Module ngx_stream_core_module
The ngx_stream_core_module
module
is available since version 1.9.0.
This module is not built by default, it should be enabled with the
--with-stream
configuration parameter.
Example Configuration
worker_processes auto; error_log /var/log/nginx/error.log info; events { worker_connections 1024; } stream { upstream backend { hash $remote_addr consistent; server backend1.example.com:12345 weight=5; server 127.0.0.1:12345 max_fails=3 fail_timeout=30s; server unix:/tmp/backend3; } upstream dns { server 192.168.0.1:53535; server dns.example.com:53; } server { listen 12345; proxy_connect_timeout 1s; proxy_timeout 3s; proxy_pass backend; } server { listen 127.0.0.1:53 udp; proxy_responses 1; proxy_timeout 20s; proxy_pass dns; } server { listen [::1]:12345; proxy_pass unix:/tmp/stream.socket; } }
Directives
Syntax: |
listen
|
---|---|
Default: | — |
Context: |
server |
Sets the address
and port
for the socket
on which the server will accept connections.
It is possible to specify just the port.
The address can also be a hostname, for example:
listen 127.0.0.1:12345; listen *:12345; listen 12345; # same as *:12345 listen localhost:12345;
IPv6 addresses are specified in square brackets:
listen [::1]:12345; listen [::]:12345;
UNIX-domain sockets are specified with the “unix:
”
prefix:
listen unix:/var/run/nginx.sock;
The ssl
parameter allows specifying that all
connections accepted on this port should work in SSL mode.
The udp
parameter configures a listening socket
for working with datagrams (1.9.13).
The proxy_protocol
parameter (1.11.4)
allows specifying that all connections accepted on this port should use the
PROXY
protocol.
The listen
directive
can have several additional parameters specific to socket-related system calls.
-
backlog
=number
-
sets the
backlog
parameter in thelisten()
call that limits the maximum length for the queue of pending connections (1.9.2). By default,backlog
is set to -1 on FreeBSD, DragonFly BSD, and Mac OS X, and to 511 on other platforms. -
bind
-
this parameter instructs to make a separate
bind()
call for a given address:port pair. The fact is that if there are severallisten
directives with the same port but different addresses, and one of thelisten
directives listens on all addresses for the given port (*:
port
), nginx willbind()
only to*:
port
. It should be noted that thegetsockname()
system call will be made in this case to determine the address that accepted the connection. If theipv6only
orso_keepalive
parameters are used then for a givenaddress
:port
pair a separatebind()
call will always be made. -
ipv6only
=on
|off
-
this parameter determines
(via the
IPV6_V6ONLY
socket option) whether an IPv6 socket listening on a wildcard address[::]
will accept only IPv6 connections or both IPv6 and IPv4 connections. This parameter is turned on by default. It can only be set once on start. -
reuseport
-
this parameter (1.9.1) instructs to create an individual listening socket
for each worker process
(using the
SO_REUSEPORT
socket option), allowing a kernel to distribute incoming connections between worker processes. This currently works only on Linux 3.9+ and DragonFly BSD.Inappropriate use of this option may have its security implications.
-
so_keepalive
=on
|off
|[keepidle
]:[keepintvl
]:[keepcnt
] -
this parameter configures the “TCP keepalive” behavior
for the listening socket.
If this parameter is omitted then the operating system’s settings will be
in effect for the socket.
If it is set to the value “
on
”, theSO_KEEPALIVE
option is turned on for the socket. If it is set to the value “off
”, theSO_KEEPALIVE
option is turned off for the socket. Some operating systems support setting of TCP keepalive parameters on a per-socket basis using theTCP_KEEPIDLE
,TCP_KEEPINTVL
, andTCP_KEEPCNT
socket options. On such systems (currently, Linux 2.4+, NetBSD 5+, and FreeBSD 9.0-STABLE), they can be configured using thekeepidle
,keepintvl
, andkeepcnt
parameters. One or two parameters may be omitted, in which case the system default setting for the corresponding socket option will be in effect. For example,
will set the idle timeout (so_keepalive=30m::10
TCP_KEEPIDLE
) to 30 minutes, leave the probe interval (TCP_KEEPINTVL
) at its system default, and set the probes count (TCP_KEEPCNT
) to 10 probes.
Different servers must listen on different
address
:port
pairs.
Syntax: |
preread_buffer_size |
---|---|
Default: |
preread_buffer_size 16k; |
Context: |
stream , server |
This directive appeared in version 1.11.5.
Specifies a size
of the
preread buffer.
