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Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02001 -----------------------------------------------
2 Stream Processing Offload Engine (SPOE)
Christopher Faulet57583e42017-09-04 15:41:09 +02003 Version 1.2
Christopher Faulet3b788092020-05-13 08:25:12 +02004 ( Last update: 2020-06-13 )
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02005 -----------------------------------------------
6 Author : Christopher Faulet
7 Contact : cfaulet at haproxy dot com
8
9
10SUMMARY
11--------
12
13 0. Terms
14 1. Introduction
15 2. SPOE configuration
16 2.1. SPOE scope
17 2.2. "spoe-agent" section
18 2.3. "spoe-message" section
Christopher Faulet11610f32017-09-21 10:23:10 +020019 2.4. "spoe-group" section
20 2.5. Example
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +020021 3. SPOP specification
22 3.1. Data types
23 3.2. Frames
24 3.2.1. Frame capabilities
25 3.2.2. Frame types overview
26 3.2.3. Workflow
27 3.2.4. Frame: HAPROXY-HELLO
28 3.2.5. Frame: AGENT-HELLO
29 3.2.6. Frame: NOTIFY
30 3.2.7. Frame: ACK
31 3.2.8. Frame: HAPROXY-DISCONNECT
32 3.2.9. Frame: AGENT-DISCONNECT
33 3.3. Events & messages
34 3.4. Actions
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +010035 3.5. Errors & timeouts
Christopher Fauletb2dd1e02018-03-22 09:07:41 +010036 4. Logging
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +020037
38
390. Terms
40---------
41
42* SPOE : Stream Processing Offload Engine.
43
Ilya Shipitsin11057a32020-06-21 21:18:27 +050044 A SPOE is a filter talking to servers managed by a SPOA to offload the
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +020045 stream processing. An engine is attached to a proxy. A proxy can have
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +010046 several engines. Each engine is linked to an agent and only one.
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +020047
48* SPOA : Stream Processing Offload Agent.
49
50 A SPOA is a service that will receive info from a SPOE to offload the
51 stream processing. An agent manages several servers. It uses a backend to
52 reference all of them. By extension, these servers can also be called
53 agents.
54
55* SPOP : Stream Processing Offload Protocol, used by SPOEs to talk to SPOA
56 servers.
57
58 This protocol is used by engines to talk to agents. It is an in-house
59 binary protocol described in this documentation.
60
61
621. Introduction
63----------------
64
65SPOE is a feature introduced in HAProxy 1.7. It makes possible the
66communication with external components to retrieve some info. The idea started
67with the problems caused by most ldap libs not working fine in event-driven
68systems (often at least the connect() is blocking). So, it is hard to properly
69implement Single Sign On solution (SSO) in HAProxy. The SPOE will ease this
70kind of processing, or we hope so.
71
72Now, the aim of SPOE is to allow any kind of offloading on the streams. First
Christopher Faulet3b788092020-05-13 08:25:12 +020073releases won't do lot of things. As we will see, there are few handled events
74and even less actions supported. Actually, for now, the SPOE can offload the
75processing before "tcp-request content", "tcp-response content", "http-request"
76and "http-response" rules. And it only supports variables definition. But, in
77spite of these limited features, we can easily imagine to implement SSO
78solution, ip reputation or ip geolocation services.
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +020079
Willy Tarreau86951992021-04-21 09:39:06 +020080Some example implementations in various languages are linked to from the
81HAProxy Wiki page dedicated to this mechanism:
82
83 https://github.com/haproxy/wiki/wiki/SPOE:-Stream-Processing-Offloading-Engine
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +020084
852. SPOE configuration
86----------------------
87
88Because SPOE is implemented as a filter, To use it, you must declare a "filter
89spoe" line in a proxy section (frontend/backend/listen) :
90
91 frontend my-front
92 ...
93 filter spoe [engine <name>] config <file>
94 ...
95
96The "config" parameter is mandatory. It specififies the SPOE configuration
97file. The engine name is optional. It can be set to declare the scope to use in
98the SPOE configuration. So it is possible to use the same SPOE configuration
99for several engines. If no name is provided, the SPOE configuration must not
100contain any scope directive.
101
102We use a separate configuration file on purpose. By commenting SPOE filter
Michael Prokop4438c602019-05-24 10:25:45 +0200103line, you completely disable the feature, including the parsing of sections
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200104reserved to SPOE. This is also a way to keep the HAProxy configuration clean.
105
106A SPOE configuration file must contains, at least, the SPOA configuration
Christopher Faulet11610f32017-09-21 10:23:10 +0200107("spoe-agent" section) and SPOE messages/groups ("spoe-message" or "spoe-group"
108sections) attached to this agent.
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200109
110IMPORTANT : The configuration of a SPOE filter must be located in a dedicated
111file. But the backend used by a SPOA must be declared in HAProxy configuration
112file.
113
1142.1. SPOE scope
115-------------------------
116
117If you specify an engine name on the SPOE filter line, then you need to define
118scope in the SPOE configuration with the same name. You can have several SPOE
119scope in the same file. In each scope, you must define one and only one
120"spoe-agent" section to configure the SPOA linked to your SPOE and several
Ilya Shipitsin2a950d02020-03-06 13:07:38 +0500121"spoe-message" and "spoe-group" sections to describe, respectively, messages and
Christopher Faulet11610f32017-09-21 10:23:10 +0200122group of messages sent to servers mananged by your SPOA.
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200123
124A SPOE scope starts with this kind of line :
125
126 [<name>]
127
128where <name> is the same engine name specified on the SPOE filter line. The
129scope ends when the file ends or when another scope is found.
130
131 Example :
132 [my-first-engine]
133 spoe-agent my-agent
134 ...
135 spoe-message msg1
136 ...
137 spoe-message msg2
138 ...
Christopher Fauletb2dd1e02018-03-22 09:07:41 +0100139 spoe-group grp1
Christopher Faulet11610f32017-09-21 10:23:10 +0200140 ...
Christopher Fauletb2dd1e02018-03-22 09:07:41 +0100141 spoe-group grp2
142 ...
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200143
144 [my-second-engine]
145 ...
146
147If no engine name is provided on the SPOE filter line, no SPOE scope must be
148found in the SPOE configuration file. All the file is considered to be in the
149same anonymous and implicit scope.
150
Christopher Faulet7ee86672017-09-19 11:08:28 +0200151The engine name must be uniq for a proxy. If no engine name is provided on the
Joseph Herlant71b4b152018-11-13 16:55:16 -0800152SPOE filter line, the SPOE agent name is used by default.
