nghttpx --version (return code: 0)
nghttpx nghttp2/1.7.1
nghttpx --help (return code: 0)
Usage: nghttpx [OPTIONS]... [<PRIVATE_KEY> <CERT>]
A reverse proxy for HTTP/2, HTTP/1 and SPDY.
<PRIVATE_KEY>
Set path to server's private key. Required unless -p,
--client or --frontend-no-tls are given.
<CERT> Set path to server's certificate. Required unless -p,
--client or --frontend-no-tls are given. To make OCSP
stapling work, this must be absolute path.
Options:
The options are categorized into several groups.
Connections:
-b, --backend=(<HOST>,<PORT>|unix:<PATH>)[;<PATTERN>[:...]]
Set backend host and port. The multiple backend
addresses are accepted by repeating this option. UNIX
domain socket can be specified by prefixing path name
with "unix:" (e.g., unix:/var/run/backend.sock).
Optionally, if <PATTERN>s are given, the backend address
is only used if request matches the pattern. If -s or
-p is used, <PATTERN>s are ignored. The pattern
matching is closely designed to ServeMux in net/http
package of Go programming language. <PATTERN> consists
of path, host + path or just host. The path must start
with "/". If it ends with "/", it matches all request
path in its subtree. To deal with the request to the
directory without trailing slash, the path which ends
with "/" also matches the request path which only lacks
trailing '/' (e.g., path "/foo/" matches request path
"/foo"). If it does not end with "/", it performs exact
match against the request path. If host is given, it
performs exact match against the request host. If host
alone is given, "/" is appended to it, so that it
matches all request paths under the host (e.g.,
specifying "nghttp2.org" equals to "nghttp2.org/").
Patterns with host take precedence over patterns with
just path. Then, longer patterns take precedence over
shorter ones, breaking a tie by the order of the
appearance in the configuration.
If <PATTERN> is omitted, "/" is used as pattern, which
matches all request paths (catch-all pattern). The
catch-all backend must be given.
When doing a match, nghttpx made some normalization to
pattern, request host and path. For host part, they are
converted to lower case. For path part, percent-encoded
unreserved characters defined in RFC 3986 are decoded,
and any dot-segments (".." and ".") are resolved and
removed.
For example, -b'127.0.0.1,8080;nghttp2.org/httpbin/'
matches the request host "nghttp2.org" and the request
path "/httpbin/get", but does not match the request host
"nghttp2.org" and the request path "/index.html".
The multiple <PATTERN>s can be specified, delimiting
them by ":". Specifying
-b'127.0.0.1,8080;nghttp2.org:www.nghttp2.org' has the
same effect to specify -b'127.0.0.1,8080;nghttp2.org'
and -b'127.0.0.1,8080;www.nghttp2.org'.
The backend addresses sharing same <PATTERN> are grouped
together forming load balancing group.
Since ";" and ":" are used as delimiter, <PATTERN> must
not contain these characters. Since ";" has special
meaning in shell, the option value must be quoted.
Default: 127.0.0.1,80
-f, --frontend=(<HOST>,<PORT>|unix:<PATH>)
Set frontend host and port. If <HOST> is '*', it
assumes all addresses including both IPv4 and IPv6.
UNIX domain socket can be specified by prefixing path
name with "unix:" (e.g., unix:/var/run/nghttpx.sock)
Default: *,3000
--backlog=<N>
Set listen backlog size.
Default: 512
--backend-ipv4
Resolve backend hostname to IPv4 address only.
--backend-ipv6
Resolve backend hostname to IPv6 address only.
--backend-http-proxy-uri=<URI>
Specify proxy URI in the form
http://[<USER>:<PASS>@]<PROXY>:<PORT>. If a proxy
requires authentication, specify <USER> and <PASS>.
Note that they must be properly percent-encoded. This
proxy is used when the backend connection is HTTP/2.
First, make a CONNECT request to the proxy and it
connects to the backend on behalf of nghttpx. This
forms tunnel. After that, nghttpx performs SSL/TLS
handshake with the downstream through the tunnel. The
timeouts when connecting and making CONNECT request can
be specified by --backend-read-timeout and
--backend-write-timeout options.
