blob: f8d4ec8802cfd1b2570c3d9fd960849939924a15 [file] [log] [blame]
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +02001 ------------------------
2 HAProxy Management Guide
3 ------------------------
Willy Tarreaueaded982022-12-01 15:25:34 +01004 version 2.8
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +02005
6
7This document describes how to start, stop, manage, and troubleshoot HAProxy,
8as well as some known limitations and traps to avoid. It does not describe how
9to configure it (for this please read configuration.txt).
10
11Note to documentation contributors :
12 This document is formatted with 80 columns per line, with even number of
13 spaces for indentation and without tabs. Please follow these rules strictly
14 so that it remains easily printable everywhere. If you add sections, please
15 update the summary below for easier searching.
16
17
18Summary
19-------
20
211. Prerequisites
222. Quick reminder about HAProxy's architecture
233. Starting HAProxy
244. Stopping and restarting HAProxy
255. File-descriptor limitations
266. Memory management
277. CPU usage
288. Logging
299. Statistics and monitoring
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +0200309.1. CSV format
Willy Tarreau5d8b9792016-03-11 11:09:34 +0100319.2. Typed output format
329.3. Unix Socket commands
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +0100339.4. Master CLI
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +0100349.4.1. Master CLI commands
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +02003510. Tricks for easier configuration management
3611. Well-known traps to avoid
3712. Debugging and performance issues
3813. Security considerations
39
40
411. Prerequisites
42----------------
43
44In this document it is assumed that the reader has sufficient administration
45skills on a UNIX-like operating system, uses the shell on a daily basis and is
46familiar with troubleshooting utilities such as strace and tcpdump.
47
48
492. Quick reminder about HAProxy's architecture
50----------------------------------------------
51
Willy Tarreau3f364482019-02-27 15:01:46 +010052HAProxy is a multi-threaded, event-driven, non-blocking daemon. This means is
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +020053uses event multiplexing to schedule all of its activities instead of relying on
54the system to schedule between multiple activities. Most of the time it runs as
55a single process, so the output of "ps aux" on a system will report only one
56"haproxy" process, unless a soft reload is in progress and an older process is
57finishing its job in parallel to the new one. It is thus always easy to trace
Willy Tarreau3f364482019-02-27 15:01:46 +010058its activity using the strace utility. In order to scale with the number of
59available processors, by default haproxy will start one worker thread per
60processor it is allowed to run on. Unless explicitly configured differently,
61the incoming traffic is spread over all these threads, all running the same
62event loop. A great care is taken to limit inter-thread dependencies to the
63strict minimum, so as to try to achieve near-linear scalability. This has some
64impacts such as the fact that a given connection is served by a single thread.
65Thus in order to use all available processing capacity, it is needed to have at
66least as many connections as there are threads, which is almost always granted.
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +020067
68HAProxy is designed to isolate itself into a chroot jail during startup, where
69it cannot perform any file-system access at all. This is also true for the
70libraries it depends on (eg: libc, libssl, etc). The immediate effect is that
71a running process will not be able to reload a configuration file to apply
72changes, instead a new process will be started using the updated configuration
73file. Some other less obvious effects are that some timezone files or resolver
74files the libc might attempt to access at run time will not be found, though
75this should generally not happen as they're not needed after startup. A nice
76consequence of this principle is that the HAProxy process is totally stateless,
77and no cleanup is needed after it's killed, so any killing method that works
78will do the right thing.
79
80HAProxy doesn't write log files, but it relies on the standard syslog protocol
81to send logs to a remote server (which is often located on the same system).
82
83HAProxy uses its internal clock to enforce timeouts, that is derived from the
84system's time but where unexpected drift is corrected. This is done by limiting
85the time spent waiting in poll() for an event, and measuring the time it really
86took. In practice it never waits more than one second. This explains why, when
87running strace over a completely idle process, periodic calls to poll() (or any
88of its variants) surrounded by two gettimeofday() calls are noticed. They are
89normal, completely harmless and so cheap that the load they imply is totally
90undetectable at the system scale, so there's nothing abnormal there. Example :
91
92 16:35:40.002320 gettimeofday({1442759740, 2605}, NULL) = 0
93 16:35:40.002942 epoll_wait(0, {}, 200, 1000) = 0
94 16:35:41.007542 gettimeofday({1442759741, 7641}, NULL) = 0
95 16:35:41.007998 gettimeofday({1442759741, 8114}, NULL) = 0
96 16:35:41.008391 epoll_wait(0, {}, 200, 1000) = 0
97 16:35:42.011313 gettimeofday({1442759742, 11411}, NULL) = 0
98
99HAProxy is a TCP proxy, not a router. It deals with established connections that
100have been validated by the kernel, and not with packets of any form nor with
101sockets in other states (eg: no SYN_RECV nor TIME_WAIT), though their existence
102may prevent it from binding a port. It relies on the system to accept incoming
103connections and to initiate outgoing connections. An immediate effect of this is
104that there is no relation between packets observed on the two sides of a
105forwarded connection, which can be of different size, numbers and even family.
106Since a connection may only be accepted from a socket in LISTEN state, all the
107sockets it is listening to are necessarily visible using the "netstat" utility
108to show listening sockets. Example :
109
110 # netstat -ltnp
111 Active Internet connections (only servers)
112 Proto Recv-Q Send-Q Local Address Foreign Address State PID/Program name
113 tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:22 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 1629/sshd
114 tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:80 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 2847/haproxy
115 tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:443 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 2847/haproxy
116
117
1183. Starting HAProxy
119-------------------
120
121HAProxy is started by invoking the "haproxy" program with a number of arguments
122passed on the command line. The actual syntax is :
123
124 $ haproxy [<options>]*
125
126where [<options>]* is any number of options. An option always starts with '-'
127followed by one of more letters, and possibly followed by one or multiple extra
128arguments. Without any option, HAProxy displays the help page with a reminder
129about supported options. Available options may vary slightly based on the
130operating system. A fair number of these options overlap with an equivalent one
131if the "global" section. In this case, the command line always has precedence
132over the configuration file, so that the command line can be used to quickly
133enforce some settings without touching the configuration files. The current
134list of options is :
135
136 -- <cfgfile>* : all the arguments following "--" are paths to configuration
Maxime de Roucy379d9c72016-05-13 23:52:56 +0200137 file/directory to be loaded and processed in the declaration order. It is
138 mostly useful when relying on the shell to load many files that are
139 numerically ordered. See also "-f". The difference between "--" and "-f" is
140 that one "-f" must be placed before each file name, while a single "--" is
141 needed before all file names. Both options can be used together, the
142 command line ordering still applies. When more than one file is specified,
143 each file must start on a section boundary, so the first keyword of each
144 file must be one of "global", "defaults", "peers", "listen", "frontend",
145 "backend", and so on. A file cannot contain just a server list for example.
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200146
Maxime de Roucy379d9c72016-05-13 23:52:56 +0200147 -f <cfgfile|cfgdir> : adds <cfgfile> to the list of configuration files to be
148 loaded. If <cfgdir> is a directory, all the files (and only files) it
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -0400149 contains are added in lexical order (using LC_COLLATE=C) to the list of
Maxime de Roucy379d9c72016-05-13 23:52:56 +0200150 configuration files to be loaded ; only files with ".cfg" extension are
151 added, only non hidden files (not prefixed with ".") are added.
152 Configuration files are loaded and processed in their declaration order.
153 This option may be specified multiple times to load multiple files. See
154 also "--". The difference between "--" and "-f" is that one "-f" must be
155 placed before each file name, while a single "--" is needed before all file
156 names. Both options can be used together, the command line ordering still
157 applies. When more than one file is specified, each file must start on a
158 section boundary, so the first keyword of each file must be one of
159 "global", "defaults", "peers", "listen", "frontend", "backend", and so on.
160 A file cannot contain just a server list for example.
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200161
162 -C <dir> : changes to directory <dir> before loading configuration
163 files. This is useful when using relative paths. Warning when using
164 wildcards after "--" which are in fact replaced by the shell before
165 starting haproxy.
166
167 -D : start as a daemon. The process detaches from the current terminal after
168 forking, and errors are not reported anymore in the terminal. It is
169 equivalent to the "daemon" keyword in the "global" section of the
170 configuration. It is recommended to always force it in any init script so
171 that a faulty configuration doesn't prevent the system from booting.
172
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200173 -L <name> : change the local peer name to <name>, which defaults to the local
William Lallemanddaf4cd22018-04-17 16:46:13 +0200174 hostname. This is used only with peers replication. You can use the
175 variable $HAPROXY_LOCALPEER in the configuration file to reference the
176 peer name.
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200177
178 -N <limit> : sets the default per-proxy maxconn to <limit> instead of the
179 builtin default value (usually 2000). Only useful for debugging.
180
181 -V : enable verbose mode (disables quiet mode). Reverts the effect of "-q" or
182 "quiet".
183
William Lallemande202b1e2017-06-01 17:38:56 +0200184 -W : master-worker mode. It is equivalent to the "master-worker" keyword in
185 the "global" section of the configuration. This mode will launch a "master"
186 which will monitor the "workers". Using this mode, you can reload HAProxy
187 directly by sending a SIGUSR2 signal to the master. The master-worker mode
188 is compatible either with the foreground or daemon mode. It is
189 recommended to use this mode with multiprocess and systemd.
190
Pavlos Parissisf65f2572018-02-07 21:42:16 +0100191 -Ws : master-worker mode with support of `notify` type of systemd service.
192 This option is only available when HAProxy was built with `USE_SYSTEMD`
193 build option enabled.
194
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200195 -c : only performs a check of the configuration files and exits before trying
196 to bind. The exit status is zero if everything is OK, or non-zero if an
Willy Tarreaubebd2122020-04-15 16:06:11 +0200197 error is encountered. Presence of warnings will be reported if any.
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200198
Maximilian Maderfc0cceb2021-06-06 00:50:22 +0200199 -cc : evaluates a condition as used within a conditional block of the
200 configuration. The exit status is zero if the condition is true, 1 if the
201 condition is false or 2 if an error is encountered.
202
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200203 -d : enable debug mode. This disables daemon mode, forces the process to stay
Willy Tarreauccf42992020-10-09 19:15:03 +0200204 in foreground and to show incoming and outgoing events. It must never be
205 used in an init script.
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200206
Erwan Le Goasb0c05012022-09-14 17:51:55 +0200207 -dC[key] : dump the configuration file. It is performed after the lines are
208 tokenized, so comments are stripped and indenting is forced. If a non-zero
209 key is specified, lines are truncated before sensitive/confidential fields,
210 and identifiers and addresses are emitted hashed with this key using the
Michael Prokop9a62e352022-12-09 12:28:46 +0100211 same algorithm as the one used by the anonymized mode on the CLI. This
Erwan Le Goasb0c05012022-09-14 17:51:55 +0200212 means that the output may safely be shared with a developer who needs it
213 to figure what's happening in a dump that was anonymized using the same
214 key. Please also see the CLI's "set anon" command.
215
Amaury Denoyelle7b01a8d2021-03-29 10:29:07 +0200216 -dD : enable diagnostic mode. This mode will output extra warnings about
217 suspicious configuration statements. This will never prevent startup even in
218 "zero-warning" mode nor change the exit status code.
219
Christopher Faulet678a4ce2023-02-14 16:12:54 +0100220 -dF : disable data fast-forward. It is a mechanism to optimize the data
221 forwarding by passing data directly from a side to the other one without
222 waking the stream up. Thanks to this directive, it is possible to disable
223 this optimization. Note it also disable any kernel tcp splicing. This
224 command is not meant for regular use, it will generally only be suggested by
225 developers along complex debugging sessions.
226
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200227 -dG : disable use of getaddrinfo() to resolve host names into addresses. It
228 can be used when suspecting that getaddrinfo() doesn't work as expected.
229 This option was made available because many bogus implementations of
230 getaddrinfo() exist on various systems and cause anomalies that are
231 difficult to troubleshoot.
232
Willy Tarreau76871a42022-03-08 16:01:40 +0100233 -dK<class[,class]*> : dumps the list of registered keywords in each class.
234 The list of classes is available with "-dKhelp". All classes may be dumped
235 using "-dKall", otherwise a selection of those shown in the help can be
236 specified as a comma-delimited list. The output format will vary depending
237 on what class of keywords is being dumped (e.g. "cfg" will show the known
Willy Tarreau55b96892022-05-31 08:07:43 +0200238 configuration keywords in a format resembling the config file format while
Willy Tarreau76871a42022-03-08 16:01:40 +0100239 "smp" will show sample fetch functions prefixed with a compatibility matrix
240 with each rule set). These may rarely be used as-is by humans but can be of
241 great help for external tools that try to detect the appearance of new
242 keywords at certain places to automatically update some documentation,
243 syntax highlighting files, configuration parsers, API etc. The output
244 format may evolve a bit over time so it is really recommended to use this
245 output mostly to detect differences with previous archives. Note that not
246 all keywords are listed because many keywords have existed long before the
247 different keyword registration subsystems were created, and they do not
248 appear there. However since new keywords are only added via the modern
249 mechanisms, it's reasonably safe to assume that this output may be used to
250 detect language additions with a good accuracy. The keywords are only
251 dumped after the configuration is fully parsed, so that even dynamically
252 created keywords can be dumped. A good way to dump and exit is to run a
253 silent config check on an existing configuration:
254
255 ./haproxy -dKall -q -c -f foo.cfg
256
257 If no configuration file is available, using "-f /dev/null" will work as
258 well to dump all default keywords, but then the return status will not be
259 zero since there will be no listener, and will have to be ignored.
260
Willy Tarreau654726d2021-12-28 15:43:11 +0100261 -dL : dumps the list of dynamic shared libraries that are loaded at the end
262 of the config processing. This will generally also include deep dependencies
263 such as anything loaded from Lua code for example, as well as the executable
264 itself. The list is printed in a format that ought to be easy enough to
265 sanitize to directly produce a tarball of all dependencies. Since it doesn't
266 stop the program's startup, it is recommended to only use it in combination
267 with "-c" and "-q" where only the list of loaded objects will be displayed
268 (or nothing in case of error). In addition, keep in mind that when providing
269 such a package to help with a core file analysis, most libraries are in fact
270 symbolic links that need to be dereferenced when creating the archive:
271
272 ./haproxy -W -q -c -dL -f foo.cfg | tar -T - -hzcf archive.tgz
273
Willy Tarreau9ef27422023-03-22 11:37:54 +0100274 When started in verbose mode (-V) the shared libraries' address ranges are
275 also enumerated, unless the quiet mode is in use (-q).
276
Willy Tarreauf4b79c42022-02-23 15:20:53 +0100277 -dM[<byte>[,]][help|options,...] : forces memory poisoning, and/or changes
278 memory other debugging options. Memory poisonning means that each and every
Willy Tarreaubafbe012017-11-24 17:34:44 +0100279 memory region allocated with malloc() or pool_alloc() will be filled with
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200280 <byte> before being passed to the caller. When <byte> is not specified, it
281 defaults to 0x50 ('P'). While this slightly slows down operations, it is
282 useful to reliably trigger issues resulting from missing initializations in
283 the code that cause random crashes. Note that -dM0 has the effect of
284 turning any malloc() into a calloc(). In any case if a bug appears or
285 disappears when using this option it means there is a bug in haproxy, so
Willy Tarreauf4b79c42022-02-23 15:20:53 +0100286 please report it. A number of other options are available either alone or
287 after a comma following the byte. The special option "help" will list the
288 currently supported options and their current value. Each debugging option
289 may be forced on or off. The most optimal options are usually chosen at
290 build time based on the operating system and do not need to be adjusted,
291 unless suggested by a developer. Supported debugging options include
292 (set/clear):
293 - fail / no-fail:
294 This enables randomly failing memory allocations, in conjunction with
295 the global "tune.fail-alloc" setting. This is used to detect missing
Willy Tarreau0c4348c2023-03-21 09:24:53 +0100296 error checks in the code. Setting the option presets the ratio to 1%
297 failure rate.
Willy Tarreauf4b79c42022-02-23 15:20:53 +0100298
299 - no-merge / merge:
300 By default, pools of very similar sizes are merged, resulting in more
301 efficiency, but this complicates the analysis of certain memory dumps.
302 This option allows to disable this mechanism, and may slightly increase
303 the memory usage.
304
305 - cold-first / hot-first:
306 In order to optimize the CPU cache hit ratio, by default the most
307 recently released objects ("hot") are recycled for new allocations.
308 But doing so also complicates analysis of memory dumps and may hide
309 use-after-free bugs. This option allows to instead pick the coldest
310 objects first, which may result in a slight increase of CPU usage.
311
312 - integrity / no-integrity:
313 When this option is enabled, memory integrity checks are enabled on
314 the allocated area to verify that it hasn't been modified since it was
315 last released. This works best with "no-merge", "cold-first" and "tag".
316 Enabling this option will slightly increase the CPU usage.
317
318 - no-global / global:
319 Depending on the operating system, a process-wide global memory cache
320 may be enabled if it is estimated that the standard allocator is too
321 slow or inefficient with threads. This option allows to forcefully
322 disable it or enable it. Disabling it may result in a CPU usage
323 increase with inefficient allocators. Enabling it may result in a
324 higher memory usage with efficient allocators.
325
326 - no-cache / cache:
327 Each thread uses a very fast local object cache for allocations, which
328 is always enabled by default. This option allows to disable it. Since
329 the global cache also passes via the local caches, this will
330 effectively result in disabling all caches and allocating directly from
331 the default allocator. This may result in a significant increase of CPU
332 usage, but may also result in small memory savings on tiny systems.
333
334 - caller / no-caller:
335 Enabling this option reserves some extra space in each allocated object
336 to store the address of the last caller that allocated or released it.
337 This helps developers go back in time when analysing memory dumps and
338 to guess how something unexpected happened.
339
340 - tag / no-tag:
341 Enabling this option reserves some extra space in each allocated object
342 to store a tag that allows to detect bugs such as double-free, freeing
343 an invalid object, and buffer overflows. It offers much stronger
344 reliability guarantees at the expense of 4 or 8 extra bytes per
345 allocation. It usually is the first step to detect memory corruption.
346
347 - poison / no-poison:
348 Enabling this option will fill allocated objects with a fixed pattern
349 that will make sure that some accidental values such as 0 will not be
350 present if a newly added field was mistakenly forgotten in an
351 initialization routine. Such bugs tend to rarely reproduce, especially
352 when pools are not merged. This is normally enabled by directly passing
353 the byte's value to -dM but using this option allows to disable/enable
354 use of a previously set value.
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200355
Valentine Krasnobaevaa5a50c92024-06-12 10:39:02 +0200356 -dR : disable SO_REUSEPORT socket option on listening ports. It is equivalent
357 to the "global" section's "noreuseport" keyword. This may be applied in
358 multi-threading scenarios, when load distribution issues observed among the
359 haproxy threads (could be monitored with top).
360
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200361 -dS : disable use of the splice() system call. It is equivalent to the
362 "global" section's "nosplice" keyword. This may be used when splice() is
363 suspected to behave improperly or to cause performance issues, or when
364 using strace to see the forwarded data (which do not appear when using
365 splice()).
366
367 -dV : disable SSL verify on the server side. It is equivalent to having
368 "ssl-server-verify none" in the "global" section. This is useful when
369 trying to reproduce production issues out of the production
370 environment. Never use this in an init script as it degrades SSL security
371 to the servers.
372
Willy Tarreau3eb10b82020-04-15 16:42:39 +0200373 -dW : if set, haproxy will refuse to start if any warning was emitted while
374 processing the configuration. This helps detect subtle mistakes and keep the
375 configuration clean and portable across versions. It is recommended to set
376 this option in service scripts when configurations are managed by humans,
377 but it is recommended not to use it with generated configurations, which
378 tend to emit more warnings. It may be combined with "-c" to cause warnings
379 in checked configurations to fail. This is equivalent to global option
380 "zero-warning".
381
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200382 -db : disable background mode and multi-process mode. The process remains in
383 foreground. It is mainly used during development or during small tests, as
384 Ctrl-C is enough to stop the process. Never use it in an init script.
385
386 -de : disable the use of the "epoll" poller. It is equivalent to the "global"
387 section's keyword "noepoll". It is mostly useful when suspecting a bug
388 related to this poller. On systems supporting epoll, the fallback will
389 generally be the "poll" poller.
390
391 -dk : disable the use of the "kqueue" poller. It is equivalent to the
392 "global" section's keyword "nokqueue". It is mostly useful when suspecting
393 a bug related to this poller. On systems supporting kqueue, the fallback
394 will generally be the "poll" poller.
395
396 -dp : disable the use of the "poll" poller. It is equivalent to the "global"
397 section's keyword "nopoll". It is mostly useful when suspecting a bug
398 related to this poller. On systems supporting poll, the fallback will
399 generally be the "select" poller, which cannot be disabled and is limited
400 to 1024 file descriptors.
401
Willy Tarreau3eed10e2016-11-07 21:03:16 +0100402 -dr : ignore server address resolution failures. It is very common when
403 validating a configuration out of production not to have access to the same
404 resolvers and to fail on server address resolution, making it difficult to
405 test a configuration. This option simply appends the "none" method to the
406 list of address resolution methods for all servers, ensuring that even if
407 the libc fails to resolve an address, the startup sequence is not
408 interrupted.
409
Valentine Krasnobaevaa5a50c92024-06-12 10:39:02 +0200410 -dv : disable the use of the "evports" poller. It is equivalent to the
411 "global" section's keyword "noevports". It is mostly useful when suspecting
412 a bug related to this poller. On systems supporting event ports (SunOS
413 derived from Solaris 10 and later), the fallback will generally be the
414 "poll" poller.
415
Willy Tarreau70060452015-12-14 12:46:07 +0100416 -m <limit> : limit the total allocatable memory to <limit> megabytes across
417 all processes. This may cause some connection refusals or some slowdowns
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200418 depending on the amount of memory needed for normal operations. This is
Willy Tarreau70060452015-12-14 12:46:07 +0100419 mostly used to force the processes to work in a constrained resource usage
420 scenario. It is important to note that the memory is not shared between
421 processes, so in a multi-process scenario, this value is first divided by
422 global.nbproc before forking.
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200423
424 -n <limit> : limits the per-process connection limit to <limit>. This is
425 equivalent to the global section's keyword "maxconn". It has precedence
426 over this keyword. This may be used to quickly force lower limits to avoid
427 a service outage on systems where resource limits are too low.
428
429 -p <file> : write all processes' pids into <file> during startup. This is
430 equivalent to the "global" section's keyword "pidfile". The file is opened
431 before entering the chroot jail, and after doing the chdir() implied by
432 "-C". Each pid appears on its own line.
433
William Lallemand01e12942023-11-09 14:26:37 +0100434 -q : set "quiet" mode. This disables the output messages. It can be used in
435 combination with "-c" to just check if a configuration file is valid or not.
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200436
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +0100437 -S <bind>[,bind_options...]: in master-worker mode, bind a master CLI, which
438 allows the access to every processes, running or leaving ones.
439 For security reasons, it is recommended to bind the master CLI to a local
440 UNIX socket. The bind options are the same as the keyword "bind" in
441 the configuration file with words separated by commas instead of spaces.
442
443 Note that this socket can't be used to retrieve the listening sockets from
444 an old process during a seamless reload.
445
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200446 -sf <pid>* : send the "finish" signal (SIGUSR1) to older processes after boot
447 completion to ask them to finish what they are doing and to leave. <pid>
448 is a list of pids to signal (one per argument). The list ends on any
449 option starting with a "-". It is not a problem if the list of pids is
450 empty, so that it can be built on the fly based on the result of a command
Amaury Denoyellefb375572023-02-01 09:28:32 +0100451 like "pidof" or "pgrep".
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200452
453 -st <pid>* : send the "terminate" signal (SIGTERM) to older processes after
454 boot completion to terminate them immediately without finishing what they
455 were doing. <pid> is a list of pids to signal (one per argument). The list
456 is ends on any option starting with a "-". It is not a problem if the list
457 of pids is empty, so that it can be built on the fly based on the result of
458 a command like "pidof" or "pgrep".
459
460 -v : report the version and build date.
461
462 -vv : display the version, build options, libraries versions and usable
463 pollers. This output is systematically requested when filing a bug report.
464
Olivier Houchardd33fc3a2017-04-05 22:50:59 +0200465 -x <unix_socket> : connect to the specified socket and try to retrieve any
466 listening sockets from the old process, and use them instead of trying to
467 bind new ones. This is useful to avoid missing any new connection when
William Lallemandb6760952024-04-26 15:08:31 +0200468 reloading the configuration on Linux.
469
470 Without master-worker mode, the capability must be enable on the stats
471 socket using "expose-fd listeners" in your configuration.
472
473 In master-worker mode, it does not need "expose-fd listeners", the master
474 will use automatically this option upon a reload with the "sockpair@"
475 syntax, which allows the master to connect directly to a worker without using
476 any stats socket declared in the configuration. If you want to disable this,
477 you can pass -x /dev/null.
Olivier Houchardd33fc3a2017-04-05 22:50:59 +0200478
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -0400479A safe way to start HAProxy from an init file consists in forcing the daemon
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200480mode, storing existing pids to a pid file and using this pid file to notify
481older processes to finish before leaving :
482
483 haproxy -f /etc/haproxy.cfg \
484 -D -p /var/run/haproxy.pid -sf $(cat /var/run/haproxy.pid)
485
486When the configuration is split into a few specific files (eg: tcp vs http),
487it is recommended to use the "-f" option :
488
489 haproxy -f /etc/haproxy/global.cfg -f /etc/haproxy/stats.cfg \
490 -f /etc/haproxy/default-tcp.cfg -f /etc/haproxy/tcp.cfg \
491 -f /etc/haproxy/default-http.cfg -f /etc/haproxy/http.cfg \
492 -D -p /var/run/haproxy.pid -sf $(cat /var/run/haproxy.pid)
493
494When an unknown number of files is expected, such as customer-specific files,
495it is recommended to assign them a name starting with a fixed-size sequence
496number and to use "--" to load them, possibly after loading some defaults :
497
498 haproxy -f /etc/haproxy/global.cfg -f /etc/haproxy/stats.cfg \
499 -f /etc/haproxy/default-tcp.cfg -f /etc/haproxy/tcp.cfg \
500 -f /etc/haproxy/default-http.cfg -f /etc/haproxy/http.cfg \
501 -D -p /var/run/haproxy.pid -sf $(cat /var/run/haproxy.pid) \
502 -f /etc/haproxy/default-customers.cfg -- /etc/haproxy/customers/*
503
504Sometimes a failure to start may happen for whatever reason. Then it is
505important to verify if the version of HAProxy you are invoking is the expected
506version and if it supports the features you are expecting (eg: SSL, PCRE,
507compression, Lua, etc). This can be verified using "haproxy -vv". Some
508important information such as certain build options, the target system and
509the versions of the libraries being used are reported there. It is also what
510you will systematically be asked for when posting a bug report :
511
512 $ haproxy -vv
Willy Tarreau58000fe2021-05-09 06:25:16 +0200513 HAProxy version 1.6-dev7-a088d3-4 2015/10/08
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200514 Copyright 2000-2015 Willy Tarreau <willy@haproxy.org>
515
516 Build options :
517 TARGET = linux2628
518 CPU = generic
519 CC = gcc
520 CFLAGS = -pg -O0 -g -fno-strict-aliasing -Wdeclaration-after-statement \
521 -DBUFSIZE=8030 -DMAXREWRITE=1030 -DSO_MARK=36 -DTCP_REPAIR=19
522 OPTIONS = USE_ZLIB=1 USE_DLMALLOC=1 USE_OPENSSL=1 USE_LUA=1 USE_PCRE=1
523
524 Default settings :
525 maxconn = 2000, bufsize = 8030, maxrewrite = 1030, maxpollevents = 200
526
527 Encrypted password support via crypt(3): yes
528 Built with zlib version : 1.2.6
529 Compression algorithms supported : identity("identity"), deflate("deflate"), \
530 raw-deflate("deflate"), gzip("gzip")
531 Built with OpenSSL version : OpenSSL 1.0.1o 12 Jun 2015
532 Running on OpenSSL version : OpenSSL 1.0.1o 12 Jun 2015
533 OpenSSL library supports TLS extensions : yes
534 OpenSSL library supports SNI : yes
535 OpenSSL library supports prefer-server-ciphers : yes
536 Built with PCRE version : 8.12 2011-01-15
537 PCRE library supports JIT : no (USE_PCRE_JIT not set)
538 Built with Lua version : Lua 5.3.1
539 Built with transparent proxy support using: IP_TRANSPARENT IP_FREEBIND
540
541 Available polling systems :
542 epoll : pref=300, test result OK
543 poll : pref=200, test result OK
544 select : pref=150, test result OK
545 Total: 3 (3 usable), will use epoll.
546
547The relevant information that many non-developer users can verify here are :
548 - the version : 1.6-dev7-a088d3-4 above means the code is currently at commit
549 ID "a088d3" which is the 4th one after after official version "1.6-dev7".
550 Version 1.6-dev7 would show as "1.6-dev7-8c1ad7". What matters here is in
551 fact "1.6-dev7". This is the 7th development version of what will become
552 version 1.6 in the future. A development version not suitable for use in
553 production (unless you know exactly what you are doing). A stable version
554 will show as a 3-numbers version, such as "1.5.14-16f863", indicating the
555 14th level of fix on top of version 1.5. This is a production-ready version.
556
557 - the release date : 2015/10/08. It is represented in the universal
558 year/month/day format. Here this means August 8th, 2015. Given that stable
559 releases are issued every few months (1-2 months at the beginning, sometimes
560 6 months once the product becomes very stable), if you're seeing an old date
561 here, it means you're probably affected by a number of bugs or security
562 issues that have since been fixed and that it might be worth checking on the
563 official site.
564
565 - build options : they are relevant to people who build their packages
566 themselves, they can explain why things are not behaving as expected. For
567 example the development version above was built for Linux 2.6.28 or later,
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -0400568 targeting a generic CPU (no CPU-specific optimizations), and lacks any
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200569 code optimization (-O0) so it will perform poorly in terms of performance.
570
571 - libraries versions : zlib version is reported as found in the library
572 itself. In general zlib is considered a very stable product and upgrades
573 are almost never needed. OpenSSL reports two versions, the version used at
574 build time and the one being used, as found on the system. These ones may
575 differ by the last letter but never by the numbers. The build date is also
576 reported because most OpenSSL bugs are security issues and need to be taken
577 seriously, so this library absolutely needs to be kept up to date. Seeing a
578 4-months old version here is highly suspicious and indeed an update was
579 missed. PCRE provides very fast regular expressions and is highly
580 recommended. Certain of its extensions such as JIT are not present in all
581 versions and still young so some people prefer not to build with them,
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -0400582 which is why the build status is reported as well. Regarding the Lua
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200583 scripting language, HAProxy expects version 5.3 which is very young since
584 it was released a little time before HAProxy 1.6. It is important to check
585 on the Lua web site if some fixes are proposed for this branch.
586
587 - Available polling systems will affect the process's scalability when
588 dealing with more than about one thousand of concurrent connections. These
589 ones are only available when the correct system was indicated in the TARGET
590 variable during the build. The "epoll" mechanism is highly recommended on
591 Linux, and the kqueue mechanism is highly recommended on BSD. Lacking them
592 will result in poll() or even select() being used, causing a high CPU usage
593 when dealing with a lot of connections.