Christopher Faulet7ee86672017-09-19 11:08:28 +0200153
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02001542.2. "spoe-agent" section
155--------------------------
156
157For each engine, you must define one and only one "spoe-agent" section. In this
158section, you will declare SPOE messages and the backend you will use. You will
159also set timeouts and options to customize your agent's behaviour.
160
161
162spoe-agent <name>
163 Create a new SPOA with the name <name>. It must have one and only one
164 "spoe-agent" definition by SPOE scope.
165
166 Arguments :
167 <name> is the name of the agent section.
168
169 following keywords are supported :
Christopher Faulet11610f32017-09-21 10:23:10 +0200170 - groups
Christopher Faulet7250b8f2018-03-26 17:19:01 +0200171 - log
Christopher Faulet48026722016-11-16 15:01:12 +0100172 - maxconnrate
173 - maxerrrate
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +0100174 - max-frame-size
Christopher Faulete8ade382018-01-25 15:32:22 +0100175 - max-waiting-frames
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200176 - messages
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +0100177 - [no] option async
Christopher Faulet0e0f0852018-03-26 17:20:36 +0200178 - [no] option dontlog-normal
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +0100179 - [no] option pipelining
180 - [no] option send-frag-payload
Christopher Fauletea62c2a2016-11-14 10:54:21 +0100181 - option continue-on-error
Christopher Faulet336d3ef2017-12-22 10:00:55 +0100182 - option force-set-var
Christopher Faulet985532d2016-11-16 15:36:19 +0100183 - option set-on-error
Christopher Faulet36bda1c2018-03-22 09:08:20 +0100184 - option set-process-time
185 - option set-total-time
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200186 - option var-prefix
Christopher Faulet336d3ef2017-12-22 10:00:55 +0100187 - register-var-names
Christopher Faulet03a34492016-11-19 16:47:56 +0100188 - timeout hello|idle|processing
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200189 - use-backend
190
191
Christopher Faulet11610f32017-09-21 10:23:10 +0200192groups <grp-name> ...
193 Declare the list of SPOE groups that an agent will handle.
194
195 Arguments :
196 <grp-name> is the name of a SPOE group.
197
Joseph Herlant71b4b152018-11-13 16:55:16 -0800198 Groups declared here must be found in the same engine scope, else an error is
Christopher Faulet11610f32017-09-21 10:23:10 +0200199 triggered during the configuration parsing. You can have many "groups" lines.
200
201 See also: "spoe-group" section.
202
203
Christopher Faulet7250b8f2018-03-26 17:19:01 +0200204log global
205log <address> [len <length>] [format <format>] <facility> [<level> [<minlevel>]]
206no log
207 Enable per-instance logging of events and traffic.
208
209 Prefix :
210 no should be used when the logger list must be flushed.
211
212 See the HAProxy Configuration Manual for details about this option.
213
Christopher Faulet48026722016-11-16 15:01:12 +0100214maxconnrate <number>
215 Set the maximum number of connections per second to <number>. The SPOE will
216 stop to open new connections if the maximum is reached and will wait to
217 acquire an existing one. So it is important to set "timeout hello" to a
218 relatively small value.
219
220
221maxerrrate <number>
222 Set the maximum number of errors per second to <number>. The SPOE will stop
223 its processing if the maximum is reached.
224
225
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +0100226max-frame-size <number>
227 Set the maximum allowed size for frames exchanged between HAProxy and SPOA.
228 It must be in the range [256, tune.bufsize-4] (4 bytes are reserved for the
229 frame length). By default, it is set to (tune.bufsize-4).
230
Christopher Faulete8ade382018-01-25 15:32:22 +0100231max-waiting-frames <number>
232 Set the maximum number of frames waiting for an acknowledgement on the same
233 connection. This value is only used when the pipelinied or asynchronus
234 exchanges between HAProxy and SPOA are enabled. By default, it is set to 20.
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +0100235
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200236messages <msg-name> ...
237 Declare the list of SPOE messages that an agent will handle.
238
239 Arguments :
240 <msg-name> is the name of a SPOE message.
241
242 Messages declared here must be found in the same engine scope, else an error
243 is triggered during the configuration parsing. You can have many "messages"
244 lines.
245
246 See also: "spoe-message" section.
247
248
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +0100249option async
250no option async
251 Enable or disable the support of asynchronus exchanges between HAProxy and
252 SPOA. By default, this option is enabled.
253
254
Christopher Fauletea62c2a2016-11-14 10:54:21 +0100255option continue-on-error
256 Do not stop the events processing when an error occurred on a stream.
257
258 By default, for a specific stream, when an abnormal/unexpected error occurs,
259 the SPOE is disabled for all the transaction. So if you have several events
Ilya Shipitsin11057a32020-06-21 21:18:27 +0500260 configured, such error on an event will disabled all following. For TCP
Christopher Fauletea62c2a2016-11-14 10:54:21 +0100261 streams, this will disable the SPOE for the whole session. For HTTP streams,
262 this will disable it for the transaction (request and response).
263
264 When set, this option bypass this behaviour and only the current event will
265 be ignored.
266
Christopher Faulet0e0f0852018-03-26 17:20:36 +0200267
268option dontlog-normal
269no option dontlog-normal
270 Enable or disable logging of normal, successful processing.
271
272 Arguments : none
273
274 See also: "log" and section 4 about logging.
275
276
Etienne Carriereaec89892017-12-14 09:36:40 +0000277option force-set-var
278 By default, SPOE filter only register already known variables (mainly from
Willy Tarreau7978c5c2021-09-07 14:24:07 +0200279 parsing of the configuration), and process-wide variables (those of scope
280 "proc") cannot be created. If you want that haproxy trusts the agent and
Etienne Carriereaec89892017-12-14 09:36:40 +0000281 registers all variables (ex: can be useful for LUA workload), activate this
282 option.
283
284 Caution : this option opens to a variety of attacks such as a rogue SPOA that
285 asks to register too many variables.
286
Christopher Fauletea62c2a2016-11-14 10:54:21 +0100287
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +0100288option pipelining
289no option pipelining
290 Enable or disable the support of pipelined exchanges between HAProxy and
291 SPOA. By default, this option is enabled.
292
293
294option send-frag-payload
295no option send-frag-payload
296 Enable or disable the sending of fragmented payload to SPOA. By default, this
297 option is enabled.
298
299
Christopher Faulet985532d2016-11-16 15:36:19 +0100300option set-on-error <var name>
301 Define the variable to set when an error occurred during an event processing.
302
303 Arguments :
304
305 <var name> is the variable name, without the scope. The name may only
306 contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9', '.' and '_'.