Syntax: |
preread_timeout |
---|---|
Default: |
preread_timeout 30s; |
Context: |
stream , server |
This directive appeared in version 1.11.5.
Specifies a timeout
of the
preread phase.
Syntax: |
proxy_protocol_timeout |
---|---|
Default: |
proxy_protocol_timeout 30s; |
Context: |
stream , server |
This directive appeared in version 1.11.4.
Specifies a timeout
for
reading the PROXY protocol header to complete.
If no entire header is transmitted within this time,
the connection is closed.
Syntax: |
resolver
|
---|---|
Default: | — |
Context: |
stream , server |
This directive appeared in version 1.11.3.
Configures name servers used to resolve names of upstream servers into addresses, for example:
resolver 127.0.0.1 [::1]:5353;
An address can be specified as a domain name or IP address, and an optional port. If port is not specified, the port 53 is used. Name servers are queried in a round-robin fashion.
By default, nginx will look up both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses while resolving.
If looking up of IPv6 addresses is not desired,
the ipv6=off
parameter can be specified.
By default, nginx caches answers using the TTL value of a response.
The optional valid
parameter allows overriding it:
resolver 127.0.0.1 [::1]:5353 valid=30s;
Before version 1.11.3, this directive was available as part of our commercial subscription.
Syntax: |
resolver_timeout |
---|---|
Default: |
resolver_timeout 30s; |
Context: |
stream , server |
This directive appeared in version 1.11.3.
Sets a timeout for name resolution, for example:
resolver_timeout 5s;
Before version 1.11.3, this directive was available as part of our commercial subscription.
Syntax: |
server { ... } |
---|---|
Default: | — |
Context: |
stream |
Sets the configuration for a server.
Syntax: |
stream { ... } |
---|---|
Default: | — |
Context: |
main |
Provides the configuration file context in which the stream server directives are specified.
Syntax: |
tcp_nodelay |
---|---|
Default: |
tcp_nodelay on; |
Context: |
stream , server |
This directive appeared in version 1.9.4.
Enables or disables the use of the TCP_NODELAY
option.
The option is enabled for both client and proxied server connections.
Syntax: |
variables_hash_bucket_size |
---|---|
Default: |
variables_hash_bucket_size 64; |
Context: |
stream |
This directive appeared in version 1.11.2.
Sets the bucket size for the variables hash table. The details of setting up hash tables are provided in a separate document.
Syntax: |
variables_hash_max_size |
---|---|
Default: |
variables_hash_max_size 1024; |
Context: |
stream |
This directive appeared in version 1.11.2.
Sets the maximum size
of the variables hash table.
The details of setting up hash tables are provided in a separate
document.
Embedded Variables
The ngx_stream_core_module
module supports variables
since 1.11.2.
$binary_remote_addr
- client address in a binary form, value’s length is always 4 bytes for IPv4 addresses or 16 bytes for IPv6 addresses
$bytes_received
- number of bytes received from a client (1.11.4)
$bytes_sent
- number of bytes sent to a client
$connection
- connection serial number
$hostname
- host name
$msec
- current time in seconds with the milliseconds resolution
$nginx_version
- nginx version
$pid
- PID of the worker process
$protocol
-
protocol used to communicate with the client:
TCP
orUDP
(1.11.4) $proxy_protocol_addr
-
client address from the PROXY protocol header, or an empty string otherwise
(1.11.4)
The PROXY protocol must be previously enabled by setting the
proxy_protocol
parameter in the listen directive. $proxy_protocol_port
-
client port from the PROXY protocol header, or an empty string otherwise
(1.11.4)
The PROXY protocol must be previously enabled by setting the
proxy_protocol
parameter in the listen directive. $remote_addr
- client address
$remote_port
- client port
$server_addr
-
an address of the server which accepted a connection
Computing a value of this variable usually requires one system call. To avoid a system call, the listen directives must specify addresses and use the
bind
parameter. $server_port
- port of the server which accepted a connection
$session_time
- session duration in seconds with a milliseconds resolution (1.11.4);
$status
-
session status (1.11.4), can be one of the following:
200
- session completed successfully
400
- client data could not be parsed, for example, the PROXY protocol header
403
- access forbidden, for example, when access is limited for certain client addresses
500
- internal server error
502
- bad gateway, for example, if an upstream server could not be selected or reached.
503
- service unavailable, for example, when access is limited by the number of connections
$time_iso8601
- local time in the ISO 8601 standard format
$time_local
- local time in the Common Log Format