Nginx Wiki(已过时最新:http://nginxorg/en/docs/)

原创
2016-07-30 13:30:471160浏览
Synopsis

This module makes it possible to transfer requests to another server.

Example:

location / {
  proxy_pass        http://localhost:8000;
  proxy_set_header  X-Real-IP  $remote_addr;}

Note that when using the HTTP Proxy Module (or even when using FastCGI), the entire client request will be buffered in nginx before being passed on to the backend proxied servers. As a result, upload progress meters will not function correctly if they work by measuring the data received by the backend servers.

Directives

proxy_bind

syntax: proxy_bind address

default: none

context: http, server, location

version: ≥ 0.8.22

example:

proxy_bind  192.168.1.1;

This directive binds each upstream socket to a local address before calling connect(). It may be useful if host has several interfaces/aliases and you want to pass outgoing connections from specific interface/address.

proxy_buffer_size

Syntax:proxy_buffer_size sizeDefault:4k|8kContext:http
server
locationReference:proxy_buffer_size


This directive set the buffer size, into which will be read the first part of the response, obtained from the proxied server.

In this part of response the small response-header is located, as a rule.

By default, the buffer size is equal to the size of one buffer in directive proxy_buffers; however, it is possible to set it to less.

proxy_buffering

Syntax:proxy_buffering on | offDefault:onContext:http
server
locationReference:proxy_buffering


This directive activate response buffering of the proxied server.

If buffering is activated, then nginx reads the answer from the proxied server as fast as possible, saving it in the buffer as configured by directives proxy_buffer_size and proxy_buffers. If the response does not fit into memory, then parts of it will be written to disk.

If buffering is switched off, then the response is synchronously transferred to client immediately as it is received. nginx does not attempt to read the entire answer from the proxied server, the maximum size of data which nginx can accept from the server is set by directive proxy_buffer_size.

Also note that caching upstream proxy responses won't work if proxy_buffering is set to off.

For Comet applications based on long-polling it is important to set proxy_buffering to off, otherwise the asynchronous response is buffered and the Comet does not work.

Buffering can be set on a per-request basis by setting the X-Accel-Buffering header in the proxy response.

proxy_buffers

Syntax:proxy_buffers number sizeDefault:8 4k|8kContext:http
server
locationReference:proxy_buffers


This directive sets the number and the size of buffers, into which will be read the answer, obtained from the proxied server. By default, the size of one buffer is equal to the size of page. Depending on platform this is either 4K or 8K.

proxy_busy_buffers_size

Syntax:proxy_busy_buffers_size sizeDefault:8k|16kContext:http
server
locationReference:proxy_busy_buffers_size


proxy_cache

Syntax:proxy_cache zone | offDefault:offContext:http
server
locationReference:proxy_cache


This directive sets name of zone for caching. The same zone can be used in multiple places.

The cache honors backend's "Expires", "Cache-Control: no-cache", and "Cache-Control: max-age=XXX" headers since version 0.7.48. Since version 7.66, "private" and "no-store" are also honored. nginx does not handle "Vary" headers when caching. In order to ensure private items are not served to all users unintentionally by the cache, the back-end can set "no-cache" or "max-age=0", or the proxy_cache_key must include user-specific data such as $cookie_xxx. However, using cookie values as part of proxy_cache_key can defeat the benefits of caching for public items, so separate locations with different proxy_cache_key values might be necessary to separate private and public items.

The cache depends on proxy buffers, and will not work if proxy_buffers is set to off.

The following response headers flag a response as uncacheable unless they are ignored:

  • Set-Cookie
  • Cache-Control containing "no-cache", "no-store", "private", or a "max-age" with a non-numeric or 0 value
  • Expires with a time in the past
  • X-Accel-Expires: 0
  • proxy_cache_bypass

    Syntax:proxy_cache_bypass string ...Default: Context:http
    server
    locationReference:proxy_cache_bypass


    The directive specifies the conditions under which the answer will not be taken from the cache. If at least one of a string variable is not empty and not equal to "0", the answer is not taken from the cache:

     proxy_cache_bypass $cookie_nocache$arg_nocache$arg_comment;
     proxy_cache_bypass $http_pragma$http_authorization;

    Note that the response from the back-end is still eligible for caching. Thus one way of refreshing an item in the cache is sending a request with a header you pick yourself, e.g. "My-Secret-Header: 1", then having a proxy_cache_bypass line like:

    proxy_cache_bypass $http_my_secret_header;

