I created proxy with MFA using OpenResty, it mainly works ok.
But I have problem with websockets: Firefox says that it "cannot connect with server wss://...". Looking in browser's network panel I can see switching protocols request that seems be ok. My nginx.conf looks as bellow:
worker_processes auto;
env TARGET_APPLICATION_HOST;
env TARGET_APPLICATION_PORT;
env TARGET_USE_SSL;
events {
worker_connections 1024;
}
http {
server {
listen 80;
server_name localhost;
location / {
resolver local=on ipv6=off valid=100s;
content_by_lua_block {
local http = require "resty.http"
local httpc = http.new()
httpc:set_timeout(500)
local ok, err = httpc:connect(
os.getenv("TARGET_APPLICATION_HOST"),
os.getenv("TARGET_APPLICATION_PORT"))
if not ok then
ngx.log(ngx.ERR, err)
return
end
if os.getenv("TARGET_USE_SSL") == "TRUE" then
-- Trigger the SSL handshake
session, err = httpc:ssl_handshake(False, server, False)
end
httpc:set_timeout(2000)
httpc:proxy_response(httpc:proxy_request())
httpc:set_keepalive()
}
}
}
}
It is simpler version of production proxy, but returns the same error with websockets. I tried to use proxy with pure nginx and it works ok with websockets, but I need capabilites of OpenResty (proxing different hosts basing of cookie value).
Is there any simple mistake in the above file or OpenResty does not have websocket abilities?
lua-resty-http is a HTTP(S) client libraty, it does not (and probably will not) support the WebSocket protocol.
There is another library for the WebSocket protocol: lua-resty-websocket. It implements both client and server, so it should be possible to write the proxy using this library.
I need capabilites of OpenResty (proxing different hosts basing of cookie value)
ngx.balancer does exactly what you need, check the example and this answer.
Im trying to do a very basic task of redirecting between two servers based on "http referer".
I have tried a basic If, but I know IF IS EVIL in nginx and didnt manage to make it work, so came up with this solution, of directing based on valid_referer. but Im keep getting 502.
server {
location /application1 {
valid_referers server_names
.click2dad.net*;
if ($invalid_referer){
set $1 '';
proxy_pass http://localhost:8080/$1;
}
}
}
server 2:
server {
listen 8080;
root /home/ubuntu/data/server2;
}
btw I used set $1 = "" , since I kept getting an error if proxy_pass cannot have uri under if statment
Thanks
Make sure you have something running on http://localhost:8080/ .
Do something to check whether port 8080 is used by any process, like
netstat -tulpn | grep 8080
on your terminal.
I am tryin to run nginx latest version with the following configuration, but I get nginx: [emerg] invalid parameter "route=bloomberg" in /etc/nginx/nginx.conf:13
docker run --rm -ti -v root_to_local_nginx_directory:/etc/nginx:ro -p 3080:80 --name=mynginx --entrypoint nginx nginx
# nginx.conf file inside root_to_local_nginx_directory
http {
map $cookie_route $route_from_cookie {
~.(?P<version>w+)$ $route;
}
split_clients "${remote_addr}" $random_route {
50% server bloomberg.com route=bloomberg;
* server yahoo.com route=yahoo;
}
upstream backend {
zone backend 64k;
server bloomberg.com route=bloomberg;
server yahoo.com route=yahoo;
sticky route $route_from_cookie $randomroute;
}
server {
# ...
listen 80;
location / {
proxy_set_header Host $host;
proxy_pass http://backend;
}
}
}
Why is this? According to the documentation this should be correct http://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_upstream_module.html#upstream.
The route=string parameter of the server directive within the upstream context is considered to be an enterprise-grade feature, and is thus only available through the commercial subscription, in NGINX Plus, not in OSS NGINX. (If you look closer into the documentation, you'll notice it's grouped together with the other parameters under a separate "available as part of our commercial subscription" subsection.)
Additionally, you're also trying to use some similar "server" parameters within the split_clients context as if they were actual directives interpreted by nginx, even though everything is supposed to be string literals in that context; it's unclear whether or not that part is responsible for any errors, but even if not, it's a bad style to introduce such confusion into your configuration.
References:
http://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_upstream_module.html#server
http://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_split_clients_module.html#split_clients
https://www.nginx.com/products/nginx/
The reason why you are seeing the error is because the split_clients module does not support the route parameter. Alternatively, you can do something along the lines:
upstream bloomberg {
server bloomberg.com route=bloomberg;
}
upstream yahoo {
server yahoo.com route=yahoo;
}
split_clients "${remote_addr}" $random_route {
50% bloomberg;
* yahoo;
}
I use nginx to proxy and hold persistent connections to far away servers for me.
I have configured about 15 blocks similar to this example:
upstream rinu-test {
server test.rinu.test:443;
keepalive 20;
}
server {
listen 80;
server_name test.rinu.test;
location / {
proxy_pass https://rinu-test;
proxy_http_version 1.1;
proxy_set_header Connection "";
proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
}
}
The problem is if the hostname can not be resolved in one or more of the upstream blocks, nginx will not (re)start. I can't use static IPs either, some of these hosts explicitly said not to do that because IPs will change. Every other solution I've seen to this error message says to get rid of upstream and do everything in the location block. That it not possible here because keepalive is only available under upstream.
I can temporarily afford to lose one server but not all 15.
Edit:
Turns out nginx is not suitable for this use case. An alternative backend (upstream) keepalive proxy should be used. A custom Node.js alternative is in my answer. So far I haven't found any other alternatives that actually work.