307
308 This variable will only be set when an error occurred in the scope of the
309 transaction. As for all other variables define by the SPOE, it will be
310 prefixed. So, if your variable name is "error" and your prefix is
311 "my_spoe_pfx", the variable will be "txn.my_spoe_pfx.error".
312
Christopher Fauletb067b062017-01-04 16:39:11 +0100313 When set, the variable is an integer representing the error reason. For values
314 under 256, it represents an error coming from the engine. Below 256, it
315 reports a SPOP error. In this case, to retrieve the right SPOP status code,
316 you must remove 256 to this value. Here are possible values:
317
318 * 1 a timeout occurred during the event processing.
319
Michael Prokop4438c602019-05-24 10:25:45 +0200320 * 2 an error was triggered during the resources allocation.
Christopher Fauletb067b062017-01-04 16:39:11 +0100321
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +0100322 * 3 the frame payload exceeds the frame size and it cannot be
323 fragmented.
324
325 * 4 the fragmentation of a payload is aborted.
326
Christopher Faulet344c4ab2017-09-22 10:20:13 +0200327 * 5 The frame processing has been interrupted by HAProxy.
328
Christopher Fauletb067b062017-01-04 16:39:11 +0100329 * 255 an unknown error occurred during the event processing.
330
331 * 256+N a SPOP error occurred during the event processing (see section
332 "Errors & timeouts").
333
334 Note that if "option continue-on-error" is set, the variable is not
335 automatically removed between events processing.
Christopher Faulet985532d2016-11-16 15:36:19 +0100336
337 See also: "option continue-on-error", "option var-prefix".
338
Christopher Faulet36bda1c2018-03-22 09:08:20 +0100339
340option set-process-time <var name>
341 Define the variable to set to report the processing time of the last event or
342 group.
343
344 Arguments :
345
346 <var name> is the variable name, without the scope. The name may only
347 contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9', '.' and '_'.
348
349 This variable will be set in the scope of the transaction. As for all other
350 variables define by the SPOE, it will be prefixed. So, if your variable name
351 is "process_time" and your prefix is "my_spoe_pfx", the variable will be
352 "txn.my_spoe_pfx.process_time".
353
354 When set, the variable is an integer representing the delay to process the
355 event or the group, in milliseconds. From the stream point of view, it is the
356 latency added by the SPOE processing for the last handled event or group.
357
358 If several events or groups are processed for the same stream, this value
359 will be overrideen.
360
361 See also: "option set-total-time".
362
363
364option set-total-time <var name>
365 Define the variable to set to report the total processing time SPOE for a
366 stream.
367
368 Arguments :
369
370 <var name> is the variable name, without the scope. The name may only
371 contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9', '.' and '_'.
372
373 This variable will be set in the scope of the transaction. As for all other
374 variables define by the SPOE, it will be prefixed. So, if your variable name
375 is "total_time" and your prefix is "my_spoe_pfx", the variable will be
376 "txn.my_spoe_pfx.total_time".
377
378 When set, the variable is an integer representing the sum of processing times
379 for a stream, in milliseconds. From the stream point of view, it is the
380 latency added by the SPOE processing.
381
382 If several events or groups are processed for the same stream, this value
383 will be updated.
384
385 See also: "option set-process-time".
386
387
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200388option var-prefix <prefix>
389 Define the prefix used when variables are set by an agent.
390
391 Arguments :
392
393 <prefix> is the prefix used to limit the scope of variables set by an
394 agent.
395
396 To avoid conflict with other variables defined by HAProxy, all variables
397 names will be prefixed. By default, the "spoe-agent" name is used. This
398 option can be used to customize it.
399
400 The prefix will be added between the variable scope and its name, separated
401 by a '.'. It may only contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9', '.' and '_', as
402 for variables name. In HAProxy configuration, you need to use this prefix as
403 a part of the variables name. For example, if an agent define the variable
404 "myvar" in the "txn" scope, with the prefix "my_spoe_pfx", then you should
405 use "txn.my_spoe_pfx.myvar" name in your HAProxy configuration.
406
Etienne Carriereaec89892017-12-14 09:36:40 +0000407 By default, an agent will never set new variables at runtime: It can only set
408 new value for existing ones. If you want a different behaviour, see
Christopher Faulet336d3ef2017-12-22 10:00:55 +0100409 force-set-var option and register-var-names directive.
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200410
Christopher Faulet336d3ef2017-12-22 10:00:55 +0100411register-var-names <var name> ...
412 Register some variable names. By default, an agent will not be allowed to set
413 new variables at runtime. This rule can be totally relaxed by setting the
414 option "force-set-var". If you know all the variables you will need, this
415 directive is a good way to register them without letting an agent doing what
416 it want. This is only required if these variables are not referenced anywhere
417 in the HAProxy configuration or the SPOE one.
418
419 Arguments:
420 <var name> is a variable name without the scope. The name may only
421 contain characters 'a-z', 'A-Z', '0-9', '.' and '_'.
422
423 The prefix will be automatically added during the registration. You can have
424 many "register-var-names" lines.
425
426 See also: "option force-set-var", "option var-prefix".
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200427
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200428timeout hello <timeout>
429 Set the maximum time to wait for an agent to receive the AGENT-HELLO frame.
Christopher Fauletf7a30922016-11-10 15:04:51 +0100430 It is applied on the stream that handle the connection with the agent.
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200431
432 Arguments :
433 <timeout> is the timeout value specified in milliseconds by default, but
434 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
435 as explained at the top of this document.
436
437 This timeout is an applicative timeout. It differ from "timeout connect"
438 defined on backends.
439
440
441timeout idle <timeout>
Christopher Fauletf7a30922016-11-10 15:04:51 +0100442 Set the maximum time to wait for an agent to close an idle connection. It is
443 applied on the stream that handle the connection with the agent.
444
445 Arguments :
446 <timeout> is the timeout value specified in milliseconds by default, but
447 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
448 as explained at the top of this document.
449
450
451timeout processing <timeout>
452 Set the maximum time to wait for a stream to process an event, i.e to acquire
453 a stream to talk with an agent, to encode all messages, to send the NOTIFY
Ilya Shipitsin01881082021-08-07 14:41:56 +0500454 frame, to receive the corresponding acknowledgement and to process all
Christopher Fauletf7a30922016-11-10 15:04:51 +0100455 actions. It is applied on the stream that handle the client and the server
456 sessions.
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200457
458 Arguments :
459 <timeout> is the timeout value specified in milliseconds by default, but
460 can be in any other unit if the number is suffixed by the unit,
461 as explained at the top of this document.