594
595
5964. Stopping and restarting HAProxy
597----------------------------------
598
599HAProxy supports a graceful and a hard stop. The hard stop is simple, when the
600SIGTERM signal is sent to the haproxy process, it immediately quits and all
601established connections are closed. The graceful stop is triggered when the
602SIGUSR1 signal is sent to the haproxy process. It consists in only unbinding
603from listening ports, but continue to process existing connections until they
604close. Once the last connection is closed, the process leaves.
605
606The hard stop method is used for the "stop" or "restart" actions of the service
607management script. The graceful stop is used for the "reload" action which
608tries to seamlessly reload a new configuration in a new process.
609
610Both of these signals may be sent by the new haproxy process itself during a
611reload or restart, so that they are sent at the latest possible moment and only
612if absolutely required. This is what is performed by the "-st" (hard) and "-sf"
613(graceful) options respectively.
614
William Lallemande202b1e2017-06-01 17:38:56 +0200615In master-worker mode, it is not needed to start a new haproxy process in
616order to reload the configuration. The master process reacts to the SIGUSR2
617signal by reexecuting itself with the -sf parameter followed by the PIDs of
618the workers. The master will then parse the configuration file and fork new
619workers.
620
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200621To understand better how these signals are used, it is important to understand
622the whole restart mechanism.
623
624First, an existing haproxy process is running. The administrator uses a system
Jackie Tapia749f74c2020-07-22 18:59:40 -0500625specific command such as "/etc/init.d/haproxy reload" to indicate they want to
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200626take the new configuration file into effect. What happens then is the following.
627First, the service script (/etc/init.d/haproxy or equivalent) will verify that
628the configuration file parses correctly using "haproxy -c". After that it will
629try to start haproxy with this configuration file, using "-st" or "-sf".
630
631Then HAProxy tries to bind to all listening ports. If some fatal errors happen
632(eg: address not present on the system, permission denied), the process quits
633with an error. If a socket binding fails because a port is already in use, then
634the process will first send a SIGTTOU signal to all the pids specified in the
635"-st" or "-sf" pid list. This is what is called the "pause" signal. It instructs
636all existing haproxy processes to temporarily stop listening to their ports so
637that the new process can try to bind again. During this time, the old process
638continues to process existing connections. If the binding still fails (because
639for example a port is shared with another daemon), then the new process sends a
640SIGTTIN signal to the old processes to instruct them to resume operations just
641as if nothing happened. The old processes will then restart listening to the
Jonathon Lacherc5b5e7b2021-08-04 00:29:05 -0500642ports and continue to accept connections. Note that this mechanism is system
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -0400643dependent and some operating systems may not support it in multi-process mode.
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200644
645If the new process manages to bind correctly to all ports, then it sends either
646the SIGTERM (hard stop in case of "-st") or the SIGUSR1 (graceful stop in case
647of "-sf") to all processes to notify them that it is now in charge of operations
648and that the old processes will have to leave, either immediately or once they
649have finished their job.
650
651It is important to note that during this timeframe, there are two small windows
652of a few milliseconds each where it is possible that a few connection failures
653will be noticed during high loads. Typically observed failure rates are around
6541 failure during a reload operation every 10000 new connections per second,
655which means that a heavily loaded site running at 30000 new connections per
656second may see about 3 failed connection upon every reload. The two situations
657where this happens are :
658
659 - if the new process fails to bind due to the presence of the old process,
660 it will first have to go through the SIGTTOU+SIGTTIN sequence, which
661 typically lasts about one millisecond for a few tens of frontends, and
662 during which some ports will not be bound to the old process and not yet
663 bound to the new one. HAProxy works around this on systems that support the
664 SO_REUSEPORT socket options, as it allows the new process to bind without
665 first asking the old one to unbind. Most BSD systems have been supporting
666 this almost forever. Linux has been supporting this in version 2.0 and
667 dropped it around 2.2, but some patches were floating around by then. It
668 was reintroduced in kernel 3.9, so if you are observing a connection
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -0400669 failure rate above the one mentioned above, please ensure that your kernel
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200670 is 3.9 or newer, or that relevant patches were backported to your kernel
671 (less likely).
672
673 - when the old processes close the listening ports, the kernel may not always
674 redistribute any pending connection that was remaining in the socket's
675 backlog. Under high loads, a SYN packet may happen just before the socket
676 is closed, and will lead to an RST packet being sent to the client. In some
677 critical environments where even one drop is not acceptable, these ones are
678 sometimes dealt with using firewall rules to block SYN packets during the
679 reload, forcing the client to retransmit. This is totally system-dependent,
680 as some systems might be able to visit other listening queues and avoid
681 this RST. A second case concerns the ACK from the client on a local socket
682 that was in SYN_RECV state just before the close. This ACK will lead to an
683 RST packet while the haproxy process is still not aware of it. This one is
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -0400684 harder to get rid of, though the firewall filtering rules mentioned above
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200685 will work well if applied one second or so before restarting the process.
686
687For the vast majority of users, such drops will never ever happen since they
688don't have enough load to trigger the race conditions. And for most high traffic
689users, the failure rate is still fairly within the noise margin provided that at
690least SO_REUSEPORT is properly supported on their systems.
691
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +02006925. File-descriptor limitations
693------------------------------
694
695In order to ensure that all incoming connections will successfully be served,
696HAProxy computes at load time the total number of file descriptors that will be
697needed during the process's life. A regular Unix process is generally granted
6981024 file descriptors by default, and a privileged process can raise this limit
699itself. This is one reason for starting HAProxy as root and letting it adjust
700the limit. The default limit of 1024 file descriptors roughly allow about 500
701concurrent connections to be processed. The computation is based on the global
702maxconn parameter which limits the total number of connections per process, the
703number of listeners, the number of servers which have a health check enabled,
704the agent checks, the peers, the loggers and possibly a few other technical
705requirements. A simple rough estimate of this number consists in simply
706doubling the maxconn value and adding a few tens to get the approximate number
707of file descriptors needed.
708
709Originally HAProxy did not know how to compute this value, and it was necessary
710to pass the value using the "ulimit-n" setting in the global section. This
711explains why even today a lot of configurations are seen with this setting
712present. Unfortunately it was often miscalculated resulting in connection
713failures when approaching maxconn instead of throttling incoming connection
714while waiting for the needed resources. For this reason it is important to
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -0400715remove any vestigial "ulimit-n" setting that can remain from very old versions.
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200716
717Raising the number of file descriptors to accept even moderate loads is
718mandatory but comes with some OS-specific adjustments. First, the select()
719polling system is limited to 1024 file descriptors. In fact on Linux it used
720to be capable of handling more but since certain OS ship with excessively
721restrictive SELinux policies forbidding the use of select() with more than
7221024 file descriptors, HAProxy now refuses to start in this case in order to
723avoid any issue at run time. On all supported operating systems, poll() is
724available and will not suffer from this limitation. It is automatically picked
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -0400725so there is nothing to do to get a working configuration. But poll's becomes
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200726very slow when the number of file descriptors increases. While HAProxy does its
727best to limit this performance impact (eg: via the use of the internal file
728descriptor cache and batched processing), a good rule of thumb is that using
729poll() with more than a thousand concurrent connections will use a lot of CPU.
730
731For Linux systems base on kernels 2.6 and above, the epoll() system call will
732be used. It's a much more scalable mechanism relying on callbacks in the kernel
733that guarantee a constant wake up time regardless of the number of registered
734monitored file descriptors. It is automatically used where detected, provided
735that HAProxy had been built for one of the Linux flavors. Its presence and
736support can be verified using "haproxy -vv".
737
738For BSD systems which support it, kqueue() is available as an alternative. It
739is much faster than poll() and even slightly faster than epoll() thanks to its
740batched handling of changes. At least FreeBSD and OpenBSD support it. Just like
741with Linux's epoll(), its support and availability are reported in the output
742of "haproxy -vv".
743
744Having a good poller is one thing, but it is mandatory that the process can
745reach the limits. When HAProxy starts, it immediately sets the new process's
746file descriptor limits and verifies if it succeeds. In case of failure, it
747reports it before forking so that the administrator can see the problem. As
748long as the process is started by as root, there should be no reason for this
749setting to fail. However, it can fail if the process is started by an
750unprivileged user. If there is a compelling reason for *not* starting haproxy
751as root (eg: started by end users, or by a per-application account), then the
752file descriptor limit can be raised by the system administrator for this
753specific user. The effectiveness of the setting can be verified by issuing
754"ulimit -n" from the user's command line. It should reflect the new limit.
755
756Warning: when an unprivileged user's limits are changed in this user's account,
757it is fairly common that these values are only considered when the user logs in
758and not at all in some scripts run at system boot time nor in crontabs. This is
759totally dependent on the operating system, keep in mind to check "ulimit -n"
760before starting haproxy when running this way. The general advice is never to
761start haproxy as an unprivileged user for production purposes. Another good
762reason is that it prevents haproxy from enabling some security protections.
763
764Once it is certain that the system will allow the haproxy process to use the
765requested number of file descriptors, two new system-specific limits may be
766encountered. The first one is the system-wide file descriptor limit, which is
767the total number of file descriptors opened on the system, covering all
768processes. When this limit is reached, accept() or socket() will typically
769return ENFILE. The second one is the per-process hard limit on the number of
770file descriptors, it prevents setrlimit() from being set higher. Both are very
771dependent on the operating system. On Linux, the system limit is set at boot
772based on the amount of memory. It can be changed with the "fs.file-max" sysctl.
773And the per-process hard limit is set to 1048576 by default, but it can be
774changed using the "fs.nr_open" sysctl.
775
776File descriptor limitations may be observed on a running process when they are
777set too low. The strace utility will report that accept() and socket() return
778"-1 EMFILE" when the process's limits have been reached. In this case, simply
779raising the "ulimit-n" value (or removing it) will solve the problem. If these
780system calls return "-1 ENFILE" then it means that the kernel's limits have
781been reached and that something must be done on a system-wide parameter. These
782trouble must absolutely be addressed, as they result in high CPU usage (when
783accept() fails) and failed connections that are generally visible to the user.
784One solution also consists in lowering the global maxconn value to enforce
785serialization, and possibly to disable HTTP keep-alive to force connections
786to be released and reused faster.
787
788
7896. Memory management
790--------------------
791
792HAProxy uses a simple and fast pool-based memory management. Since it relies on
793a small number of different object types, it's much more efficient to pick new
794objects from a pool which already contains objects of the appropriate size than
795to call malloc() for each different size. The pools are organized as a stack or
796LIFO, so that newly allocated objects are taken from recently released objects
797still hot in the CPU caches. Pools of similar sizes are merged together, in
798order to limit memory fragmentation.
799
800By default, since the focus is set on performance, each released object is put
801back into the pool it came from, and allocated objects are never freed since
802they are expected to be reused very soon.
803
804On the CLI, it is possible to check how memory is being used in pools thanks to
805the "show pools" command :
806
807 > show pools
808 Dumping pools usage. Use SIGQUIT to flush them.
Willy Tarreau0a93b642018-10-16 07:58:39 +0200809 - Pool cache_st (16 bytes) : 0 allocated (0 bytes), 0 used, 0 failures, 1 users, @0x9ccc40=03 [SHARED]
810 - Pool pipe (32 bytes) : 5 allocated (160 bytes), 5 used, 0 failures, 2 users, @0x9ccac0=00 [SHARED]
811 - Pool comp_state (48 bytes) : 3 allocated (144 bytes), 3 used, 0 failures, 5 users, @0x9cccc0=04 [SHARED]
812 - Pool filter (64 bytes) : 0 allocated (0 bytes), 0 used, 0 failures, 3 users, @0x9ccbc0=02 [SHARED]
813 - Pool vars (80 bytes) : 0 allocated (0 bytes), 0 used, 0 failures, 2 users, @0x9ccb40=01 [SHARED]
814 - Pool uniqueid (128 bytes) : 0 allocated (0 bytes), 0 used, 0 failures, 2 users, @0x9cd240=15 [SHARED]
815 - Pool task (144 bytes) : 55 allocated (7920 bytes), 55 used, 0 failures, 1 users, @0x9cd040=11 [SHARED]
816 - Pool session (160 bytes) : 1 allocated (160 bytes), 1 used, 0 failures, 1 users, @0x9cd140=13 [SHARED]
817 - Pool h2s (208 bytes) : 0 allocated (0 bytes), 0 used, 0 failures, 2 users, @0x9ccec0=08 [SHARED]
818 - Pool h2c (288 bytes) : 0 allocated (0 bytes), 0 used, 0 failures, 1 users, @0x9cce40=07 [SHARED]
819 - Pool spoe_ctx (304 bytes) : 0 allocated (0 bytes), 0 used, 0 failures, 2 users, @0x9ccf40=09 [SHARED]
820 - Pool connection (400 bytes) : 2 allocated (800 bytes), 2 used, 0 failures, 1 users, @0x9cd1c0=14 [SHARED]
821 - Pool hdr_idx (416 bytes) : 0 allocated (0 bytes), 0 used, 0 failures, 1 users, @0x9cd340=17 [SHARED]
822 - Pool dns_resolut (480 bytes) : 0 allocated (0 bytes), 0 used, 0 failures, 1 users, @0x9ccdc0=06 [SHARED]
823 - Pool dns_answer_ (576 bytes) : 0 allocated (0 bytes), 0 used, 0 failures, 1 users, @0x9ccd40=05 [SHARED]
824 - Pool stream (960 bytes) : 1 allocated (960 bytes), 1 used, 0 failures, 1 users, @0x9cd0c0=12 [SHARED]
825 - Pool requri (1024 bytes) : 0 allocated (0 bytes), 0 used, 0 failures, 1 users, @0x9cd2c0=16 [SHARED]
826 - Pool buffer (8030 bytes) : 3 allocated (24090 bytes), 2 used, 0 failures, 1 users, @0x9cd3c0=18 [SHARED]
827 - Pool trash (8062 bytes) : 1 allocated (8062 bytes), 1 used, 0 failures, 1 users, @0x9cd440=19
828 Total: 19 pools, 42296 bytes allocated, 34266 used.
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200829
830The pool name is only indicative, it's the name of the first object type using
831this pool. The size in parenthesis is the object size for objects in this pool.
832Object sizes are always rounded up to the closest multiple of 16 bytes. The
833number of objects currently allocated and the equivalent number of bytes is
834reported so that it is easy to know which pool is responsible for the highest
835memory usage. The number of objects currently in use is reported as well in the
836"used" field. The difference between "allocated" and "used" corresponds to the
Willy Tarreau0a93b642018-10-16 07:58:39 +0200837objects that have been freed and are available for immediate use. The address
838at the end of the line is the pool's address, and the following number is the
839pool index when it exists, or is reported as -1 if no index was assigned.
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200840
841It is possible to limit the amount of memory allocated per process using the
842"-m" command line option, followed by a number of megabytes. It covers all of
843the process's addressable space, so that includes memory used by some libraries
844as well as the stack, but it is a reliable limit when building a resource
845constrained system. It works the same way as "ulimit -v" on systems which have
846it, or "ulimit -d" for the other ones.
847
848If a memory allocation fails due to the memory limit being reached or because
849the system doesn't have any enough memory, then haproxy will first start to
850free all available objects from all pools before attempting to allocate memory
851again. This mechanism of releasing unused memory can be triggered by sending
852the signal SIGQUIT to the haproxy process. When doing so, the pools state prior
853to the flush will also be reported to stderr when the process runs in
854foreground.
855
856During a reload operation, the process switched to the graceful stop state also
857automatically performs some flushes after releasing any connection so that all
858possible memory is released to save it for the new process.
859
860
8617. CPU usage
862------------
863
864HAProxy normally spends most of its time in the system and a smaller part in
865userland. A finely tuned 3.5 GHz CPU can sustain a rate about 80000 end-to-end
866connection setups and closes per second at 100% CPU on a single core. When one
867core is saturated, typical figures are :
868 - 95% system, 5% user for long TCP connections or large HTTP objects
869 - 85% system and 15% user for short TCP connections or small HTTP objects in
870 close mode
871 - 70% system and 30% user for small HTTP objects in keep-alive mode
872
873The amount of rules processing and regular expressions will increase the user
874land part. The presence of firewall rules, connection tracking, complex routing
875tables in the system will instead increase the system part.
876
877On most systems, the CPU time observed during network transfers can be cut in 4
878parts :
879 - the interrupt part, which concerns all the processing performed upon I/O
880 receipt, before the target process is even known. Typically Rx packets are
881 accounted for in interrupt. On some systems such as Linux where interrupt
882 processing may be deferred to a dedicated thread, it can appear as softirq,
883 and the thread is called ksoftirqd/0 (for CPU 0). The CPU taking care of
884 this load is generally defined by the hardware settings, though in the case
885 of softirq it is often possible to remap the processing to another CPU.
886 This interrupt part will often be perceived as parasitic since it's not
887 associated with any process, but it actually is some processing being done
888 to prepare the work for the process.
889
890 - the system part, which concerns all the processing done using kernel code
891 called from userland. System calls are accounted as system for example. All
892 synchronously delivered Tx packets will be accounted for as system time. If
893 some packets have to be deferred due to queues filling up, they may then be
894 processed in interrupt context later (eg: upon receipt of an ACK opening a
895 TCP window).
896
897 - the user part, which exclusively runs application code in userland. HAProxy
898 runs exclusively in this part, though it makes heavy use of system calls.
899 Rules processing, regular expressions, compression, encryption all add to
900 the user portion of CPU consumption.
901
902 - the idle part, which is what the CPU does when there is nothing to do. For
903 example HAProxy waits for an incoming connection, or waits for some data to
904 leave, meaning the system is waiting for an ACK from the client to push
905 these data.
906
907In practice regarding HAProxy's activity, it is in general reasonably accurate
908(but totally inexact) to consider that interrupt/softirq are caused by Rx
909processing in kernel drivers, that user-land is caused by layer 7 processing
910in HAProxy, and that system time is caused by network processing on the Tx
911path.
912
913Since HAProxy runs around an event loop, it waits for new events using poll()
914(or any alternative) and processes all these events as fast as possible before
915going back to poll() waiting for new events. It measures the time spent waiting
916in poll() compared to the time spent doing processing events. The ratio of
917polling time vs total time is called the "idle" time, it's the amount of time
918spent waiting for something to happen. This ratio is reported in the stats page
919on the "idle" line, or "Idle_pct" on the CLI. When it's close to 100%, it means
920the load is extremely low. When it's close to 0%, it means that there is
921constantly some activity. While it cannot be very accurate on an overloaded
922system due to other processes possibly preempting the CPU from the haproxy
923process, it still provides a good estimate about how HAProxy considers it is
924working : if the load is low and the idle ratio is low as well, it may indicate
925that HAProxy has a lot of work to do, possibly due to very expensive rules that
926have to be processed. Conversely, if HAProxy indicates the idle is close to
927100% while things are slow, it means that it cannot do anything to speed things
928up because it is already waiting for incoming data to process. In the example
929below, haproxy is completely idle :
930
931 $ echo "show info" | socat - /var/run/haproxy.sock | grep ^Idle
932 Idle_pct: 100
933
934When the idle ratio starts to become very low, it is important to tune the
935system and place processes and interrupts correctly to save the most possible
936CPU resources for all tasks. If a firewall is present, it may be worth trying
937to disable it or to tune it to ensure it is not responsible for a large part
938of the performance limitation. It's worth noting that unloading a stateful
939firewall generally reduces both the amount of interrupt/softirq and of system
940usage since such firewalls act both on the Rx and the Tx paths. On Linux,
941unloading the nf_conntrack and ip_conntrack modules will show whether there is
942anything to gain. If so, then the module runs with default settings and you'll
943have to figure how to tune it for better performance. In general this consists
944in considerably increasing the hash table size. On FreeBSD, "pfctl -d" will
945disable the "pf" firewall and its stateful engine at the same time.
946
947If it is observed that a lot of time is spent in interrupt/softirq, it is
948important to ensure that they don't run on the same CPU. Most systems tend to
949pin the tasks on the CPU where they receive the network traffic because for
950certain workloads it improves things. But with heavily network-bound workloads
951it is the opposite as the haproxy process will have to fight against its kernel
952counterpart. Pinning haproxy to one CPU core and the interrupts to another one,
953all sharing the same L3 cache tends to sensibly increase network performance
954because in practice the amount of work for haproxy and the network stack are
955quite close, so they can almost fill an entire CPU each. On Linux this is done
956using taskset (for haproxy) or using cpu-map (from the haproxy config), and the
957interrupts are assigned under /proc/irq. Many network interfaces support
958multiple queues and multiple interrupts. In general it helps to spread them
959across a small number of CPU cores provided they all share the same L3 cache.
960Please always stop irq_balance which always does the worst possible thing on
961such workloads.
962
963For CPU-bound workloads consisting in a lot of SSL traffic or a lot of
964compression, it may be worth using multiple processes dedicated to certain
965tasks, though there is no universal rule here and experimentation will have to
966be performed.
967
968In order to increase the CPU capacity, it is possible to make HAProxy run as
969several processes, using the "nbproc" directive in the global section. There
970are some limitations though :
971 - health checks are run per process, so the target servers will get as many
972 checks as there are running processes ;
973 - maxconn values and queues are per-process so the correct value must be set
974 to avoid overloading the servers ;
975 - outgoing connections should avoid using port ranges to avoid conflicts
976 - stick-tables are per process and are not shared between processes ;
977 - each peers section may only run on a single process at a time ;
978 - the CLI operations will only act on a single process at a time.
979
980With this in mind, it appears that the easiest setup often consists in having
981one first layer running on multiple processes and in charge for the heavy
982processing, passing the traffic to a second layer running in a single process.
983This mechanism is suited to SSL and compression which are the two CPU-heavy
984features. Instances can easily be chained over UNIX sockets (which are cheaper
fengpeiyuancc123c62016-01-15 16:40:53 +0800985than TCP sockets and which do not waste ports), and the proxy protocol which is
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200986useful to pass client information to the next stage. When doing so, it is
987generally a good idea to bind all the single-process tasks to process number 1
988and extra tasks to next processes, as this will make it easier to generate
989similar configurations for different machines.
990
991On Linux versions 3.9 and above, running HAProxy in multi-process mode is much
992more efficient when each process uses a distinct listening socket on the same
993IP:port ; this will make the kernel evenly distribute the load across all
994processes instead of waking them all up. Please check the "process" option of
995the "bind" keyword lines in the configuration manual for more information.
996
997
9988. Logging
999----------
1000
1001For logging, HAProxy always relies on a syslog server since it does not perform
1002any file-system access. The standard way of using it is to send logs over UDP
1003to the log server (by default on port 514). Very commonly this is configured to
1004127.0.0.1 where the local syslog daemon is running, but it's also used over the
1005network to log to a central server. The central server provides additional
1006benefits especially in active-active scenarios where it is desirable to keep
1007the logs merged in arrival order. HAProxy may also make use of a UNIX socket to
1008send its logs to the local syslog daemon, but it is not recommended at all,
1009because if the syslog server is restarted while haproxy runs, the socket will
1010be replaced and new logs will be lost. Since HAProxy will be isolated inside a
1011chroot jail, it will not have the ability to reconnect to the new socket. It
1012has also been observed in field that the log buffers in use on UNIX sockets are
1013very small and lead to lost messages even at very light loads. But this can be
1014fine for testing however.
1015
1016It is recommended to add the following directive to the "global" section to
1017make HAProxy log to the local daemon using facility "local0" :
1018
1019 log 127.0.0.1:514 local0
1020
1021and then to add the following one to each "defaults" section or to each frontend
1022and backend section :
1023
1024 log global
1025
1026This way, all logs will be centralized through the global definition of where
1027the log server is.
1028
1029Some syslog daemons do not listen to UDP traffic by default, so depending on
1030the daemon being used, the syntax to enable this will vary :
1031
1032 - on sysklogd, you need to pass argument "-r" on the daemon's command line
1033 so that it listens to a UDP socket for "remote" logs ; note that there is
1034 no way to limit it to address 127.0.0.1 so it will also receive logs from
1035 remote systems ;
1036
1037 - on rsyslogd, the following lines must be added to the configuration file :
1038
1039 $ModLoad imudp
1040 $UDPServerAddress *
1041 $UDPServerRun 514
1042
1043 - on syslog-ng, a new source can be created the following way, it then needs
1044 to be added as a valid source in one of the "log" directives :
1045
1046 source s_udp {
1047 udp(ip(127.0.0.1) port(514));
1048 };
1049
1050Please consult your syslog daemon's manual for more information. If no logs are
1051seen in the system's log files, please consider the following tests :
1052
1053 - restart haproxy. Each frontend and backend logs one line indicating it's
1054 starting. If these logs are received, it means logs are working.
1055
1056 - run "strace -tt -s100 -etrace=sendmsg -p <haproxy's pid>" and perform some
1057 activity that you expect to be logged. You should see the log messages
1058 being sent using sendmsg() there. If they don't appear, restart using
1059 strace on top of haproxy. If you still see no logs, it definitely means
1060 that something is wrong in your configuration.
1061
1062 - run tcpdump to watch for port 514, for example on the loopback interface if
1063 the traffic is being sent locally : "tcpdump -As0 -ni lo port 514". If the
1064 packets are seen there, it's the proof they're sent then the syslogd daemon
1065 needs to be troubleshooted.
1066
1067While traffic logs are sent from the frontends (where the incoming connections
1068are accepted), backends also need to be able to send logs in order to report a
1069server state change consecutive to a health check. Please consult HAProxy's
1070configuration manual for more information regarding all possible log settings.
1071
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -04001072It is convenient to chose a facility that is not used by other daemons. HAProxy
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +02001073examples often suggest "local0" for traffic logs and "local1" for admin logs
1074because they're never seen in field. A single facility would be enough as well.
1075Having separate logs is convenient for log analysis, but it's also important to
1076remember that logs may sometimes convey confidential information, and as such
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -04001077they must not be mixed with other logs that may accidentally be handed out to
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +02001078unauthorized people.
1079
1080For in-field troubleshooting without impacting the server's capacity too much,
1081it is recommended to make use of the "halog" utility provided with HAProxy.
1082This is sort of a grep-like utility designed to process HAProxy log files at
1083a very fast data rate. Typical figures range between 1 and 2 GB of logs per
1084second. It is capable of extracting only certain logs (eg: search for some
1085classes of HTTP status codes, connection termination status, search by response
1086time ranges, look for errors only), count lines, limit the output to a number
1087of lines, and perform some more advanced statistics such as sorting servers
1088by response time or error counts, sorting URLs by time or count, sorting client
1089addresses by access count, and so on. It is pretty convenient to quickly spot
1090anomalies such as a bot looping on the site, and block them.
1091
1092
10939. Statistics and monitoring
1094----------------------------
1095
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001096It is possible to query HAProxy about its status. The most commonly used
1097mechanism is the HTTP statistics page. This page also exposes an alternative
1098CSV output format for monitoring tools. The same format is provided on the
1099Unix socket.
1100
Amaury Denoyelle072f97e2020-10-05 11:49:37 +02001101Statistics are regroup in categories labelled as domains, corresponding to the
Ilya Shipitsin2272d8a2020-12-21 01:22:40 +05001102multiple components of HAProxy. There are two domains available: proxy and dns.
Amaury Denoyellefbd0bc92020-10-05 11:49:46 +02001103If not specified, the proxy domain is selected. Note that only the proxy
1104statistics are printed on the HTTP page.
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001105
11069.1. CSV format
1107---------------
1108
1109The statistics may be consulted either from the unix socket or from the HTTP
1110page. Both means provide a CSV format whose fields follow. The first line
1111begins with a sharp ('#') and has one word per comma-delimited field which
1112represents the title of the column. All other lines starting at the second one
1113use a classical CSV format using a comma as the delimiter, and the double quote
1114('"') as an optional text delimiter, but only if the enclosed text is ambiguous
1115(if it contains a quote or a comma). The double-quote character ('"') in the
1116text is doubled ('""'), which is the format that most tools recognize. Please
1117do not insert any column before these ones in order not to break tools which
1118use hard-coded column positions.
1119
Amaury Denoyelle50660a82020-10-05 11:49:39 +02001120For proxy statistics, after each field name, the types which may have a value
1121for that field are specified in brackets. The types are L (Listeners), F
1122(Frontends), B (Backends), and S (Servers). There is a fixed set of static
1123fields that are always available in the same order. A column containing the
1124character '-' delimits the end of the static fields, after which presence or
1125order of the fields are not guaranteed.
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001126
Amaury Denoyelle50660a82020-10-05 11:49:39 +02001127Here is the list of static fields using the proxy statistics domain:
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001128 0. pxname [LFBS]: proxy name
1129 1. svname [LFBS]: service name (FRONTEND for frontend, BACKEND for backend,
1130 any name for server/listener)
1131 2. qcur [..BS]: current queued requests. For the backend this reports the
1132 number queued without a server assigned.
1133 3. qmax [..BS]: max value of qcur
1134 4. scur [LFBS]: current sessions
1135 5. smax [LFBS]: max sessions
1136 6. slim [LFBS]: configured session limit
Willy Tarreauc73810f2016-01-11 13:52:04 +01001137 7. stot [LFBS]: cumulative number of sessions
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001138 8. bin [LFBS]: bytes in
1139 9. bout [LFBS]: bytes out
1140 10. dreq [LFB.]: requests denied because of security concerns.
1141 - For tcp this is because of a matched tcp-request content rule.
1142 - For http this is because of a matched http-request or tarpit rule.
1143 11. dresp [LFBS]: responses denied because of security concerns.
1144 - For http this is because of a matched http-request rule, or
1145 "option checkcache".
1146 12. ereq [LF..]: request errors. Some of the possible causes are:
1147 - early termination from the client, before the request has been sent.
1148 - read error from the client
1149 - client timeout
1150 - client closed connection
1151 - various bad requests from the client.
1152 - request was tarpitted.
1153 13. econ [..BS]: number of requests that encountered an error trying to
1154 connect to a backend server. The backend stat is the sum of the stat
1155 for all servers of that backend, plus any connection errors not
1156 associated with a particular server (such as the backend having no
1157 active servers).
1158 14. eresp [..BS]: response errors. srv_abrt will be counted here also.
1159 Some other errors are:
1160 - write error on the client socket (won't be counted for the server stat)
1161 - failure applying filters to the response.
1162 15. wretr [..BS]: number of times a connection to a server was retried.
1163 16. wredis [..BS]: number of times a request was redispatched to another
1164 server. The server value counts the number of times that server was
1165 switched away from.
Willy Tarreaub96dd282016-11-09 14:45:51 +01001166 17. status [LFBS]: status (UP/DOWN/NOLB/MAINT/MAINT(via)/MAINT(resolution)...)
Willy Tarreaubd715102020-10-23 22:44:30 +02001167 18. weight [..BS]: total effective weight (backend), effective weight (server)
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001168 19. act [..BS]: number of active servers (backend), server is active (server)
1169 20. bck [..BS]: number of backup servers (backend), server is backup (server)
1170 21. chkfail [...S]: number of failed checks. (Only counts checks failed when
1171 the server is up.)
1172 22. chkdown [..BS]: number of UP->DOWN transitions. The backend counter counts
1173 transitions to the whole backend being down, rather than the sum of the
1174 counters for each server.