    Can be used in conjunction with the directive proxy_no_cache.

    proxy_cache_key

    Syntax:proxy_cache_key stringDefault:$scheme$proxy_host$request_uriContext:http
    server
    locationReference:proxy_cache_key


    The directive specifies what information is included in the key for caching, for example

    proxy_cache_key "$host$request_uri$cookie_user";

    Note that by default, the hostname of the server is not included in the cache key. If you are using subdomains for different locations on your website, you need to include it, e.g. by changing the cache key to something like

    proxy_cache_key "$scheme$host$request_uri";

    proxy_cache_lock

    Syntax:proxy_cache_lock on | offDefault:offContext:http
    server
    locationAppeared in:1.1.12Reference:proxy_cache_lock

    When enabled, only one request at a time will be allowed to populate a new cache element identified according to the proxy_cache_key directive by passing a request to a proxied server. Other requests of the same cache element will either wait for a response to appear in the cache or the cache lock for this element to be released, up to the time set by the proxy_cache_lock_timeout directive. Similar effect for updating cache entry (this directive works only for inserting new cache element) can be archieved by using proxy_cache_use_stale updating directive.

    proxy_cache_lock_timeout

    Syntax:proxy_cache_lock_timeout timeDefault:5sContext:http
    server
    locationAppeared in:1.1.12Reference:proxy_cache_lock_timeout


    proxy_cache_methods

    syntax: proxy_cache_methods [GET HEAD POST];

    default: proxy_cache_methods GET HEAD;

    context: http, server, location

    GET/HEAD is syntax sugar, i.e. you can not disable GET/HEAD even if you set just

    proxy_cache_methods POST;

    proxy_cache_min_uses

    Syntax:proxy_cache_min_uses numberDefault:1Context:http
    server
    locationReference:proxy_cache_min_uses


    Number of queries, after which reply will be cached.

    proxy_cache_path

    Syntax:proxy_cache_path path [ levels = levels ] keys_zone = name : size [ inactive = time ] [ max_size = size ] [ loader_files = number ] [ loader_sleep = time ] [ loader_threshold = time ]Default: Context:httpReference:proxy_cache_path


    This directive sets the cache path and other cache parameters. Cached data is stored in files. An MD5 hash of the proxied URL is used as the key for the cache entry, and is also used as the filename in the cache path for the response contents and metadata. The levels parameter sets the number of subdirectory levels in cache. For example:

    proxy_cache_path  /data/nginx/cache/one  levels=1:2   keys_zone=one:10m;

    In this cache, file names will be like the following:

    /data/nginx/cache/c/29/b7f54b2df7773722d382f4809d65029c

    You may use any combination of 1 and 2 in the level formats: X, X:X, or X:X:X e.g.: "2", "2:2", "1:1:2". There can be at most 3 levels.

    All active keys and metadata is stored in shared memory. Zone name and the size of the zone is defined via the keys_zone parameter.

    Note that each defined zone must have a unique path. For example:

    proxy_cache_path  /data/nginx/cache/one    levels=1      keys_zone=one:10m;
    proxy_cache_path  /data/nginx/cache/two    levels=2:2    keys_zone=two:100m;
    proxy_cache_path  /data/nginx/cache/three  levels=1:1:2  keys_zone=three:1000m;

    If cached data is not requested for time defined by the inactive parameter, than that data is removed from the cache. The inactive parameter defaults to 10 minutes (10m).

    A special process, called "cache manager", is created to control the on-disk cache. It is responsible for removing inactive items and enforcing the size of the cache, as defined by the parameter max_size. When the total size of the cache exceeds the maximum size set by max_size, the least recently used data in the cache is deleted to make room for a new cache entry (a LRU replacement policy).

    Zone size should be set proportional to number of pages to cache. The size of the metadata for one page (file) depends on the OS; currently it is 64 bytes for FreeBSD/i386, and 128 bytes for FreeBSD/amd64.

    The directories specified by proxy_cache_path and proxy_temp_path should be located on the same filesystem.

    proxy_cache_use_stale

    Syntax:proxy_cache_use_stale error | timeout | invalid_header | updating | http_500 | http_502 | http_503 | http_504 | http_404 | off ...Default:offContext:http
    server
    locationReference:proxy_cache_use_stale


    This directive tells Nginx when to serve a stale item from the proxy cache. The parameters for this directive are similar to proxy_next_upstream with the addition of 'updating'.