Earlier versions of nginx (before 1.1.4), which already powered a huge number of the most visited websites worldwide (and some still do even nowdays, if the server headers are to be believed), didn't even support keepalive on the upstream side, because there is very little benefit for doing so in the datacentre setting, unless you have a non-trivial latency between your various hosts; see https://serverfault.com/a/883019/110020 for some explanation.
Basically, unless you know you specifically need keepalive between your upstream and front-end, chances are it's only making your architecture less resilient and worse-off.
(Note that your current solution is also wrong because a change in the IP address will likewise go undetected, because you're doing hostname resolution at config reload only; so, even if nginx does start, it'll basically stop working once IP addresses of the upstream servers do change.)
Potential solutions, pick one:
The best solution would seem to just get rid of upstream keepalive as likely unnecessary in a datacentre environment, and use variables with proxy_pass for up-to-date DNS resolution for each request (nginx is still smart-enough to still do the caching of such resolutions)
Another option would be to get a paid version of nginx through a commercial subscription, which has a resolve parameter for the server directive within the upstream context.
Finally, another thing to try might be to use a set variable and/or a map to specify the servers within upstream; this is neither confirmed nor denied to have been implemented; e.g., it may or may not work.
Your scenario is very similar to the one when using aws ELB as uptreams in where is critical to resolve the proper IP of the defined domain.
The first thing you need to do and ensure is that the DNS servers you are using can resolve to your domains, then you could create your config like this:
resolver 10.0.0.2 valid=300s;
resolver_timeout 10s;
location /foo {
set $foo_backend_servers foo_backends.example.com;
proxy_pass http://$foo_backend_servers;
}
location /bar {
set $bar_backend_servers bar_backends.example.com;
proxy_pass http://$bar_backend_servers;
}
Notice the resolver 10.0.0.2 it should be IP of the DNS server that works and answer your queries, depending on your setup this could be a local cache service like unbound. and then just use resolve 127.0.0.1
Now, is very important to use a variable to specify the domain name, from the docs:
When you use a variable to specify the domain name in the proxy_pass directive, NGINX re‑resolves the domain name when its TTL expires.
You could check your resolver by using tools like dig for example:
$ dig +short stackoverflow.com
In case is a must to use keepalive in the upstreams, and if is not an option to use Nginx +, then you could give a try to openresty balancer, you will need to use/implement lua-resty-dns
A one possible solution is to involve a local DNS cache. It can be a local DNS server like Bind or Dnsmasq (with some crafty configuration, note that nginx can also use specified dns server in place of the system default), or just maintaining the cache in hosts file.
It seems that using hosts file with some scripting is quite straightforward way. The hosts file should be spitted into the static and dynamic parts (i.e. cat hosts.static hosts.dynamic > hosts), and the dynamic part should be generated (and updated) automatically by a script.
Perhaps it make sense to check from time to time the hostnames for changing IPs, and update hosts file and reload configuration in nginx on changes. In case of some hostname cannot be resolved the old IP or some default IP (like 127.0.1.9) should be used.
If you don't need the hostnames in the nginx config file (i.e., IPs are enough), the upstream section with IPs (resolved hostnames) can be generated by a script and included into nginx config — and no need to touch the hosts file in such case.
I put the resolve parameter on server and you need to set the Nginx Resolver in nginx.conf as below:
/etc/nginx/nginx.conf:
http {
resolver 192.168.0.2 ipv6=off valid=40s; # The DNS IP server
}
Site.conf:
upstream rinu-test {
server test.rinu.test:443;
keepalive 20;
}
My problem was container related. I'm using docker compose to create the nginx container, plus the app container. When setting network_mode: host in the app container config in docker-compose.yml, nginx was unable to find the upstream app container. Removing this fixed the problem.
we can resolve it temporarily
cd /etc
sudo vim resolv.conf
i
nameserver 8.8.8.8
:wq
then do sudo nginx -t
restart nginx it will work for the momment
An alternative is to write a new service that only does what I want. The following replaces nginx for proxying https connections using Node.js
const http = require('http');
const https = require('https');
const httpsKeepAliveAgent = new https.Agent({ keepAlive: true });
http.createServer(onRequest).listen(3000);
function onRequest(client_req, client_res) {
https.pipe(
protocol.request({
host: client_req.headers.host,
port: 443,
path: client_req.url,
method: client_req.method,
headers: client_req.headers,
agent: httpsKeepAliveAgent
}, (res) => {
res.pipe(client_res);
}).on('error', (e) => {
client_res.end();
})
);
}
Example usage:
curl http://localhost:3000/request_uri -H "Host: test.rinu.test"
which is equivalent to:
curl https://test.rinu.test/request_uri
I'm using Lua with NGINX. My code has a lua method called "rabbitmq.createExchange". I want to call this method, when nginx server starts.
I tried following code, but i failed with error "content_by_lua_block directive is not allowed here". Any solutions?
http {
lua_package_path '/app/nginx/src/?.lua;;';
server {
listen 4000;
include 'src/proj1.conf';
}
content_by_lua_block {
local rabbitmq = require 'src/rabbitmq.lua';
rabbitmq.createExchange("nginx", "topic");
}
}
You probably want init_by_lua_block - the content_by_lua_block directive is specifically for responding to a particular location, whereas the init_ version is for startup:
init_by_lua_block
syntax: init_by_lua_block { lua-script }
context: http
phase: loading-config
Similar to the init_by_lua directive except that this
directive inlines the Lua source directly inside a pair of curly
braces ({}) instead of in an NGINX string literal (which requires
special character escaping).
For instance,
init_by_lua_block {
print("I need no extra escaping here, for example: \r\nblah") }
(From the init_by_lua section, "Runs the Lua code [...] on the global Lua VM level when the Nginx master process (if any) is loading the Nginx config file.")