1175 23. lastchg [..BS]: number of seconds since the last UP<->DOWN transition
1176 24. downtime [..BS]: total downtime (in seconds). The value for the backend
1177 is the downtime for the whole backend, not the sum of the server downtime.
1178 25. qlimit [...S]: configured maxqueue for the server, or nothing in the
1179 value is 0 (default, meaning no limit)
1180 26. pid [LFBS]: process id (0 for first instance, 1 for second, ...)
1181 27. iid [LFBS]: unique proxy id
1182 28. sid [L..S]: server id (unique inside a proxy)
1183 29. throttle [...S]: current throttle percentage for the server, when
1184 slowstart is active, or no value if not in slowstart.
1185 30. lbtot [..BS]: total number of times a server was selected, either for new
1186 sessions, or when re-dispatching. The server counter is the number
1187 of times that server was selected.
1188 31. tracked [...S]: id of proxy/server if tracking is enabled.
1189 32. type [LFBS]: (0=frontend, 1=backend, 2=server, 3=socket/listener)
1190 33. rate [.FBS]: number of sessions per second over last elapsed second
1191 34. rate_lim [.F..]: configured limit on new sessions per second
1192 35. rate_max [.FBS]: max number of new sessions per second
1193 36. check_status [...S]: status of last health check, one of:
1194 UNK -> unknown
1195 INI -> initializing
1196 SOCKERR -> socket error
1197 L4OK -> check passed on layer 4, no upper layers testing enabled
1198 L4TOUT -> layer 1-4 timeout
1199 L4CON -> layer 1-4 connection problem, for example
1200 "Connection refused" (tcp rst) or "No route to host" (icmp)
1201 L6OK -> check passed on layer 6
1202 L6TOUT -> layer 6 (SSL) timeout
1203 L6RSP -> layer 6 invalid response - protocol error
1204 L7OK -> check passed on layer 7
1205 L7OKC -> check conditionally passed on layer 7, for example 404 with
1206 disable-on-404
1207 L7TOUT -> layer 7 (HTTP/SMTP) timeout
1208 L7RSP -> layer 7 invalid response - protocol error
1209 L7STS -> layer 7 response error, for example HTTP 5xx
Daniel Schnellerb6c8b0d2017-09-01 19:13:55 +02001210 Notice: If a check is currently running, the last known status will be
1211 reported, prefixed with "* ". e. g. "* L7OK".
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001212 37. check_code [...S]: layer5-7 code, if available
1213 38. check_duration [...S]: time in ms took to finish last health check
1214 39. hrsp_1xx [.FBS]: http responses with 1xx code
1215 40. hrsp_2xx [.FBS]: http responses with 2xx code
1216 41. hrsp_3xx [.FBS]: http responses with 3xx code
1217 42. hrsp_4xx [.FBS]: http responses with 4xx code
1218 43. hrsp_5xx [.FBS]: http responses with 5xx code
1219 44. hrsp_other [.FBS]: http responses with other codes (protocol error)
1220 45. hanafail [...S]: failed health checks details
1221 46. req_rate [.F..]: HTTP requests per second over last elapsed second
1222 47. req_rate_max [.F..]: max number of HTTP requests per second observed
Willy Tarreaufb981bd2016-12-12 14:31:46 +01001223 48. req_tot [.FB.]: total number of HTTP requests received
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001224 49. cli_abrt [..BS]: number of data transfers aborted by the client
1225 50. srv_abrt [..BS]: number of data transfers aborted by the server
1226 (inc. in eresp)
1227 51. comp_in [.FB.]: number of HTTP response bytes fed to the compressor
1228 52. comp_out [.FB.]: number of HTTP response bytes emitted by the compressor
1229 53. comp_byp [.FB.]: number of bytes that bypassed the HTTP compressor
1230 (CPU/BW limit)
1231 54. comp_rsp [.FB.]: number of HTTP responses that were compressed
1232 55. lastsess [..BS]: number of seconds since last session assigned to
1233 server/backend
1234 56. last_chk [...S]: last health check contents or textual error
1235 57. last_agt [...S]: last agent check contents or textual error
1236 58. qtime [..BS]: the average queue time in ms over the 1024 last requests
1237 59. ctime [..BS]: the average connect time in ms over the 1024 last requests
1238 60. rtime [..BS]: the average response time in ms over the 1024 last requests
1239 (0 for TCP)
1240 61. ttime [..BS]: the average total session time in ms over the 1024 last
1241 requests
Willy Tarreau7f618842016-01-08 11:40:03 +01001242 62. agent_status [...S]: status of last agent check, one of:
1243 UNK -> unknown
1244 INI -> initializing
1245 SOCKERR -> socket error
1246 L4OK -> check passed on layer 4, no upper layers testing enabled
1247 L4TOUT -> layer 1-4 timeout
1248 L4CON -> layer 1-4 connection problem, for example
1249 "Connection refused" (tcp rst) or "No route to host" (icmp)
1250 L7OK -> agent reported "up"
1251 L7STS -> agent reported "fail", "stop", or "down"
1252 63. agent_code [...S]: numeric code reported by agent if any (unused for now)
1253 64. agent_duration [...S]: time in ms taken to finish last check
Willy Tarreaudd7354b2016-01-08 13:47:26 +01001254 65. check_desc [...S]: short human-readable description of check_status
1255 66. agent_desc [...S]: short human-readable description of agent_status
Willy Tarreau3141f592016-01-08 14:25:28 +01001256 67. check_rise [...S]: server's "rise" parameter used by checks
1257 68. check_fall [...S]: server's "fall" parameter used by checks
1258 69. check_health [...S]: server's health check value between 0 and rise+fall-1
1259 70. agent_rise [...S]: agent's "rise" parameter, normally 1
1260 71. agent_fall [...S]: agent's "fall" parameter, normally 1
1261 72. agent_health [...S]: agent's health parameter, between 0 and rise+fall-1
Willy Tarreaua6f5a732016-01-08 16:59:56 +01001262 73. addr [L..S]: address:port or "unix". IPv6 has brackets around the address.
Willy Tarreaue4847c62016-01-08 15:43:54 +01001263 74: cookie [..BS]: server's cookie value or backend's cookie name
Willy Tarreauf8211df2016-01-11 14:09:38 +01001264 75: mode [LFBS]: proxy mode (tcp, http, health, unknown)
Willy Tarreauf1516d92016-01-11 14:48:36 +01001265 76: algo [..B.]: load balancing algorithm
Willy Tarreauc73810f2016-01-11 13:52:04 +01001266 77: conn_rate [.F..]: number of connections over the last elapsed second
1267 78: conn_rate_max [.F..]: highest known conn_rate
1268 79: conn_tot [.F..]: cumulative number of connections
Willy Tarreau5b9bdff2016-01-11 14:40:47 +01001269 80: intercepted [.FB.]: cum. number of intercepted requests (monitor, stats)
Willy Tarreau8a90b8e2016-10-21 18:15:32 +02001270 81: dcon [LF..]: requests denied by "tcp-request connection" rules
Willy Tarreaua5bc36b2016-10-21 18:16:27 +02001271 82: dses [LF..]: requests denied by "tcp-request session" rules
Willy Tarreauea96a822018-05-28 15:15:43 +02001272 83: wrew [LFBS]: cumulative number of failed header rewriting warnings
Jérôme Magnin708eb882019-07-17 09:24:46 +02001273 84: connect [..BS]: cumulative number of connection establishment attempts
1274 85: reuse [..BS]: cumulative number of connection reuses
Willy Tarreau72974292019-11-08 07:29:34 +01001275 86: cache_lookups [.FB.]: cumulative number of cache lookups
Jérôme Magnin34ebb5c2019-07-17 14:04:40 +02001276 87: cache_hits [.FB.]: cumulative number of cache hits
Christopher Faulet2ac25742019-11-08 15:27:27 +01001277 88: srv_icur [...S]: current number of idle connections available for reuse
1278 89: src_ilim [...S]: limit on the number of available idle connections
1279 90. qtime_max [..BS]: the maximum observed queue time in ms
1280 91. ctime_max [..BS]: the maximum observed connect time in ms
1281 92. rtime_max [..BS]: the maximum observed response time in ms (0 for TCP)
1282 93. ttime_max [..BS]: the maximum observed total session time in ms
Christopher Faulet0159ee42019-12-16 14:40:39 +01001283 94. eint [LFBS]: cumulative number of internal errors
Pierre Cheynier08eb7182020-10-08 16:37:14 +02001284 95. idle_conn_cur [...S]: current number of unsafe idle connections
1285 96. safe_conn_cur [...S]: current number of safe idle connections
1286 97. used_conn_cur [...S]: current number of connections in use
1287 98. need_conn_est [...S]: estimated needed number of connections
Willy Tarreaubd715102020-10-23 22:44:30 +02001288 99. uweight [..BS]: total user weight (backend), server user weight (server)
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001289
Amaury Denoyelle50660a82020-10-05 11:49:39 +02001290For all other statistics domains, the presence or the order of the fields are
1291not guaranteed. In this case, the header line should always be used to parse
1292the CSV data.
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001293
Phil Schererb931f962020-12-02 19:36:08 +000012949.2. Typed output format
Willy Tarreau5d8b9792016-03-11 11:09:34 +01001295------------------------
1296
1297Both "show info" and "show stat" support a mode where each output value comes
1298with its type and sufficient information to know how the value is supposed to
1299be aggregated between processes and how it evolves.
1300
1301In all cases, the output consists in having a single value per line with all
1302the information split into fields delimited by colons (':').
1303
1304The first column designates the object or metric being dumped. Its format is
1305specific to the command producing this output and will not be described in this
1306section. Usually it will consist in a series of identifiers and field names.
1307
1308The second column contains 3 characters respectively indicating the origin, the
1309nature and the scope of the value being reported. The first character (the
1310origin) indicates where the value was extracted from. Possible characters are :
1311
1312 M The value is a metric. It is valid at one instant any may change depending
1313 on its nature .
1314
1315 S The value is a status. It represents a discrete value which by definition
1316 cannot be aggregated. It may be the status of a server ("UP" or "DOWN"),
1317 the PID of the process, etc.
1318
1319 K The value is a sorting key. It represents an identifier which may be used
1320 to group some values together because it is unique among its class. All
1321 internal identifiers are keys. Some names can be listed as keys if they
1322 are unique (eg: a frontend name is unique). In general keys come from the
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -04001323 configuration, even though some of them may automatically be assigned. For
Willy Tarreau5d8b9792016-03-11 11:09:34 +01001324 most purposes keys may be considered as equivalent to configuration.
1325
1326 C The value comes from the configuration. Certain configuration values make
1327 sense on the output, for example a concurrent connection limit or a cookie
1328 name. By definition these values are the same in all processes started
1329 from the same configuration file.
1330
1331 P The value comes from the product itself. There are very few such values,
1332 most common use is to report the product name, version and release date.
1333 These elements are also the same between all processes.
1334
1335The second character (the nature) indicates the nature of the information
1336carried by the field in order to let an aggregator decide on what operation to
1337use to aggregate multiple values. Possible characters are :
1338
1339 A The value represents an age since a last event. This is a bit different
1340 from the duration in that an age is automatically computed based on the
1341 current date. A typical example is how long ago did the last session
1342 happen on a server. Ages are generally aggregated by taking the minimum
1343 value and do not need to be stored.
1344
1345 a The value represents an already averaged value. The average response times
1346 and server weights are of this nature. Averages can typically be averaged
1347 between processes.
1348
1349 C The value represents a cumulative counter. Such measures perpetually
1350 increase until they wrap around. Some monitoring protocols need to tell
1351 the difference between a counter and a gauge to report a different type.
1352 In general counters may simply be summed since they represent events or
1353 volumes. Examples of metrics of this nature are connection counts or byte
1354 counts.
1355
1356 D The value represents a duration for a status. There are a few usages of
1357 this, most of them include the time taken by the last health check and
1358 the time a server has spent down. Durations are generally not summed,
1359 most of the time the maximum will be retained to compute an SLA.
1360
1361 G The value represents a gauge. It's a measure at one instant. The memory
1362 usage or the current number of active connections are of this nature.
1363 Metrics of this type are typically summed during aggregation.
1364
1365 L The value represents a limit (generally a configured one). By nature,
1366 limits are harder to aggregate since they are specific to the point where
1367 they were retrieved. In certain situations they may be summed or be kept
1368 separate.
1369
1370 M The value represents a maximum. In general it will apply to a gauge and
1371 keep the highest known value. An example of such a metric could be the
1372 maximum amount of concurrent connections that was encountered in the
1373 product's life time. To correctly aggregate maxima, you are supposed to
1374 output a range going from the maximum of all maxima and the sum of all
1375 of them. There is indeed no way to know if they were encountered
1376 simultaneously or not.
1377
1378 m The value represents a minimum. In general it will apply to a gauge and
1379 keep the lowest known value. An example of such a metric could be the
1380 minimum amount of free memory pools that was encountered in the product's
1381 life time. To correctly aggregate minima, you are supposed to output a
1382 range going from the minimum of all minima and the sum of all of them.
1383 There is indeed no way to know if they were encountered simultaneously
1384 or not.
1385
1386 N The value represents a name, so it is a string. It is used to report
1387 proxy names, server names and cookie names. Names have configuration or
1388 keys as their origin and are supposed to be the same among all processes.
1389
1390 O The value represents a free text output. Outputs from various commands,
1391 returns from health checks, node descriptions are of such nature.
1392
1393 R The value represents an event rate. It's a measure at one instant. It is
1394 quite similar to a gauge except that the recipient knows that this measure
1395 moves slowly and may decide not to keep all values. An example of such a
1396 metric is the measured amount of connections per second. Metrics of this
1397 type are typically summed during aggregation.
1398
1399 T The value represents a date or time. A field emitting the current date
1400 would be of this type. The method to aggregate such information is left
1401 as an implementation choice. For now no field uses this type.
1402
1403The third character (the scope) indicates what extent the value reflects. Some
1404elements may be per process while others may be per configuration or per system.
1405The distinction is important to know whether or not a single value should be
1406kept during aggregation or if values have to be aggregated. The following
1407characters are currently supported :
1408
1409 C The value is valid for a whole cluster of nodes, which is the set of nodes
1410 communicating over the peers protocol. An example could be the amount of
1411 entries present in a stick table that is replicated with other peers. At
1412 the moment no metric use this scope.
1413
1414 P The value is valid only for the process reporting it. Most metrics use
1415 this scope.
1416
1417 S The value is valid for the whole service, which is the set of processes
1418 started together from the same configuration file. All metrics originating
1419 from the configuration use this scope. Some other metrics may use it as
1420 well for some shared resources (eg: shared SSL cache statistics).
1421
1422 s The value is valid for the whole system, such as the system's hostname,
1423 current date or resource usage. At the moment this scope is not used by
1424 any metric.
1425
1426Consumers of these information will generally have enough of these 3 characters
1427to determine how to accurately report aggregated information across multiple
1428processes.
1429
1430After this column, the third column indicates the type of the field, among "s32"
1431(signed 32-bit integer), "s64" (signed 64-bit integer), "u32" (unsigned 32-bit
1432integer), "u64" (unsigned 64-bit integer), "str" (string). It is important to
1433know the type before parsing the value in order to properly read it. For example
1434a string containing only digits is still a string an not an integer (eg: an
1435error code extracted by a check).
1436
1437Then the fourth column is the value itself, encoded according to its type.
1438Strings are dumped as-is immediately after the colon without any leading space.
1439If a string contains a colon, it will appear normally. This means that the
1440output should not be exclusively split around colons or some check outputs
1441or server addresses might be truncated.
1442
1443
14449.3. Unix Socket commands
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001445-------------------------
1446
1447The stats socket is not enabled by default. In order to enable it, it is
1448necessary to add one line in the global section of the haproxy configuration.
1449A second line is recommended to set a larger timeout, always appreciated when
1450issuing commands by hand :
1451
1452 global
1453 stats socket /var/run/haproxy.sock mode 600 level admin
1454 stats timeout 2m
1455
1456It is also possible to add multiple instances of the stats socket by repeating
1457the line, and make them listen to a TCP port instead of a UNIX socket. This is
1458never done by default because this is dangerous, but can be handy in some
1459situations :
1460
1461 global
1462 stats socket /var/run/haproxy.sock mode 600 level admin
1463 stats socket ipv4@192.168.0.1:9999 level admin
1464 stats timeout 2m
1465
1466To access the socket, an external utility such as "socat" is required. Socat is
1467a swiss-army knife to connect anything to anything. We use it to connect
1468terminals to the socket, or a couple of stdin/stdout pipes to it for scripts.
1469The two main syntaxes we'll use are the following :
1470
1471 # socat /var/run/haproxy.sock stdio
1472 # socat /var/run/haproxy.sock readline
1473
1474The first one is used with scripts. It is possible to send the output of a
1475script to haproxy, and pass haproxy's output to another script. That's useful
1476for retrieving counters or attack traces for example.
1477
1478The second one is only useful for issuing commands by hand. It has the benefit
1479that the terminal is handled by the readline library which supports line
1480editing and history, which is very convenient when issuing repeated commands
1481(eg: watch a counter).
1482
1483The socket supports two operation modes :
1484 - interactive
1485 - non-interactive
1486
1487The non-interactive mode is the default when socat connects to the socket. In
1488this mode, a single line may be sent. It is processed as a whole, responses are
1489sent back, and the connection closes after the end of the response. This is the
1490mode that scripts and monitoring tools use. It is possible to send multiple
1491commands in this mode, they need to be delimited by a semi-colon (';'). For
1492example :
1493
1494 # echo "show info;show stat;show table" | socat /var/run/haproxy stdio
1495
Dragan Dosena1c35ab2016-11-24 11:33:12 +01001496If a command needs to use a semi-colon or a backslash (eg: in a value), it
Joseph Herlant71b4b152018-11-13 16:55:16 -08001497must be preceded by a backslash ('\').
Chad Lavoiee3f50312016-05-26 16:42:25 -04001498
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001499The interactive mode displays a prompt ('>') and waits for commands to be
1500entered on the line, then processes them, and displays the prompt again to wait
1501for a new command. This mode is entered via the "prompt" command which must be
1502sent on the first line in non-interactive mode. The mode is a flip switch, if
1503"prompt" is sent in interactive mode, it is disabled and the connection closes
1504after processing the last command of the same line.
1505
1506For this reason, when debugging by hand, it's quite common to start with the
1507"prompt" command :
1508
1509 # socat /var/run/haproxy readline
1510 prompt
1511 > show info
1512 ...
1513 >
1514
Willy Tarreau22555572023-05-04 14:22:36 +02001515Optionally the process' uptime may be displayed in the prompt. In order to
1516enable this, the "prompt timed" command will enable the prompt and toggle the
1517displaying of the time. The uptime is displayed in format "d:hh:mm:ss" where
1518"d" is the number of days, and "hh", "mm", "ss" are respectively the number
1519of hours, minutes and seconds on two digits each:
1520
1521 # socat /var/run/haproxy readline
1522 prompt timed
1523
1524 [23:03:34:39]> show version
1525 2.8-dev9-e5e622-18
1526
1527 [23:03:34:41]> quit
1528
Willy Tarreauea077152023-05-11 16:14:02 +02001529When the timed prompt is set on the master CLI, the prompt will display the
1530currently selected process' uptime, so this will work for the master, current
1531worker or an older worker:
1532
1533 master> prompt timed
1534 [0:00:00:50] master> show proc
1535 (...)
1536 [0:00:00:58] master> @!11955 <-- master, switch to current worker
1537 [0:00:01:03] 11955> @!11942 <-- current worker, switch to older worker
1538 [0:00:02:17] 11942> @ <-- older worker, switch back to master
1539 [0:00:01:10] master>
1540
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001541Since multiple commands may be issued at once, haproxy uses the empty line as a
1542delimiter to mark an end of output for each command, and takes care of ensuring
1543that no command can emit an empty line on output. A script can thus easily
1544parse the output even when multiple commands were pipelined on a single line.
1545
Aurélien Nephtaliabbf6072018-04-18 13:26:46 +02001546Some commands may take an optional payload. To add one to a command, the first
1547line needs to end with the "<<\n" pattern. The next lines will be treated as
1548the payload and can contain as many lines as needed. To validate a command with
1549a payload, it needs to end with an empty line.
1550
1551Limitations do exist: the length of the whole buffer passed to the CLI must
1552not be greater than tune.bfsize and the pattern "<<" must not be glued to the
1553last word of the line.
1554
1555When entering a paylod while in interactive mode, the prompt will change from
1556"> " to "+ ".
1557
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001558It is important to understand that when multiple haproxy processes are started
1559on the same sockets, any process may pick up the request and will output its
1560own stats.
1561
1562The list of commands currently supported on the stats socket is provided below.
1563If an unknown command is sent, haproxy displays the usage message which reminds
1564all supported commands. Some commands support a more complex syntax, generally
1565it will explain what part of the command is invalid when this happens.
1566
Olivier Doucetd8703e82017-08-31 11:05:10 +02001567Some commands require a higher level of privilege to work. If you do not have
1568enough privilege, you will get an error "Permission denied". Please check
1569the "level" option of the "bind" keyword lines in the configuration manual
1570for more information.
1571
Remi Tricot-Le Bretone88a2ca2021-04-08 15:30:23 +02001572abort ssl ca-file <cafile>
1573 Abort and destroy a temporary CA file update transaction.
1574
1575 See also "set ssl ca-file" and "commit ssl ca-file".
1576
William Lallemand6ab08b32019-11-29 16:48:43 +01001577abort ssl cert <filename>
1578 Abort and destroy a temporary SSL certificate update transaction.
1579
1580 See also "set ssl cert" and "commit ssl cert".
1581
Remi Tricot-Le Breton3c222bd2021-04-27 16:28:25 +02001582abort ssl crl-file <crlfile>
1583 Abort and destroy a temporary CRL file update transaction.
1584
1585 See also "set ssl crl-file" and "commit ssl crl-file".
1586
Willy Tarreaubb51c442021-04-30 15:23:36 +02001587add acl [@<ver>] <acl> <pattern>
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001588 Add an entry into the acl <acl>. <acl> is the #<id> or the <file> returned by
Willy Tarreaubb51c442021-04-30 15:23:36 +02001589 "show acl". This command does not verify if the entry already exists. Entries
1590 are added to the current version of the ACL, unless a specific version is
1591 specified with "@<ver>". This version number must have preliminary been
1592 allocated by "prepare acl", and it will be comprised between the versions
1593 reported in "curr_ver" and "next_ver" on the output of "show acl". Entries
1594 added with a specific version number will not match until a "commit acl"
1595 operation is performed on them. They may however be consulted using the
1596 "show acl @<ver>" command, and cleared using a "clear acl @<ver>" command.
1597 This command cannot be used if the reference <acl> is a file also used with
1598 a map. In this case, the "add map" command must be used instead.
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001599
Willy Tarreaubb51c442021-04-30 15:23:36 +02001600add map [@<ver>] <map> <key> <value>
1601add map [@<ver>] <map> <payload>
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001602 Add an entry into the map <map> to associate the value <value> to the key
1603 <key>. This command does not verify if the entry already exists. It is
Willy Tarreaubb51c442021-04-30 15:23:36 +02001604 mainly used to fill a map after a "clear" or "prepare" operation. Entries
1605 are added to the current version of the ACL, unless a specific version is
1606 specified with "@<ver>". This version number must have preliminary been
1607 allocated by "prepare acl", and it will be comprised between the versions
1608 reported in "curr_ver" and "next_ver" on the output of "show acl". Entries
1609 added with a specific version number will not match until a "commit map"
1610 operation is performed on them. They may however be consulted using the
1611 "show map @<ver>" command, and cleared using a "clear acl @<ver>" command.
1612 If the designated map is also used as an ACL, the ACL will only match the
1613 <key> part and will ignore the <value> part. Using the payload syntax it is
1614 possible to add multiple key/value pairs by entering them on separate lines.
1615 On each new line, the first word is the key and the rest of the line is
1616 considered to be the value which can even contains spaces.
Aurélien Nephtali25650ce2018-04-18 14:04:47 +02001617
1618 Example:
1619
1620 # socat /tmp/sock1 -
1621 prompt
1622
1623 > add map #-1 <<
1624 + key1 value1
1625 + key2 value2 with spaces
1626 + key3 value3 also with spaces
1627 + key4 value4
1628
1629 >
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001630
Amaury Denoyellef99f77a2021-03-08 17:13:32 +01001631add server <backend>/<server> [args]*
Amaury Denoyelle76e8b702022-03-09 15:07:31 +01001632 Instantiate a new server attached to the backend <backend>.
Amaury Denoyellef99f77a2021-03-08 17:13:32 +01001633
1634 The <server> name must not be already used in the backend. A special
Amaury Denoyelleeafd7012021-04-29 14:59:42 +02001635 restriction is put on the backend which must used a dynamic load-balancing
1636 algorithm. A subset of keywords from the server config file statement can be
1637 used to configure the server behavior. Also note that no settings will be
1638 reused from an hypothetical 'default-server' statement in the same backend.
Amaury Denoyellefc465a52021-03-09 17:36:23 +01001639
Amaury Denoyelleefbf35c2021-06-10 17:34:10 +02001640 Currently a dynamic server is statically initialized with the "none"
1641 init-addr method. This means that no resolution will be undertaken if a FQDN
1642 is specified as an address, even if the server creation will be validated.
1643
Amaury Denoyelle14c3c5c2021-08-23 14:10:51 +02001644 To support the reload operations, it is expected that the server created via
1645 the CLI is also manually inserted in the relevant haproxy configuration file.
1646 A dynamic server not present in the configuration won't be restored after a
1647 reload operation.
1648
Amaury Denoyelle56eb8ed2021-07-13 10:36:03 +02001649 A dynamic server may use the "track" keyword to follow the check status of
1650 another server from the configuration. However, it is not possible to track
1651 another dynamic server. This is to ensure that the tracking chain is kept
1652 consistent even in the case of dynamic servers deletion.
1653
Amaury Denoyelle2fc4d392021-07-22 16:04:59 +02001654 Use the "check" keyword to enable health-check support. Note that the
1655 health-check is disabled by default and must be enabled independently from
Amaury Denoyelleb65f4ca2021-08-04 11:33:14 +02001656 the server using the "enable health" command. For agent checks, use the
1657 "agent-check" keyword and the "enable agent" command. Note that in this case
1658 the server may be activated via the agent depending on the status reported,
1659 without an explicit "enable server" command. This also means that extra care
1660 is required when removing a dynamic server with agent check. The agent should
1661 be first deactivated via "disable agent" to be able to put the server in the
1662 required maintenance mode before removal.
Amaury Denoyelle2fc4d392021-07-22 16:04:59 +02001663
Amaury Denoyelle414a6122021-08-06 10:25:32 +02001664 It may be possible to reach the fd limit when using a large number of dynamic
1665 servers. Please refer to the "u-limit" global keyword documentation in this
1666 case.
1667
Amaury Denoyellefc465a52021-03-09 17:36:23 +01001668 Here is the list of the currently supported keywords :
1669
Amaury Denoyelleb65f4ca2021-08-04 11:33:14 +02001670 - agent-addr
1671 - agent-check
1672 - agent-inter
1673 - agent-port
1674 - agent-send
Amaury Denoyelle34897d22021-05-19 09:49:41 +02001675 - allow-0rtt
1676 - alpn
Amaury Denoyelle2fc4d392021-07-22 16:04:59 +02001677 - addr
Amaury Denoyellefc465a52021-03-09 17:36:23 +01001678 - backup
Amaury Denoyelle34897d22021-05-19 09:49:41 +02001679 - ca-file
Amaury Denoyelle2fc4d392021-07-22 16:04:59 +02001680 - check
Amaury Denoyelle79b90e82021-09-20 15:15:19 +02001681 - check-alpn
Amaury Denoyelle2fc4d392021-07-22 16:04:59 +02001682 - check-proto
1683 - check-send-proxy
Amaury Denoyelle79b90e82021-09-20 15:15:19 +02001684 - check-sni
1685 - check-ssl
Amaury Denoyelle2fc4d392021-07-22 16:04:59 +02001686 - check-via-socks4
Amaury Denoyelle34897d22021-05-19 09:49:41 +02001687 - ciphers
1688 - ciphersuites
Amaury Denoyelleae8882d2024-03-27 10:50:21 +01001689 - cookie
Amaury Denoyelle34897d22021-05-19 09:49:41 +02001690 - crl-file
1691 - crt
Amaury Denoyellefc465a52021-03-09 17:36:23 +01001692 - disabled
Amaury Denoyelle2fc4d392021-07-22 16:04:59 +02001693 - downinter
Amaury Denoyellefc465a52021-03-09 17:36:23 +01001694 - enabled
Amaury Denoyelle725f8d22021-09-20 15:16:12 +02001695 - error-limit
Amaury Denoyelle2fc4d392021-07-22 16:04:59 +02001696 - fall
1697 - fastinter
Amaury Denoyelle34897d22021-05-19 09:49:41 +02001698 - force-sslv3/tlsv10/tlsv11/tlsv12/tlsv13
Amaury Denoyellefc465a52021-03-09 17:36:23 +01001699 - id
Amaury Denoyelle2fc4d392021-07-22 16:04:59 +02001700 - inter
Amaury Denoyellefc465a52021-03-09 17:36:23 +01001701 - maxconn
1702 - maxqueue
1703 - minconn
Amaury Denoyelle34897d22021-05-19 09:49:41 +02001704 - no-ssl-reuse
1705 - no-sslv3/tlsv10/tlsv11/tlsv12/tlsv13
1706 - no-tls-tickets
1707 - npn
Amaury Denoyelle725f8d22021-09-20 15:16:12 +02001708 - observe
1709 - on-error
1710 - on-marked-down
1711 - on-marked-up
Amaury Denoyellefc465a52021-03-09 17:36:23 +01001712 - pool-low-conn
1713 - pool-max-conn
1714 - pool-purge-delay
Amaury Denoyelle2fc4d392021-07-22 16:04:59 +02001715 - port
Amaury Denoyelle30467232021-03-12 18:03:27 +01001716 - proto
Amaury Denoyellefc465a52021-03-09 17:36:23 +01001717 - proxy-v2-options
Amaury Denoyelle2fc4d392021-07-22 16:04:59 +02001718 - rise
Amaury Denoyellefc465a52021-03-09 17:36:23 +01001719 - send-proxy
1720 - send-proxy-v2
Amaury Denoyelle34897d22021-05-19 09:49:41 +02001721 - send-proxy-v2-ssl
1722 - send-proxy-v2-ssl-cn
Amaury Denoyellecd8a6f22021-09-21 11:51:54 +02001723 - slowstart
Amaury Denoyelle34897d22021-05-19 09:49:41 +02001724 - sni
Amaury Denoyellefc465a52021-03-09 17:36:23 +01001725 - source
Amaury Denoyelle34897d22021-05-19 09:49:41 +02001726 - ssl
1727 - ssl-max-ver
1728 - ssl-min-ver
Amaury Denoyellefc465a52021-03-09 17:36:23 +01001729 - tfo
Amaury Denoyelle34897d22021-05-19 09:49:41 +02001730 - tls-tickets
Amaury Denoyelle56eb8ed2021-07-13 10:36:03 +02001731 - track
Amaury Denoyellefc465a52021-03-09 17:36:23 +01001732 - usesrc
Amaury Denoyelle34897d22021-05-19 09:49:41 +02001733 - verify
1734 - verifyhost
Amaury Denoyellefc465a52021-03-09 17:36:23 +01001735 - weight
Amaury Denoyellef9d59572021-10-18 14:40:29 +02001736 - ws
Amaury Denoyellefc465a52021-03-09 17:36:23 +01001737
1738 Their syntax is similar to the server line from the configuration file,
1739 please refer to their individual documentation for details.