--accept-proxy-protocol
Accept PROXY protocol version 1 on frontend connection.
Performance:
-n, --workers=<N>
Set the number of worker threads.
Default: 1
--read-rate=<SIZE>
Set maximum average read rate on frontend connection.
Setting 0 to this option means read rate is unlimited.
Default: 0
--read-burst=<SIZE>
Set maximum read burst size on frontend connection.
Setting 0 to this option means read burst size is
unlimited.
Default: 0
--write-rate=<SIZE>
Set maximum average write rate on frontend connection.
Setting 0 to this option means write rate is unlimited.
Default: 0
--write-burst=<SIZE>
Set maximum write burst size on frontend connection.
Setting 0 to this option means write burst size is
unlimited.
Default: 0
--worker-read-rate=<SIZE>
Set maximum average read rate on frontend connection per
worker. Setting 0 to this option means read rate is
unlimited. Not implemented yet.
Default: 0
--worker-read-burst=<SIZE>
Set maximum read burst size on frontend connection per
worker. Setting 0 to this option means read burst size
is unlimited. Not implemented yet.
Default: 0
--worker-write-rate=<SIZE>
Set maximum average write rate on frontend connection
per worker. Setting 0 to this option means write rate
is unlimited. Not implemented yet.
Default: 0
--worker-write-burst=<SIZE>
Set maximum write burst size on frontend connection per
worker. Setting 0 to this option means write burst size
is unlimited. Not implemented yet.
Default: 0
--worker-frontend-connections=<N>
Set maximum number of simultaneous connections frontend
accepts. Setting 0 means unlimited.
Default: 0
--backend-http2-connections-per-worker=<N>
Set maximum number of backend HTTP/2 physical
connections per worker. If pattern is used in -b
option, this limit is applied to each pattern group (in
other words, each pattern group can have maximum <N>
HTTP/2 connections). The default value is 0, which
means that the value is adjusted to the number of
backend addresses. If pattern is used, this adjustment
is done for each pattern group.
--backend-http1-connections-per-host=<N>
Set maximum number of backend concurrent HTTP/1
connections per origin host. This option is meaningful
when -s option is used. The origin host is determined
by authority portion of request URI (or :authority
header field for HTTP/2). To limit the number of
connections per frontend for default mode, use
--backend-http1-connections-per-frontend.
Default: 8
--backend-http1-connections-per-frontend=<N>
Set maximum number of backend concurrent HTTP/1
connections per frontend. This option is only used for
default mode. 0 means unlimited. To limit the number
of connections per host for HTTP/2 or SPDY proxy mode
(-s option), use --backend-http1-connections-per-host.
Default: 0
--rlimit-nofile=<N>
Set maximum number of open files (RLIMIT_NOFILE) to <N>.
If 0 is given, nghttpx does not set the limit.
Default: 0
--backend-request-buffer=<SIZE>
Set buffer size used to store backend request.
Default: 16K
--backend-response-buffer=<SIZE>
Set buffer size used to store backend response.
Default: 128K
--fastopen=<N>
Enables "TCP Fast Open" for the listening socket and
limits the maximum length for the queue of connections
that have not yet completed the three-way handshake. If
value is 0 then fast open is disabled.
Default: 0
Timeout:
--frontend-http2-read-timeout=<DURATION>
Specify read timeout for HTTP/2 and SPDY frontend
connection.
Default: 3m
--frontend-read-timeout=<DURATION>
Specify read timeout for HTTP/1.1 frontend connection.
Default: 1m
--frontend-write-timeout=<DURATION>
Specify write timeout for all frontend connections.
Default: 30s
--stream-read-timeout=<DURATION>
Specify read timeout for HTTP/2 and SPDY streams. 0
means no timeout.
Default: 0
--stream-write-timeout=<DURATION>
Specify write timeout for HTTP/2 and SPDY streams. 0
means no timeout.
Default: 0
--backend-read-timeout=<DURATION>
Specify read timeout for backend connection.