462
463
464use-backend <backend>
465 Specify the backend to use. It must be defined.
466
467 Arguments :
468 <backend> is the name of a valid "backend" section.
469
470
4712.3. "spoe-message" section
472----------------------------
473
474To offload the stream processing, SPOE will send messages with specific
475information at a specific moment in the stream life and will wait for
476corresponding replies to know what to do.
477
478
479spoe-message <name>
480 Create a new SPOE message with the name <name>.
481
482 Arguments :
483 <name> is the name of the SPOE message.
484
485 Here you define a message that can be referenced in a "spoe-agent"
486 section. Following keywords are supported :
Christopher Faulet57583e42017-09-04 15:41:09 +0200487 - acl
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200488 - args
489 - event
490
491 See also: "spoe-agent" section.
492
493
Christopher Faulet57583e42017-09-04 15:41:09 +0200494acl <aclname> <criterion> [flags] [operator] <value> ...
Christopher Faulet57583e42017-09-04 15:41:09 +0200495 Declare or complete an access list.
496
497 See section 7 about ACL usage in the HAProxy Configuration Manual.
498
499
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200500args [name=]<sample> ...
501 Define arguments passed into the SPOE message.
502
503 Arguments :
504 <sample> is a sample expression.
505
506 When the message is processed, if a sample expression is not available, it is
507 set to NULL. Arguments are processed in their declaration order and added in
Joseph Herlant71b4b152018-11-13 16:55:16 -0800508 the message in that order. It is possible to declare named arguments.
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200509
510 For example:
511 args frontend=fe_id src dst
512
513
Christopher Faulet57583e42017-09-04 15:41:09 +0200514event <name> [ { if | unless } <condition> ]
515 Set the event that triggers sending of the message. It may optionally be
516 followed by an ACL-based condition, in which case it will only be evaluated
517 if the condition is true.
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200518
Christopher Faulet57583e42017-09-04 15:41:09 +0200519 ACL-based conditions are executed in the context of the stream that handle
520 the client and the server connections.
521
522 Arguments :
523 <name> is the event name.
524 <condition> is a standard ACL-based condition.
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200525
526 Supported events are:
527 - on-client-session
Christopher Faulet1002aac2016-12-09 17:41:54 +0100528 - on-server-session
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200529 - on-frontend-tcp-request
530 - on-backend-tcp-request
531 - on-tcp-response
532 - on-frontend-http-request
533 - on-backend-http-request
534 - on-http-response
535
Christopher Faulet57583e42017-09-04 15:41:09 +0200536 See section "Events & Messages" for more details about supported events.
537 See section 7 about ACL usage in the HAProxy Configuration Manual.
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200538
Christopher Faulet11610f32017-09-21 10:23:10 +02005392.4. "spoe-group" section
540--------------------------
541
542This section can be used to declare a group of SPOE messages. Unlike messages
543referenced in a "spoe-agent" section, messages inside a group are not sent on a
544specific event. The sending must be triggered by TCP or HTTP rules, from the
545HAProxy configuration.
546
547
548spoe-group <name>
549 Create a new SPOE group with the name <name>.
550
551 Arguments :
552 <name> is the name of the SPOE group.
553
554 Here you define a group of SPOE messages that can be referenced in a
555 "spoe-agent" section. Following keywords are supported :
556 - messages
557
558 See also: "spoe-agent" and "spoe-message" sections.
559
560
561messages <msg-name> ...
562 Declare the list of SPOE messages belonging to the group.
563
564 Arguments :
565 <msg-name> is the name of a SPOE message.
566
567 Messages declared here must be found in the same engine scope, else an error
568 is triggered during the configuration parsing. Furthermore, a message belongs
569 at most to a group. You can have many "messages" lines.
570
571 See also: "spoe-message" section.
572
573
5742.5. Example
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200575-------------
576
577Here is a simple but complete example that sends client-ip address to a ip
578reputation service. This service can set the variable "ip_score" which is an
579integer between 0 and 100, indicating its reputation (100 means totally safe
580and 0 a blacklisted IP with no doubt).
581
582 ###
583 ### HAProxy configuration
584 frontend www
585 mode http
586 bind *:80
587
588 filter spoe engine ip-reputation config spoe-ip-reputation.conf
589
590 # Reject connection if the IP reputation is under 20
591 tcp-request content reject if { var(sess.iprep.ip_score) -m int lt 20 }
592
593 default_backend http-servers
594
595 backend http-servers
596 mode http
597 server http A.B.C.D:80
598
599 backend iprep-servers
600 mode tcp
601 balance roundrobin
602
603 timeout connect 5s # greater than hello timeout
604 timeout server 3m # greater than idle timeout
605
606 server iprep1 A1.B1.C1.D1:12345
607 server iprep2 A2.B2.C2.D2:12345
608
609 ####
610 ### spoe-ip-reputation.conf
611 [ip-reputation]
612
613 spoe-agent iprep-agent
614 messages get-ip-reputation
615
616 option var-prefix iprep
617
Christopher Faulet03a34492016-11-19 16:47:56 +0100618 timeout hello 2s
619 timeout idle 2m
620 timeout processing 10ms
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200621
622 use-backend iprep-servers
623
624 spoe-message get-ip-reputation
625 args ip=src
Christopher Faulet57583e42017-09-04 15:41:09 +0200626 event on-client-session if ! { src -f /etc/haproxy/whitelist.lst }
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200627
628
6293. SPOP specification
630----------------------
631
6323.1. Data types
633----------------
634
635Here is the bytewise representation of typed data:
636
637 TYPED-DATA : <TYPE:4 bits><FLAGS:4 bits><DATA>
638
639Supported types and their representation are:
640
641 TYPE | ID | DESCRIPTION
642 -----------------------------+-----+----------------------------------
643 NULL | 0 | NULL : <0>
644 Boolean | 1 | BOOL : <1+FLAG>
645 32bits signed integer | 2 | INT32 : <2><VALUE:varint>
646 32bits unsigned integer | 3 | UINT32 : <3><VALUE:varint>
647 64bits signed integer | 4 | INT64 : <4><VALUE:varint>
648 32bits unsigned integer | 5 | UNIT64 : <5><VALUE:varint>
649 IPV4 | 6 | IPV4 : <6><STRUCT IN_ADDR:4 bytes>
650 IPV6 | 7 | IPV6 : <7><STRUCT IN_ADDR6:16 bytes>
651 String | 8 | STRING : <8><LENGTH:varint><BYTES>
652 Binary | 9 | BINARY : <9><LENGTH:varint><BYTES>
653 10 -> 15 unused/reserved | - | -
654 -----------------------------+-----+----------------------------------
655
656Variable-length integer (varint) are encoded using Peers encoding:
657
658
659 0 <= X < 240 : 1 byte (7.875 bits) [ XXXX XXXX ]
660 240 <= X < 2288 : 2 bytes (11 bits) [ 1111 XXXX ] [ 0XXX XXXX ]
661 2288 <= X < 264432 : 3 bytes (18 bits) [ 1111 XXXX ] [ 1XXX XXXX ] [ 0XXX XXXX ]
662 264432 <= X < 33818864 : 4 bytes (25 bits) [ 1111 XXXX ] [ 1XXX XXXX ]*2 [ 0XXX XXXX ]
663 33818864 <= X < 4328786160 : 5 bytes (32 bits) [ 1111 XXXX ] [ 1XXX XXXX ]*3 [ 0XXX XXXX ]
664 ...