    To prevent cache stampedes (when multiple threads stampede in to try to update the cache simultaneously) you can specify the 'updating' parameter. This will cause one thread to update the cache and while the update is in progress all other threads will serve the stale version of what is in the cache.

    proxy_cache_valid

    Syntax:proxy_cache_valid [ code ...] timeDefault: Context:http
    server
    locationReference:proxy_cache_valid


    This directive sets the time for caching different replies. Example:

    proxy_cache_valid  200302  10m;
    proxy_cache_valid  404      1m;

    sets 10 minutes cache time for replies with code 200 and 302, and 1 minute for 404s.

    If only time is specified:

    proxy_cache_valid 5m;

    then only replies with codes 200, 301 and 302 will be cached.

    Also it is possible to cache any replies with parameter "any":

    proxy_cache_valid  200302 10m;
    proxy_cache_valid  301 1h;
    proxy_cache_valid  any 1m;

    Upstream cache-related directives have priority over proxy_cache_valid value, in particular the order is (from Igor):

  • X-Accel-Expires
  • Expires/Cache-Control
  • proxy_cache_valid
  • The order in which your backend return HTTP headers change cache behaviour. Read this post for details.

    You may ignore the headers using

    proxy_ignore_headers X-Accel-Expires Expires Cache-Control;

    Concerning If-Modified / Last-Modified since behaviour, please remember that by default nginx sends 304 only if L-M == I-M-S. Controlled by directive if_modified_since [off|exact|before]

    Note: you must set this option for any persistent caching to occur.

    proxy_connect_timeout

    Syntax:proxy_connect_timeout timeDefault:60sContext:http
    server
    locationReference:proxy_connect_timeout


    This directive assigns a timeout for the connection to the upstream server. It is necessary to keep in mind that this time out cannot be more than 75 seconds.

    This is not the time until the server returns the pages, that is the proxy_read_timeout statement. If your upstream server is up, but hanging (e.g. it does not have enough threads to process your request so it puts you in the pool of connections to deal with later), then this statement will not help as the connection to the server has been made.

    proxy_cookie_domain

    Syntax:proxy_cookie_domain off
    proxy_cookie_domain domain replacementDefault:offContext:http
    server
    locationAppeared in:1.1.15Reference:proxy_cookie_domain


    proxy_cookie_path

    Syntax:proxy_cookie_path off
    proxy_cookie_path path replacementDefault:offContext:http
    server
    locationAppeared in:1.1.15Reference:proxy_cookie_path


    proxy_headers_hash_bucket_size

    syntax: proxy_headers_hash_bucket_size size;

    default: proxy_headers_hash_bucket_size 64;

    context: http, server, location, if

    This directive sets the bucket size of the headers hash table.
    This determines the limit of the header name. If you use header names longer than 64 characters then increase this.

    proxy_headers_hash_max_size

    syntax: proxy_headers_hash_max_size size;

    default: proxy_headers_hash_max_size 512;

    context: http, server, location, if

    This directive sets the maximum size of the headers hash table.
    Should not be smaller than the amount of headers your back-end is setting.

    proxy_hide_header

    Syntax:proxy_hide_header fieldDefault: Context:http
    server
    locationReference:proxy_hide_header


    nginx does not transfer the "Date", "Server", "X-Pad" and "X-Accel-..." header lines from the proxied server response. The proxy_hide_header directive allows to hide some additional header lines. But if on the contrary the header lines must be passed, then the proxy_pass_header should be used. For example if you want to hide the MS-OfficeWebserver and the AspNet-Version:

    location / {
      proxy_hide_header X-AspNet-Version;
      proxy_hide_header MicrosoftOfficeWebServer;}

    This directive can also be very helpful when using X-Accel-Redirect. For example, you may have one set of backend servers which return the headers for a file download, which includes X-Accel-Redirect to the actual file, as well as the correct Content-Type. However, the Redirect URL points to a files erver which hosts the actual file you wish to serve, and that server sends its own Content-Type header, which might be incorrect, and overrides the header sent by the original backend servers. You can avoid this by adding the proxy_hide_header directive to the fileserver. Example:

    location / {
      proxy_pass http://backend_servers;}
     
    location /files/ {
      proxy_pass http://fileserver;
      proxy_hide_header Content-Type;}

    proxy_http_version

    Syntax:proxy_http_version 1.0 | 1.1Default:1.0Context:http
    server
    locationAppeared in:1.1.4Reference:proxy_http_version


    proxy_ignore_client_abort

    Syntax:proxy_ignore_client_abort on | offDefault:offContext:http
    server
    locationReference:proxy_ignore_client_abort