Amaury Denoyellef99f77a2021-03-08 17:13:32 +01001740
William Lallemand62c0b992022-07-29 17:50:58 +02001741add ssl ca-file <cafile> <payload>
1742 Add a new certificate to a ca-file. This command is useful when you reached
Michael Prokop9a62e352022-12-09 12:28:46 +01001743 the buffer size limit on the CLI and want to add multiple certificates.
William Lallemand62c0b992022-07-29 17:50:58 +02001744 Instead of doing a "set" with all the certificates you are able to add each
1745 certificate individually. A "set ssl ca-file" will reset the ca-file.
1746
1747 Example:
1748 echo -e "set ssl ca-file cafile.pem <<\n$(cat rootCA.crt)\n" | \
1749 socat /var/run/haproxy.stat -
1750 echo -e "add ssl ca-file cafile.pem <<\n$(cat intermediate1.crt)\n" | \
1751 socat /var/run/haproxy.stat -
1752 echo -e "add ssl ca-file cafile.pem <<\n$(cat intermediate2.crt)\n" | \
1753 socat /var/run/haproxy.stat -
1754 echo "commit ssl ca-file cafile.pem" | socat /var/run/haproxy.stat -
1755
William Lallemandaccac232020-04-02 17:42:51 +02001756add ssl crt-list <crtlist> <certificate>
1757add ssl crt-list <crtlist> <payload>
1758 Add an certificate in a crt-list. It can also be used for directories since
1759 directories are now loaded the same way as the crt-lists. This command allow
1760 you to use a certificate name in parameter, to use SSL options or filters a
1761 crt-list line must sent as a payload instead. Only one crt-list line is
1762 supported in the payload. This command will load the certificate for every
1763 bind lines using the crt-list. To push a new certificate to HAProxy the
1764 commands "new ssl cert" and "set ssl cert" must be used.
1765
1766 Example:
1767 $ echo "new ssl cert foobar.pem" | socat /tmp/sock1 -
1768 $ echo -e "set ssl cert foobar.pem <<\n$(cat foobar.pem)\n" | socat
1769 /tmp/sock1 -
1770 $ echo "commit ssl cert foobar.pem" | socat /tmp/sock1 -
1771 $ echo "add ssl crt-list certlist1 foobar.pem" | socat /tmp/sock1 -
1772
1773 $ echo -e 'add ssl crt-list certlist1 <<\nfoobar.pem [allow-0rtt] foo.bar.com
1774 !test1.com\n' | socat /tmp/sock1 -
1775
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001776clear counters
1777 Clear the max values of the statistics counters in each proxy (frontend &
Willy Tarreaud80cb4e2018-01-20 19:30:13 +01001778 backend) and in each server. The accumulated counters are not affected. The
1779 internal activity counters reported by "show activity" are also reset. This
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001780 can be used to get clean counters after an incident, without having to
1781 restart nor to clear traffic counters. This command is restricted and can
1782 only be issued on sockets configured for levels "operator" or "admin".
1783
1784clear counters all
1785 Clear all statistics counters in each proxy (frontend & backend) and in each
1786 server. This has the same effect as restarting. This command is restricted
1787 and can only be issued on sockets configured for level "admin".
1788
Willy Tarreauff3feeb2021-04-30 13:31:43 +02001789clear acl [@<ver>] <acl>
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001790 Remove all entries from the acl <acl>. <acl> is the #<id> or the <file>
1791 returned by "show acl". Note that if the reference <acl> is a file and is
Willy Tarreauff3feeb2021-04-30 13:31:43 +02001792 shared with a map, this map will be also cleared. By default only the current
1793 version of the ACL is cleared (the one being matched against). However it is
1794 possible to specify another version using '@' followed by this version.
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001795
Willy Tarreauff3feeb2021-04-30 13:31:43 +02001796clear map [@<ver>] <map>
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001797 Remove all entries from the map <map>. <map> is the #<id> or the <file>
1798 returned by "show map". Note that if the reference <map> is a file and is
Willy Tarreauff3feeb2021-04-30 13:31:43 +02001799 shared with a acl, this acl will be also cleared. By default only the current
1800 version of the map is cleared (the one being matched against). However it is
1801 possible to specify another version using '@' followed by this version.
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001802
1803clear table <table> [ data.<type> <operator> <value> ] | [ key <key> ]
1804 Remove entries from the stick-table <table>.
1805
1806 This is typically used to unblock some users complaining they have been
1807 abusively denied access to a service, but this can also be used to clear some
1808 stickiness entries matching a server that is going to be replaced (see "show
1809 table" below for details). Note that sometimes, removal of an entry will be
1810 refused because it is currently tracked by a session. Retrying a few seconds
1811 later after the session ends is usual enough.
1812
1813 In the case where no options arguments are given all entries will be removed.
1814
1815 When the "data." form is used entries matching a filter applied using the
1816 stored data (see "stick-table" in section 4.2) are removed. A stored data
1817 type must be specified in <type>, and this data type must be stored in the
1818 table otherwise an error is reported. The data is compared according to
1819 <operator> with the 64-bit integer <value>. Operators are the same as with
1820 the ACLs :
1821
1822 - eq : match entries whose data is equal to this value
1823 - ne : match entries whose data is not equal to this value
1824 - le : match entries whose data is less than or equal to this value
1825 - ge : match entries whose data is greater than or equal to this value
1826 - lt : match entries whose data is less than this value
1827 - gt : match entries whose data is greater than this value
1828
1829 When the key form is used the entry <key> is removed. The key must be of the
1830 same type as the table, which currently is limited to IPv4, IPv6, integer and
1831 string.
1832
1833 Example :
1834 $ echo "show table http_proxy" | socat stdio /tmp/sock1
1835 >>> # table: http_proxy, type: ip, size:204800, used:2
1836 >>> 0x80e6a4c: key=127.0.0.1 use=0 exp=3594729 gpc0=0 conn_rate(30000)=1 \
1837 bytes_out_rate(60000)=187
1838 >>> 0x80e6a80: key=127.0.0.2 use=0 exp=3594740 gpc0=1 conn_rate(30000)=10 \
1839 bytes_out_rate(60000)=191
1840
1841 $ echo "clear table http_proxy key 127.0.0.1" | socat stdio /tmp/sock1
1842
1843 $ echo "show table http_proxy" | socat stdio /tmp/sock1
1844 >>> # table: http_proxy, type: ip, size:204800, used:1
1845 >>> 0x80e6a80: key=127.0.0.2 use=0 exp=3594740 gpc0=1 conn_rate(30000)=10 \
1846 bytes_out_rate(60000)=191
1847 $ echo "clear table http_proxy data.gpc0 eq 1" | socat stdio /tmp/sock1
1848 $ echo "show table http_proxy" | socat stdio /tmp/sock1
1849 >>> # table: http_proxy, type: ip, size:204800, used:1
1850
Willy Tarreau7a562ca2021-04-30 15:10:01 +02001851commit acl @<ver> <acl>
1852 Commit all changes made to version <ver> of ACL <acl>, and deletes all past
1853 versions. <acl> is the #<id> or the <file> returned by "show acl". The
1854 version number must be between "curr_ver"+1 and "next_ver" as reported in
1855 "show acl". The contents to be committed to the ACL can be consulted with
1856 "show acl @<ver> <acl>" if desired. The specified version number has normally
1857 been created with the "prepare acl" command. The replacement is atomic. It
1858 consists in atomically updating the current version to the specified version,
1859 which will instantly cause all entries in other versions to become invisible,
1860 and all entries in the new version to become visible. It is also possible to
1861 use this command to perform an atomic removal of all visible entries of an
1862 ACL by calling "prepare acl" first then committing without adding any
1863 entries. This command cannot be used if the reference <acl> is a file also
1864 used as a map. In this case, the "commit map" command must be used instead.
1865
1866commit map @<ver> <map>
1867 Commit all changes made to version <ver> of map <map>, and deletes all past
1868 versions. <map> is the #<id> or the <file> returned by "show map". The
1869 version number must be between "curr_ver"+1 and "next_ver" as reported in
1870 "show map". The contents to be committed to the map can be consulted with
1871 "show map @<ver> <map>" if desired. The specified version number has normally
1872 been created with the "prepare map" command. The replacement is atomic. It
1873 consists in atomically updating the current version to the specified version,
1874 which will instantly cause all entries in other versions to become invisible,
1875 and all entries in the new version to become visible. It is also possible to
1876 use this command to perform an atomic removal of all visible entries of an
1877 map by calling "prepare map" first then committing without adding any
1878 entries.
1879
Remi Tricot-Le Bretone88a2ca2021-04-08 15:30:23 +02001880commit ssl ca-file <cafile>
1881 Commit a temporary SSL CA file update transaction.
1882
1883 In the case of an existing CA file (in a "Used" state in "show ssl ca-file"),
1884 the new CA file tree entry is inserted in the CA file tree and every instance
1885 that used the CA file entry is rebuilt, along with the SSL contexts it needs.
1886 All the contexts previously used by the rebuilt instances are removed.
1887 Upon success, the previous CA file entry is removed from the tree.
1888 Upon failure, nothing is removed or deleted, and all the original SSL
1889 contexts are kept and used.
1890 Once the temporary transaction is committed, it is destroyed.
1891
1892 In the case of a new CA file (after a "new ssl ca-file" and in a "Unused"
1893 state in "show ssl ca-file"), the CA file will be inserted in the CA file
1894 tree but it won't be used anywhere in HAProxy. To use it and generate SSL
1895 contexts that use it, you will need to add it to a crt-list with "add ssl
1896 crt-list".
1897
William Lallemand62c0b992022-07-29 17:50:58 +02001898 See also "new ssl ca-file", "set ssl ca-file", "add ssl ca-file",
1899 "abort ssl ca-file" and "add ssl crt-list".
Remi Tricot-Le Bretone88a2ca2021-04-08 15:30:23 +02001900
William Lallemand6ab08b32019-11-29 16:48:43 +01001901commit ssl cert <filename>
William Lallemandc184d872020-06-26 15:39:57 +02001902 Commit a temporary SSL certificate update transaction.
1903
1904 In the case of an existing certificate (in a "Used" state in "show ssl
1905 cert"), generate every SSL contextes and SNIs it need, insert them, and
1906 remove the previous ones. Replace in memory the previous SSL certificates
1907 everywhere the <filename> was used in the configuration. Upon failure it
1908 doesn't remove or insert anything. Once the temporary transaction is
1909 committed, it is destroyed.
1910
1911 In the case of a new certificate (after a "new ssl cert" and in a "Unused"
Ilya Shipitsin2272d8a2020-12-21 01:22:40 +05001912 state in "show ssl cert"), the certificate will be committed in a certificate
William Lallemandc184d872020-06-26 15:39:57 +02001913 storage, but it won't be used anywhere in haproxy. To use it and generate
1914 its SNIs you will need to add it to a crt-list or a directory with "add ssl
1915 crt-list".
William Lallemand6ab08b32019-11-29 16:48:43 +01001916
Remi Tricot-Le Bretone88a2ca2021-04-08 15:30:23 +02001917 See also "new ssl cert", "set ssl cert", "abort ssl cert" and
William Lallemandc184d872020-06-26 15:39:57 +02001918 "add ssl crt-list".
William Lallemand6ab08b32019-11-29 16:48:43 +01001919
Remi Tricot-Le Breton3c222bd2021-04-27 16:28:25 +02001920commit ssl crl-file <crlfile>
1921 Commit a temporary SSL CRL file update transaction.
1922
1923 In the case of an existing CRL file (in a "Used" state in "show ssl
1924 crl-file"), the new CRL file entry is inserted in the CA file tree (which
1925 holds both the CA files and the CRL files) and every instance that used the
1926 CRL file entry is rebuilt, along with the SSL contexts it needs.
1927 All the contexts previously used by the rebuilt instances are removed.
1928 Upon success, the previous CRL file entry is removed from the tree.
1929 Upon failure, nothing is removed or deleted, and all the original SSL
1930 contexts are kept and used.
1931 Once the temporary transaction is committed, it is destroyed.
1932
1933 In the case of a new CRL file (after a "new ssl crl-file" and in a "Unused"
1934 state in "show ssl crl-file"), the CRL file will be inserted in the CRL file
1935 tree but it won't be used anywhere in HAProxy. To use it and generate SSL
1936 contexts that use it, you will need to add it to a crt-list with "add ssl
1937 crt-list".
1938
1939 See also "new ssl crl-file", "set ssl crl-file", "abort ssl crl-file" and
1940 "add ssl crt-list".
1941
Willy Tarreau6bdf3e92019-05-20 14:25:05 +02001942debug dev <command> [args]*
Willy Tarreaub24ab222019-10-24 18:03:39 +02001943 Call a developer-specific command. Only supported on a CLI connection running
1944 in expert mode (see "expert-mode on"). Such commands are extremely dangerous
1945 and not forgiving, any misuse may result in a crash of the process. They are
1946 intended for experts only, and must really not be used unless told to do so.
1947 Some of them are only available when haproxy is built with DEBUG_DEV defined
1948 because they may have security implications. All of these commands require
1949 admin privileges, and are purposely not documented to avoid encouraging their
1950 use by people who are not at ease with the source code.
Willy Tarreau6bdf3e92019-05-20 14:25:05 +02001951
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001952del acl <acl> [<key>|#<ref>]
1953 Delete all the acl entries from the acl <acl> corresponding to the key <key>.
1954 <acl> is the #<id> or the <file> returned by "show acl". If the <ref> is used,
1955 this command delete only the listed reference. The reference can be found with
1956 listing the content of the acl. Note that if the reference <acl> is a file and
1957 is shared with a map, the entry will be also deleted in the map.
1958
1959del map <map> [<key>|#<ref>]
1960 Delete all the map entries from the map <map> corresponding to the key <key>.
1961 <map> is the #<id> or the <file> returned by "show map". If the <ref> is used,
1962 this command delete only the listed reference. The reference can be found with
1963 listing the content of the map. Note that if the reference <map> is a file and
1964 is shared with a acl, the entry will be also deleted in the map.
1965
Remi Tricot-Le Bretone88a2ca2021-04-08 15:30:23 +02001966del ssl ca-file <cafile>
1967 Delete a CA file tree entry from HAProxy. The CA file must be unused and
1968 removed from any crt-list. "show ssl ca-file" displays the status of the CA
1969 files. The deletion doesn't work with a certificate referenced directly with
1970 the "ca-file" or "ca-verify-file" directives in the configuration.
1971
William Lallemand419e6342020-04-08 12:05:39 +02001972del ssl cert <certfile>
1973 Delete a certificate store from HAProxy. The certificate must be unused and
1974 removed from any crt-list or directory. "show ssl cert" displays the status
1975 of the certificate. The deletion doesn't work with a certificate referenced
1976 directly with the "crt" directive in the configuration.
1977
Remi Tricot-Le Breton3c222bd2021-04-27 16:28:25 +02001978del ssl crl-file <crlfile>
1979 Delete a CRL file tree entry from HAProxy. The CRL file must be unused and
1980 removed from any crt-list. "show ssl crl-file" displays the status of the CRL
1981 files. The deletion doesn't work with a certificate referenced directly with
1982 the "crl-file" directive in the configuration.
1983
William Lallemand0a9b9412020-04-06 17:43:05 +02001984del ssl crt-list <filename> <certfile[:line]>
1985 Delete an entry in a crt-list. This will delete every SNIs used for this
1986 entry in the frontends. If a certificate is used several time in a crt-list,
1987 you will need to provide which line you want to delete. To display the line
1988 numbers, use "show ssl crt-list -n <crtlist>".
1989
Amaury Denoyellee5580432021-04-15 14:41:20 +02001990del server <backend>/<server>
Amaury Denoyelle14c3c5c2021-08-23 14:10:51 +02001991 Remove a server attached to the backend <backend>. All servers are eligible,
1992 except servers which are referenced by other configuration elements. The
1993 server must be put in maintenance mode prior to its deletion. The operation
1994 is cancelled if the serveur still has active or idle connection or its
1995 connection queue is not empty.
Amaury Denoyellee5580432021-04-15 14:41:20 +02001996
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02001997disable agent <backend>/<server>
1998 Mark the auxiliary agent check as temporarily stopped.
1999
2000 In the case where an agent check is being run as a auxiliary check, due
2001 to the agent-check parameter of a server directive, new checks are only
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -04002002 initialized when the agent is in the enabled. Thus, disable agent will
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002003 prevent any new agent checks from begin initiated until the agent
2004 re-enabled using enable agent.
2005
2006 When an agent is disabled the processing of an auxiliary agent check that
2007 was initiated while the agent was set as enabled is as follows: All
2008 results that would alter the weight, specifically "drain" or a weight
2009 returned by the agent, are ignored. The processing of agent check is
2010 otherwise unchanged.
2011
2012 The motivation for this feature is to allow the weight changing effects
2013 of the agent checks to be paused to allow the weight of a server to be
2014 configured using set weight without being overridden by the agent.
2015
2016 This command is restricted and can only be issued on sockets configured for
2017 level "admin".
2018
Olivier Houchard614f8d72017-03-14 20:08:46 +01002019disable dynamic-cookie backend <backend>
Ilya Shipitsin2a950d02020-03-06 13:07:38 +05002020 Disable the generation of dynamic cookies for the backend <backend>
Olivier Houchard614f8d72017-03-14 20:08:46 +01002021
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002022disable frontend <frontend>
2023 Mark the frontend as temporarily stopped. This corresponds to the mode which
2024 is used during a soft restart : the frontend releases the port but can be
2025 enabled again if needed. This should be used with care as some non-Linux OSes
2026 are unable to enable it back. This is intended to be used in environments
2027 where stopping a proxy is not even imaginable but a misconfigured proxy must
2028 be fixed. That way it's possible to release the port and bind it into another
2029 process to restore operations. The frontend will appear with status "STOP"
2030 on the stats page.
2031
2032 The frontend may be specified either by its name or by its numeric ID,
2033 prefixed with a sharp ('#').
2034
2035 This command is restricted and can only be issued on sockets configured for
2036 level "admin".
2037
2038disable health <backend>/<server>
2039 Mark the primary health check as temporarily stopped. This will disable
2040 sending of health checks, and the last health check result will be ignored.
2041 The server will be in unchecked state and considered UP unless an auxiliary
2042 agent check forces it down.
2043
2044 This command is restricted and can only be issued on sockets configured for
2045 level "admin".
2046
2047disable server <backend>/<server>
2048 Mark the server DOWN for maintenance. In this mode, no more checks will be
2049 performed on the server until it leaves maintenance.
2050 If the server is tracked by other servers, those servers will be set to DOWN
2051 during the maintenance.
2052
2053 In the statistics page, a server DOWN for maintenance will appear with a
2054 "MAINT" status, its tracking servers with the "MAINT(via)" one.
2055
2056 Both the backend and the server may be specified either by their name or by
2057 their numeric ID, prefixed with a sharp ('#').
2058
2059 This command is restricted and can only be issued on sockets configured for
2060 level "admin".
2061
2062enable agent <backend>/<server>
2063 Resume auxiliary agent check that was temporarily stopped.
2064
2065 See "disable agent" for details of the effect of temporarily starting
2066 and stopping an auxiliary agent.
2067
2068 This command is restricted and can only be issued on sockets configured for
2069 level "admin".
2070
Olivier Houchard614f8d72017-03-14 20:08:46 +01002071enable dynamic-cookie backend <backend>
n9@users.noreply.github.com25a1c8e2019-08-23 11:21:05 +02002072 Enable the generation of dynamic cookies for the backend <backend>.
2073 A secret key must also be provided.
Olivier Houchard614f8d72017-03-14 20:08:46 +01002074
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002075enable frontend <frontend>
2076 Resume a frontend which was temporarily stopped. It is possible that some of
2077 the listening ports won't be able to bind anymore (eg: if another process
2078 took them since the 'disable frontend' operation). If this happens, an error
2079 is displayed. Some operating systems might not be able to resume a frontend
2080 which was disabled.
2081
2082 The frontend may be specified either by its name or by its numeric ID,
2083 prefixed with a sharp ('#').
2084
2085 This command is restricted and can only be issued on sockets configured for
2086 level "admin".
2087
2088enable health <backend>/<server>
2089 Resume a primary health check that was temporarily stopped. This will enable
2090 sending of health checks again. Please see "disable health" for details.
2091
2092 This command is restricted and can only be issued on sockets configured for
2093 level "admin".
2094
2095enable server <backend>/<server>
2096 If the server was previously marked as DOWN for maintenance, this marks the
2097 server UP and checks are re-enabled.
2098
2099 Both the backend and the server may be specified either by their name or by
2100 their numeric ID, prefixed with a sharp ('#').
2101
2102 This command is restricted and can only be issued on sockets configured for
2103 level "admin".
2104
Amaury Denoyelle18487fb2021-03-18 15:32:53 +01002105experimental-mode [on|off]
2106 Without options, this indicates whether the experimental mode is enabled or
2107 disabled on the current connection. When passed "on", it turns the
2108 experimental mode on for the current CLI connection only. With "off" it turns
2109 it off.
2110
2111 The experimental mode is used to access to extra features still in
2112 development. These features are currently not stable and should be used with
Ilya Shipitsinba13f162021-03-19 22:21:44 +05002113 care. They may be subject to breaking changes across versions.
Amaury Denoyelle18487fb2021-03-18 15:32:53 +01002114
William Lallemand7267f782022-02-01 16:08:50 +01002115 When used from the master CLI, this command shouldn't be prefixed, as it will
2116 set the mode for any worker when connecting to its CLI.
2117
2118 Example:
Amaury Denoyelle76e8b702022-03-09 15:07:31 +01002119 echo "@1; experimental-mode on; <experimental_cmd>..." | socat /var/run/haproxy.master -
2120 echo "experimental-mode on; @1 <experimental_cmd>..." | socat /var/run/haproxy.master -
William Lallemand7267f782022-02-01 16:08:50 +01002121
Willy Tarreauabb9f9b2019-10-24 17:55:53 +02002122expert-mode [on|off]
Amaury Denoyelle18487fb2021-03-18 15:32:53 +01002123 This command is similar to experimental-mode but is used to toggle the
2124 expert mode.
2125
2126 The expert mode enables displaying of expert commands that can be extremely
Willy Tarreauabb9f9b2019-10-24 17:55:53 +02002127 dangerous for the process and which may occasionally help developers collect
2128 important information about complex bugs. Any misuse of these features will
2129 likely lead to a process crash. Do not use this option without being invited
2130 to do so. Note that this command is purposely not listed in the help message.
2131 This command is only accessible in admin level. Changing to another level
2132 automatically resets the expert mode.
2133
William Lallemand7267f782022-02-01 16:08:50 +01002134 When used from the master CLI, this command shouldn't be prefixed, as it will
2135 set the mode for any worker when connecting to its CLI.
2136
2137 Example:
2138 echo "@1; expert-mode on; debug dev exit 1" | socat /var/run/haproxy.master -
2139 echo "expert-mode on; @1 debug dev exit 1" | socat /var/run/haproxy.master -
2140
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002141get map <map> <value>
2142get acl <acl> <value>
2143 Lookup the value <value> in the map <map> or in the ACL <acl>. <map> or <acl>
2144 are the #<id> or the <file> returned by "show map" or "show acl". This command
2145 returns all the matching patterns associated with this map. This is useful for
2146 debugging maps and ACLs. The output format is composed by one line par
2147 matching type. Each line is composed by space-delimited series of words.
2148
2149 The first two words are:
2150
2151 <match method>: The match method applied. It can be "found", "bool",
2152 "int", "ip", "bin", "len", "str", "beg", "sub", "dir",
2153 "dom", "end" or "reg".
2154
2155 <match result>: The result. Can be "match" or "no-match".
2156
2157 The following words are returned only if the pattern matches an entry.
2158
2159 <index type>: "tree" or "list". The internal lookup algorithm.
2160
2161 <case>: "case-insensitive" or "case-sensitive". The
2162 interpretation of the case.
2163
2164 <entry matched>: match="<entry>". Return the matched pattern. It is
2165 useful with regular expressions.
2166
2167 The two last word are used to show the returned value and its type. With the
2168 "acl" case, the pattern doesn't exist.
2169
2170 return=nothing: No return because there are no "map".
2171 return="<value>": The value returned in the string format.
2172 return=cannot-display: The value cannot be converted as string.
2173
2174 type="<type>": The type of the returned sample.
2175
Willy Tarreauc35eb382021-03-26 14:51:31 +01002176get var <name>
2177 Show the existence, type and contents of the process-wide variable 'name'.
2178 Only process-wide variables are readable, so the name must begin with
2179 'proc.' otherwise no variable will be found. This command requires levels
2180 "operator" or "admin".
2181
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002182get weight <backend>/<server>
2183 Report the current weight and the initial weight of server <server> in
2184 backend <backend> or an error if either doesn't exist. The initial weight is
2185 the one that appears in the configuration file. Both are normally equal
2186 unless the current weight has been changed. Both the backend and the server
2187 may be specified either by their name or by their numeric ID, prefixed with a
2188 sharp ('#').
2189
Willy Tarreau0b1b8302021-05-09 20:59:23 +02002190help [<command>]
2191 Print the list of known keywords and their basic usage, or commands matching
2192 the requested one. The same help screen is also displayed for unknown
2193 commands.
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002194
William Lallemandb175c232021-10-19 14:53:55 +02002195httpclient <method> <URI>
2196 Launch an HTTP client request and print the response on the CLI. Only
2197 supported on a CLI connection running in expert mode (see "expert-mode on").
William Lallemand9ae05bb2022-09-29 15:00:15 +02002198 It's only meant for debugging. The httpclient is able to resolve a server
2199 name in the URL using the "default" resolvers section, which is populated
2200 with the DNS servers of your /etc/resolv.conf by default. However it won't be
2201 able to resolve an host from /etc/hosts if you don't use a local dns daemon
2202 which can resolve those.
William Lallemandb175c232021-10-19 14:53:55 +02002203
Remi Tricot-Le Bretone88a2ca2021-04-08 15:30:23 +02002204new ssl ca-file <cafile>
2205 Create a new empty CA file tree entry to be filled with a set of CA
2206 certificates and added to a crt-list. This command should be used in
William Lallemand62c0b992022-07-29 17:50:58 +02002207 combination with "set ssl ca-file", "add ssl ca-file" and "add ssl crt-list".
Remi Tricot-Le Bretone88a2ca2021-04-08 15:30:23 +02002208
William Lallemandaccac232020-04-02 17:42:51 +02002209new ssl cert <filename>
2210 Create a new empty SSL certificate store to be filled with a certificate and
2211 added to a directory or a crt-list. This command should be used in
2212 combination with "set ssl cert" and "add ssl crt-list".
2213
Remi Tricot-Le Breton3c222bd2021-04-27 16:28:25 +02002214new ssl crl-file <crlfile>
2215 Create a new empty CRL file tree entry to be filled with a set of CRLs
2216 and added to a crt-list. This command should be used in combination with "set
2217 ssl crl-file" and "add ssl crt-list".
2218
Willy Tarreau97218ce2021-04-30 14:57:03 +02002219prepare acl <acl>
2220 Allocate a new version number in ACL <acl> for atomic replacement. <acl> is
2221 the #<id> or the <file> returned by "show acl". The new version number is
2222 shown in response after "New version created:". This number will then be
2223 usable to prepare additions of new entries into the ACL which will then
2224 atomically replace the current ones once committed. It is reported as
2225 "next_ver" in "show acl". There is no impact of allocating new versions, as
2226 unused versions will automatically be removed once a more recent version is
2227 committed. Version numbers are unsigned 32-bit values which wrap at the end,
2228 so care must be taken when comparing them in an external program. This
2229 command cannot be used if the reference <acl> is a file also used as a map.
2230 In this case, the "prepare map" command must be used instead.
2231
2232prepare map <map>
2233 Allocate a new version number in map <map> for atomic replacement. <map> is
2234 the #<id> or the <file> returned by "show map". The new version number is
2235 shown in response after "New version created:". This number will then be
2236 usable to prepare additions of new entries into the map which will then
2237 atomically replace the current ones once committed. It is reported as
2238 "next_ver" in "show map". There is no impact of allocating new versions, as
2239 unused versions will automatically be removed once a more recent version is
2240 committed. Version numbers are unsigned 32-bit values which wrap at the end,
2241 so care must be taken when comparing them in an external program.
2242
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002243prompt
2244 Toggle the prompt at the beginning of the line and enter or leave interactive
2245 mode. In interactive mode, the connection is not closed after a command
2246 completes. Instead, the prompt will appear again, indicating the user that
2247 the interpreter is waiting for a new command. The prompt consists in a right
2248 angle bracket followed by a space "> ". This mode is particularly convenient
2249 when one wants to periodically check information such as stats or errors.
2250 It is also a good idea to enter interactive mode before issuing a "help"
2251 command.
2252
2253quit
2254 Close the connection when in interactive mode.
2255
Erwan Le Goas54966df2022-09-14 17:24:22 +02002256set anon [on|off] [<key>]
2257 This command enables or disables the "anonymized mode" for the current CLI
2258 session, which replaces certain fields considered sensitive or confidential
2259 in command outputs with hashes that preserve sufficient consistency between
2260 elements to help developers identify relations between elements when trying
2261 to spot bugs, but a low enough bit count (24) to make them non-reversible due
2262 to the high number of possible matches. When turned on, if no key is
2263 specified, the global key will be used (either specified in the configuration
Erwan Le Goasd7869312022-09-29 10:36:11 +02002264 file by "anonkey" or set via the CLI command "set anon global-key"). If no such
Erwan Le Goas54966df2022-09-14 17:24:22 +02002265 key was set, a random one will be generated. Otherwise it's possible to
2266 specify the 32-bit key to be used for the current session, for example, to
2267 reuse the key that was used in a previous dump to help compare outputs.
2268 Developers will never need this key and it's recommended never to share it as
2269 it could allow to confirm/infirm some guesses about what certain hashes could
2270 be hiding.
2271
Olivier Houchard614f8d72017-03-14 20:08:46 +01002272set dynamic-cookie-key backend <backend> <value>
2273 Modify the secret key used to generate the dynamic persistent cookies.
2274 This will break the existing sessions.
2275
Erwan Le Goasd7869312022-09-29 10:36:11 +02002276set anon global-key <key>
Erwan Le Goasfad9da82022-09-14 17:24:22 +02002277 This sets the global anonymizing key to <key>, which must be a 32-bit
2278 integer between 0 and 4294967295 (0 disables the global key). This command
2279 requires admin privilege.
2280
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002281set map <map> [<key>|#<ref>] <value>
2282 Modify the value corresponding to each key <key> in a map <map>. <map> is the
2283 #<id> or <file> returned by "show map". If the <ref> is used in place of
2284 <key>, only the entry pointed by <ref> is changed. The new value is <value>.
