Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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No functional changes.
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Since the "pass" option supports both strings and variables, a generic
nxt_var_t structure can be used in the configuration phase, and the "name"
field in actions is redundant.
No functional changes.
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This commit introduces the replacement of the client address based on the value
of a specified HTTP header. This is intended for use when Unit is placed
behind a reverse proxy like nginx or a CDN.
You must specify the source addresses of the trusted proxies. This can be
accomplished with any valid IP pattern supported by Unit's match block:
["10.0.0.1", "10.4.0.0/16", "!192.168.1.1"]
The feature is configured per listener.
The client address replacement functionality only operates when there is a
source IP match and the specified header is present. Typically this would be
an 'X-Forwarded-For' header.
{
"listeners": {
"127.0.0.1:8080": {
"client_ip": {
"header": "X-Forwarded-For",
"source": [
"10.0.0.0/8"
]
},
"pass": "applications/my_app"
},
}
}
If a request occurs and Unit receives a header like below:
"X-Forwarded-For: 84.123.23.23"
By default, Unit trusts the last rightmost IP in the header, so REMOTE_ADDR
will be set to 84.123.23.23 if the connection originated from 10.0.0.0/8.
If Unit runs behind consecutive reverse proxies and receives a header similar
to the following:
"X-Forwarded-For: 84.123.23.23, 10.0.0.254"
You will need to enable "recursive" checking, which walks the header from
last address to first and chooses the first non-trusted address it finds.
{
"listeners": {
"127.0.0.1:8080": {
"client_ip": {
"header": "X-Forwarded-For",
"source": [
"10.0.0.0/8"
]
"recursive": true,
},
"pass": "applications/my_app"
},
}
}
If a connection from 10.0.0.0/8 occurs, the chain is walked. Here, 10.0.0.254
is also a trusted address so the client address will be replaced with
84.123.23.23.
If all IP addresses in the header are trusted, the client address is set to
the first address in the header:
If 10.0.0.0/8 is trusted and "X-Forwarded-For: 10.0.0.3, 10.0.0.2, 10.0.0.1",
the client address will be replaced with 10.0.0.3.
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No functional changes.
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This is a prerequisite for further introduction of openat2() features.
No functional changes.
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Previous value was too small, which reduced efficiency of the pool causing
a lot of additional allocations even for simple request and response.
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This allows to specify multiple subsequent targets inside PHP applications.
For example:
{
"listeners": {
"*:80": {
"pass": "routes"
}
},
"routes": [
{
"match": {
"uri": "/info"
},
"action": {
"pass": "applications/my_app/phpinfo"
}
},
{
"match": {
"uri": "/hello"
},
"action": {
"pass": "applications/my_app/hello"
}
},
{
"action": {
"pass": "applications/my_app/rest"
}
}
],
"applications": {
"my_app": {
"type": "php",
"targets": {
"phpinfo": {
"script": "phpinfo.php",
"root": "/www/data/admin",
},
"hello": {
"script": "hello.php",
"root": "/www/data/test",
},
"rest": {
"root": "/www/data/example.com",
"index": "index.php"
},
}
}
}
}
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This is required due to lack of a graceful shutdown: there is a small gap
between the runtime's memory pool release and router process's exit. Thus, a
worker thread may start processing a request between these two operations,
which may result in an http fields hash access and subsequent crash.
To simplify issue reproduction, it makes sense to add a 2 sec sleep before
exit() in nxt_runtime_exit().
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This closes #386 on GitHub.
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If the call is done only after a successful RPC data allocation, its
corresponding release call is not missed, which avoids a potential leak.
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The check was moved from the request body read stage.
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Scheme matches exact string “http” or “https”.
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This closes #223 issue on GitHub.
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Absence of this flag is the reason of memory leak in case when client
disconnected before receiving all response data.
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Previously, the nxt_router_prepare_msg() function expected server host among
other headers unmodified. It's not true anymore since normalization of the
Host header has been introduced in 77aad2c142a0.
The nxt_unit_split_host() function was removed. It didn't work correctly with
IPv6 literals. Anyway, after 77aad2c142a0 the port splitting is done in router
while Host header processing.
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Such header fields are already rejected by HTTP parser.
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Timers that don't require maximum precision (most of them, actually) can be
triggered earlier or later within the bias interval.
To reduce wakeups by timers, the expire function now triggers not only all
timers that fall within the elapsed time, but also those whose bias falls
within this interval.
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The bug has appeared in changeset 5817734dd9b9.
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The bug has appeared in changeset 5817734dd9b9.
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Found by Coverity (CID 215687).
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