256/4M (16384 for 256M machine)
2531MAXFILES=16384
2532echo $MAXFILES > /proc/sys/fs/file-max
2533ulimit -n $MAXFILES
2534
2535if [ -e /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_conntrack_max ]; then
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002536 echo 65536 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_conntrack_max
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002537fi
2538
2539if [ -e /proc/sys/net/ipv4/netfilter/ip_ct_tcp_timeout_fin_wait ]; then
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002540 # 30 seconds for fin, 15 for time wait
2541 echo 3000 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/netfilter/ip_ct_tcp_timeout_fin_wait
2542 echo 1500 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/netfilter/ip_ct_tcp_timeout_time_wait
2543 echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/netfilter/ip_ct_tcp_log_invalid_scale
2544 echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/netfilter/ip_ct_tcp_log_out_of_window
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002545fi
2546
2547echo 1024 60999 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range
2548echo 30 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_fin_timeout
2549echo 4096 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_max_syn_backlog
2550echo 262144 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_max_tw_buckets
2551echo 262144 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_max_orphans
2552echo 300 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_keepalive_time
2553echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_tw_recycle
2554echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_timestamps
2555echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_ecn
willy tarreauc5f73ed2005-12-18 01:26:38 +01002556echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_sack
willy tarreaueedaa9f2005-12-17 14:08:03 +01002557echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_dsack
2558
2559# auto-tuned on 2.4
2560#echo 262143 > /proc/sys/net/core/rmem_max
2561#echo 262143 > /proc/sys/net/core/rmem_default
2562
2563echo 16384 65536 524288 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_rmem
2564echo 16384 349520 699040 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/tcp_wmem
2565
2566-- cut here --
2567
willy tarreau197e8ec2005-12-17 14:10:59 +01002568
2569FreeBSD
2570=======
2571
2572A FreeBSD port of HA-Proxy is now available and maintained, thanks to
2573Clement Laforet <sheepkiller@cultdeadsheep.org>.
2574
2575For more information :
2576http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/url.cgi?ports/net/haproxy/pkg-descr
2577http://www.freebsd.org/cgi/cvsweb.cgi/ports/net/haproxy/
2578http://www.freshports.org/net/haproxy
2579
2580
2581-- end --