665
666For booleans, the value (true or false) is the first bit in the FLAGS
667bitfield. if this bit is set to 0, then the boolean is evaluated as false,
668otherwise, the boolean is evaluated as true.
669
6703.2. Frames
671------------
672
673Exchange between HAProxy and agents are made using FRAME packets. All frames
674must be prefixed with their size encoded on 4 bytes in network byte order:
675
676 <FRAME-LENGTH:4 bytes> <FRAME>
677
678A frame always starts with its type, on one byte, followed by metadata
679containing flags, on 4 bytes and a two variable-length integer representing the
680stream identifier and the frame identifier inside the stream:
681
682 FRAME : <FRAME-TYPE:1 byte> <METADATA> <FRAME-PAYLOAD>
683 METADATA : <FLAGS:4 bytes> <STREAM-ID:varint> <FRAME-ID:varint>
684
685Then comes the frame payload. Depending on the frame type, the payload can be
686of three types: a simple key/value list, a list of messages or a list of
687actions.
688
689 FRAME-PAYLOAD : <LIST-OF-MESSAGES> | <LIST-OF-ACTIONS> | <KV-LIST>
690
691 LIST-OF-MESSAGES : [ <MESSAGE-NAME> <NB-ARGS:1 byte> <KV-LIST> ... ]
692 MESSAGE-NAME : <STRING>
693
694 LIST-OF-ACTIONS : [ <ACTION-TYPE:1 byte> <NB-ARGS:1 byte> <ACTION-ARGS> ... ]
695 ACTION-ARGS : [ <TYPED-DATA>... ]
696
697 KV-LIST : [ <KV-NAME> <KV-VALUE> ... ]
698 KV-NAME : <STRING>
699 KV-VALUE : <TYPED-DATA>
700
Thierry FOURNIERc4dcaff2018-05-18 12:25:39 +0200701 FLAGS :
702
703 Flags are a 32 bits field. They are encoded on 4 bytes in network byte
704 order, where the bit 0 is the LSB.
705
706 0 1 2-31
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +0100707 +---+---+----------+
708 | | A | |
709 | F | B | |
710 | I | O | RESERVED |
711 | N | R | |
712 | | T | |
713 +---+---+----------+
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200714
715 FIN: Indicates that this is the final payload fragment. The first fragment
716 may also be the final fragment.
717
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +0100718 ABORT: Indicates that the processing of the current frame must be
719 cancelled. This bit should be set on frames with a fragmented
720 payload. It can be ignore for frames with an unfragemnted
721 payload. When it is set, the FIN bit must also be set.
722
723
Joseph Herlant71b4b152018-11-13 16:55:16 -0800724Frames cannot exceed a maximum size negotiated between HAProxy and agents
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200725during the HELLO handshake. Most of time, payload will be small enough to send
726it in one frame. But when supported by the peer, it will be possible to
727fragment huge payload on many frames. This ability is announced during the
728HELLO handshake and it can be asynmetric (supported by agents but not by
729HAProxy or the opposite). The following rules apply to fragmentation:
730
731 * An unfragemnted payload consists of a single frame with the FIN bit set.
732
733 * A fragemented payload consists of several frames with the FIN bit clear and
734 terminated by a single frame with the FIN bit set. All these frames must
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +0100735 share the same STREAM-ID and FRAME-ID. The first frame must set the right
736 FRAME-TYPE (e.g, NOTIFY). The following frames must have an unset type (0).
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200737
738Beside the support of fragmented payload by a peer, some payload must not be
739fragmented. See below for details.
740
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +0100741IMPORTANT : The maximum size supported by peers for a frame must be greater
742than or equal to 256 bytes.
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200743
7443.2.1. Frame capabilities
745--------------------------
746
747Here are the list of official capabilities that HAProxy and agents can support:
748
Christopher Fauleta1cda022016-12-21 08:58:06 +0100749 * fragmentation: This is the ability for a peer to support fragmented
750 payload in received frames. This is an asymmectical
751 capability, it only concerns the peer that announces
752 it. This is the responsibility to the other peer to use it
753 or not.
754
755 * pipelining: This is the ability for a peer to decouple NOTIFY and ACK
756 frames. This is a symmectical capability. To be used, it must
Willy Tarreau714f3452021-05-09 06:47:26 +0200757 be supported by HAProxy and agents. Unlike HTTP pipelining, the
Christopher Fauleta1cda022016-12-21 08:58:06 +0100758 ACK frames can be send in any order, but always on the same TCP
759 connection used for the corresponding NOTIFY frame.
760
761 * async: This ability is similar to the pipelining, but here any TCP
762 connection established between HAProxy and the agent can be used to
763 send ACK frames. if an agent accepts connections from multiple
764 HAProxy, it can use the "engine-id" value to group TCP
765 connections. See details about HAPROXY-HELLO frame.
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200766
767Unsupported or unknown capabilities are silently ignored, when possible.
768
Christopher Faulet9536ad72021-03-02 10:05:03 +0100769NOTE: HAProxy does not support the fragmentation for now. This means it is not
770 able to handle fragmented frames. However, if an agent announces the
771 fragmentation support, HAProxy may choose to send fragemented frames.
772
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02007733.2.2. Frame types overview
774----------------------------
775
776Here are types of frame supported by SPOE. Frames sent by HAProxy come first,
777then frames sent by agents :
778
779 TYPE | ID | DESCRIPTION
780 -----------------------------+-----+-------------------------------------
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +0100781 UNSET | 0 | Used for all frames but the first when a
782 | | payload is fragmented.