2285
2286set maxconn frontend <frontend> <value>
2287 Dynamically change the specified frontend's maxconn setting. Any positive
2288 value is allowed including zero, but setting values larger than the global
2289 maxconn does not make much sense. If the limit is increased and connections
2290 were pending, they will immediately be accepted. If it is lowered to a value
2291 below the current number of connections, new connections acceptation will be
2292 delayed until the threshold is reached. The frontend might be specified by
2293 either its name or its numeric ID prefixed with a sharp ('#').
2294
Andrew Hayworthedb93a72015-10-27 21:46:25 +00002295set maxconn server <backend/server> <value>
2296 Dynamically change the specified server's maxconn setting. Any positive
2297 value is allowed including zero, but setting values larger than the global
2298 maxconn does not make much sense.
2299
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002300set maxconn global <maxconn>
2301 Dynamically change the global maxconn setting within the range defined by the
2302 initial global maxconn setting. If it is increased and connections were
2303 pending, they will immediately be accepted. If it is lowered to a value below
2304 the current number of connections, new connections acceptation will be
2305 delayed until the threshold is reached. A value of zero restores the initial
2306 setting.
2307
Willy Tarreau00dd44f2021-05-05 16:44:23 +02002308set profiling { tasks | memory } { auto | on | off }
2309 Enables or disables CPU or memory profiling for the indicated subsystem. This
2310 is equivalent to setting or clearing the "profiling" settings in the "global"
Willy Tarreaucfa71012021-01-29 11:56:21 +01002311 section of the configuration file. Please also see "show profiling". Note
2312 that manually setting the tasks profiling to "on" automatically resets the
2313 scheduler statistics, thus allows to check activity over a given interval.
Willy Tarreau00dd44f2021-05-05 16:44:23 +02002314 The memory profiling is limited to certain operating systems (known to work
2315 on the linux-glibc target), and requires USE_MEMORY_PROFILING to be set at
2316 compile time.
Willy Tarreau75c62c22018-11-22 11:02:09 +01002317
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002318set rate-limit connections global <value>
2319 Change the process-wide connection rate limit, which is set by the global
2320 'maxconnrate' setting. A value of zero disables the limitation. This limit
2321 applies to all frontends and the change has an immediate effect. The value
2322 is passed in number of connections per second.
2323
2324set rate-limit http-compression global <value>
2325 Change the maximum input compression rate, which is set by the global
2326 'maxcomprate' setting. A value of zero disables the limitation. The value is
2327 passed in number of kilobytes per second. The value is available in the "show
2328 info" on the line "CompressBpsRateLim" in bytes.
2329
2330set rate-limit sessions global <value>
2331 Change the process-wide session rate limit, which is set by the global
2332 'maxsessrate' setting. A value of zero disables the limitation. This limit
2333 applies to all frontends and the change has an immediate effect. The value
2334 is passed in number of sessions per second.
2335
2336set rate-limit ssl-sessions global <value>
2337 Change the process-wide SSL session rate limit, which is set by the global
2338 'maxsslrate' setting. A value of zero disables the limitation. This limit
2339 applies to all frontends and the change has an immediate effect. The value
2340 is passed in number of sessions per second sent to the SSL stack. It applies
2341 before the handshake in order to protect the stack against handshake abuses.
2342
Baptiste Assmann3749ebf2016-08-03 22:34:12 +02002343set server <backend>/<server> addr <ip4 or ip6 address> [port <port>]
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002344 Replace the current IP address of a server by the one provided.
Michael Prokop4438c602019-05-24 10:25:45 +02002345 Optionally, the port can be changed using the 'port' parameter.
Baptiste Assmann3749ebf2016-08-03 22:34:12 +02002346 Note that changing the port also support switching from/to port mapping
2347 (notation with +X or -Y), only if a port is configured for the health check.
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002348
2349set server <backend>/<server> agent [ up | down ]
2350 Force a server's agent to a new state. This can be useful to immediately
2351 switch a server's state regardless of some slow agent checks for example.
2352 Note that the change is propagated to tracking servers if any.
2353
William Dauchy7cabc062021-02-11 22:51:24 +01002354set server <backend>/<server> agent-addr <addr> [port <port>]
Misiek43972902017-01-09 09:53:06 +01002355 Change addr for servers agent checks. Allows to migrate agent-checks to
2356 another address at runtime. You can specify both IP and hostname, it will be
2357 resolved.
William Dauchy7cabc062021-02-11 22:51:24 +01002358 Optionally, change the port agent.
2359
2360set server <backend>/<server> agent-port <port>
2361 Change the port used for agent checks.
Misiek43972902017-01-09 09:53:06 +01002362
2363set server <backend>/<server> agent-send <value>
2364 Change agent string sent to agent check target. Allows to update string while
2365 changing server address to keep those two matching.
2366
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002367set server <backend>/<server> health [ up | stopping | down ]
2368 Force a server's health to a new state. This can be useful to immediately
2369 switch a server's state regardless of some slow health checks for example.
2370 Note that the change is propagated to tracking servers if any.
2371
William Dauchyb456e1f2021-02-11 22:51:23 +01002372set server <backend>/<server> check-addr <ip4 | ip6> [port <port>]
2373 Change the IP address used for server health checks.
2374 Optionally, change the port used for server health checks.
2375
Baptiste Assmann50946562016-08-31 23:26:29 +02002376set server <backend>/<server> check-port <port>
2377 Change the port used for health checking to <port>
2378
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002379set server <backend>/<server> state [ ready | drain | maint ]
2380 Force a server's administrative state to a new state. This can be useful to
2381 disable load balancing and/or any traffic to a server. Setting the state to
2382 "ready" puts the server in normal mode, and the command is the equivalent of
2383 the "enable server" command. Setting the state to "maint" disables any traffic
2384 to the server as well as any health checks. This is the equivalent of the
2385 "disable server" command. Setting the mode to "drain" only removes the server
2386 from load balancing but still allows it to be checked and to accept new
2387 persistent connections. Changes are propagated to tracking servers if any.
2388
2389set server <backend>/<server> weight <weight>[%]
2390 Change a server's weight to the value passed in argument. This is the exact
2391 equivalent of the "set weight" command below.
2392
Frédéric Lécailleb418c122017-04-26 11:24:02 +02002393set server <backend>/<server> fqdn <FQDN>
Lukas Tribusc5dd5a52018-08-14 11:39:35 +02002394 Change a server's FQDN to the value passed in argument. This requires the
2395 internal run-time DNS resolver to be configured and enabled for this server.
Frédéric Lécailleb418c122017-04-26 11:24:02 +02002396
William Lallemand9998a332022-01-19 15:17:08 +01002397set server <backend>/<server> ssl [ on | off ] (deprecated)
William Dauchyf6370442020-11-14 19:25:33 +01002398 This option configures SSL ciphering on outgoing connections to the server.
William Dauchya087f872022-01-06 16:57:15 +01002399 When switch off, all traffic becomes plain text; health check path is not
2400 changed.
William Dauchyf6370442020-11-14 19:25:33 +01002401
William Lallemand9998a332022-01-19 15:17:08 +01002402 This command is deprecated, create a new server dynamically with or without
2403 SSL instead, using the "add server" command.
2404
Andjelko Iharosc4df59e2017-07-20 11:59:48 +02002405set severity-output [ none | number | string ]
2406 Change the severity output format of the stats socket connected to for the
2407 duration of the current session.
2408
Remi Tricot-Le Bretone88a2ca2021-04-08 15:30:23 +02002409set ssl ca-file <cafile> <payload>
William Lallemand62c0b992022-07-29 17:50:58 +02002410 this command is part of a transaction system, the "commit ssl ca-file" and
Remi Tricot-Le Bretone88a2ca2021-04-08 15:30:23 +02002411 "abort ssl ca-file" commands could be required.
William Lallemand62c0b992022-07-29 17:50:58 +02002412 if there is no on-going transaction, it will create a ca file tree entry into
2413 which the certificates contained in the payload will be stored. the ca file
2414 entry will not be stored in the ca file tree and will only be kept in a
2415 temporary transaction. if a transaction with the same filename already exists,
2416 the previous ca file entry will be deleted and replaced by the new one.
2417 once the modifications are done, you have to commit the transaction through
2418 a "commit ssl ca-file" call. If you want to add multiple certificates
2419 separately, you can use the "add ssl ca-file" command
Remi Tricot-Le Bretone88a2ca2021-04-08 15:30:23 +02002420
2421 Example:
2422 echo -e "set ssl ca-file cafile.pem <<\n$(cat rootCA.crt)\n" | \
2423 socat /var/run/haproxy.stat -
2424 echo "commit ssl ca-file cafile.pem" | socat /var/run/haproxy.stat -
2425
William Lallemand6ab08b32019-11-29 16:48:43 +01002426set ssl cert <filename> <payload>
2427 This command is part of a transaction system, the "commit ssl cert" and
2428 "abort ssl cert" commands could be required.
Remi Tricot-Le Breton34459092021-04-14 16:19:28 +02002429 This whole transaction system works on any certificate displayed by the
Remi Tricot-Le Bretonb5f0fac2021-04-14 16:19:29 +02002430 "show ssl cert" command, so on any frontend or backend certificate.
William Lallemand6ab08b32019-11-29 16:48:43 +01002431 If there is no on-going transaction, it will duplicate the certificate
2432 <filename> in memory to a temporary transaction, then update this
2433 transaction with the PEM file in the payload. If a transaction exists with
2434 the same filename, it will update this transaction. It's also possible to
2435 update the files linked to a certificate (.issuer, .sctl, .oscp etc.)
2436 Once the modification are done, you have to "commit ssl cert" the
2437 transaction.
2438
William Lallemanded8bfad2021-09-16 17:30:51 +02002439 Injection of files over the CLI must be done with caution since an empty line
2440 is used to notify the end of the payload. It is recommended to inject a PEM
2441 file which has been sanitized. A simple method would be to remove every empty
2442 line and only leave what are in the PEM sections. It could be achieved with a
2443 sed command.
2444
William Lallemand6ab08b32019-11-29 16:48:43 +01002445 Example:
William Lallemanded8bfad2021-09-16 17:30:51 +02002446
2447 # With some simple sanitizing
2448 echo -e "set ssl cert localhost.pem <<\n$(sed -n '/^$/d;/-BEGIN/,/-END/p' 127.0.0.1.pem)\n" | \
2449 socat /var/run/haproxy.stat -
2450
2451 # Complete example with commit
William Lallemand6ab08b32019-11-29 16:48:43 +01002452 echo -e "set ssl cert localhost.pem <<\n$(cat 127.0.0.1.pem)\n" | \
2453 socat /var/run/haproxy.stat -
2454 echo -e \
2455 "set ssl cert localhost.pem.issuer <<\n $(cat 127.0.0.1.pem.issuer)\n" | \
2456 socat /var/run/haproxy.stat -
2457 echo -e \
2458 "set ssl cert localhost.pem.ocsp <<\n$(base64 -w 1000 127.0.0.1.pem.ocsp)\n" | \
2459 socat /var/run/haproxy.stat -
2460 echo "commit ssl cert localhost.pem" | socat /var/run/haproxy.stat -
2461
Remi Tricot-Le Breton3c222bd2021-04-27 16:28:25 +02002462set ssl crl-file <crlfile> <payload>
2463 This command is part of a transaction system, the "commit ssl crl-file" and
2464 "abort ssl crl-file" commands could be required.
2465 If there is no on-going transaction, it will create a CRL file tree entry into
2466 which the Revocation Lists contained in the payload will be stored. The CRL
2467 file entry will not be stored in the CRL file tree and will only be kept in a
2468 temporary transaction. If a transaction with the same filename already exists,
2469 the previous CRL file entry will be deleted and replaced by the new one.
2470 Once the modifications are done, you have to commit the transaction through
2471 a "commit ssl crl-file" call.
2472
2473 Example:
2474 echo -e "set ssl crl-file crlfile.pem <<\n$(cat rootCRL.pem)\n" | \
2475 socat /var/run/haproxy.stat -
2476 echo "commit ssl crl-file crlfile.pem" | socat /var/run/haproxy.stat -
2477
Aurélien Nephtali1e0867c2018-04-18 14:04:58 +02002478set ssl ocsp-response <response | payload>
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002479 This command is used to update an OCSP Response for a certificate (see "crt"
2480 on "bind" lines). Same controls are performed as during the initial loading of
2481 the response. The <response> must be passed as a base64 encoded string of the
Emmanuel Hocdet2c32d8f2017-05-22 14:58:00 +02002482 DER encoded response from the OCSP server. This command is not supported with
2483 BoringSSL.
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002484
2485 Example:
2486 openssl ocsp -issuer issuer.pem -cert server.pem \
2487 -host ocsp.issuer.com:80 -respout resp.der
2488 echo "set ssl ocsp-response $(base64 -w 10000 resp.der)" | \
2489 socat stdio /var/run/haproxy.stat
2490
Aurélien Nephtali1e0867c2018-04-18 14:04:58 +02002491 using the payload syntax:
2492 echo -e "set ssl ocsp-response <<\n$(base64 resp.der)\n" | \
2493 socat stdio /var/run/haproxy.stat
2494
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002495set ssl tls-key <id> <tlskey>
2496 Set the next TLS key for the <id> listener to <tlskey>. This key becomes the
2497 ultimate key, while the penultimate one is used for encryption (others just
2498 decrypt). The oldest TLS key present is overwritten. <id> is either a numeric
2499 #<id> or <file> returned by "show tls-keys". <tlskey> is a base64 encoded 48
Emeric Brun9e754772019-01-10 17:51:55 +01002500 or 80 bits TLS ticket key (ex. openssl rand 80 | openssl base64 -A).
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002501
2502set table <table> key <key> [data.<data_type> <value>]*
2503 Create or update a stick-table entry in the table. If the key is not present,
2504 an entry is inserted. See stick-table in section 4.2 to find all possible
2505 values for <data_type>. The most likely use consists in dynamically entering
2506 entries for source IP addresses, with a flag in gpc0 to dynamically block an
2507 IP address or affect its quality of service. It is possible to pass multiple
2508 data_types in a single call.
2509
2510set timeout cli <delay>
2511 Change the CLI interface timeout for current connection. This can be useful
2512 during long debugging sessions where the user needs to constantly inspect
2513 some indicators without being disconnected. The delay is passed in seconds.
2514
Willy Tarreau4000ff02021-04-30 14:45:53 +02002515set var <name> <expression>
Willy Tarreaue93bff42021-09-03 09:47:37 +02002516set var <name> expr <expression>
2517set var <name> fmt <format>
Willy Tarreau4000ff02021-04-30 14:45:53 +02002518 Allows to set or overwrite the process-wide variable 'name' with the result
Willy Tarreaue93bff42021-09-03 09:47:37 +02002519 of expression <expression> or format string <format>. Only process-wide
2520 variables may be used, so the name must begin with 'proc.' otherwise no
2521 variable will be set. The <expression> and <format> may only involve
2522 "internal" sample fetch keywords and converters even though the most likely
2523 useful ones will be str('something'), int(), simple strings or references to
2524 other variables. Note that the command line parser doesn't know about quotes,
2525 so any space in the expression must be preceded by a backslash. This command
2526 requires levels "operator" or "admin". This command is only supported on a
2527 CLI connection running in experimental mode (see "experimental-mode on").
Willy Tarreau4000ff02021-04-30 14:45:53 +02002528
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002529set weight <backend>/<server> <weight>[%]
2530 Change a server's weight to the value passed in argument. If the value ends
2531 with the '%' sign, then the new weight will be relative to the initially
2532 configured weight. Absolute weights are permitted between 0 and 256.
2533 Relative weights must be positive with the resulting absolute weight is
2534 capped at 256. Servers which are part of a farm running a static
2535 load-balancing algorithm have stricter limitations because the weight
2536 cannot change once set. Thus for these servers, the only accepted values
2537 are 0 and 100% (or 0 and the initial weight). Changes take effect
2538 immediately, though certain LB algorithms require a certain amount of
2539 requests to consider changes. A typical usage of this command is to
2540 disable a server during an update by setting its weight to zero, then to
2541 enable it again after the update by setting it back to 100%. This command
2542 is restricted and can only be issued on sockets configured for level
2543 "admin". Both the backend and the server may be specified either by their
2544 name or by their numeric ID, prefixed with a sharp ('#').
2545
Willy Tarreau95f753e2021-04-30 12:09:54 +02002546show acl [[@<ver>] <acl>]
Willy Tarreaud6129fc2017-07-28 16:52:23 +02002547 Dump info about acl converters. Without argument, the list of all available
Willy Tarreau95f753e2021-04-30 12:09:54 +02002548 acls is returned. If a <acl> is specified, its contents are dumped. <acl> is
2549 the #<id> or <file>. By default the current version of the ACL is shown (the
2550 version currently being matched against and reported as 'curr_ver' in the ACL
2551 list). It is possible to instead dump other versions by prepending '@<ver>'
2552 before the ACL's identifier. The version works as a filter and non-existing
2553 versions will simply report no result. The dump format is the same as for the
2554 maps even for the sample values. The data returned are not a list of
2555 available ACL, but are the list of all patterns composing any ACL. Many of
Dragan Dosena75eea72021-05-21 16:59:15 +02002556 these patterns can be shared with maps. The 'entry_cnt' value represents the
2557 count of all the ACL entries, not just the active ones, which means that it
2558 also includes entries currently being added.
Willy Tarreaud6129fc2017-07-28 16:52:23 +02002559
Erwan Le Goas54966df2022-09-14 17:24:22 +02002560show anon
2561 Display the current state of the anonymized mode (enabled or disabled) and
2562 the current session's key.
2563
Willy Tarreaud6129fc2017-07-28 16:52:23 +02002564show backend
2565 Dump the list of backends available in the running process
2566
William Lallemand67a234f2018-12-13 09:05:45 +01002567show cli level
2568 Display the CLI level of the current CLI session. The result could be
2569 'admin', 'operator' or 'user'. See also the 'operator' and 'user' commands.
2570
2571 Example :
2572
2573 $ socat /tmp/sock1 readline
2574 prompt
2575 > operator
2576 > show cli level
2577 operator
2578 > user
2579 > show cli level
2580 user
2581 > operator
2582 Permission denied
2583
2584operator
2585 Decrease the CLI level of the current CLI session to operator. It can't be
Amaury Denoyelle18487fb2021-03-18 15:32:53 +01002586 increased. It also drops expert and experimental mode. See also "show cli
2587 level".
William Lallemand67a234f2018-12-13 09:05:45 +01002588
2589user
2590 Decrease the CLI level of the current CLI session to user. It can't be
Amaury Denoyelle18487fb2021-03-18 15:32:53 +01002591 increased. It also drops expert and experimental mode. See also "show cli
2592 level".
William Lallemand67a234f2018-12-13 09:05:45 +01002593
Willy Tarreau9a7fa902022-07-15 16:51:16 +02002594show activity [-1 | 0 | thread_num]
Willy Tarreau4c356932019-05-16 17:39:32 +02002595 Reports some counters about internal events that will help developers and
2596 more generally people who know haproxy well enough to narrow down the causes
2597 of reports of abnormal behaviours. A typical example would be a properly
2598 running process never sleeping and eating 100% of the CPU. The output fields
2599 will be made of one line per metric, and per-thread counters on the same
Thayne McCombscdbcca92021-01-07 21:24:41 -07002600 line. These counters are 32-bit and will wrap during the process's life, which
Willy Tarreau4c356932019-05-16 17:39:32 +02002601 is not a problem since calls to this command will typically be performed
2602 twice. The fields are purposely not documented so that their exact meaning is
2603 verified in the code where the counters are fed. These values are also reset
Willy Tarreau9a7fa902022-07-15 16:51:16 +02002604 by the "clear counters" command. On multi-threaded deployments, the first
2605 column will indicate the total (or average depending on the nature of the
2606 metric) for all threads, and the list of all threads' values will be
2607 represented between square brackets in the thread order. Optionally the
2608 thread number to be dumped may be specified in argument. The special value
2609 "0" will report the aggregated value (first column), and "-1", which is the
2610 default, will display all the columns. Note that just like in single-threaded
2611 mode, there will be no brackets when a single column is requested.
Willy Tarreau4c356932019-05-16 17:39:32 +02002612
William Lallemand51132162016-12-16 16:38:58 +01002613show cli sockets
2614 List CLI sockets. The output format is composed of 3 fields separated by
2615 spaces. The first field is the socket address, it can be a unix socket, a
2616 ipv4 address:port couple or a ipv6 one. Socket of other types won't be dump.
2617 The second field describe the level of the socket: 'admin', 'user' or
2618 'operator'. The last field list the processes on which the socket is bound,
2619 separated by commas, it can be numbers or 'all'.
2620
2621 Example :
2622
2623 $ echo 'show cli sockets' | socat stdio /tmp/sock1
2624 # socket lvl processes
2625 /tmp/sock1 admin all
2626 127.0.0.1:9999 user 2,3,4
2627 127.0.0.2:9969 user 2
2628 [::1]:9999 operator 2
2629
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +01002630show cache
Cyril Bonté7b888f12017-11-26 22:24:31 +01002631 List the configured caches and the objects stored in each cache tree.
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +01002632
2633 $ echo 'show cache' | socat stdio /tmp/sock1
2634 0x7f6ac6c5b03a: foobar (shctx:0x7f6ac6c5b000, available blocks:3918)
2635 1 2 3 4
2636
2637 1. pointer to the cache structure
2638 2. cache name
2639 3. pointer to the mmap area (shctx)
2640 4. number of blocks available for reuse in the shctx
2641
Remi Tricot-Le Bretone3e1e5f2020-11-27 15:48:40 +01002642 0x7f6ac6c5b4cc hash:286881868 vary:0x0011223344556677 size:39114 (39 blocks), refcount:9, expire:237
2643 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +01002644
2645 1. pointer to the cache entry
2646 2. first 32 bits of the hash
Remi Tricot-Le Bretone3e1e5f2020-11-27 15:48:40 +01002647 3. secondary hash of the entry in case of vary
2648 4. size of the object in bytes
2649 5. number of blocks used for the object
2650 6. number of transactions using the entry
2651 7. expiration time, can be negative if already expired
William Lallemand86d0df02017-11-24 21:36:45 +01002652
Willy Tarreauae795722016-02-16 11:27:28 +01002653show env [<name>]
2654 Dump one or all environment variables known by the process. Without any
2655 argument, all variables are dumped. With an argument, only the specified
2656 variable is dumped if it exists. Otherwise "Variable not found" is emitted.
2657 Variables are dumped in the same format as they are stored or returned by the
2658 "env" utility, that is, "<name>=<value>". This can be handy when debugging
2659 certain configuration files making heavy use of environment variables to
2660 ensure that they contain the expected values. This command is restricted and
2661 can only be issued on sockets configured for levels "operator" or "admin".
2662
Willy Tarreau35069f82016-11-25 09:16:37 +01002663show errors [<iid>|<proxy>] [request|response]
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002664 Dump last known request and response errors collected by frontends and
2665 backends. If <iid> is specified, the limit the dump to errors concerning
Willy Tarreau234ba2d2016-11-25 08:39:10 +01002666 either frontend or backend whose ID is <iid>. Proxy ID "-1" will cause
2667 all instances to be dumped. If a proxy name is specified instead, its ID
Willy Tarreau35069f82016-11-25 09:16:37 +01002668 will be used as the filter. If "request" or "response" is added after the
2669 proxy name or ID, only request or response errors will be dumped. This
2670 command is restricted and can only be issued on sockets configured for
2671 levels "operator" or "admin".
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002672
2673 The errors which may be collected are the last request and response errors
2674 caused by protocol violations, often due to invalid characters in header
2675 names. The report precisely indicates what exact character violated the
2676 protocol. Other important information such as the exact date the error was
2677 detected, frontend and backend names, the server name (when known), the
2678 internal session ID and the source address which has initiated the session
2679 are reported too.
2680
2681 All characters are returned, and non-printable characters are encoded. The
2682 most common ones (\t = 9, \n = 10, \r = 13 and \e = 27) are encoded as one
2683 letter following a backslash. The backslash itself is encoded as '\\' to
2684 avoid confusion. Other non-printable characters are encoded '\xNN' where
2685 NN is the two-digits hexadecimal representation of the character's ASCII
2686 code.
2687
2688 Lines are prefixed with the position of their first character, starting at 0
2689 for the beginning of the buffer. At most one input line is printed per line,
2690 and large lines will be broken into multiple consecutive output lines so that
2691 the output never goes beyond 79 characters wide. It is easy to detect if a
2692 line was broken, because it will not end with '\n' and the next line's offset
2693 will be followed by a '+' sign, indicating it is a continuation of previous
2694 line.
2695
2696 Example :
Willy Tarreau35069f82016-11-25 09:16:37 +01002697 $ echo "show errors -1 response" | socat stdio /tmp/sock1
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002698 >>> [04/Mar/2009:15:46:56.081] backend http-in (#2) : invalid response
2699 src 127.0.0.1, session #54, frontend fe-eth0 (#1), server s2 (#1)
2700 response length 213 bytes, error at position 23:
2701
2702 00000 HTTP/1.0 200 OK\r\n
2703 00017 header/bizarre:blah\r\n
2704 00038 Location: blah\r\n
2705 00054 Long-line: this is a very long line which should b
2706 00104+ e broken into multiple lines on the output buffer,
2707 00154+ otherwise it would be too large to print in a ter
2708 00204+ minal\r\n
2709 00211 \r\n
2710
2711 In the example above, we see that the backend "http-in" which has internal
2712 ID 2 has blocked an invalid response from its server s2 which has internal
2713 ID 1. The request was on session 54 initiated by source 127.0.0.1 and
2714 received by frontend fe-eth0 whose ID is 1. The total response length was
2715 213 bytes when the error was detected, and the error was at byte 23. This
2716 is the slash ('/') in header name "header/bizarre", which is not a valid
2717 HTTP character for a header name.
2718
Willy Tarreau1d181e42019-08-30 11:17:01 +02002719show events [<sink>] [-w] [-n]
Willy Tarreau9f830d72019-08-26 18:17:04 +02002720 With no option, this lists all known event sinks and their types. With an
2721 option, it will dump all available events in the designated sink if it is of
Willy Tarreau1d181e42019-08-30 11:17:01 +02002722 type buffer. If option "-w" is passed after the sink name, then once the end
2723 of the buffer is reached, the command will wait for new events and display
2724 them. It is possible to stop the operation by entering any input (which will
2725 be discarded) or by closing the session. Finally, option "-n" is used to
2726 directly seek to the end of the buffer, which is often convenient when
2727 combined with "-w" to only report new events. For convenience, "-wn" or "-nw"
2728 may be used to enable both options at once.
Willy Tarreau9f830d72019-08-26 18:17:04 +02002729
Willy Tarreau1cb041a2023-03-31 16:33:53 +02002730show fd [-!plcfbsd]* [<fd>]
Willy Tarreau7a4a0ac2017-07-25 19:32:50 +02002731 Dump the list of either all open file descriptors or just the one number <fd>
Willy Tarreau1cb041a2023-03-31 16:33:53 +02002732 if specified. A set of flags may optionally be passed to restrict the dump
2733 only to certain FD types or to omit certain FD types. When '-' or '!' are
2734 encountered, the selection is inverted for the following characters in the
2735 same argument. The inversion is reset before each argument word delimited by
2736 white spaces. Selectable FD types include 'p' for pipes, 'l' for listeners,
2737 'c' for connections (any type), 'f' for frontend connections, 'b' for backend
2738 connections (any type), 's' for connections to servers, 'd' for connections
2739 to the "dispatch" address or the backend's transparent address. With this,
2740 'b' is a shortcut for 'sd' and 'c' for 'fb' or 'fsd'. 'c!f' is equivalent to
2741 'b' ("any connections except frontend connections" are indeed backend
2742 connections). This is only aimed at developers who need to observe internal
Willy Tarreau7a4a0ac2017-07-25 19:32:50 +02002743 states in order to debug complex issues such as abnormal CPU usages. One fd
2744 is reported per lines, and for each of them, its state in the poller using
2745 upper case letters for enabled flags and lower case for disabled flags, using
2746 "P" for "polled", "R" for "ready", "A" for "active", the events status using
2747 "H" for "hangup", "E" for "error", "O" for "output", "P" for "priority" and
2748 "I" for "input", a few other flags like "N" for "new" (just added into the fd
2749 cache), "U" for "updated" (received an update in the fd cache), "L" for
2750 "linger_risk", "C" for "cloned", then the cached entry position, the pointer
2751 to the internal owner, the pointer to the I/O callback and its name when
2752 known. When the owner is a connection, the connection flags, and the target
2753 are reported (frontend, proxy or server). When the owner is a listener, the
2754 listener's state and its frontend are reported. There is no point in using
2755 this command without a good knowledge of the internals. It's worth noting
2756 that the output format may evolve over time so this output must not be parsed
Willy Tarreau8050efe2021-01-21 08:26:06 +01002757 by tools designed to be durable. Some internal structure states may look
2758 suspicious to the function listing them, in this case the output line will be
2759 suffixed with an exclamation mark ('!'). This may help find a starting point
2760 when trying to diagnose an incident.
Willy Tarreau7a4a0ac2017-07-25 19:32:50 +02002761
Willy Tarreau27456202021-05-08 07:54:24 +02002762show info [typed|json] [desc] [float]
Willy Tarreau5d8b9792016-03-11 11:09:34 +01002763 Dump info about haproxy status on current process. If "typed" is passed as an
2764 optional argument, field numbers, names and types are emitted as well so that
2765 external monitoring products can easily retrieve, possibly aggregate, then
2766 report information found in fields they don't know. Each field is dumped on
Simon Horman05ee2132017-01-04 09:37:25 +01002767 its own line. If "json" is passed as an optional argument then
2768 information provided by "typed" output is provided in JSON format as a
2769 list of JSON objects. By default, the format contains only two columns
2770 delimited by a colon (':'). The left one is the field name and the right
2771 one is the value. It is very important to note that in typed output
2772 format, the dump for a single object is contiguous so that there is no
Willy Tarreau27456202021-05-08 07:54:24 +02002773 need for a consumer to store everything at once. If "float" is passed as an
2774 optional argument, some fields usually emitted as integers may switch to
2775 floats for higher accuracy. It is purposely unspecified which ones are
2776 concerned as this might evolve over time. Using this option implies that the
2777 consumer is able to process floats. The output format used is sprintf("%f").
Willy Tarreau5d8b9792016-03-11 11:09:34 +01002778
2779 When using the typed output format, each line is made of 4 columns delimited
2780 by colons (':'). The first column is a dot-delimited series of 3 elements. The
2781 first element is the numeric position of the field in the list (starting at
2782 zero). This position shall not change over time, but holes are to be expected,
2783 depending on build options or if some fields are deleted in the future. The
2784 second element is the field name as it appears in the default "show info"
2785 output. The third element is the relative process number starting at 1.
2786
2787 The rest of the line starting after the first colon follows the "typed output
2788 format" described in the section above. In short, the second column (after the
2789 first ':') indicates the origin, nature and scope of the variable. The third
2790 column indicates the type of the field, among "s32", "s64", "u32", "u64" and
2791 "str". Then the fourth column is the value itself, which the consumer knows
2792 how to parse thanks to column 3 and how to process thanks to column 2.
2793
2794 Thus the overall line format in typed mode is :
2795
2796 <field_pos>.<field_name>.<process_num>:<tags>:<type>:<value>
2797
Willy Tarreau6b19b142019-10-09 15:44:21 +02002798 When "desc" is appended to the command, one extra colon followed by a quoted
2799 string is appended with a description for the metric. At the time of writing,
2800 this is only supported for the "typed" and default output formats.