    Prevents aborting request to proxy in case the client itself aborts the request.

    proxy_ignore_headers

    Syntax:proxy_ignore_headers field ...Default: Context:http
    server
    locationReference:proxy_ignore_headers


    Prohibits the processing of the header lines from the proxy server's response.

    It can specify the string as "X-Accel-Redirect", "X-Accel-Expires", "Expires", "Cache-Control" or "Set-Cookie". By default, nginx does not caches requests with Set-Cookie.

    proxy_intercept_errors

    Syntax:proxy_intercept_errors on | offDefault:offContext:http
    server
    locationReference:proxy_intercept_errors


    This directive decides if nginx will intercept responses with HTTP status codes of 400 and higher.

    By default all responses will be sent as-is from the proxied server.

    If you set this to on then nginx will intercept status codes that are explicitly handled by an error_page directive. Responses with status codes that do not match an error_page directive will be sent as-is from the proxied server.

    proxy_max_temp_file_size

    Syntax:proxy_max_temp_file_size sizeDefault:1024mContext:http
    server
    locationReference:proxy_max_temp_file_size


    The maximum size of a temporary file when the content is larger than the proxy buffer. If file is larger than this size, it will be served synchronously from upstream server rather than buffered to disk.

    If proxy_max_temp_file_size is equal to zero, temporary files usage will be disabled.

    proxy_method

    syntax: proxy_method [method];

    default: None

    context: http, server, location

    Allows you to override the HTTP method of the request to be passed to the backend server. If you specify POST for example, all requests forwarded to the backend server will be POST requests.

    Example:

    proxy_method POST;

    proxy_next_upstream

    Syntax:proxy_next_upstream error | timeout | invalid_header | http_500 | http_502 | http_503 | http_504 | http_404 | off ...Default:error timeoutContext:http
    server
    locationReference:proxy_next_upstream


    Directive determines in what cases the request will be transmitted to the next server:

  • error — an error has occurred while connecting to the server, sending a request to it, or reading its response;
  • timeout — occurred timeout during the connection with the server, transfer the request or while reading response from the server;
  • invalid_header — server returned a empty or incorrect answer;
  • http_500 — server returned answer with code 500
  • http_502 — server returned answer with code 502
  • http_503 — server returned answer with code 503
  • http_504 — server returned answer with code 504
  • http_404 — server returned answer with code 404
  • off — it forbids the request transfer to the next server
  • Transferring the request to the next server is only possible when nothing has been transferred to the client -- that is, if an error or timeout arises in the middle of the transfer of the request, then it is not possible to retry the current request on a different server.

    proxy_no_cache

    Syntax:proxy_no_cache string ...Default: Context:http
    server
    locationReference:proxy_no_cache


    Specifies in what cases a response will not be cached, e.g.

    proxy_no_cache $cookie_nocache$arg_nocache$arg_comment;
    proxy_no_cache $http_pragma$http_authorization;

    The response is marked uncacheable if any of the arguments expand to anything other than "0" or the empty string. For instance, in the above example, the response will never be cached if the cookie "nocache" is set in the request.

    proxy_pass

    Syntax:proxy_pass URLDefault: Context:location
    if in location
    limit_exceptReference:proxy_pass


    This directive sets the address of the proxied server and the URI to which location will be mapped. Address may be given as hostname or address and port, for example,

    proxy_pass http://localhost:8000/uri/;

    or as unix socket path:

    proxy_pass http://unix:/path/to/backend.socket:/uri/;

    path is given after the word unix between two colons.

    By default, the Host header from the request is not forwarded, but is set based on the proxy_pass statement. To forward the requested Host header, it is necessary to use:

    proxy_set_header Host $host;

    While passing request nginx replaces URI part which corresponds to location with one indicated in proxy_pass direct
    声明:本文内容由网友自发贡献,版权归原作者所有,本站不承担相应法律责任。如您发现有涉嫌抄袭侵权的内容,请联系admin@php.cn核实处理。