783 -----------------------------+-----+-------------------------------------
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200784 HAPROXY-HELLO | 1 | Sent by HAProxy when it opens a
785 | | connection on an agent.
786 | |
787 HAPROXY-DISCONNECT | 2 | Sent by HAProxy when it want to close
788 | | the connection or in reply to an
789 | | AGENT-DISCONNECT frame
790 | |
791 NOTIFY | 3 | Sent by HAProxy to pass information
792 | | to an agent
793 -----------------------------+-----+-------------------------------------
794 AGENT-HELLO | 101 | Reply to a HAPROXY-HELLO frame, when
795 | | the connection is established
796 | |
797 AGENT-DISCONNECT | 102 | Sent by an agent just before closing
798 | | the connection
799 | |
800 ACK | 103 | Sent to acknowledge a NOTIFY frame
801 -----------------------------+-----+-------------------------------------
802
803Unknown frames may be silently skipped.
804
8053.2.3. Workflow
806----------------
807
808 * Successful HELLO handshake:
809
810 HAPROXY AGENT SRV
811 | HAPROXY-HELLO |
Christopher Fauletba7bc162016-11-07 21:07:38 +0100812 | (healthcheck: false) |
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200813 | --------------------------> |
814 | |
815 | AGENT-HELLO |
816 | <-------------------------- |
817 | |
818
Christopher Fauletba7bc162016-11-07 21:07:38 +0100819 * Successful HELLO healthcheck:
820
821 HAPROXY AGENT SRV
822 | HAPROXY-HELLO |
823 | (healthcheck: true) |
824 | --------------------------> |
825 | |
826 | AGENT-HELLO + close() |
827 | <-------------------------- |
828 | |
829
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200830
831 * Error encountered by agent during the HELLO handshake:
832
833 HAPROXY AGENT SRV
834 | HAPROXY-HELLO |
835 | --------------------------> |
836 | |
837 | DISCONNECT + close() |
838 | <-------------------------- |
839 | |
840
841 * Error encountered by HAProxy during the HELLO handshake:
842
843 HAPROXY AGENT SRV
844 | HAPROXY-HELLO |
845 | --------------------------> |
846 | |
847 | AGENT-HELLO |
848 | <-------------------------- |
849 | |
850 | DISCONNECT |
851 | --------------------------> |
852 | |
853 | DISCONNECT + close() |
854 | <-------------------------- |
855 | |
856
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +0100857 * Notify / Ack exchange (unfragmented payload):
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200858
859 HAPROXY AGENT SRV
860 | NOTIFY |
861 | --------------------------> |
862 | |
863 | ACK |
864 | <-------------------------- |
865 | |
866
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +0100867 * Notify / Ack exchange (fragmented payload):
868
869 HAPROXY AGENT SRV
870 | NOTIFY (frag 1) |
871 | --------------------------> |
872 | |
873 | UNSET (frag 2) |
874 | --------------------------> |
875 | ... |
876 | UNSET (frag N) |
877 | --------------------------> |
878 | |
879 | ACK |
880 | <-------------------------- |
881 | |
882
883 * Aborted fragmentation of a NOTIFY frame:
884
885 HAPROXY AGENT SRV
886 | ... |
887 | UNSET (frag X) |
888 | --------------------------> |
889 | |
890 | ACK/ABORT |
891 | <-------------------------- |
892 | |
893 | UNSET (frag X+1) |
894 | -----------X |
895 | |
896 | |
897
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200898 * Connection closed by haproxy:
899
900 HAPROXY AGENT SRV
901 | DISCONNECT |
902 | --------------------------> |
903 | |
904 | DISCONNECT + close() |
905 | <-------------------------- |
906 | |
907
908 * Connection closed by agent:
909
910 HAPROXY AGENT SRV
911 | DISCONNECT + close() |
912 | <-------------------------- |
913 | |
914
9153.2.4. Frame: HAPROXY-HELLO
916----------------------------
917
918This frame is the first one exchanged between HAProxy and an agent, when the
919connection is established. The payload of this frame is a KV-LIST. It cannot be
920fragmented. STREAM-ID and FRAME-ID are must be set 0.
921
922Following items are mandatory in the KV-LIST:
923
924 * "supported-versions" <STRING>
925
926 Last SPOP major versions supported by HAProxy. It is a comma-separated list
927 of versions, following the format "Major.Minor". Spaces must be ignored, if
928 any. When a major version is announced by HAProxy, it means it also support
929 all previous minor versions.
930
931 Example: "2.0, 1.5" means HAProxy supports SPOP 2.0 and 1.0 to 1.5
932
933 * "max-frame-size" <UINT32>
934
935 This is the maximum size allowed for a frame. The HAPROXY-HELLO frame must
936 be lower or equal to this value.
937
938 * "capabilities" <STRING>
939
940 This a comma-separated list of capabilities supported by HAProxy. Spaces
941 must be ignored, if any.
942
Christopher Fauletba7bc162016-11-07 21:07:38 +0100943Following optional items can be added in the KV-LIST:
944
945 * "healthcheck" <BOOLEAN>
946
947 If this item is set to TRUE, then the HAPROXY-HELLO frame is sent during a
948 SPOE health check. When set to FALSE, this item can be ignored.
949
Christopher Fauleta1cda022016-12-21 08:58:06 +0100950 * "engine-id" <STRING>
951
952 This is a uniq string that identify a SPOE engine.
953
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +0200954To finish the HELLO handshake, the agent must return an AGENT-HELLO frame with
955its supported SPOP version, the lower value between its maximum size allowed
956for a frame and the HAProxy one and capabilities it supports. If an error
957occurs or if an incompatibility is detected with the agent configuration, an
958AGENT-DISCONNECT frame must be returned.
959
9603.2.5. Frame: AGENT-HELLO
961--------------------------
962
963This frame is sent in reply to a HAPROXY-HELLO frame to finish a HELLO
964handshake. As for HAPROXY-HELLO frame, STREAM-ID and FRAME-ID are also set
9650. The payload of this frame is a KV-LIST and it cannot be fragmented.
966
967Following items are mandatory in the KV-LIST:
968
969 * "version" <STRING>
970
971 This is the SPOP version the agent supports. It must follow the format
972 "Major.Minor" and it must be lower or equal than one of major versions
973 announced by HAProxy.
974
975 * "max-frame-size" <UINT32>
976
977 This is the maximum size allowed for a frame. It must be lower or equal to
978 the value in the HAPROXY-HELLO frame. This value will be used for all
979 subsequent frames.
980
981 * "capabilities" <STRING>
982
983 This a comma-separated list of capabilities supported by agent. Spaces must
984 be ignored, if any.