2801
Willy Tarreau5d8b9792016-03-11 11:09:34 +01002802 Example :
2803
2804 > show info
2805 Name: HAProxy
2806 Version: 1.7-dev1-de52ea-146
2807 Release_date: 2016/03/11
2808 Nbproc: 1
2809 Process_num: 1
2810 Pid: 28105
2811 Uptime: 0d 0h00m04s
2812 Uptime_sec: 4
2813 Memmax_MB: 0
2814 PoolAlloc_MB: 0
2815 PoolUsed_MB: 0
2816 PoolFailed: 0
2817 (...)
2818
2819 > show info typed
2820 0.Name.1:POS:str:HAProxy
2821 1.Version.1:POS:str:1.7-dev1-de52ea-146
2822 2.Release_date.1:POS:str:2016/03/11
2823 3.Nbproc.1:CGS:u32:1
2824 4.Process_num.1:KGP:u32:1
2825 5.Pid.1:SGP:u32:28105
2826 6.Uptime.1:MDP:str:0d 0h00m08s
2827 7.Uptime_sec.1:MDP:u32:8
2828 8.Memmax_MB.1:CLP:u32:0
2829 9.PoolAlloc_MB.1:MGP:u32:0
2830 10.PoolUsed_MB.1:MGP:u32:0
2831 11.PoolFailed.1:MCP:u32:0
2832 (...)
2833
Simon Horman1084a362016-11-21 17:00:24 +01002834 In the typed format, the presence of the process ID at the end of the
2835 first column makes it very easy to visually aggregate outputs from
2836 multiple processes.
Willy Tarreau5d8b9792016-03-11 11:09:34 +01002837 Example :
2838
2839 $ ( echo show info typed | socat /var/run/haproxy.sock1 ; \
2840 echo show info typed | socat /var/run/haproxy.sock2 ) | \
2841 sort -t . -k 1,1n -k 2,2 -k 3,3n
2842 0.Name.1:POS:str:HAProxy
2843 0.Name.2:POS:str:HAProxy
2844 1.Version.1:POS:str:1.7-dev1-868ab3-148
2845 1.Version.2:POS:str:1.7-dev1-868ab3-148
2846 2.Release_date.1:POS:str:2016/03/11
2847 2.Release_date.2:POS:str:2016/03/11
2848 3.Nbproc.1:CGS:u32:2
2849 3.Nbproc.2:CGS:u32:2
2850 4.Process_num.1:KGP:u32:1
2851 4.Process_num.2:KGP:u32:2
2852 5.Pid.1:SGP:u32:30120
2853 5.Pid.2:SGP:u32:30121
2854 6.Uptime.1:MDP:str:0d 0h01m28s
2855 6.Uptime.2:MDP:str:0d 0h01m28s
2856 (...)
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002857
Simon Horman05ee2132017-01-04 09:37:25 +01002858 The format of JSON output is described in a schema which may be output
Simon Horman6f6bb382017-01-04 09:37:26 +01002859 using "show schema json".
Simon Horman05ee2132017-01-04 09:37:25 +01002860
2861 The JSON output contains no extra whitespace in order to reduce the
2862 volume of output. For human consumption passing the output through a
2863 pretty printer may be helpful. Example :
2864
2865 $ echo "show info json" | socat /var/run/haproxy.sock stdio | \
2866 python -m json.tool
2867
Simon Horman6f6bb382017-01-04 09:37:26 +01002868 The JSON output contains no extra whitespace in order to reduce the
2869 volume of output. For human consumption passing the output through a
2870 pretty printer may be helpful. Example :
2871
2872 $ echo "show info json" | socat /var/run/haproxy.sock stdio | \
2873 python -m json.tool
2874
Willy Tarreau6ab7b212021-12-28 09:57:10 +01002875show libs
2876 Dump the list of loaded shared dynamic libraries and object files, on systems
2877 that support it. When available, for each shared object the range of virtual
2878 addresses will be indicated, the size and the path to the object. This can be
2879 used for example to try to estimate what library provides a function that
2880 appears in a dump. Note that on many systems, addresses will change upon each
2881 restart (address space randomization), so that this list would need to be
2882 retrieved upon startup if it is expected to be used to analyse a core file.
2883 This command may only be issued on sockets configured for levels "operator"
2884 or "admin". Note that the output format may vary between operating systems,
2885 architectures and even haproxy versions, and ought not to be relied on in
2886 scripts.
2887
Willy Tarreau95f753e2021-04-30 12:09:54 +02002888show map [[@<ver>] <map>]
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002889 Dump info about map converters. Without argument, the list of all available
2890 maps is returned. If a <map> is specified, its contents are dumped. <map> is
Willy Tarreau95f753e2021-04-30 12:09:54 +02002891 the #<id> or <file>. By default the current version of the map is shown (the
2892 version currently being matched against and reported as 'curr_ver' in the map
2893 list). It is possible to instead dump other versions by prepending '@<ver>'
2894 before the map's identifier. The version works as a filter and non-existing
Dragan Dosena75eea72021-05-21 16:59:15 +02002895 versions will simply report no result. The 'entry_cnt' value represents the
2896 count of all the map entries, not just the active ones, which means that it
2897 also includes entries currently being added.
Willy Tarreau95f753e2021-04-30 12:09:54 +02002898
2899 In the output, the first column is a unique entry identifier, which is usable
2900 as a reference for operations "del map" and "set map". The second column is
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002901 the pattern and the third column is the sample if available. The data returned
2902 are not directly a list of available maps, but are the list of all patterns
2903 composing any map. Many of these patterns can be shared with ACL.
2904
Willy Tarreau49962b52021-02-12 16:56:22 +01002905show peers [dict|-] [<peers section>]
Frédéric Lécaille21dde502019-04-15 13:50:23 +02002906 Dump info about the peers configured in "peers" sections. Without argument,
2907 the list of the peers belonging to all the "peers" sections are listed. If
2908 <peers section> is specified, only the information about the peers belonging
Willy Tarreau49962b52021-02-12 16:56:22 +01002909 to this "peers" section are dumped. When "dict" is specified before the peers
2910 section name, the entire Tx/Rx dictionary caches will also be dumped (very
2911 large). Passing "-" may be required to dump a peers section called "dict".
Frédéric Lécaille21dde502019-04-15 13:50:23 +02002912
Michael Prokop4438c602019-05-24 10:25:45 +02002913 Here are two examples of outputs where hostA, hostB and hostC peers belong to
Frédéric Lécaille21dde502019-04-15 13:50:23 +02002914 "sharedlb" peers sections. Only hostA and hostB are connected. Only hostA has
2915 sent data to hostB.
2916
2917 $ echo "show peers" | socat - /tmp/hostA
2918 0x55deb0224320: [15/Apr/2019:11:28:01] id=sharedlb state=0 flags=0x3 \
Emeric Brun0bbec0f2019-04-18 11:39:43 +02002919 resync_timeout=<PAST> task_calls=45122
Frédéric Lécaille21dde502019-04-15 13:50:23 +02002920 0x55deb022b540: id=hostC(remote) addr=127.0.0.12:10002 status=CONN \
2921 reconnect=4s confirm=0
2922 flags=0x0
2923 0x55deb022a440: id=hostA(local) addr=127.0.0.10:10000 status=NONE \
2924 reconnect=<NEVER> confirm=0
2925 flags=0x0
2926 0x55deb0227d70: id=hostB(remote) addr=127.0.0.11:10001 status=ESTA
2927 reconnect=2s confirm=0
Emeric Brun0bbec0f2019-04-18 11:39:43 +02002928 flags=0x20000200 appctx:0x55deb028fba0 st0=7 st1=0 task_calls=14456 \
2929 state=EST
Frédéric Lécaille21dde502019-04-15 13:50:23 +02002930 xprt=RAW src=127.0.0.1:37257 addr=127.0.0.10:10000
2931 remote_table:0x55deb0224a10 id=stkt local_id=1 remote_id=1
2932 last_local_table:0x55deb0224a10 id=stkt local_id=1 remote_id=1
2933 shared tables:
2934 0x55deb0224a10 local_id=1 remote_id=1 flags=0x0 remote_data=0x65
2935 last_acked=0 last_pushed=3 last_get=0 teaching_origin=0 update=3
2936 table:0x55deb022d6a0 id=stkt update=3 localupdate=3 \
2937 commitupdate=3 syncing=0
2938
2939 $ echo "show peers" | socat - /tmp/hostB
2940 0x55871b5ab320: [15/Apr/2019:11:28:03] id=sharedlb state=0 flags=0x3 \
Emeric Brun0bbec0f2019-04-18 11:39:43 +02002941 resync_timeout=<PAST> task_calls=3
Frédéric Lécaille21dde502019-04-15 13:50:23 +02002942 0x55871b5b2540: id=hostC(remote) addr=127.0.0.12:10002 status=CONN \
2943 reconnect=3s confirm=0
2944 flags=0x0
2945 0x55871b5b1440: id=hostB(local) addr=127.0.0.11:10001 status=NONE \
2946 reconnect=<NEVER> confirm=0
2947 flags=0x0
2948 0x55871b5aed70: id=hostA(remote) addr=127.0.0.10:10000 status=ESTA \
2949 reconnect=2s confirm=0
Emeric Brun0bbec0f2019-04-18 11:39:43 +02002950 flags=0x20000200 appctx:0x7fa46800ee00 st0=7 st1=0 task_calls=62356 \
2951 state=EST
Frédéric Lécaille21dde502019-04-15 13:50:23 +02002952 remote_table:0x55871b5ab960 id=stkt local_id=1 remote_id=1
2953 last_local_table:0x55871b5ab960 id=stkt local_id=1 remote_id=1
2954 shared tables:
2955 0x55871b5ab960 local_id=1 remote_id=1 flags=0x0 remote_data=0x65
2956 last_acked=3 last_pushed=0 last_get=3 teaching_origin=0 update=0
2957 table:0x55871b5b46a0 id=stkt update=1 localupdate=0 \
2958 commitupdate=0 syncing=0
2959
Willy Tarreau7583c362022-11-21 10:02:29 +01002960show pools [byname|bysize|byusage] [match <pfx>] [<nb>]
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002961 Dump the status of internal memory pools. This is useful to track memory
2962 usage when suspecting a memory leak for example. It does exactly the same
Willy Tarreau2fba08f2022-11-21 09:34:02 +01002963 as the SIGQUIT when running in foreground except that it does not flush the
2964 pools. The output is not sorted by default. If "byname" is specified, it is
2965 sorted by pool name; if "bysize" is specified, it is sorted by item size in
2966 reverse order; if "byusage" is specified, it is sorted by total usage in
2967 reverse order, and only used entries are shown. It is also possible to limit
Willy Tarreau7583c362022-11-21 10:02:29 +01002968 the output to the <nb> first entries (e.g. when sorting by usage). Finally,
2969 if "match" followed by a prefix is specified, then only pools whose name
2970 starts with this prefix will be shown. The reported total only concerns pools
2971 matching the filtering criteria. Example:
2972
2973 $ socat - /tmp/haproxy.sock <<< "show pools match quic byusage"
2974 Dumping pools usage. Use SIGQUIT to flush them.
2975 - Pool quic_conn_r (65560 bytes) : 1337 allocated (87653720 bytes), ...
2976 - Pool quic_crypto (1048 bytes) : 6685 allocated (7005880 bytes), ...
2977 - Pool quic_conn (4056 bytes) : 1337 allocated (5422872 bytes), ...
2978 - Pool quic_rxbuf (262168 bytes) : 8 allocated (2097344 bytes), ...
Frédéric Lécaillea9461252023-04-24 18:20:44 +02002979 - Pool quic_conne (184 bytes) : 9359 allocated (1722056 bytes), ...
Willy Tarreau7583c362022-11-21 10:02:29 +01002980 - Pool quic_frame (184 bytes) : 7938 allocated (1460592 bytes), ...
2981 - Pool quic_tx_pac (152 bytes) : 6454 allocated (981008 bytes), ...
2982 - Pool quic_tls_ke (56 bytes) : 12033 allocated (673848 bytes), ...
2983 - Pool quic_rx_pac (408 bytes) : 1596 allocated (651168 bytes), ...
2984 - Pool quic_tls_se (88 bytes) : 6685 allocated (588280 bytes), ...
2985 - Pool quic_cstrea (88 bytes) : 4011 allocated (352968 bytes), ...
2986 - Pool quic_tls_iv (24 bytes) : 12033 allocated (288792 bytes), ...
2987 - Pool quic_dgram (344 bytes) : 732 allocated (251808 bytes), ...
2988 - Pool quic_arng (56 bytes) : 4011 allocated (224616 bytes), ...
2989 - Pool quic_conn_c (152 bytes) : 1337 allocated (203224 bytes), ...
2990 Total: 15 pools, 109578176 bytes allocated, 109578176 used ...
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02002991
Willy Tarreaue86bc352022-09-08 16:38:10 +02002992show profiling [{all | status | tasks | memory}] [byaddr|bytime|aggr|<max_lines>]*
Willy Tarreau75c62c22018-11-22 11:02:09 +01002993 Dumps the current profiling settings, one per line, as well as the command
Willy Tarreau1bd67e92021-01-29 00:07:40 +01002994 needed to change them. When tasks profiling is enabled, some per-function
2995 statistics collected by the scheduler will also be emitted, with a summary
Willy Tarreau42712cb2021-05-05 17:48:13 +02002996 covering the number of calls, total/avg CPU time and total/avg latency. When
2997 memory profiling is enabled, some information such as the number of
2998 allocations/releases and their sizes will be reported. It is possible to
2999 limit the dump to only the profiling status, the tasks, or the memory
3000 profiling by specifying the respective keywords; by default all profiling
3001 information are dumped. It is also possible to limit the number of lines
Willy Tarreauf1c8a382021-05-13 10:00:17 +02003002 of output of each category by specifying a numeric limit. If is possible to
Willy Tarreaue86bc352022-09-08 16:38:10 +02003003 request that the output is sorted by address or by total execution time
3004 instead of usage, e.g. to ease comparisons between subsequent calls or to
3005 check what needs to be optimized, and to aggregate task activity by called
3006 function instead of seeing the details. Please note that profiling is
Willy Tarreauf1c8a382021-05-13 10:00:17 +02003007 essentially aimed at developers since it gives hints about where CPU cycles
3008 or memory are wasted in the code. There is nothing useful to monitor there.
Willy Tarreau75c62c22018-11-22 11:02:09 +01003009
Willy Tarreau87ef3232021-01-29 12:01:46 +01003010show resolvers [<resolvers section id>]
3011 Dump statistics for the given resolvers section, or all resolvers sections
3012 if no section is supplied.
3013
3014 For each name server, the following counters are reported:
3015 sent: number of DNS requests sent to this server
3016 valid: number of DNS valid responses received from this server
3017 update: number of DNS responses used to update the server's IP address
3018 cname: number of CNAME responses
3019 cname_error: CNAME errors encountered with this server
3020 any_err: number of empty response (IE: server does not support ANY type)
3021 nx: non existent domain response received from this server
3022 timeout: how many time this server did not answer in time
3023 refused: number of requests refused by this server
3024 other: any other DNS errors
3025 invalid: invalid DNS response (from a protocol point of view)
3026 too_big: too big response
Michael Prokop9a62e352022-12-09 12:28:46 +01003027 outdated: number of response arrived too late (after another name server)
Willy Tarreau87ef3232021-01-29 12:01:46 +01003028
Willy Tarreau6ccc8622023-05-31 15:54:48 +02003029show quic [oneline|full] [all]
Amaury Denoyelle15c74702023-02-01 10:18:26 +01003030 Dump information on all active QUIC frontend connections. This command is
3031 restricted and can only be issued on sockets configured for levels "operator"
Amaury Denoyellebc1f5fe2023-05-05 16:07:58 +02003032 or "admin". An optional format can be specified as first argument to control
Amaury Denoyelle2273af12023-05-05 16:08:34 +02003033 the verbosity. Currently supported values are "oneline" which is the default
3034 if format is unspecified or "full". By default, connections on closing or
3035 draining state are not displayed. Use the extra argument "all" to include
3036 them in the output.
Amaury Denoyelle15c74702023-02-01 10:18:26 +01003037
Willy Tarreau69f591e2020-07-01 07:00:59 +02003038show servers conn [<backend>]
3039 Dump the current and idle connections state of the servers belonging to the
3040 designated backend (or all backends if none specified). A backend name or
3041 identifier may be used.
3042
3043 The output consists in a header line showing the fields titles, then one
3044 server per line with for each, the backend name and ID, server name and ID,
3045 the address, port and a series or values. The number of fields varies
3046 depending on thread count.
3047
3048 Given the threaded nature of idle connections, it's important to understand
3049 that some values may change once read, and that as such, consistency within a
3050 line isn't granted. This output is mostly provided as a debugging tool and is
3051 not relevant to be routinely monitored nor graphed.
3052
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02003053show servers state [<backend>]
3054 Dump the state of the servers found in the running configuration. A backend
3055 name or identifier may be provided to limit the output to this backend only.
3056
3057 The dump has the following format:
3058 - first line contains the format version (1 in this specification);
3059 - second line contains the column headers, prefixed by a sharp ('#');
3060 - third line and next ones contain data;
3061 - each line starting by a sharp ('#') is considered as a comment.
3062
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -04003063 Since multiple versions of the output may co-exist, below is the list of
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02003064 fields and their order per file format version :
3065 1:
3066 be_id: Backend unique id.
3067 be_name: Backend label.
3068 srv_id: Server unique id (in the backend).
3069 srv_name: Server label.
3070 srv_addr: Server IP address.
3071 srv_op_state: Server operational state (UP/DOWN/...).
Cyril Bonté5b2ce8a2016-11-02 00:19:58 +01003072 0 = SRV_ST_STOPPED
3073 The server is down.
3074 1 = SRV_ST_STARTING
3075 The server is warming up (up but
3076 throttled).
3077 2 = SRV_ST_RUNNING
3078 The server is fully up.
3079 3 = SRV_ST_STOPPING
3080 The server is up but soft-stopping
3081 (eg: 404).
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02003082 srv_admin_state: Server administrative state (MAINT/DRAIN/...).
Cyril Bonté5b2ce8a2016-11-02 00:19:58 +01003083 The state is actually a mask of values :
3084 0x01 = SRV_ADMF_FMAINT
3085 The server was explicitly forced into
3086 maintenance.
3087 0x02 = SRV_ADMF_IMAINT
3088 The server has inherited the maintenance
3089 status from a tracked server.
3090 0x04 = SRV_ADMF_CMAINT
3091 The server is in maintenance because of
3092 the configuration.
3093 0x08 = SRV_ADMF_FDRAIN
3094 The server was explicitly forced into
3095 drain state.
3096 0x10 = SRV_ADMF_IDRAIN
3097 The server has inherited the drain status
3098 from a tracked server.
Baptiste Assmann89aa7f32016-11-02 21:31:27 +01003099 0x20 = SRV_ADMF_RMAINT
3100 The server is in maintenance because of an
3101 IP address resolution failure.
Frédéric Lécailleb418c122017-04-26 11:24:02 +02003102 0x40 = SRV_ADMF_HMAINT
3103 The server FQDN was set from stats socket.
3104
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02003105 srv_uweight: User visible server's weight.
3106 srv_iweight: Server's initial weight.
3107 srv_time_since_last_change: Time since last operational change.
3108 srv_check_status: Last health check status.
3109 srv_check_result: Last check result (FAILED/PASSED/...).
Cyril Bonté5b2ce8a2016-11-02 00:19:58 +01003110 0 = CHK_RES_UNKNOWN
3111 Initialized to this by default.
3112 1 = CHK_RES_NEUTRAL
3113 Valid check but no status information.
3114 2 = CHK_RES_FAILED
3115 Check failed.
3116 3 = CHK_RES_PASSED
3117 Check succeeded and server is fully up
3118 again.
3119 4 = CHK_RES_CONDPASS
3120 Check reports the server doesn't want new
3121 sessions.
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02003122 srv_check_health: Checks rise / fall current counter.
3123 srv_check_state: State of the check (ENABLED/PAUSED/...).
Cyril Bonté5b2ce8a2016-11-02 00:19:58 +01003124 The state is actually a mask of values :
3125 0x01 = CHK_ST_INPROGRESS
3126 A check is currently running.
3127 0x02 = CHK_ST_CONFIGURED
3128 This check is configured and may be
3129 enabled.
3130 0x04 = CHK_ST_ENABLED
3131 This check is currently administratively
3132 enabled.
3133 0x08 = CHK_ST_PAUSED
3134 Checks are paused because of maintenance
3135 (health only).
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02003136 srv_agent_state: State of the agent check (ENABLED/PAUSED/...).
Cyril Bonté5b2ce8a2016-11-02 00:19:58 +01003137 This state uses the same mask values as
3138 "srv_check_state", adding this specific one :
3139 0x10 = CHK_ST_AGENT
3140 Check is an agent check (otherwise it's a
3141 health check).
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02003142 bk_f_forced_id: Flag to know if the backend ID is forced by
3143 configuration.
3144 srv_f_forced_id: Flag to know if the server's ID is forced by
3145 configuration.
Frédéric Lécailleb418c122017-04-26 11:24:02 +02003146 srv_fqdn: Server FQDN.
Frédéric Lécaille31694712017-08-01 08:47:19 +02003147 srv_port: Server port.
Baptiste Assmann6d0f38f2018-07-02 17:00:54 +02003148 srvrecord: DNS SRV record associated to this SRV.
William Dauchyf6370442020-11-14 19:25:33 +01003149 srv_use_ssl: use ssl for server connections.
William Dauchyd1a7b852021-02-11 22:51:26 +01003150 srv_check_port: Server health check port.
3151 srv_check_addr: Server health check address.
3152 srv_agent_addr: Server health agent address.
3153 srv_agent_port: Server health agent port.
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02003154
3155show sess
3156 Dump all known sessions. Avoid doing this on slow connections as this can
3157 be huge. This command is restricted and can only be issued on sockets
Willy Tarreauc6e7a1b2020-06-28 01:24:12 +02003158 configured for levels "operator" or "admin". Note that on machines with
3159 quickly recycled connections, it is possible that this output reports less
3160 entries than really exist because it will dump all existing sessions up to
3161 the last one that was created before the command was entered; those which
3162 die in the mean time will not appear.
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02003163
3164show sess <id>
3165 Display a lot of internal information about the specified session identifier.
3166 This identifier is the first field at the beginning of the lines in the dumps
3167 of "show sess" (it corresponds to the session pointer). Those information are
3168 useless to most users but may be used by haproxy developers to troubleshoot a
3169 complex bug. The output format is intentionally not documented so that it can
3170 freely evolve depending on demands. You may find a description of all fields
3171 returned in src/dumpstats.c
3172
3173 The special id "all" dumps the states of all sessions, which must be avoided
3174 as much as possible as it is highly CPU intensive and can take a lot of time.
3175
Aurelien DARRAGON993a0302024-06-12 11:41:54 +02003176show stat [domain <resolvers|proxy>] [{<iid>|<proxy>} <type> <sid>] \
3177 [typed|json] [desc] [up|no-maint]
Daniel Corbettc40edac2020-11-01 10:54:17 -05003178 Dump statistics. The domain is used to select which statistics to print; dns
3179 and proxy are available for now. By default, the CSV format is used; you can
Amaury Denoyelle072f97e2020-10-05 11:49:37 +02003180 activate the extended typed output format described in the section above if
3181 "typed" is passed after the other arguments; or in JSON if "json" is passed
3182 after the other arguments. By passing <id>, <type> and <sid>, it is possible
3183 to dump only selected items :
Willy Tarreaua1b1ed52016-11-25 08:50:58 +01003184 - <iid> is a proxy ID, -1 to dump everything. Alternatively, a proxy name
3185 <proxy> may be specified. In this case, this proxy's ID will be used as
3186 the ID selector.
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02003187 - <type> selects the type of dumpable objects : 1 for frontends, 2 for
3188 backends, 4 for servers, -1 for everything. These values can be ORed,
3189 for example:
3190 1 + 2 = 3 -> frontend + backend.
3191 1 + 2 + 4 = 7 -> frontend + backend + server.
3192 - <sid> is a server ID, -1 to dump everything from the selected proxy.
3193
3194 Example :
3195 $ echo "show info;show stat" | socat stdio unix-connect:/tmp/sock1
3196 >>> Name: HAProxy
3197 Version: 1.4-dev2-49
3198 Release_date: 2009/09/23
3199 Nbproc: 1
3200 Process_num: 1
3201 (...)
3202
3203 # pxname,svname,qcur,qmax,scur,smax,slim,stot,bin,bout,dreq, (...)
3204 stats,FRONTEND,,,0,0,1000,0,0,0,0,0,0,,,,,OPEN,,,,,,,,,1,1,0, (...)
3205 stats,BACKEND,0,0,0,0,1000,0,0,0,0,0,,0,0,0,0,UP,0,0,0,,0,250,(...)
3206 (...)
3207 www1,BACKEND,0,0,0,0,1000,0,0,0,0,0,,0,0,0,0,UP,1,1,0,,0,250, (...)
3208
3209 $
3210
Willy Tarreau5d8b9792016-03-11 11:09:34 +01003211 In this example, two commands have been issued at once. That way it's easy to
3212 find which process the stats apply to in multi-process mode. This is not
3213 needed in the typed output format as the process number is reported on each
3214 line. Notice the empty line after the information output which marks the end
3215 of the first block. A similar empty line appears at the end of the second
3216 block (stats) so that the reader knows the output has not been truncated.
3217
3218 When "typed" is specified, the output format is more suitable to monitoring
3219 tools because it provides numeric positions and indicates the type of each
3220 output field. Each value stands on its own line with process number, element
3221 number, nature, origin and scope. This same format is available via the HTTP
3222 stats by passing ";typed" after the URI. It is very important to note that in
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -04003223 typed output format, the dump for a single object is contiguous so that there
Willy Tarreau5d8b9792016-03-11 11:09:34 +01003224 is no need for a consumer to store everything at once.
3225
Willy Tarreau698097b2020-10-23 20:19:47 +02003226 The "up" modifier will result in listing only servers which reportedly up or
3227 not checked. Those down, unresolved, or in maintenance will not be listed.
3228 This is analogous to the ";up" option on the HTTP stats. Similarly, the
3229 "no-maint" modifier will act like the ";no-maint" HTTP modifier and will
3230 result in disabled servers not to be listed. The difference is that those
3231 which are enabled but down will not be evicted.
3232
Willy Tarreau5d8b9792016-03-11 11:09:34 +01003233 When using the typed output format, each line is made of 4 columns delimited
3234 by colons (':'). The first column is a dot-delimited series of 5 elements. The
3235 first element is a letter indicating the type of the object being described.
3236 At the moment the following object types are known : 'F' for a frontend, 'B'
3237 for a backend, 'L' for a listener, and 'S' for a server. The second element
3238 The second element is a positive integer representing the unique identifier of
3239 the proxy the object belongs to. It is equivalent to the "iid" column of the
3240 CSV output and matches the value in front of the optional "id" directive found
3241 in the frontend or backend section. The third element is a positive integer
3242 containing the unique object identifier inside the proxy, and corresponds to
3243 the "sid" column of the CSV output. ID 0 is reported when dumping a frontend
3244 or a backend. For a listener or a server, this corresponds to their respective
3245 ID inside the proxy. The fourth element is the numeric position of the field
3246 in the list (starting at zero). This position shall not change over time, but
3247 holes are to be expected, depending on build options or if some fields are
3248 deleted in the future. The fifth element is the field name as it appears in
3249 the CSV output. The sixth element is a positive integer and is the relative
3250 process number starting at 1.
3251
3252 The rest of the line starting after the first colon follows the "typed output
3253 format" described in the section above. In short, the second column (after the
3254 first ':') indicates the origin, nature and scope of the variable. The third
Willy Tarreau589722e2021-05-08 07:46:44 +02003255 column indicates the field type, among "s32", "s64", "u32", "u64", "flt' and
Willy Tarreau5d8b9792016-03-11 11:09:34 +01003256 "str". Then the fourth column is the value itself, which the consumer knows
3257 how to parse thanks to column 3 and how to process thanks to column 2.
3258
Willy Tarreau6b19b142019-10-09 15:44:21 +02003259 When "desc" is appended to the command, one extra colon followed by a quoted
3260 string is appended with a description for the metric. At the time of writing,
3261 this is only supported for the "typed" output format.
3262
Willy Tarreau5d8b9792016-03-11 11:09:34 +01003263 Thus the overall line format in typed mode is :
3264
3265 <obj>.<px_id>.<id>.<fpos>.<fname>.<process_num>:<tags>:<type>:<value>
3266
3267 Here's an example of typed output format :
3268
3269 $ echo "show stat typed" | socat stdio unix-connect:/tmp/sock1
3270 F.2.0.0.pxname.1:MGP:str:private-frontend
3271 F.2.0.1.svname.1:MGP:str:FRONTEND
3272 F.2.0.8.bin.1:MGP:u64:0
3273 F.2.0.9.bout.1:MGP:u64:0
3274 F.2.0.40.hrsp_2xx.1:MGP:u64:0
3275 L.2.1.0.pxname.1:MGP:str:private-frontend
3276 L.2.1.1.svname.1:MGP:str:sock-1
3277 L.2.1.17.status.1:MGP:str:OPEN
3278 L.2.1.73.addr.1:MGP:str:0.0.0.0:8001
3279 S.3.13.60.rtime.1:MCP:u32:0
3280 S.3.13.61.ttime.1:MCP:u32:0
3281 S.3.13.62.agent_status.1:MGP:str:L4TOUT
3282 S.3.13.64.agent_duration.1:MGP:u64:2001
3283 S.3.13.65.check_desc.1:MCP:str:Layer4 timeout
3284 S.3.13.66.agent_desc.1:MCP:str:Layer4 timeout
3285 S.3.13.67.check_rise.1:MCP:u32:2
3286 S.3.13.68.check_fall.1:MCP:u32:3
3287 S.3.13.69.check_health.1:SGP:u32:0
3288 S.3.13.70.agent_rise.1:MaP:u32:1
3289 S.3.13.71.agent_fall.1:SGP:u32:1
3290 S.3.13.72.agent_health.1:SGP:u32:1
3291 S.3.13.73.addr.1:MCP:str:1.255.255.255:8888
3292 S.3.13.75.mode.1:MAP:str:http
3293 B.3.0.0.pxname.1:MGP:str:private-backend
3294 B.3.0.1.svname.1:MGP:str:BACKEND
3295 B.3.0.2.qcur.1:MGP:u32:0
3296 B.3.0.3.qmax.1:MGP:u32:0
3297 B.3.0.4.scur.1:MGP:u32:0
3298 B.3.0.5.smax.1:MGP:u32:0
3299 B.3.0.6.slim.1:MGP:u32:1000
3300 B.3.0.55.lastsess.1:MMP:s32:-1
3301 (...)