Default: 1m
--backend-write-timeout=<DURATION>
Specify write timeout for backend connection.
Default: 30s
--backend-keep-alive-timeout=<DURATION>
Specify keep-alive timeout for backend connection.
Default: 2s
--listener-disable-timeout=<DURATION>
After accepting connection failed, connection listener
is disabled for a given amount of time. Specifying 0
disables this feature.
Default: 30s
SSL/TLS:
--ciphers=<SUITE>
Set allowed cipher list. The format of the string is
described in OpenSSL ciphers(1).
-k, --insecure
Don't verify backend server's certificate if -p,
--client or --http2-bridge are given and
--backend-no-tls is not given.
--cacert=<PATH>
Set path to trusted CA certificate file if -p, --client
or --http2-bridge are given and --backend-no-tls is not
given. The file must be in PEM format. It can contain
multiple certificates. If the linked OpenSSL is
configured to load system wide certificates, they are
loaded at startup regardless of this option.
--private-key-passwd-file=<PATH>
Path to file that contains password for the server's
private key. If none is given and the private key is
password protected it'll be requested interactively.
--subcert=<KEYPATH>:<CERTPATH>
Specify additional certificate and private key file.
nghttpx will choose certificates based on the hostname
indicated by client using TLS SNI extension. This
option can be used multiple times. To make OCSP
stapling work, <CERTPATH> must be absolute path.
--backend-tls-sni-field=<HOST>
Explicitly set the content of the TLS SNI extension.
This will default to the backend HOST name.
--dh-param-file=<PATH>
Path to file that contains DH parameters in PEM format.
Without this option, DHE cipher suites are not
available.
--npn-list=<LIST>
Comma delimited list of ALPN protocol identifier sorted
in the order of preference. That means most desirable
protocol comes first. This is used in both ALPN and
NPN. The parameter must be delimited by a single comma
only and any white spaces are treated as a part of
protocol string.
Default: h2,h2-16,h2-14,spdy/3.1,http/1.1
--verify-client
Require and verify client certificate.
--verify-client-cacert=<PATH>
Path to file that contains CA certificates to verify
client certificate. The file must be in PEM format. It
can contain multiple certificates.
--client-private-key-file=<PATH>
Path to file that contains client private key used in
backend client authentication.
--client-cert-file=<PATH>
Path to file that contains client certificate used in
backend client authentication.
--tls-proto-list=<LIST>
Comma delimited list of SSL/TLS protocol to be enabled.
The following protocols are available: TLSv1.2, TLSv1.1
and TLSv1.0. The name matching is done in
case-insensitive manner. The parameter must be
delimited by a single comma only and any white spaces
are treated as a part of protocol string. If the
protocol list advertised by client does not overlap this
list, you will receive the error message "unknown
protocol".
Default: TLSv1.2,TLSv1.1
--tls-ticket-key-file=<PATH>
Path to file that contains random data to construct TLS
session ticket parameters. If aes-128-cbc is given in
--tls-ticket-key-cipher, the file must contain exactly
48 bytes. If aes-256-cbc is given in
--tls-ticket-key-cipher, the file must contain exactly
80 bytes. This options can be used repeatedly to
specify multiple ticket parameters. If several files
are given, only the first key is used to encrypt TLS
session tickets. Other keys are accepted but server
will issue new session ticket with first key. This
allows session key rotation. Please note that key
rotation does not occur automatically. User should
rearrange files or change options values and restart
nghttpx gracefully. If opening or reading given file
fails, all loaded keys are discarded and it is treated
as if none of this option is given. If this option is
not given or an error occurred while opening or reading
a file, key is generated every 1 hour internally and
they are valid for 12 hours. This is recommended if
ticket key sharing between nghttpx instances is not
required.
--tls-ticket-key-memcached=<HOST>,<PORT>
Specify address of memcached server to store session
cache. This enables shared TLS ticket key between
multiple nghttpx instances. nghttpx does not set TLS
ticket key to memcached. The external ticket key
generator is required. nghttpx just gets TLS ticket
keys from memcached, and use them, possibly replacing
current set of keys. It is up to extern TLS ticket key
generator to rotate keys frequently. See "TLS SESSION
TICKET RESUMPTION" section in manual page to know the
data format in memcached entry.
