Provided by: trafficserver_8.0.5+ds-3_amd64 bug

NAME

       remap.config - Traffic Server remap rules configuration file

       The  remap.config file (by default, located in /usr/local/etc/trafficserver/) contains mapping rules that
       Traffic Server uses to perform the following actions:

       • Map URL requests for a specific origin server to  the  appropriate  location  on  Traffic  Server  when
         Traffic Server acts as a reverse proxy for that particular origin server

       • Reverse-map  server  location  headers so that when origin servers respond to a request with a location
         header that redirects the client to another location, the clients do not bypass Traffic Server

       • Redirect HTTP requests permanently or temporarily without Traffic Server having to contact  any  origin
         servers

       Refer  to   reverse-proxy-and-http-redirects,  for  information about redirecting HTTP requests and using
       reverse proxy.

       After you modify the remap.config run the traffic_ctl config reload to apply the changes.

FORMAT

       Each line in the remap.config file must contain a mapping rule. Empty lines, or lines starting with # are
       ignored. Each line can be broken up into multiple lines for better readability by using \ as continuation
       marker.

       Traffic Server recognizes three space-delimited fields: type, target, and replacement. The following list
       describes the format of each field.

       type   Enter one of the following:

              • map --translates an incoming request URL to the appropriate origin server URL.

              • map_with_recv_port  --exactly  like  'map' except that it uses the port at which the request was
                received to perform the mapping instead of the port present in the request. The regex  qualifier
                can  also  be used for this type. When present, 'map_with_recv_port' mappings are checked first.
                If there is a match, then it is chosen without evaluating the "regular" forward mapping rules.

              • map_with_referer -- extended version of 'map', which can  be  used  to  activate  "deep  linking
                protection",  where target URLs are only accessible when the Referer header is set to a URL that
                is allowed to link to the target.

              • reverse_map --translates the URL in origin server redirect responses to  point  to  the  Traffic
                Server.

              • redirect  --redirects  HTTP  requests  permanently  without having to contact the origin server.
                Permanent redirects notify the browser of the URL change (by returning an HTTP status code  301)
                so that the browser can update bookmarks.

              • redirect_temporary  --redirects  HTTP  requests temporarily without having to contact the origin
                server. Temporary redirects notify the browser of the URL change for the  current  request  only
                (by returning an HTTP status code 307).

       target Enter the origin ("from") URL. You can enter up to four components:

                 scheme://host:port/path_prefix

              where scheme is http, https, ws or wss.

       replacement
              Enter the origin ("from") URL. You can enter up to four components:

                 scheme://host:port/path_prefix

              where scheme is http, https, ws or wss.

PRECEDENCE

       Remap  rules are not processed top-down, but based on an internal priority. Once these rules are executed
       we pick the first match based on configuration file parse order.

       1. map_with_recv_port and `regex_map_with_recv_port`

       2. map and regex_map and reverse_map

       3. redirect and redirect_temporary

       4. regex_redirect and regex_redirect_temporary

       For each precedence group the rules are checked in two phases. If the first phase fails to find  a  match
       then  the  second  phase  is  performed against the same group of rules. In the first phase the rules are
       checked using the host name of the request. Only rules that specify a host name can match.  If  there  is
       no  match in that phase, then the rules are checked again with no host name and only rules without a host
       will match. The result is that rules with an explicit host take precedence over rules without.

MATCH-ALL

       A map rule with a single / acts as a wildcard, it will match any request. This should be use  with  care,
       and certainly only once at the end of the remap.config file. E.g.

          map / http://all.example.com

   Examples
       The following section shows example mapping rules in the remap.config file.

   Reverse Proxy Mapping Rules
       The following example shows a map rule that does not specify a path prefix in the target or replacement:

          map http://www.x.com/ http://server.hoster.com/
          reverse_map http://server.hoster.com/ http://www.x.com/

       This rule results in the following translations:

         ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
         │Client Request                               │ Translated Request                                   │
         ├─────────────────────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
         │http://www.x.com/Widgets/index.htmlhttp://server.hoster.com/Widgets/index.html          │
         ├─────────────────────────────────────────────┼──────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
         │http://www.x.com/cgi/form/submit.sh?arg=truehttp://server.hoster.com/cgi/form/submit.sh?arg=true │
         └─────────────────────────────────────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