3302
Simon Horman1084a362016-11-21 17:00:24 +01003303 In the typed format, the presence of the process ID at the end of the
3304 first column makes it very easy to visually aggregate outputs from
3305 multiple processes, as show in the example below where each line appears
3306 for each process :
Willy Tarreau5d8b9792016-03-11 11:09:34 +01003307
3308 $ ( echo show stat typed | socat /var/run/haproxy.sock1 - ; \
3309 echo show stat typed | socat /var/run/haproxy.sock2 - ) | \
3310 sort -t . -k 1,1 -k 2,2n -k 3,3n -k 4,4n -k 5,5 -k 6,6n
3311 B.3.0.0.pxname.1:MGP:str:private-backend
3312 B.3.0.0.pxname.2:MGP:str:private-backend
3313 B.3.0.1.svname.1:MGP:str:BACKEND
3314 B.3.0.1.svname.2:MGP:str:BACKEND
3315 B.3.0.2.qcur.1:MGP:u32:0
3316 B.3.0.2.qcur.2:MGP:u32:0
3317 B.3.0.3.qmax.1:MGP:u32:0
3318 B.3.0.3.qmax.2:MGP:u32:0
3319 B.3.0.4.scur.1:MGP:u32:0
3320 B.3.0.4.scur.2:MGP:u32:0
3321 B.3.0.5.smax.1:MGP:u32:0
3322 B.3.0.5.smax.2:MGP:u32:0
3323 B.3.0.6.slim.1:MGP:u32:1000
3324 B.3.0.6.slim.2:MGP:u32:1000
3325 (...)
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02003326
Simon Horman05ee2132017-01-04 09:37:25 +01003327 The format of JSON output is described in a schema which may be output
Simon Horman6f6bb382017-01-04 09:37:26 +01003328 using "show schema json".
3329
3330 The JSON output contains no extra whitespace in order to reduce the
3331 volume of output. For human consumption passing the output through a
3332 pretty printer may be helpful. Example :
3333
3334 $ echo "show stat json" | socat /var/run/haproxy.sock stdio | \
3335 python -m json.tool
Simon Horman05ee2132017-01-04 09:37:25 +01003336
3337 The JSON output contains no extra whitespace in order to reduce the
3338 volume of output. For human consumption passing the output through a
3339 pretty printer may be helpful. Example :
3340
3341 $ echo "show stat json" | socat /var/run/haproxy.sock stdio | \
3342 python -m json.tool
3343
Remi Tricot-Le Bretone88a2ca2021-04-08 15:30:23 +02003344show ssl ca-file [<cafile>[:<index>]]
William Lallemand0c395262023-01-10 14:44:27 +01003345 Display the list of CA files loaded into the process and their respective
3346 certificate counts. The certificates are not used by any frontend or backend
3347 until their status is "Used".
William Lallemandf29c4152023-01-10 15:07:12 +01003348 A "@system-ca" entry can appear in the list, it is loaded by the httpclient
3349 by default. It contains the list of trusted CA of your system returned by
3350 OpenSSL.
William Lallemand0c395262023-01-10 14:44:27 +01003351 If a filename is prefixed by an asterisk, it is a transaction which
Remi Tricot-Le Bretone88a2ca2021-04-08 15:30:23 +02003352 is not committed yet. If a <cafile> is specified without <index>, it will show
3353 the status of the CA file ("Used"/"Unused") followed by details about all the
3354 certificates contained in the CA file. The details displayed for every
3355 certificate are the same as the ones displayed by a "show ssl cert" command.
3356 If a <cafile> is specified followed by an <index>, it will only display the
3357 details of the certificate having the specified index. Indexes start from 1.
3358 If the index is invalid (too big for instance), nothing will be displayed.
3359 This command can be useful to check if a CA file was properly updated.
3360 You can also display the details of an ongoing transaction by prefixing the
3361 filename by an asterisk.
3362
3363 Example :
3364
3365 $ echo "show ssl ca-file" | socat /var/run/haproxy.master -
3366 # transaction
3367 *cafile.crt - 2 certificate(s)
3368 # filename
3369 cafile.crt - 1 certificate(s)
3370
3371 $ echo "show ssl ca-file cafile.crt" | socat /var/run/haproxy.master -
3372 Filename: /home/tricot/work/haproxy/reg-tests/ssl/set_cafile_ca2.crt
3373 Status: Used
3374
3375 Certificate #1:
3376 Serial: 11A4D2200DC84376E7D233CAFF39DF44BF8D1211
3377 notBefore: Apr 1 07:40:53 2021 GMT
3378 notAfter: Aug 17 07:40:53 2048 GMT
3379 Subject Alternative Name:
3380 Algorithm: RSA4096
3381 SHA1 FingerPrint: A111EF0FEFCDE11D47FE3F33ADCA8435EBEA4864
3382 Subject: /C=FR/ST=Some-State/O=HAProxy Technologies/CN=HAProxy Technologies CA
3383 Issuer: /C=FR/ST=Some-State/O=HAProxy Technologies/CN=HAProxy Technologies CA
3384
3385 $ echo "show ssl ca-file *cafile.crt:2" | socat /var/run/haproxy.master -
3386 Filename: */home/tricot/work/haproxy/reg-tests/ssl/set_cafile_ca2.crt
3387 Status: Unused
3388
3389 Certificate #2:
3390 Serial: 587A1CE5ED855040A0C82BF255FF300ADB7C8136
3391 [...]
3392
William Lallemandd4f946c2019-12-05 10:26:40 +01003393show ssl cert [<filename>]
William Lallemand0c395262023-01-10 14:44:27 +01003394 Display the list of certificates loaded into the process. They are not used
3395 by any frontend or backend until their status is "Used".
Remi Tricot-Le Bretonb5f0fac2021-04-14 16:19:29 +02003396 If a filename is prefixed by an asterisk, it is a transaction which is not
3397 committed yet. If a filename is specified, it will show details about the
3398 certificate. This command can be useful to check if a certificate was well
3399 updated. You can also display details on a transaction by prefixing the
3400 filename by an asterisk.
Remi Tricot-Le Breton6056e612021-06-10 13:51:15 +02003401 This command can also be used to display the details of a certificate's OCSP
3402 response by suffixing the filename with a ".ocsp" extension. It works for
3403 committed certificates as well as for ongoing transactions. On a committed
3404 certificate, this command is equivalent to calling "show ssl ocsp-response"
3405 with the certificate's corresponding OCSP response ID.
William Lallemandd4f946c2019-12-05 10:26:40 +01003406
3407 Example :
3408
3409 $ echo "@1 show ssl cert" | socat /var/run/haproxy.master -
3410 # transaction
3411 *test.local.pem
3412 # filename
3413 test.local.pem
3414
3415 $ echo "@1 show ssl cert test.local.pem" | socat /var/run/haproxy.master -
3416 Filename: test.local.pem
William Lallemand0c395262023-01-10 14:44:27 +01003417 Status: Used
William Lallemandd4f946c2019-12-05 10:26:40 +01003418 Serial: 03ECC19BA54B25E85ABA46EE561B9A10D26F
3419 notBefore: Sep 13 21:20:24 2019 GMT
3420 notAfter: Dec 12 21:20:24 2019 GMT
3421 Issuer: /C=US/O=Let's Encrypt/CN=Let's Encrypt Authority X3
3422 Subject: /CN=test.local
3423 Subject Alternative Name: DNS:test.local, DNS:imap.test.local
3424 Algorithm: RSA2048
3425 SHA1 FingerPrint: 417A11CAE25F607B24F638B4A8AEE51D1E211477
3426
3427 $ echo "@1 show ssl cert *test.local.pem" | socat /var/run/haproxy.master -
3428 Filename: *test.local.pem
William Lallemand0c395262023-01-10 14:44:27 +01003429 Status: Unused
William Lallemandd4f946c2019-12-05 10:26:40 +01003430 [...]
3431
Remi Tricot-Le Breton3c222bd2021-04-27 16:28:25 +02003432show ssl crl-file [<crlfile>[:<index>]]
William Lallemand0c395262023-01-10 14:44:27 +01003433 Display the list of CRL files loaded into the process. They are not used
3434 by any frontend or backend until their status is "Used".
Remi Tricot-Le Breton3c222bd2021-04-27 16:28:25 +02003435 If a filename is prefixed by an asterisk, it is a transaction which is not
3436 committed yet. If a <crlfile> is specified without <index>, it will show the
3437 status of the CRL file ("Used"/"Unused") followed by details about all the
3438 Revocation Lists contained in the CRL file. The details displayed for every
3439 list are based on the output of "openssl crl -text -noout -in <file>".
3440 If a <crlfile> is specified followed by an <index>, it will only display the
3441 details of the list having the specified index. Indexes start from 1.
3442 If the index is invalid (too big for instance), nothing will be displayed.
3443 This command can be useful to check if a CRL file was properly updated.
3444 You can also display the details of an ongoing transaction by prefixing the
3445 filename by an asterisk.
3446
3447 Example :
3448
3449 $ echo "show ssl crl-file" | socat /var/run/haproxy.master -
3450 # transaction
3451 *crlfile.pem
3452 # filename
3453 crlfile.pem
3454
3455 $ echo "show ssl crl-file crlfile.pem" | socat /var/run/haproxy.master -
3456 Filename: /home/tricot/work/haproxy/reg-tests/ssl/crlfile.pem
3457 Status: Used
3458
3459 Certificate Revocation List #1:
3460 Version 1
3461 Signature Algorithm: sha256WithRSAEncryption
3462 Issuer: /C=FR/O=HAProxy Technologies/CN=Intermediate CA2
3463 Last Update: Apr 23 14:45:39 2021 GMT
3464 Next Update: Sep 8 14:45:39 2048 GMT
3465 Revoked Certificates:
3466 Serial Number: 1008
3467 Revocation Date: Apr 23 14:45:36 2021 GMT
3468
3469 Certificate Revocation List #2:
3470 Version 1
3471 Signature Algorithm: sha256WithRSAEncryption
3472 Issuer: /C=FR/O=HAProxy Technologies/CN=Root CA
3473 Last Update: Apr 23 14:30:44 2021 GMT
3474 Next Update: Sep 8 14:30:44 2048 GMT
3475 No Revoked Certificates.
3476
William Lallemandc69f02d2020-04-06 19:07:03 +02003477show ssl crt-list [-n] [<filename>]
William Lallemandaccac232020-04-02 17:42:51 +02003478 Display the list of crt-list and directories used in the HAProxy
William Lallemandc69f02d2020-04-06 19:07:03 +02003479 configuration. If a filename is specified, dump the content of a crt-list or
3480 a directory. Once dumped the output can be used as a crt-list file.
3481 The '-n' option can be used to display the line number, which is useful when
3482 combined with the 'del ssl crt-list' option when a entry is duplicated. The
3483 output with the '-n' option is not compatible with the crt-list format and
3484 not loadable by haproxy.
William Lallemandaccac232020-04-02 17:42:51 +02003485
3486 Example:
William Lallemandc69f02d2020-04-06 19:07:03 +02003487 echo "show ssl crt-list -n localhost.crt-list" | socat /tmp/sock1 -
William Lallemandaccac232020-04-02 17:42:51 +02003488 # localhost.crt-list
William Lallemandc69f02d2020-04-06 19:07:03 +02003489 common.pem:1 !not.test1.com *.test1.com !localhost
3490 common.pem:2
3491 ecdsa.pem:3 [verify none allow-0rtt ssl-min-ver TLSv1.0 ssl-max-ver TLSv1.3] localhost !www.test1.com
3492 ecdsa.pem:4 [verify none allow-0rtt ssl-min-ver TLSv1.0 ssl-max-ver TLSv1.3]
William Lallemandaccac232020-04-02 17:42:51 +02003493
Remi Tricot-Le Bretondafc0682023-03-13 15:56:34 +01003494show ssl ocsp-response [[text|base64] <id|path>]
Remi Tricot-Le Bretond92fd112021-06-10 13:51:13 +02003495 Display the IDs of the OCSP tree entries corresponding to all the OCSP
Remi Tricot-Le Breton7716f272023-03-13 15:56:35 +01003496 responses used in HAProxy, as well as the corresponding frontend
3497 certificate's path, the issuer's name and key hash and the serial number of
3498 the certificate for which the OCSP response was built.
Remi Tricot-Le Bretondafc0682023-03-13 15:56:34 +01003499 If a valid <id> or the <path> of a valid frontend certificate is provided,
3500 display the contents of the corresponding OCSP response. When an <id> is
3501 provided, it it possible to define the format in which the data is dumped.
3502 The 'text' option is the default one and it allows to display detailed
3503 information about the OCSP response the same way as in an "openssl ocsp
3504 -respin <ocsp-response> -text" call. The 'base64' format allows to dump the
3505 contents of an OCSP response in base64.
Remi Tricot-Le Bretond92fd112021-06-10 13:51:13 +02003506
3507 Example :
3508
3509 $ echo "show ssl ocsp-response" | socat /var/run/haproxy.master -
3510 # Certificate IDs
3511 Certificate ID key : 303b300906052b0e03021a050004148a83e0060faff709ca7e9b95522a2e81635fda0a0414f652b0e435d5ea923851508f0adbe92d85de007a0202100a
Remi Tricot-Le Breton7716f272023-03-13 15:56:35 +01003512 Certificate path : /path_to_cert/foo.pem
Remi Tricot-Le Bretond92fd112021-06-10 13:51:13 +02003513 Certificate ID:
Remi Tricot-Le Bretond92fd112021-06-10 13:51:13 +02003514 Issuer Name Hash: 8A83E0060FAFF709CA7E9B95522A2E81635FDA0A
3515 Issuer Key Hash: F652B0E435D5EA923851508F0ADBE92D85DE007A
3516 Serial Number: 100A
3517
3518 $ echo "show ssl ocsp-response 303b300906052b0e03021a050004148a83e0060faff709ca7e9b95522a2e81635fda0a0414f652b0e435d5ea923851508f0adbe92d85de007a0202100a" | socat /var/run/haproxy.master -
3519 OCSP Response Data:
3520 OCSP Response Status: successful (0x0)
3521 Response Type: Basic OCSP Response
3522 Version: 1 (0x0)
3523 Responder Id: C = FR, O = HAProxy Technologies, CN = ocsp.haproxy.com
3524 Produced At: May 27 15:43:38 2021 GMT
3525 Responses:
3526 Certificate ID:
3527 Hash Algorithm: sha1
3528 Issuer Name Hash: 8A83E0060FAFF709CA7E9B95522A2E81635FDA0A
3529 Issuer Key Hash: F652B0E435D5EA923851508F0ADBE92D85DE007A
3530 Serial Number: 100A
3531 Cert Status: good
3532 This Update: May 27 15:43:38 2021 GMT
3533 Next Update: Oct 12 15:43:38 2048 GMT
3534 [...]
3535
Remi Tricot-Le Bretondafc0682023-03-13 15:56:34 +01003536 $ echo "show ssl ocsp-response base64 /path_to_cert/foo.pem" | socat /var/run/haproxy.sock -
Remi Tricot-Le Breton9c4437d2023-02-28 17:46:28 +01003537 MIIB8woBAKCCAewwggHoBgkrBgEFBQcwAQEEggHZMIIB1TCBvqE[...]
3538
Remi Tricot-Le Bretond14fc512023-02-28 17:46:23 +01003539show ssl ocsp-updates
3540 Display information about the entries concerned by the OCSP update mechanism.
3541 The command will output one line per OCSP response and will contain the
3542 expected update time of the response as well as the time of the last
3543 successful update and counters of successful and failed updates. It will also
3544 give the status of the last update (successful or not) in numerical form as
3545 well as text form. See below for a full list of possible errors. The lines
3546 will be sorted by ascending 'Next Update' time. The lines will also contain a
3547 path to the first frontend certificate that uses the OCSP response.
3548 See "show ssl ocsp-response" command and "ocsp-update" option for more
3549 information on the OCSP auto update.
3550
3551 The update error codes and error strings can be the following:
3552
3553 +----+-------------------------------------+
3554 | ID | message |
3555 +----+-------------------------------------+
3556 | 0 | "Unknown" |
3557 | 1 | "Update successful" |
3558 | 2 | "HTTP error" |
3559 | 3 | "Missing \"ocsp-response\" header" |
3560 | 4 | "OCSP response check failure" |
3561 | 5 | "Error during insertion" |
3562 +----+-------------------------------------+
3563
3564 Example :
3565 $ echo "show ssl ocsp-updates" | socat /tmp/haproxy.sock -
3566 OCSP Certid | Path | Next Update | Last Update | Successes | Failures | Last Update Status | Last Update Status (str)
3567 303b300906052b0e03021a050004148a83e0060faff709ca7e9b95522a2e81635fda0a0414f652b0e435d5ea923851508f0adbe92d85de007a02021015 | /path_to_cert/cert.pem | 30/Jan/2023:00:08:09 +0000 | - | 0 | 1 | 2 | HTTP error
3568 304b300906052b0e03021a0500041448dac9a0fb2bd32d4ff0de68d2f567b735f9b3c40414142eb317b75856cbae500940e61faf9d8b14c2c6021203e16a7aa01542f291237b454a627fdea9c1 | /path_to_cert/other_cert.pem | 30/Jan/2023:01:07:09 +0000 | 30/Jan/2023:00:07:09 +0000 | 1 | 0 | 1 | Update successful
3569
Remi Tricot-Le Bretonf87c67e2022-04-21 12:06:41 +02003570show ssl providers
3571 Display the names of the providers loaded by OpenSSL during init. Provider
3572 loading can indeed be configured via the OpenSSL configuration file and this
3573 option allows to check that the right providers were loaded. This command is
3574 only available with OpenSSL v3.
3575
3576 Example :
3577 $ echo "show ssl providers" | socat /var/run/haproxy.master -
3578 Loaded providers :
3579 - fips
3580 - base
3581
William Lallemandf76b3b42022-10-14 15:29:07 +02003582show startup-logs
3583 Dump all messages emitted during the startup of the current haproxy process,
3584 each startup-logs buffer is unique to its haproxy worker.
3585
William Lallemand5d1e1312022-10-14 15:41:55 +02003586 This keyword also exists on the master CLI, which shows the latest startup or
3587 reload tentative.
3588
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02003589show table
3590 Dump general information on all known stick-tables. Their name is returned
3591 (the name of the proxy which holds them), their type (currently zero, always
3592 IP), their size in maximum possible number of entries, and the number of
3593 entries currently in use.
3594
3595 Example :
3596 $ echo "show table" | socat stdio /tmp/sock1
3597 >>> # table: front_pub, type: ip, size:204800, used:171454
3598 >>> # table: back_rdp, type: ip, size:204800, used:0
3599
Adis Nezirovic1a693fc2020-01-16 15:19:29 +01003600show table <name> [ data.<type> <operator> <value> [data.<type> ...]] | [ key <key> ]
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02003601 Dump contents of stick-table <name>. In this mode, a first line of generic
3602 information about the table is reported as with "show table", then all
3603 entries are dumped. Since this can be quite heavy, it is possible to specify
3604 a filter in order to specify what entries to display.
3605
3606 When the "data." form is used the filter applies to the stored data (see
3607 "stick-table" in section 4.2). A stored data type must be specified
3608 in <type>, and this data type must be stored in the table otherwise an
3609 error is reported. The data is compared according to <operator> with the
3610 64-bit integer <value>. Operators are the same as with the ACLs :
3611
3612 - eq : match entries whose data is equal to this value
3613 - ne : match entries whose data is not equal to this value
3614 - le : match entries whose data is less than or equal to this value
3615 - ge : match entries whose data is greater than or equal to this value
3616 - lt : match entries whose data is less than this value
3617 - gt : match entries whose data is greater than this value
3618
Adis Nezirovic1a693fc2020-01-16 15:19:29 +01003619 In this form, you can use multiple data filter entries, up to a maximum
3620 defined during build time (4 by default).
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02003621
3622 When the key form is used the entry <key> is shown. The key must be of the
3623 same type as the table, which currently is limited to IPv4, IPv6, integer,
3624 and string.
3625
3626 Example :
3627 $ echo "show table http_proxy" | socat stdio /tmp/sock1
3628 >>> # table: http_proxy, type: ip, size:204800, used:2
3629 >>> 0x80e6a4c: key=127.0.0.1 use=0 exp=3594729 gpc0=0 conn_rate(30000)=1 \
3630 bytes_out_rate(60000)=187
3631 >>> 0x80e6a80: key=127.0.0.2 use=0 exp=3594740 gpc0=1 conn_rate(30000)=10 \
3632 bytes_out_rate(60000)=191
3633
3634 $ echo "show table http_proxy data.gpc0 gt 0" | socat stdio /tmp/sock1
3635 >>> # table: http_proxy, type: ip, size:204800, used:2
3636 >>> 0x80e6a80: key=127.0.0.2 use=0 exp=3594740 gpc0=1 conn_rate(30000)=10 \
3637 bytes_out_rate(60000)=191
3638
3639 $ echo "show table http_proxy data.conn_rate gt 5" | \
3640 socat stdio /tmp/sock1
3641 >>> # table: http_proxy, type: ip, size:204800, used:2
3642 >>> 0x80e6a80: key=127.0.0.2 use=0 exp=3594740 gpc0=1 conn_rate(30000)=10 \
3643 bytes_out_rate(60000)=191
3644
3645 $ echo "show table http_proxy key 127.0.0.2" | \
3646 socat stdio /tmp/sock1
3647 >>> # table: http_proxy, type: ip, size:204800, used:2
3648 >>> 0x80e6a80: key=127.0.0.2 use=0 exp=3594740 gpc0=1 conn_rate(30000)=10 \
3649 bytes_out_rate(60000)=191
3650
3651 When the data criterion applies to a dynamic value dependent on time such as
3652 a bytes rate, the value is dynamically computed during the evaluation of the
3653 entry in order to decide whether it has to be dumped or not. This means that
3654 such a filter could match for some time then not match anymore because as
3655 time goes, the average event rate drops.
3656
3657 It is possible to use this to extract lists of IP addresses abusing the
3658 service, in order to monitor them or even blacklist them in a firewall.
3659 Example :
3660 $ echo "show table http_proxy data.gpc0 gt 0" \
3661 | socat stdio /tmp/sock1 \
3662 | fgrep 'key=' | cut -d' ' -f2 | cut -d= -f2 > abusers-ip.txt
3663 ( or | awk '/key/{ print a[split($2,a,"=")]; }' )
3664
Willy Tarreau16b282f2022-11-29 11:55:18 +01003665 When the stick-table is synchronized to a peers section supporting sharding,
3666 the shard number will be displayed for each key (otherwise '0' is reported).
3667 This allows to know which peers will receive this key.
3668 Example:
3669 $ echo "show table http_proxy" | socat stdio /tmp/sock1 | fgrep shard=
3670 0x7f23b0c822a8: key=10.0.0.2 use=0 exp=296398 shard=9 gpc0=0
3671 0x7f23a063f948: key=10.0.0.6 use=0 exp=296075 shard=12 gpc0=0
3672 0x7f23b03920b8: key=10.0.0.8 use=0 exp=296766 shard=1 gpc0=0
3673 0x7f23a43c09e8: key=10.0.0.12 use=0 exp=295368 shard=8 gpc0=0
3674
Willy Tarreau7eff06e2021-01-29 11:32:55 +01003675show tasks
3676 Dumps the number of tasks currently in the run queue, with the number of
3677 occurrences for each function, and their average latency when it's known
3678 (for pure tasks with task profiling enabled). The dump is a snapshot of the
3679 instant it's done, and there may be variations depending on what tasks are
3680 left in the queue at the moment it happens, especially in mono-thread mode
3681 as there's less chance that I/Os can refill the queue (unless the queue is
3682 full). This command takes exclusive access to the process and can cause
3683 minor but measurable latencies when issued on a highly loaded process, so
3684 it must not be abused by monitoring bots.
3685
Willy Tarreau4e2b6462019-05-16 17:44:30 +02003686show threads
3687 Dumps some internal states and structures for each thread, that may be useful
3688 to help developers understand a problem. The output tries to be readable by
Willy Tarreauc7091d82019-05-17 10:08:49 +02003689 showing one block per thread. When haproxy is built with USE_THREAD_DUMP=1,
3690 an advanced dump mechanism involving thread signals is used so that each
3691 thread can dump its own state in turn. Without this option, the thread
3692 processing the command shows all its details but the other ones are less
Willy Tarreaue6a02fa2019-05-22 07:06:44 +02003693 detailed. A star ('*') is displayed in front of the thread handling the
3694 command. A right angle bracket ('>') may also be displayed in front of
3695 threads which didn't make any progress since last invocation of this command,
3696 indicating a bug in the code which must absolutely be reported. When this
3697 happens between two threads it usually indicates a deadlock. If a thread is
3698 alone, it's a different bug like a corrupted list. In all cases the process
3699 needs is not fully functional anymore and needs to be restarted.
3700
3701 The output format is purposely not documented so that it can easily evolve as
3702 new needs are identified, without having to maintain any form of backwards
3703 compatibility, and just like with "show activity", the values are meaningless
3704 without the code at hand.
Willy Tarreau4e2b6462019-05-16 17:44:30 +02003705
William Lallemandbb933462016-05-31 21:09:53 +02003706show tls-keys [id|*]
3707 Dump all loaded TLS ticket keys references. The TLS ticket key reference ID
3708 and the file from which the keys have been loaded is shown. Both of those
3709 can be used to update the TLS keys using "set ssl tls-key". If an ID is
3710 specified as parameter, it will dump the tickets, using * it will dump every
3711 keys from every references.
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02003712
Simon Horman6f6bb382017-01-04 09:37:26 +01003713show schema json
3714 Dump the schema used for the output of "show info json" and "show stat json".
3715
3716 The contains no extra whitespace in order to reduce the volume of output.
3717 For human consumption passing the output through a pretty printer may be
3718 helpful. Example :
3719
3720 $ echo "show schema json" | socat /var/run/haproxy.sock stdio | \
3721 python -m json.tool
3722
3723 The schema follows "JSON Schema" (json-schema.org) and accordingly
3724 verifiers may be used to verify the output of "show info json" and "show
3725 stat json" against the schema.
3726
Willy Tarreauf909c912019-08-22 20:06:04 +02003727show trace [<source>]
3728 Show the current trace status. For each source a line is displayed with a
3729 single-character status indicating if the trace is stopped, waiting, or
3730 running. The output sink used by the trace is indicated (or "none" if none
3731 was set), as well as the number of dropped events in this sink, followed by a
3732 brief description of the source. If a source name is specified, a detailed
3733 list of all events supported by the source, and their status for each action
3734 (report, start, pause, stop), indicated by a "+" if they are enabled, or a
3735 "-" otherwise. All these events are independent and an event might trigger
3736 a start without being reported and conversely.
Simon Horman6f6bb382017-01-04 09:37:26 +01003737
William Lallemand740629e2021-12-14 15:22:29 +01003738show version
3739 Show the version of the current HAProxy process. This is available from
3740 master and workers CLI.
3741 Example:
3742
3743 $ echo "show version" | socat /var/run/haproxy.sock stdio
3744 2.4.9
3745
3746 $ echo "show version" | socat /var/run/haproxy-master.sock stdio
3747 2.5.0
3748
Willy Tarreau44aed902015-10-13 14:45:29 +02003749shutdown frontend <frontend>
3750 Completely delete the specified frontend. All the ports it was bound to will
3751 be released. It will not be possible to enable the frontend anymore after
3752 this operation. This is intended to be used in environments where stopping a
3753 proxy is not even imaginable but a misconfigured proxy must be fixed. That
3754 way it's possible to release the port and bind it into another process to
3755 restore operations. The frontend will not appear at all on the stats page
3756 once it is terminated.
3757
3758 The frontend may be specified either by its name or by its numeric ID,
3759 prefixed with a sharp ('#').
3760
3761 This command is restricted and can only be issued on sockets configured for
3762 level "admin".
3763
3764shutdown session <id>
3765 Immediately terminate the session matching the specified session identifier.
3766 This identifier is the first field at the beginning of the lines in the dumps
3767 of "show sess" (it corresponds to the session pointer). This can be used to
3768 terminate a long-running session without waiting for a timeout or when an
3769 endless transfer is ongoing. Such terminated sessions are reported with a 'K'
3770 flag in the logs.
3771
3772shutdown sessions server <backend>/<server>
3773 Immediately terminate all the sessions attached to the specified server. This
3774 can be used to terminate long-running sessions after a server is put into
3775 maintenance mode, for instance. Such terminated sessions are reported with a
3776 'K' flag in the logs.
3777
Willy Tarreauf909c912019-08-22 20:06:04 +02003778trace
3779 The "trace" command alone lists the trace sources, their current status, and
3780 their brief descriptions. It is only meant as a menu to enter next levels,
3781 see other "trace" commands below.
3782
3783trace 0
3784 Immediately stops all traces. This is made to be used as a quick solution
3785 to terminate a debugging session or as an emergency action to be used in case
3786 complex traces were enabled on multiple sources and impact the service.
3787
3788trace <source> event [ [+|-|!]<name> ]
3789 Without argument, this will list all the events supported by the designated
3790 source. They are prefixed with a "-" if they are not enabled, or a "+" if
3791 they are enabled. It is important to note that a single trace may be labelled
3792 with multiple events, and as long as any of the enabled events matches one of
3793 the events labelled on the trace, the event will be passed to the trace
3794 subsystem. For example, receiving an HTTP/2 frame of type HEADERS may trigger
3795 a frame event and a stream event since the frame creates a new stream. If
3796 either the frame event or the stream event are enabled for this source, the
3797 frame will be passed to the trace framework.
3798
3799 With an argument, it is possible to toggle the state of each event and
3800 individually enable or disable them. Two special keywords are supported,
3801 "none", which matches no event, and is used to disable all events at once,
3802 and "any" which matches all events, and is used to enable all events at
3803 once. Other events are specific to the event source. It is possible to
3804 enable one event by specifying its name, optionally prefixed with '+' for
3805 better readability. It is possible to disable one event by specifying its
3806 name prefixed by a '-' or a '!'.
3807
3808 One way to completely disable a trace source is to pass "event none", and
3809 this source will instantly be totally ignored.
3810
3811trace <source> level [<level>]
Willy Tarreau2ea549b2019-08-29 08:01:48 +02003812 Without argument, this will list all trace levels for this source, and the
Willy Tarreauf909c912019-08-22 20:06:04 +02003813 current one will be indicated by a star ('*') prepended in front of it. With
Willy Tarreau2ea549b2019-08-29 08:01:48 +02003814 an argument, this will change the trace level to the specified level. Detail
Willy Tarreauf909c912019-08-22 20:06:04 +02003815 levels are a form of filters that are applied before reporting the events.
Willy Tarreau2ea549b2019-08-29 08:01:48 +02003816 These filters are used to selectively include or exclude events depending on
3817 their level of importance. For example a developer might need to know
3818 precisely where in the code an HTTP header was considered invalid while the
3819 end user may not even care about this header's validity at all. There are
3820 currently 5 distinct levels for a trace :
Willy Tarreauf909c912019-08-22 20:06:04 +02003821
3822 user this will report information that are suitable for use by a
3823 regular haproxy user who wants to observe his traffic.
3824 Typically some HTTP requests and responses will be reported
3825 without much detail. Most sources will set this as the
3826 default level to ease operations.
3827
Willy Tarreau2ea549b2019-08-29 08:01:48 +02003828 proto in addition to what is reported at the "user" level, it also
3829 displays protocol-level updates. This can for example be the
3830 frame types or HTTP headers after decoding.
Willy Tarreauf909c912019-08-22 20:06:04 +02003831
3832 state in addition to what is reported at the "proto" level, it
3833 will also display state transitions (or failed transitions)
3834 which happen in parsers, so this will show attempts to
3835 perform an operation while the "proto" level only shows
3836 the final operation.