985
986At this time, if everything is ok for HAProxy (supported version and valid
987max-frame-size value), the HELLO handshake is successfully completed. Else,
988HAProxy sends a HAPROXY-DISCONNECT frame with the corresponding error.
989
Christopher Fauletba7bc162016-11-07 21:07:38 +0100990If "healthcheck" item was set to TRUE in the HAPROXY-HELLO frame, the agent can
991safely close the connection without DISCONNECT frame. In all cases, HAProxy
Ilya Shipitsin11057a32020-06-21 21:18:27 +0500992will close the connection at the end of the health check.
Christopher Fauletba7bc162016-11-07 21:07:38 +0100993
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02009943.2.6. Frame: NOTIFY
995---------------------
996
997Information are sent to the agents inside NOTIFY frames. These frames are
998attached to a stream, so STREAM-ID and FRAME-ID must be set. The payload of
999NOTIFY frames is a LIST-OF-MESSAGES and, if supported by agents, it can be
1000fragmented.
1001
1002NOTIFY frames must be acknowledge by agents sending an ACK frame, repeating
1003right STREAM-ID and FRAME-ID.
1004
10053.2.7. Frame: ACK
1006------------------
1007
1008ACK frames must be sent by agents to reply to NOTIFY frames. STREAM-ID and
1009FRAME-ID found in a NOTIFY frame must be reuse in the corresponding ACK
1010frame. The payload of ACK frames is a LIST-OF-ACTIONS and, if supported by
1011HAProxy, it can be fragmented.
1012
10133.2.8. Frame: HAPROXY-DISCONNECT
1014---------------------------------
1015
1016If an error occurs, at anytime, from the HAProxy side, a HAPROXY-DISCONNECT
1017frame is sent with information describing the error. HAProxy will wait an
1018AGENT-DISCONNECT frame in reply. All other frames will be ignored. The agent
1019must then close the socket.
1020
1021The payload of this frame is a KV-LIST. It cannot be fragmented. STREAM-ID and
1022FRAME-ID are must be set 0.
1023
1024Following items are mandatory in the KV-LIST:
1025
1026 * "status-code" <UINT32>
1027
1028 This is the code corresponding to the error.
1029
1030 * "message" <STRING>
1031
1032 This is a textual message describing the error.
1033
1034For more information about known errors, see section "Errors & timeouts"
1035
10363.2.9. Frame: AGENT-DISCONNECT
1037-------------------------------
1038
1039If an error occurs, at anytime, from the agent size, a AGENT-DISCONNECT frame
Michael Prokop4438c602019-05-24 10:25:45 +02001040is sent, with information describing the error. such frame is also sent in reply
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02001041to a HAPROXY-DISCONNECT. The agent must close the socket just after sending
1042this frame.
1043
1044The payload of this frame is a KV-LIST. It cannot be fragmented. STREAM-ID and
1045FRAME-ID are must be set 0.
1046
1047Following items are mandatory in the KV-LIST:
1048
1049 * "status-code" <UINT32>
1050
1051 This is the code corresponding to the error.
1052
1053 * "message" <STRING>
1054
1055 This is a textual message describing the error.
1056
1057For more information about known errors, see section "Errors & timeouts"
1058
10593.3. Events & Messages
1060-----------------------
1061
1062Information about streams are sent in NOTIFY frames. You can specify which kind
1063of information to send by defining "spoe-message" sections in your SPOE
1064configuration file. for each "spoe-message" there will be a message in a NOTIFY
1065frame when the right event is triggered.
1066
1067A NOTIFY frame is sent for an specific event when there is at least one
1068"spoe-message" attached to this event. All messages for an event will be added
1069in the same NOTIFY frame.
1070
1071Here is the list of supported events:
1072
1073 * on-client-session is triggered when a new client session is created.
1074 This event is only available for SPOE filters
1075 declared in a frontend or a listen section.
1076
1077 * on-frontend-tcp-request is triggered just before the evaluation of
1078 "tcp-request content" rules on the frontend side.
1079 This event is only available for SPOE filters
1080 declared in a frontend or a listen section.
1081
1082 * on-backend-tcp-request is triggered just before the evaluation of
1083 "tcp-request content" rules on the backend side.
1084 This event is skipped for SPOE filters declared
1085 in a listen section.
1086
1087 * on-frontend-http-request is triggered just before the evaluation of
1088 "http-request" rules on the frontend side. This
1089 event is only available for SPOE filters declared
1090 in a frontend or a listen section.
1091
1092 * on-backend-http-request is triggered just before the evaluation of
1093 "http-request" rules on the backend side. This
1094 event is skipped for SPOE filters declared in a
1095 listen section.
1096
1097 * on-server-session is triggered when the session with the server is
1098 established.
1099
1100 * on-tcp-response is triggered just before the evaluation of
1101 "tcp-response content" rules.
1102
1103 * on-http-response is triggered just before the evaluation of
1104 "http-response" rules.
1105
1106
1107The stream processing will loop on these events, when triggered, waiting the
1108agent reply.
1109
11103.4. Actions
1111-------------
1112
1113An agent must acknowledge each NOTIFY frame by sending the corresponding ACK
1114frame. Actions can be added in these frames to dynamically take action on the
1115processing of a stream.
1116
1117Here is the list of supported actions:
1118
1119 * set-var set the value for an existing variable. 3 arguments must be
1120 attached to this action: the variable scope (proc, sess, txn,
Kevin Zhu730323e2018-06-01 05:38:00 +02001121 req or res), the variable name (a string) and its value.
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02001122
1123 ACTION-SET-VAR : <SET-VAR:1 byte><NB-ARGS:1 byte><VAR-SCOPE:1 byte><VAR-NAME><VAR-VALUE>
1124
1125 SET-VAR : <1>
1126 NB-ARGS : <3>
1127 VAR-SCOPE : <PROCESS> | <SESSION> | <TRANSACTION> | <REQUEST> | <RESPONSE>
1128 VAR-NAME : <STRING>
1129 VAR-VALUE : <TYPED-DATA>
1130
1131 PROCESS : <0>
1132 SESSION : <1>
1133 TRANSACTION : <2>
1134 REQUEST : <3>
Christopher Fauleta1cda022016-12-21 08:58:06 +01001135 RESPONSE : <4>
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02001136
1137 * unset-var unset the value for an existing variable. 2 arguments must be
1138 attached to this action: the variable scope (proc, sess, txn,
Kevin Zhu730323e2018-06-01 05:38:00 +02001139 req or res) and the variable name (a string).