--tls-ticket-key-memcached-interval=<DURATION>
Set interval to get TLS ticket keys from memcached.
Default: 10m
--tls-ticket-key-memcached-max-retry=<N>
Set maximum number of consecutive retries before
abandoning TLS ticket key retrieval. If this number is
reached, the attempt is considered as failure, and
"failure" count is incremented by 1, which contributed
to the value controlled
--tls-ticket-key-memcached-max-fail option.
Default: 3
--tls-ticket-key-memcached-max-fail=<N>
Set maximum number of consecutive failure before
disabling TLS ticket until next scheduled key retrieval.
Default: 2
--tls-ticket-key-cipher=<CIPHER>
Specify cipher to encrypt TLS session ticket. Specify
either aes-128-cbc or aes-256-cbc. By default,
aes-128-cbc is used.
--fetch-ocsp-response-file=<PATH>
Path to fetch-ocsp-response script file. It should be
absolute path.
Default: /usr/share/nghttp2/fetch-ocsp-response
--ocsp-update-interval=<DURATION>
Set interval to update OCSP response cache.
Default: 4h
--no-ocsp Disable OCSP stapling.
--tls-session-cache-memcached=<HOST>,<PORT>
Specify address of memcached server to store session
cache. This enables shared session cache between
multiple nghttpx instances.
--tls-dyn-rec-warmup-threshold=<SIZE>
Specify the threshold size for TLS dynamic record size
behaviour. During a TLS session, after the threshold
number of bytes have been written, the TLS record size
will be increased to the maximum allowed (16K). The max
record size will continue to be used on the active TLS
session. After --tls-dyn-rec-idle-timeout has elapsed,
the record size is reduced to 1300 bytes. Specify 0 to
always use the maximum record size, regardless of idle
period. This behaviour applies to all TLS based
frontends, and TLS HTTP/2 backends.
Default: 1M
--tls-dyn-rec-idle-timeout=<DURATION>
Specify TLS dynamic record size behaviour timeout. See
--tls-dyn-rec-warmup-threshold for more information.
This behaviour applies to all TLS based frontends, and
TLS HTTP/2 backends.
Default: 1s
HTTP/2 and SPDY:
-c, --http2-max-concurrent-streams=<N>
Set the maximum number of the concurrent streams in one
HTTP/2 and SPDY session.
Default: 100
--frontend-http2-window-bits=<N>
Sets the per-stream initial window size of HTTP/2 SPDY
frontend connection. For HTTP/2, the size is 2**<N>-1.
For SPDY, the size is 2**<N>.
Default: 16
--frontend-http2-connection-window-bits=<N>
Sets the per-connection window size of HTTP/2 and SPDY
frontend connection. For HTTP/2, the size is
2**<N>-1. For SPDY, the size is 2**<N>.
Default: 16
--frontend-no-tls
Disable SSL/TLS on frontend connections.
--backend-http2-window-bits=<N>
Sets the initial window size of HTTP/2 backend
connection to 2**<N>-1.
Default: 16
--backend-http2-connection-window-bits=<N>
Sets the per-connection window size of HTTP/2 backend
connection to 2**<N>-1.
Default: 16
--backend-no-tls
Disable SSL/TLS on backend connections.
--http2-no-cookie-crumbling
Don't crumble cookie header field.
--padding=<N>
Add at most <N> bytes to a HTTP/2 frame payload as
padding. Specify 0 to disable padding. This option is
meant for debugging purpose and not intended to enhance
protocol security.
--no-server-push
Disable HTTP/2 server push. Server push is supported by
default mode and HTTP/2 frontend via Link header field.
It is also supported if both frontend and backend are
HTTP/2 (which implies --http2-bridge or --client mode).
In this case, server push from backend session is
relayed to frontend, and server push via Link header
field is also supported. HTTP SPDY frontend does not
support server push.