3837
Willy Tarreau2ea549b2019-08-29 08:01:48 +02003838 data in addition to what is reported at the "state" level, it
3839 will also include data transfers between the various layers.
3840
Willy Tarreauf909c912019-08-22 20:06:04 +02003841 developer it reports everything available, which can include advanced
3842 information such as "breaking out of this loop" that are
3843 only relevant to a developer trying to understand a bug that
Willy Tarreau09fb0df2019-08-29 08:40:59 +02003844 only happens once in a while in field. Function names are
3845 only reported at this level.
Willy Tarreauf909c912019-08-22 20:06:04 +02003846
3847 It is highly recommended to always use the "user" level only and switch to
3848 other levels only if instructed to do so by a developer. Also it is a good
3849 idea to first configure the events before switching to higher levels, as it
3850 may save from dumping many lines if no filter is applied.
3851
3852trace <source> lock [criterion]
3853 Without argument, this will list all the criteria supported by this source
3854 for lock-on processing, and display the current choice by a star ('*') in
3855 front of it. Lock-on means that the source will focus on the first matching
3856 event and only stick to the criterion which triggered this event, and ignore
3857 all other ones until the trace stops. This allows for example to take a trace
3858 on a single connection or on a single stream. The following criteria are
3859 supported by some traces, though not necessarily all, since some of them
3860 might not be available to the source :
3861
3862 backend lock on the backend that started the trace
3863 connection lock on the connection that started the trace
3864 frontend lock on the frontend that started the trace
3865 listener lock on the listener that started the trace
3866 nothing do not lock on anything
3867 server lock on the server that started the trace
3868 session lock on the session that started the trace
3869 thread lock on the thread that started the trace
3870
3871 In addition to this, each source may provide up to 4 specific criteria such
3872 as internal states or connection IDs. For example in HTTP/2 it is possible
3873 to lock on the H2 stream and ignore other streams once a strace starts.
3874
3875 When a criterion is passed in argument, this one is used instead of the
3876 other ones and any existing tracking is immediately terminated so that it can
3877 restart with the new criterion. The special keyword "nothing" is supported by
3878 all sources to permanently disable tracking.
3879
3880trace <source> { pause | start | stop } [ [+|-|!]event]
3881 Without argument, this will list the events enabled to automatically pause,
3882 start, or stop a trace for this source. These events are specific to each
3883 trace source. With an argument, this will either enable the event for the
3884 specified action (if optionally prefixed by a '+') or disable it (if
3885 prefixed by a '-' or '!'). The special keyword "now" is not an event and
3886 requests to take the action immediately. The keywords "none" and "any" are
3887 supported just like in "trace event".
3888
3889 The 3 supported actions are respectively "pause", "start" and "stop". The
3890 "pause" action enumerates events which will cause a running trace to stop and
3891 wait for a new start event to restart it. The "start" action enumerates the
3892 events which switch the trace into the waiting mode until one of the start
3893 events appears. And the "stop" action enumerates the events which definitely
3894 stop the trace until it is manually enabled again. In practice it makes sense
3895 to manually start a trace using "start now" without caring about events, and
3896 to stop it using "stop now". In order to capture more subtle event sequences,
3897 setting "start" to a normal event (like receiving an HTTP request) and "stop"
3898 to a very rare event like emitting a certain error, will ensure that the last
3899 captured events will match the desired criteria. And the pause event is
3900 useful to detect the end of a sequence, disable the lock-on and wait for
3901 another opportunity to take a capture. In this case it can make sense to
3902 enable lock-on to spot only one specific criterion (e.g. a stream), and have
3903 "start" set to anything that starts this criterion (e.g. all events which
3904 create a stream), "stop" set to the expected anomaly, and "pause" to anything
3905 that ends that criterion (e.g. any end of stream event). In this case the
3906 trace log will contain complete sequences of perfectly clean series affecting
3907 a single object, until the last sequence containing everything from the
3908 beginning to the anomaly.
3909
3910trace <source> sink [<sink>]
3911 Without argument, this will list all event sinks available for this source,
3912 and the currently configured one will have a star ('*') prepended in front
3913 of it. Sink "none" is always available and means that all events are simply
3914 dropped, though their processing is not ignored (e.g. lock-on does occur).
3915 Other sinks are available depending on configuration and build options, but
3916 typically "stdout" and "stderr" will be usable in debug mode, and in-memory
3917 ring buffers should be available as well. When a name is specified, the sink
3918 instantly changes for the specified source. Events are not changed during a
3919 sink change. In the worst case some may be lost if an invalid sink is used
3920 (or "none"), but operations do continue to a different destination.
3921
Willy Tarreau370a6942019-08-29 08:24:16 +02003922trace <source> verbosity [<level>]
3923 Without argument, this will list all verbosity levels for this source, and the
3924 current one will be indicated by a star ('*') prepended in front of it. With
3925 an argument, this will change the verbosity level to the specified one.
3926
3927 Verbosity levels indicate how far the trace decoder should go to provide
3928 detailed information. It depends on the trace source, since some sources will
3929 not even provide a specific decoder. Level "quiet" is always available and
3930 disables any decoding. It can be useful when trying to figure what's
3931 happening before trying to understand the details, since it will have a very
3932 low impact on performance and trace size. When no verbosity levels are
3933 declared by a source, level "default" is available and will cause a decoder
3934 to be called when specified in the traces. It is an opportunistic decoding.
3935 When the source declares some verbosity levels, these ones are listed with
3936 a description of what they correspond to. In this case the trace decoder
3937 provided by the source will be as accurate as possible based on the
3938 information available at the trace point. The first level above "quiet" is
3939 set by default.
3940
Remi Tricot-Le Bretoneeaa29b2022-12-20 11:11:07 +01003941update ssl ocsp-response <certfile>
3942 Create an OCSP request for the specified <certfile> and send it to the OCSP
3943 responder whose URI should be specified in the "Authority Information Access"
3944 section of the certificate. Only the first URI is taken into account. The
3945 OCSP response that we should receive in return is then checked and inserted
3946 in the local OCSP response tree. This command will only work for certificates
3947 that already had a stored OCSP response, either because it was provided
3948 during init or if it was previously set through the "set ssl cert" or "set
3949 ssl ocsp-response" commands.
3950 If the received OCSP response is valid and was properly inserted into the
3951 local tree, its contents will be displayed on the standard output. The format
3952 is the same as the one described in "show ssl ocsp-response".
3953
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +02003954
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +010039559.4. Master CLI
3956---------------
3957
3958The master CLI is a socket bound to the master process in master-worker mode.
3959This CLI gives access to the unix socket commands in every running or leaving
3960processes and allows a basic supervision of those processes.
3961
3962The master CLI is configurable only from the haproxy program arguments with
3963the -S option. This option also takes bind options separated by commas.
3964
3965Example:
3966
3967 # haproxy -W -S 127.0.0.1:1234 -f test1.cfg
3968 # haproxy -Ws -S /tmp/master-socket,uid,1000,gid,1000,mode,600 -f test1.cfg
William Lallemandb7ea1412018-12-13 09:05:47 +01003969 # haproxy -W -S /tmp/master-socket,level,user -f test1.cfg
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +01003970
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +01003971
William Lallemanda6622752022-03-31 15:26:51 +020039729.4.1. Master CLI commands
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01003973--------------------------
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +01003974
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01003975@<[!]pid>
3976 The master CLI uses a special prefix notation to access the multiple
3977 processes. This notation is easily identifiable as it begins by a @.
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +01003978
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01003979 A @ prefix can be followed by a relative process number or by an exclamation
3980 point and a PID. (e.g. @1 or @!1271). A @ alone could be use to specify the
3981 master. Leaving processes are only accessible with the PID as relative process
3982 number are only usable with the current processes.
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +01003983
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01003984 Examples:
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +01003985
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01003986 $ socat /var/run/haproxy-master.sock readline
3987 prompt
3988 master> @1 show info; @2 show info
3989 [...]
3990 Process_num: 1
3991 Pid: 1271
3992 [...]
3993 Process_num: 2
3994 Pid: 1272
3995 [...]
3996 master>
Willy Tarreau52880f92018-12-15 13:30:03 +01003997
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01003998 $ echo '@!1271 show info; @!1272 show info' | socat /var/run/haproxy-master.sock -
3999 [...]
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +01004000
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01004001 A prefix could be use as a command, which will send every next commands to
4002 the specified process.
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +01004003
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01004004 Examples:
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +01004005
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01004006 $ socat /var/run/haproxy-master.sock readline
4007 prompt
4008 master> @1
4009 1271> show info
4010 [...]
4011 1271> show stat
4012 [...]
4013 1271> @
4014 master>
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +01004015
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01004016 $ echo '@1; show info; show stat; @2; show info; show stat' | socat /var/run/haproxy-master.sock -
4017 [...]
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +01004018
William Lallemanda5ce28b2022-02-02 15:29:21 +01004019expert-mode [on|off]
4020 This command activates the "expert-mode" for every worker accessed from the
William Lallemand2a171912022-02-02 11:43:20 +01004021 master CLI. Combined with "mcli-debug-mode" it also activates the command on
William Lallemanddae12c72022-02-02 14:13:54 +01004022 the master. Display the flag "e" in the master CLI prompt.
William Lallemanda5ce28b2022-02-02 15:29:21 +01004023
William Lallemand2a171912022-02-02 11:43:20 +01004024 See also "expert-mode" in Section 9.3 and "mcli-debug-mode" in 9.4.1.
William Lallemanda5ce28b2022-02-02 15:29:21 +01004025
4026experimental-mode [on|off]
4027 This command activates the "experimental-mode" for every worker accessed from
William Lallemand2a171912022-02-02 11:43:20 +01004028 the master CLI. Combined with "mcli-debug-mode" it also activates the command on
William Lallemanddae12c72022-02-02 14:13:54 +01004029 the master. Display the flag "x" in the master CLI prompt.
William Lallemand2a171912022-02-02 11:43:20 +01004030
4031 See also "experimental-mode" in Section 9.3 and "mcli-debug-mode" in 9.4.1.
William Lallemanda5ce28b2022-02-02 15:29:21 +01004032
William Lallemand2a171912022-02-02 11:43:20 +01004033mcli-debug-mode [on|off]
4034 This keyword allows a special mode in the master CLI which enables every
4035 keywords that were meant for a worker CLI on the master CLI, allowing to debug
4036 the master process. Once activated, you list the new available keywords with
4037 "help". Combined with "experimental-mode" or "expert-mode" it enables even
William Lallemanddae12c72022-02-02 14:13:54 +01004038 more keywords. Display the flag "d" in the master CLI prompt.
William Lallemanda5ce28b2022-02-02 15:29:21 +01004039
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01004040prompt
4041 When the prompt is enabled (via the "prompt" command), the context the CLI is
4042 working on is displayed in the prompt. The master is identified by the "master"
4043 string, and other processes are identified with their PID. In case the last
4044 reload failed, the master prompt will be changed to "master[ReloadFailed]>" so
4045 that it becomes visible that the process is still running on the previous
4046 configuration and that the new configuration is not operational.
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +01004047
William Lallemanddae12c72022-02-02 14:13:54 +01004048 The prompt of the master CLI is able to display several flags which are the
4049 enable modes. "d" for mcli-debug-mode, "e" for expert-mode, "x" for
4050 experimental-mode.
4051
4052 Example:
4053 $ socat /var/run/haproxy-master.sock -
4054 prompt
4055 master> expert-mode on
4056 master(e)> experimental-mode on
4057 master(xe)> mcli-debug-mode on
4058 master(xed)> @1
4059 95191(xed)>
4060
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01004061reload
4062 You can also reload the HAProxy master process with the "reload" command which
4063 does the same as a `kill -USR2` on the master process, provided that the user
4064 has at least "operator" or "admin" privileges.
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +01004065
William Lallemand70c5ad42022-09-24 16:44:44 +02004066 This command allows you to perform a synchronous reload, the command will
4067 return a reload status, once the reload was performed. Be careful with the
4068 timeout if a tool is used to parse it, it is only returned once the
William Lallemandbb650f22022-09-27 11:38:10 +02004069 configuration is parsed and the new worker is forked. The "socat" command uses
4070 a timeout of 0.5s by default so it will quits before showing the message if
4071 the reload is too long. "ncat" does not have a timeout by default.
William Lallemandef3e5a12022-10-13 18:14:55 +02004072 When compiled with USE_SHM_OPEN=1, the reload command is also able to dump
4073 the startup-logs of the master.
William Lallemand70c5ad42022-09-24 16:44:44 +02004074
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01004075 Example:
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +01004076
William Lallemandbb650f22022-09-27 11:38:10 +02004077 $ echo "reload" | socat -t300 /var/run/haproxy-master.sock stdin
William Lallemandef3e5a12022-10-13 18:14:55 +02004078 Success=1
4079 --
4080 [NOTICE] (482713) : haproxy version is 2.7-dev7-4827fb-69
4081 [NOTICE] (482713) : path to executable is ./haproxy
4082 [WARNING] (482713) : config : 'http-request' rules ignored for proxy 'frt1' as they require HTTP mode.
4083 [NOTICE] (482713) : New worker (482720) forked
4084 [NOTICE] (482713) : Loading success.
William Lallemand70c5ad42022-09-24 16:44:44 +02004085
William Lallemandbb650f22022-09-27 11:38:10 +02004086 $ echo "reload" | socat -t300 /var/run/haproxy-master.sock stdin
William Lallemandef3e5a12022-10-13 18:14:55 +02004087 Success=0
4088 --
4089 [NOTICE] (482886) : haproxy version is 2.7-dev7-4827fb-69
4090 [NOTICE] (482886) : path to executable is ./haproxy
4091 [ALERT] (482886) : config : parsing [test3.cfg:1]: unknown keyword 'Aglobal' out of section.
4092 [ALERT] (482886) : config : Fatal errors found in configuration.
4093 [WARNING] (482886) : Loading failure!
4094
4095 $
William Lallemand70c5ad42022-09-24 16:44:44 +02004096
4097 The reload command is the last executed on the master CLI, every other
4098 command after it are ignored. Once the reload command returns its status, it
4099 will close the connection to the CLI.
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +01004100
William Lallemand70c5ad42022-09-24 16:44:44 +02004101 Note that a reload will close all connections to the master CLI.
William Lallemanda57b7e32018-12-14 21:11:31 +01004102
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01004103show proc
4104 The master CLI introduces a 'show proc' command to surpervise the
4105 processe.
William Lallemanda57b7e32018-12-14 21:11:31 +01004106
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01004107 Example:
William Lallemanda57b7e32018-12-14 21:11:31 +01004108
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01004109 $ echo 'show proc' | socat /var/run/haproxy-master.sock -
4110 #<PID> <type> <reloads> <uptime> <version>
4111 1162 master 5 [failed: 0] 0d00h02m07s 2.5-dev13
4112 # workers
4113 1271 worker 1 0d00h00m00s 2.5-dev13
4114 # old workers
4115 1233 worker 3 0d00h00m43s 2.0-dev3-6019f6-289
4116 # programs
4117 1244 foo 0 0d00h00m00s -
4118 1255 bar 0 0d00h00m00s -
William Lallemanda57b7e32018-12-14 21:11:31 +01004119
William Lallemandaf140ab2022-02-02 14:44:19 +01004120 In this example, the master has been reloaded 5 times but one of the old
4121 worker is still running and survived 3 reloads. You could access the CLI of
4122 this worker to understand what's going on.
William Lallemand142db372018-12-11 18:56:45 +01004123
William Lallemand5d1e1312022-10-14 15:41:55 +02004124show startup-logs
4125 HAProxy needs to be compiled with USE_SHM_OPEN=1 to be used correctly on the
4126 master CLI or all messages won't be visible.
4127
4128 Like its counterpart on the stats socket, this command is able to show the
4129 startup messages of HAProxy. However it does not dump the startup messages
4130 of the current worker, but the startup messages of the latest startup or
4131 reload, which means it is able to dump the parsing messages of a failed
4132 reload.
4133
4134 Those messages are also dumped with the "reload" command.
4135
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +0200413610. Tricks for easier configuration management
4137----------------------------------------------
4138
4139It is very common that two HAProxy nodes constituting a cluster share exactly
4140the same configuration modulo a few addresses. Instead of having to maintain a
4141duplicate configuration for each node, which will inevitably diverge, it is
4142possible to include environment variables in the configuration. Thus multiple
4143configuration may share the exact same file with only a few different system
4144wide environment variables. This started in version 1.5 where only addresses
4145were allowed to include environment variables, and 1.6 goes further by
4146supporting environment variables everywhere. The syntax is the same as in the
4147UNIX shell, a variable starts with a dollar sign ('$'), followed by an opening
4148curly brace ('{'), then the variable name followed by the closing brace ('}').
4149Except for addresses, environment variables are only interpreted in arguments
4150surrounded with double quotes (this was necessary not to break existing setups
4151using regular expressions involving the dollar symbol).
4152
4153Environment variables also make it convenient to write configurations which are
4154expected to work on various sites where only the address changes. It can also
4155permit to remove passwords from some configs. Example below where the the file
4156"site1.env" file is sourced by the init script upon startup :
4157
4158 $ cat site1.env
4159 LISTEN=192.168.1.1
4160 CACHE_PFX=192.168.11
4161 SERVER_PFX=192.168.22
4162 LOGGER=192.168.33.1
4163 STATSLP=admin:pa$$w0rd
4164 ABUSERS=/etc/haproxy/abuse.lst
4165 TIMEOUT=10s
4166
4167 $ cat haproxy.cfg
4168 global
4169 log "${LOGGER}:514" local0
4170
4171 defaults
4172 mode http
4173 timeout client "${TIMEOUT}"
4174 timeout server "${TIMEOUT}"
4175 timeout connect 5s
4176
4177 frontend public
4178 bind "${LISTEN}:80"
4179 http-request reject if { src -f "${ABUSERS}" }
4180 stats uri /stats
4181 stats auth "${STATSLP}"
4182 use_backend cache if { path_end .jpg .css .ico }
4183 default_backend server
4184
4185 backend cache
4186 server cache1 "${CACHE_PFX}.1:18080" check
4187 server cache2 "${CACHE_PFX}.2:18080" check
4188
4189 backend server
4190 server cache1 "${SERVER_PFX}.1:8080" check
4191 server cache2 "${SERVER_PFX}.2:8080" check
4192
4193
419411. Well-known traps to avoid
4195-----------------------------
4196
4197Once in a while, someone reports that after a system reboot, the haproxy
4198service wasn't started, and that once they start it by hand it works. Most
4199often, these people are running a clustered IP address mechanism such as
4200keepalived, to assign the service IP address to the master node only, and while
4201it used to work when they used to bind haproxy to address 0.0.0.0, it stopped
4202working after they bound it to the virtual IP address. What happens here is
4203that when the service starts, the virtual IP address is not yet owned by the
4204local node, so when HAProxy wants to bind to it, the system rejects this
4205because it is not a local IP address. The fix doesn't consist in delaying the
4206haproxy service startup (since it wouldn't stand a restart), but instead to
4207properly configure the system to allow binding to non-local addresses. This is
4208easily done on Linux by setting the net.ipv4.ip_nonlocal_bind sysctl to 1. This
4209is also needed in order to transparently intercept the IP traffic that passes
4210through HAProxy for a specific target address.
4211
4212Multi-process configurations involving source port ranges may apparently seem
4213to work but they will cause some random failures under high loads because more
4214than one process may try to use the same source port to connect to the same
4215server, which is not possible. The system will report an error and a retry will
4216happen, picking another port. A high value in the "retries" parameter may hide
4217the effect to a certain extent but this also comes with increased CPU usage and
4218processing time. Logs will also report a certain number of retries. For this
4219reason, port ranges should be avoided in multi-process configurations.
4220
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -04004221Since HAProxy uses SO_REUSEPORT and supports having multiple independent
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +02004222processes bound to the same IP:port, during troubleshooting it can happen that
4223an old process was not stopped before a new one was started. This provides
4224absurd test results which tend to indicate that any change to the configuration
4225is ignored. The reason is that in fact even the new process is restarted with a
4226new configuration, the old one also gets some incoming connections and
4227processes them, returning unexpected results. When in doubt, just stop the new
4228process and try again. If it still works, it very likely means that an old
4229process remains alive and has to be stopped. Linux's "netstat -lntp" is of good
4230help here.
4231
4232When adding entries to an ACL from the command line (eg: when blacklisting a
4233source address), it is important to keep in mind that these entries are not
4234synchronized to the file and that if someone reloads the configuration, these
4235updates will be lost. While this is often the desired effect (for blacklisting)
4236it may not necessarily match expectations when the change was made as a fix for
4237a problem. See the "add acl" action of the CLI interface.
4238
4239
424012. Debugging and performance issues
4241------------------------------------
4242
4243When HAProxy is started with the "-d" option, it will stay in the foreground
4244and will print one line per event, such as an incoming connection, the end of a
4245connection, and for each request or response header line seen. This debug
4246output is emitted before the contents are processed, so they don't consider the
4247local modifications. The main use is to show the request and response without
4248having to run a network sniffer. The output is less readable when multiple
4249connections are handled in parallel, though the "debug2ansi" and "debug2html"
4250scripts found in the examples/ directory definitely help here by coloring the
4251output.
4252
4253If a request or response is rejected because HAProxy finds it is malformed, the
4254best thing to do is to connect to the CLI and issue "show errors", which will
4255report the last captured faulty request and response for each frontend and
4256backend, with all the necessary information to indicate precisely the first
4257character of the input stream that was rejected. This is sometimes needed to
4258prove to customers or to developers that a bug is present in their code. In
4259this case it is often possible to relax the checks (but still keep the
4260captures) using "option accept-invalid-http-request" or its equivalent for
4261responses coming from the server "option accept-invalid-http-response". Please
4262see the configuration manual for more details.
4263
4264Example :
4265
4266 > show errors
4267 Total events captured on [13/Oct/2015:13:43:47.169] : 1
4268
4269 [13/Oct/2015:13:43:40.918] frontend HAProxyLocalStats (#2): invalid request
4270 backend <NONE> (#-1), server <NONE> (#-1), event #0
4271 src 127.0.0.1:51981, session #0, session flags 0x00000080
4272 HTTP msg state 26, msg flags 0x00000000, tx flags 0x00000000
4273 HTTP chunk len 0 bytes, HTTP body len 0 bytes
4274 buffer flags 0x00808002, out 0 bytes, total 31 bytes
4275 pending 31 bytes, wrapping at 8040, error at position 13:
4276
4277 00000 GET /invalid request HTTP/1.1\r\n
4278
4279
4280The output of "show info" on the CLI provides a number of useful information
4281regarding the maximum connection rate ever reached, maximum SSL key rate ever
4282reached, and in general all information which can help to explain temporary
4283issues regarding CPU or memory usage. Example :
4284
4285 > show info
4286 Name: HAProxy
4287 Version: 1.6-dev7-e32d18-17
4288 Release_date: 2015/10/12
4289 Nbproc: 1
4290 Process_num: 1
4291 Pid: 7949
4292 Uptime: 0d 0h02m39s
4293 Uptime_sec: 159
4294 Memmax_MB: 0
4295 Ulimit-n: 120032
4296 Maxsock: 120032
4297 Maxconn: 60000
4298 Hard_maxconn: 60000
4299 CurrConns: 0
4300 CumConns: 3
4301 CumReq: 3
4302 MaxSslConns: 0
4303 CurrSslConns: 0
4304 CumSslConns: 0
4305 Maxpipes: 0
4306 PipesUsed: 0
4307 PipesFree: 0
4308 ConnRate: 0
4309 ConnRateLimit: 0
4310 MaxConnRate: 1
4311 SessRate: 0
4312 SessRateLimit: 0
4313 MaxSessRate: 1
4314 SslRate: 0
4315 SslRateLimit: 0
4316 MaxSslRate: 0
4317 SslFrontendKeyRate: 0
4318 SslFrontendMaxKeyRate: 0
4319 SslFrontendSessionReuse_pct: 0
4320 SslBackendKeyRate: 0
4321 SslBackendMaxKeyRate: 0
4322 SslCacheLookups: 0
4323 SslCacheMisses: 0
4324 CompressBpsIn: 0
4325 CompressBpsOut: 0
4326 CompressBpsRateLim: 0
4327 ZlibMemUsage: 0
4328 MaxZlibMemUsage: 0
4329 Tasks: 5
4330 Run_queue: 1
4331 Idle_pct: 100
4332 node: wtap
4333 description:
4334
4335When an issue seems to randomly appear on a new version of HAProxy (eg: every
4336second request is aborted, occasional crash, etc), it is worth trying to enable
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -04004337memory poisoning so that each call to malloc() is immediately followed by the
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +02004338filling of the memory area with a configurable byte. By default this byte is
43390x50 (ASCII for 'P'), but any other byte can be used, including zero (which
4340will have the same effect as a calloc() and which may make issues disappear).
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -04004341Memory poisoning is enabled on the command line using the "-dM" option. It
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +02004342slightly hurts performance and is not recommended for use in production. If
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -04004343an issue happens all the time with it or never happens when poisoning uses
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +02004344byte zero, it clearly means you've found a bug and you definitely need to
4345report it. Otherwise if there's no clear change, the problem it is not related.
4346
4347When debugging some latency issues, it is important to use both strace and
4348tcpdump on the local machine, and another tcpdump on the remote system. The
4349reason for this is that there are delays everywhere in the processing chain and
4350it is important to know which one is causing latency to know where to act. In
4351practice, the local tcpdump will indicate when the input data come in. Strace
4352will indicate when haproxy receives these data (using recv/recvfrom). Warning,
4353openssl uses read()/write() syscalls instead of recv()/send(). Strace will also
4354show when haproxy sends the data, and tcpdump will show when the system sends
4355these data to the interface. Then the external tcpdump will show when the data
4356sent are really received (since the local one only shows when the packets are
4357queued). The benefit of sniffing on the local system is that strace and tcpdump
4358will use the same reference clock. Strace should be used with "-tts200" to get
4359complete timestamps and report large enough chunks of data to read them.
4360Tcpdump should be used with "-nvvttSs0" to report full packets, real sequence
4361numbers and complete timestamps.
4362
4363In practice, received data are almost always immediately received by haproxy
4364(unless the machine has a saturated CPU or these data are invalid and not
4365delivered). If these data are received but not sent, it generally is because
4366the output buffer is saturated (ie: recipient doesn't consume the data fast
4367enough). This can be confirmed by seeing that the polling doesn't notify of
4368the ability to write on the output file descriptor for some time (it's often
4369easier to spot in the strace output when the data finally leave and then roll
4370back to see when the write event was notified). It generally matches an ACK
4371received from the recipient, and detected by tcpdump. Once the data are sent,
4372they may spend some time in the system doing nothing. Here again, the TCP
4373congestion window may be limited and not allow these data to leave, waiting for
4374an ACK to open the window. If the traffic is idle and the data take 40 ms or
4375200 ms to leave, it's a different issue (which is not an issue), it's the fact
4376that the Nagle algorithm prevents empty packets from leaving immediately, in
4377hope that they will be merged with subsequent data. HAProxy automatically
4378disables Nagle in pure TCP mode and in tunnels. However it definitely remains
4379enabled when forwarding an HTTP body (and this contributes to the performance
4380improvement there by reducing the number of packets). Some HTTP non-compliant
4381applications may be sensitive to the latency when delivering incomplete HTTP
4382response messages. In this case you will have to enable "option http-no-delay"
4383to disable Nagle in order to work around their design, keeping in mind that any
4384other proxy in the chain may similarly be impacted. If tcpdump reports that data
4385leave immediately but the other end doesn't see them quickly, it can mean there
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -04004386is a congested WAN link, a congested LAN with flow control enabled and
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +02004387preventing the data from leaving, or more commonly that HAProxy is in fact
4388running in a virtual machine and that for whatever reason the hypervisor has
4389decided that the data didn't need to be sent immediately. In virtualized
4390environments, latency issues are almost always caused by the virtualization
4391layer, so in order to save time, it's worth first comparing tcpdump in the VM
4392and on the external components. Any difference has to be credited to the
4393hypervisor and its accompanying drivers.
4394
4395When some TCP SACK segments are seen in tcpdump traces (using -vv), it always
4396means that the side sending them has got the proof of a lost packet. While not
4397seeing them doesn't mean there are no losses, seeing them definitely means the
4398network is lossy. Losses are normal on a network, but at a rate where SACKs are
4399not noticeable at the naked eye. If they appear a lot in the traces, it is
4400worth investigating exactly what happens and where the packets are lost. HTTP
4401doesn't cope well with TCP losses, which introduce huge latencies.
4402
4403The "netstat -i" command will report statistics per interface. An interface
4404where the Rx-Ovr counter grows indicates that the system doesn't have enough
4405resources to receive all incoming packets and that they're lost before being
4406processed by the network driver. Rx-Drp indicates that some received packets
4407were lost in the network stack because the application doesn't process them
4408fast enough. This can happen during some attacks as well. Tx-Drp means that
4409the output queues were full and packets had to be dropped. When using TCP it
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -04004410should be very rare, but will possibly indicate a saturated outgoing link.
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +02004411
4412
441313. Security considerations
4414---------------------------
4415
4416HAProxy is designed to run with very limited privileges. The standard way to
4417use it is to isolate it into a chroot jail and to drop its privileges to a
4418non-root user without any permissions inside this jail so that if any future
4419vulnerability were to be discovered, its compromise would not affect the rest
4420of the system.
4421
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -04004422In order to perform a chroot, it first needs to be started as a root user. It is
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +02004423pointless to build hand-made chroots to start the process there, these ones are
4424painful to build, are never properly maintained and always contain way more
4425bugs than the main file-system. And in case of compromise, the intruder can use
4426the purposely built file-system. Unfortunately many administrators confuse
4427"start as root" and "run as root", resulting in the uid change to be done prior
4428to starting haproxy, and reducing the effective security restrictions.
4429
4430HAProxy will need to be started as root in order to :
4431 - adjust the file descriptor limits
4432 - bind to privileged port numbers
4433 - bind to a specific network interface
4434 - transparently listen to a foreign address
4435 - isolate itself inside the chroot jail
4436 - drop to another non-privileged UID
4437
4438HAProxy may require to be run as root in order to :
4439 - bind to an interface for outgoing connections
4440 - bind to privileged source ports for outgoing connections
Dan Lloyd8e48b872016-07-01 21:01:18 -04004441 - transparently bind to a foreign address for outgoing connections
Willy Tarreau2212e6a2015-10-13 14:40:55 +02004442
4443Most users will never need the "run as root" case. But the "start as root"
4444covers most usages.
4445
4446A safe configuration will have :
4447
4448 - a chroot statement pointing to an empty location without any access
4449 permissions. This can be prepared this way on the UNIX command line :
4450
4451 # mkdir /var/empty && chmod 0 /var/empty || echo "Failed"
4452
4453 and referenced like this in the HAProxy configuration's global section :
4454
4455 chroot /var/empty
4456
4457 - both a uid/user and gid/group statements in the global section :
4458
4459 user haproxy
4460 group haproxy
4461
4462 - a stats socket whose mode, uid and gid are set to match the user and/or
4463 group allowed to access the CLI so that nobody may access it :
4464
4465 stats socket /var/run/haproxy.stat uid hatop gid hatop mode 600