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02001140
Christopher Faulet1002aac2016-12-09 17:41:54 +01001141 ACTION-UNSET-VAR : <UNSET-VAR:1 byte><NB-ARGS:1 byte><VAR-SCOPE:1 byte><VAR-NAME>
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02001142
Christopher Faulet1002aac2016-12-09 17:41:54 +01001143 UNSET-VAR : <2>
1144 NB-ARGS : <2>
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02001145 VAR-SCOPE : <PROCESS> | <SESSION> | <TRANSACTION> | <REQUEST> | <RESPONSE>
1146 VAR-NAME : <STRING>
1147
1148 PROCESS : <0>
1149 SESSION : <1>
1150 TRANSACTION : <2>
1151 REQUEST : <3>
Christopher Fauleta1cda022016-12-21 08:58:06 +01001152 RESPONSE : <4>
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02001153
1154
1155NOTE: Name of the variables will be automatically prefixed by HAProxy to avoid
1156 name clashes with other variables used in HAProxy. Moreover, unknown
1157 variable will be silently ignored.
1158
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +010011593.5. Errors & timeouts
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02001160----------------------
1161
1162Here is the list of all known errors:
1163
1164 STATUS CODE | DESCRIPTION
1165 ----------------+--------------------------------------------------------
1166 0 | normal (no error occurred)
1167 1 | I/O error
1168 2 | A timeout occurred
1169 3 | frame is too big
1170 4 | invalid frame received
1171 5 | version value not found
1172 6 | max-frame-size value not found
1173 7 | capabilities value not found
1174 8 | unsupported version
1175 9 | max-frame-size too big or too small
Christopher Fauletd1307ce2017-02-27 21:59:39 +01001176 10 | payload fragmentation is not supported
1177 11 | invalid interlaced frames
1178 12 | frame-id not found (it does not match any referenced frame)
1179 13 | resource allocation error
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02001180 99 | an unknown error occurrde
1181 ----------------+--------------------------------------------------------
1182
1183An agent can define its own errors using a not yet assigned status code.
1184
Christopher Fauletea62c2a2016-11-14 10:54:21 +01001185IMPORTANT NOTE: By default, for a specific stream, when an abnormal/unexpected
1186 error occurs, the SPOE is disabled for all the transaction. So
1187 if you have several events configured, such error on an event
Ilya Shipitsin11057a32020-06-21 21:18:27 +05001188 will disabled all following. For TCP streams, this will
Christopher Fauletea62c2a2016-11-14 10:54:21 +01001189 disable the SPOE for the whole session. For HTTP streams, this
1190 will disable it for the transaction (request and response).
1191 See 'option continue-on-error' to bypass this limitation.
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02001192
Joseph Herlant71b4b152018-11-13 16:55:16 -08001193To avoid a stream to wait undefinetly, you must carefully choose the
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02001194acknowledgement timeout. In most of cases, it will be quiet low. But it depends
1195on the responsivness of your service.
1196
1197You must also choose idle timeout carefully. Because connection with your
1198service depends on the backend configuration used by the SPOA, it is important
1199to use a lower value for idle timeout than the server timeout. Else the
1200connection will be closed by HAProxy. The same is true for hello timeout. You
1201should choose a lower value than the connect timeout.
1202
Christopher Fauletb2dd1e02018-03-22 09:07:41 +010012034. Logging
1204-----------
1205
1206Activity of an SPOE is logged using HAProxy's logger. The messages are logged
1207in the context of the streams that handle the client and the server
1208connections. A message is emitted for each event or group handled by an
1209SPOE. Depending on the status code, the log level will be different. In the
1210normal case, when no error occurred, the message is logged with the level
1211LOG_NOTICE. Otherwise, the message is logged with the level LOG_WARNING.
1212
Christopher Faulet3b8e3492018-03-26 17:20:58 +02001213The messages are logged using the agent's logger, if defined, and use the
1214following format:
Christopher Fauletb2dd1e02018-03-22 09:07:41 +01001215
Christopher Faulet6e0d5e72018-04-26 14:25:43 +02001216 SPOE: [AGENT] <TYPE:NAME> sid=STREAM-ID st=STATUS-CODE reqT/qT/wT/resT/pT \
Christopher Fauletcaf2fec2018-04-04 10:25:50 +02001217 <idles>/<applets> <nb_sending>/<nb_waiting> <nb_error>/<nb_processed>
Christopher Fauletb2dd1e02018-03-22 09:07:41 +01001218
1219 AGENT is the agent name
1220 TYPE is EVENT of GROUP
1221 NAME is the event or the group name
1222 STREAM-ID is an integer, the unique id of the stream
1223 STATUS_CODE is the processing's status code
1224 reqT/qT/wT/resT/pT are the following time events:
1225
1226 * reqT : the encoding time. It includes ACLs processing, if any. For
1227 fragmented frames, it is the sum of all fragments.
1228 * qT : the delay before the request gets out the sending queue. For
1229 fragmented frames, it is the sum of all fragments.
Joseph Herlant71b4b152018-11-13 16:55:16 -08001230 * wT : the delay before the response is received. No fragmentation
Christopher Fauletb2dd1e02018-03-22 09:07:41 +01001231 supported here.
1232 * resT : the delay to process the response. No fragmentation supported
Christopher Faulet36bda1c2018-03-22 09:08:20 +01001233 here.
Christopher Fauletb2dd1e02018-03-22 09:07:41 +01001234 * pT : the delay to process the event or the group. From the stream
Christopher Faulet36bda1c2018-03-22 09:08:20 +01001235 point of view, it is the latency added by the SPOE processing.
1236 It is more or less the sum of values above.
Christopher Fauletb2dd1e02018-03-22 09:07:41 +01001237
Christopher Fauletcaf2fec2018-04-04 10:25:50 +02001238 <idle> is the numbers of idle SPOE applets
1239 <applets> is the numbers of SPOE applets
1240 <nb_sending> is the numbers of streams waiting to send data
1241 <nb_waiting> is the numbers of streams waiting for a ack
1242 <nb_error> is the numbers of processing errors
1243 <nb_processed> is the numbers of events/groups processed
1244
1245
Christopher Fauletb2dd1e02018-03-22 09:07:41 +01001246For all these time events, -1 means the processing was interrupted before the
1247end. So -1 for the queue time means the request was never dequeued. For
1248fragmented frames it is harder to know when the interruption happened.
Christopher Fauletf7e4e7e2016-10-27 22:29:49 +02001249
1250/*
1251 * Local variables:
1252 * fill-column: 79
1253 * End:
1254 */