Mode:
(default mode)
Accept HTTP/2, SPDY and HTTP/1.1 over SSL/TLS. If
--frontend-no-tls is used, accept HTTP/2 and HTTP/1.1.
The incoming HTTP/1.1 connection can be upgraded to
HTTP/2 through HTTP Upgrade. The protocol to the
backend is HTTP/1.1.
-s, --http2-proxy
Like default mode, but enable secure proxy mode.
--http2-bridge
Like default mode, but communicate with the backend in
HTTP/2 over SSL/TLS. Thus the incoming all connections
are converted to HTTP/2 connection and relayed to the
backend. See --backend-http-proxy-uri option if you are
behind the proxy and want to connect to the outside
HTTP/2 proxy.
--client Accept HTTP/2 and HTTP/1.1 without SSL/TLS. The
incoming HTTP/1.1 connection can be upgraded to HTTP/2
connection through HTTP Upgrade. The protocol to the
backend is HTTP/2. To use nghttpx as a forward proxy,
use -p option instead.
-p, --client-proxy
Like --client option, but it also requires the request
path from frontend must be an absolute URI, suitable for
use as a forward proxy.
Logging:
-L, --log-level=<LEVEL>
Set the severity level of log output. <LEVEL> must be
one of INFO, NOTICE, WARN, ERROR and FATAL.
Default: NOTICE
--accesslog-file=<PATH>
Set path to write access log. To reopen file, send USR1
signal to nghttpx.
--accesslog-syslog
Send access log to syslog. If this option is used,
--accesslog-file option is ignored.
--accesslog-format=<FORMAT>
Specify format string for access log. The default
format is combined format. The following variables are
available:
* $remote_addr: client IP address.
* $time_local: local time in Common Log format.
* $time_iso8601: local time in ISO 8601 format.
* $request: HTTP request line.
* $status: HTTP response status code.
* $body_bytes_sent: the number of bytes sent to client
as response body.
* $http_<VAR>: value of HTTP request header <VAR> where
'_' in <VAR> is replaced with '-'.
* $remote_port: client port.
* $server_port: server port.
* $request_time: request processing time in seconds with
milliseconds resolution.
* $pid: PID of the running process.
* $alpn: ALPN identifier of the protocol which generates
the response. For HTTP/1, ALPN is always http/1.1,
regardless of minor version.
* $ssl_cipher: cipher used for SSL/TLS connection.
* $ssl_protocol: protocol for SSL/TLS connection.
* $ssl_session_id: session ID for SSL/TLS connection.
* $ssl_session_reused: "r" if SSL/TLS session was
reused. Otherwise, "."
The variable can be enclosed by "{" and "}" for
disambiguation (e.g., ${remote_addr}).
Default: $remote_addr - - [$time_local] "$request" $status $body_bytes_sent "$http_referer" "$http_user_agent"
--errorlog-file=<PATH>
Set path to write error log. To reopen file, send USR1
signal to nghttpx. stderr will be redirected to the
error log file unless --errorlog-syslog is used.
Default: /dev/stderr
--errorlog-syslog
Send error log to syslog. If this option is used,
--errorlog-file option is ignored.
--syslog-facility=<FACILITY>
Set syslog facility to <FACILITY>.
Default: daemon
HTTP:
--add-x-forwarded-for
Append X-Forwarded-For header field to the downstream
request.
--strip-incoming-x-forwarded-for
Strip X-Forwarded-For header field from inbound client
requests.
--add-forwarded=<LIST>
Append RFC 7239 Forwarded header field with parameters
specified in comma delimited list <LIST>. The supported
parameters are "by", "for", "host", and "proto". By
default, the value of "by" and "for" parameters are
obfuscated string. See --forwarded-by and
--forwarded-for options respectively. Note that nghttpx
does not translate non-standard X-Forwarded-* header
fields into Forwarded header field, and vice versa.
--strip-incoming-forwarded
Strip Forwarded header field from inbound client
requests.