       The following example shows a map rule with path prefixes specified in the target:

          map http://www.y.com/marketing/ http://marketing.y.com/
          reverse_map http://marketing.y.com/ http://www.y.com/marketing/
          map http://www.y.com/sales/ http://sales.y.com/
          reverse_map http://sales.y.com/ http://www.y.com/sales/
          map http://www.y.com/engineering/ http://engineering.y.com/
          reverse_map http://engineering.y.com/ http://www.y.com/engineering/
          map http://www.y.com/stuff/ http://info.y.com/
          reverse_map http://info.y.com/ http://www.y.com/stuff/

       These rules result in the following translations:

 ┌────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
 │Client Request                                              │ Translated Request                                     │
 ├────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
 │http://www.y.com/marketing/projects/manhattan/specs.htmlhttp://marketing.y.com/projects/manhattan/specs.html   │
 └────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

 │http://www.y.com/stuff/marketing/projects/boston/specs.htmlhttp://info.y.com/marketing/projects/boston/specs.html │
 ├────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
 │http://www.y.com/engineering/marketing/requirements.htmlhttp://engineering.y.com/marketing/requirements.html   │
 └────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

       The following example shows that the order of the rules matters:

          map http://www.g.com/ http://external.g.com/
          reverse_map http://external.g.com/ http://www.g.com/
          map http://www.g.com/stuff/ http://stuff.g.com/
          reverse_map http://stuff.g.com/ http://www.g.com/stuff/

       These rules result in the following translation.

                          ┌─────────────────────────────┬───────────────────────────────────┐
                          │Client Request               │ Translated Request                │
                          ├─────────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────────┤
                          │http://www.g.com/stuff/a.gifhttp://external.g.com/stuff/a.gif │
                          └─────────────────────────────┴───────────────────────────────────┘

       In the above examples, the second rule is never applied because all URLs that match the second rule  also
       match  the  first  rule.  The  first rule takes precedence because it appears earlier in the remap.config
       file.

       This is different if one rule does not have a host. For example consider these rules using the  Match-All
       rule:

          map / http://127.0.0.1:8001/
          map http://example.com/dist_get_user http://127.0.0.1:8001/denied.html

       These rules are set up to redirect requests to another local process. Using them will result in

                        ┌─────────────────────────────────┬───────────────────────────────────┐
                        │Client Request                   │ Translated Request                │
                        ├─────────────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────────┤
                        │http://example.com/a.gifhttp://127.0.0.1:8001/a.gif       │
                        ├─────────────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────────────┤
                        │http://example.com/dist_get_userhttp://127.0.0.1:8001/denied.html │
                        └─────────────────────────────────┴───────────────────────────────────┘

       For  the  first  request the second rule host matches but the path does not and so the second rule is not
       selected. The first rule is then matched in the second phase when the rules are checked  without  a  host
       value.

       The  second  request  is  matched by the second rule even though the rules have the same base precedence.
       Because the first rule does not have a host it will not match in the first phase. The  second  rule  does
       have  a  host  that  matches  the host in the second request along with the other parts of the URL and is
       therefore selected in the first phase.

       This will yield the same results if the  rules  are  reversed  because  the  rule  selection  happens  in
       different phases making the order irrelevant.

          map http://example.com/dist_get_user http://127.0.0.1:8001/denied.html
          map / http://127.0.0.1:8001/

       The following example shows a mapping with a path prefix specified in the target and replacement:

          map http://www.h.com/a/b/ http://server.h.com/customers/x/y
          reverse_map http://server.h.com/customers/x/y/ http://www.h.com/a/b/

       This rule results in the following translation.

                 ┌──────────────────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
                 │Client Request                    │ Translated Request                             │
                 └──────────────────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

                 │http://www.h.com/a/b/c/d/doc.htmlhttp://server.h.com/customers/x/y/c/d/doc.html │
                 ├──────────────────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
                 │http://www.h.com/a/index.htmlTranslation fails                              │
                 └──────────────────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

       The following example shows reverse-map rules:

          map http://www.x.com/ http://server.hoster.com/x/
          reverse_map http://server.hoster.com/x/ http://www.x.com/

       These rules result in the following translations.