--forwarded-by=(obfuscated|ip|<VALUE>)
Specify the parameter value sent out with "by" parameter
of Forwarded header field. If "obfuscated" is given,
the string is randomly generated at startup. If "ip" is
given, the interface address of the connection,
including port number, is sent with "by" parameter.
User can also specify the static obfuscated string. The
limitation is that it must start with "_", and only
consists of character set [A-Za-z0-9._-], as described
in RFC 7239.
Default: obfuscated
--forwarded-for=(obfuscated|ip)
Specify the parameter value sent out with "for"
parameter of Forwarded header field. If "obfuscated" is
given, the string is randomly generated for each client
connection. If "ip" is given, the remote client address
of the connection, without port number, is sent with
"for" parameter.
Default: obfuscated
--no-via Don't append to Via header field. If Via header field
is received, it is left unaltered.
--no-location-rewrite
Don't rewrite location header field on --http2-bridge,
--client and default mode. For --http2-proxy and
--client-proxy mode, location header field will not be
altered regardless of this option.
--host-rewrite
Rewrite host and :authority header fields on
--http2-bridge, --client and default mode. For
--http2-proxy and --client-proxy mode, these headers
will not be altered regardless of this option.
--altsvc=<PROTOID,PORT[,HOST,[ORIGIN]]>
Specify protocol ID, port, host and origin of
alternative service. <HOST> and <ORIGIN> are optional.
They are advertised in alt-svc header field only in
HTTP/1.1 frontend. This option can be used multiple
times to specify multiple alternative services.
Example: --altsvc=h2,443
--add-request-header=<HEADER>
Specify additional header field to add to request header
set. This option just appends header field and won't
replace anything already set. This option can be used
several times to specify multiple header fields.
Example: --add-request-header="foo: bar"
--add-response-header=<HEADER>
Specify additional header field to add to response
header set. This option just appends header field and
won't replace anything already set. This option can be
used several times to specify multiple header fields.
Example: --add-response-header="foo: bar"
--header-field-buffer=<SIZE>
Set maximum buffer size for incoming HTTP request header
field list. This is the sum of header name and value in
bytes.
Default: 64K
--max-header-fields=<N>
Set maximum number of incoming HTTP request header
fields, which appear in one request or response header
field list.
Default: 100
Debug:
--frontend-http2-dump-request-header=<PATH>
Dumps request headers received by HTTP/2 frontend to the
file denoted in <PATH>. The output is done in HTTP/1
header field format and each header block is followed by
an empty line. This option is not thread safe and MUST
NOT be used with option -n<N>, where <N> >= 2.
--frontend-http2-dump-response-header=<PATH>
Dumps response headers sent from HTTP/2 frontend to the
file denoted in <PATH>. The output is done in HTTP/1
header field format and each header block is followed by
an empty line. This option is not thread safe and MUST
NOT be used with option -n<N>, where <N> >= 2.
-o, --frontend-frame-debug
Print HTTP/2 frames in frontend to stderr. This option
is not thread safe and MUST NOT be used with option
-n=N, where N >= 2.
Process:
-D, --daemon
Run in a background. If -D is used, the current working
directory is changed to '/'.
--pid-file=<PATH>
Set path to save PID of this program.
--user=<USER>
Run this program as <USER>. This option is intended to
be used to drop root privileges.
Scripting:
--mruby-file=<PATH>
Set mruby script file
Misc:
--conf=<PATH>
Load configuration from <PATH>.
Default: /etc/nghttpx/nghttpx.conf
--include=<PATH>
Load additional configurations from <PATH>. File <PATH>
is read when configuration parser encountered this
option. This option can be used multiple times, or even
recursively.
-v, --version
Print version and exit.
-h, --help Print this help and exit.
--
The <SIZE> argument is an integer and an optional unit (e.g., 10K is
10 * 1024). Units are K, M and G (powers of 1024).
The <DURATION> argument is an integer and an optional unit (e.g., 1s
is 1 second and 500ms is 500 milliseconds). Units are h, m, s or ms
(hours, minutes, seconds and milliseconds, respectively). If a unit
is omitted, a second is used as unit.