                            ┌─────────────────────────┬────────────────────────────────────┐
                            │Client Request           │ Translated Request                 │
                            ├─────────────────────────┼────────────────────────────────────┤
                            │http://www.x.com/Widgetshttp://server.hoster.com/x/Widgets │
                            └─────────────────────────┴────────────────────────────────────┘

             ┌─────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────────────┬───────────────────────────┐
             │Client Request           │ Origin Server Header                │ Translated Request        │
             ├─────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────────────┼───────────────────────────┤
             │http://www.x.com/Widgetshttp://server.hoster.com/x/Widgets/http://www.x.com/Widgets/ │
             └─────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────────────┴───────────────────────────┘

       When acting as a reverse proxy for multiple servers, Traffic Server is unable to route to URLs from older
       browsers   that   do   not   send   the   Host:   header.   As   a    solution,    set    the    variable
       proxy.config.header.parse.no_host_url_redirect  in  the  records.config  file to the URL to which Traffic
       Server will redirect requests without host headers.

   Redirect Mapping Rules
       The following rule permanently redirects all HTTP requests for www.company.com to www.company2.com:

          redirect http://www.company.com/ http://www.company2.com/

       The following rule temporarily redirects all HTTP requests for www.company1.com to www.company2.com:

          redirect_temporary http://www.company1.com/ http://www.company2.com/

REGULAR EXPRESSION (REGEX) REMAP SUPPORT

       Regular expressions can be specified in remapping rules, with the limitations below:

       • Only the host field can contain  a  regex;  the  scheme,  port,  and  other  fields  cannot.  For  path
         manipulation via regexes, use the admin-plugins-regex-remap.

       • The  number  of  capturing  subpatterns  is  limited to 9. This means that $0 through $9 can be used as
         subtraction placeholders ($0 will be the entire input string).

       • The number of substitutions in the expansion string is limited to 10.

       • There is no regex_ equivalent to reverse_remap, so when  using  regex_map  you  should  make  sure  the
         reverse path is clear by setting (proxy.config.url_remap.pristine_host_hdr)

   Examples
          regex_map http://x([0-9]+).z.com/ http://real-x$1.z.com/
          regex_redirect http://old.(.*).z.com http://new.$1.z.com

MAP_WITH_REFERER

       the format of is the following:

          map_with_referer client-URL origin-server-URL redirect-URL regex1 [regex2 ...]

       'redirect-URL'  is  a  redirection URL specified according to RFC 2616 and can contain special formatting
       instructions for run-time modifications of the resulting redirection URL.  All  regexes  Perl  compatible
       regular  expressions, which describes the content of the "Referer" header which must be verified. In case
       an actual request does not have "Referer" header or it does not match with  referer  regular  expression,
       the HTTP request will be redirected to 'redirect-URL'.

       At least one regular expressions must be specified in order to activate 'deep linking protection'.  There
       are limitations for the number of referer regular expression strings - 2048.   In  order  to  enable  the
       'deep linking protection' feature in Traffic Server, configure records.config with:

          CONFIG proxy.config.http.referer_filter INT 1

       In order to enable run-time formatting for redirect URL, configure:

          CONFIG proxy.config.http.referer_format_redirect INT 1

       When run-time formatting for redirect-URL was enabled the following format symbols can be used:

          %r - to substitute original "Referer" header string
          %f - to substitute client-URL from 'map_with_referer' record
          %t - to substitute origin-server-URL from 'map_with_referer' record
          %o - to substitute request URL to origin server, which was created a
               the result of a mapping operation

       Note:  There  is a special referer type "~*" that can be used in order to specify that the Referer header
       is optional in the request.  If "~*" referer was used in map_with_referer  mapping,  only  requests  with
       Referer  header  will  be  verified for validity.  If the "~" symbol was specified before referer regular
       expression, it means that the request with a matching referer header will be redirected  to  redirectURL.
       It  can  be  used  to  create  a  so-called  negative referer list.  If "*" was used as a referer regular
       expression - all referers are allowed.  Various combinations of "*" and "~" in a referer list can be used
       to create different filtering rules.

   map_with_referer Examples
          map_with_referer http://y.foo.bar.com/x/yy/  http://foo.bar.com/x/yy/ http://games.bar.com/new_games .*\.bar\.com www.bar-friends.com

       Explanation:  Referer  header  must  be  in  the request, only ".*.bar.com" and "www.bar-friends.com" are
       allowed.

          map_with_referer http://y.foo.bar.com/x/yy/  http://foo.bar.com/x/yy/ http://games.bar.com/new_games * ~.*\.evil\.com

       Explanation: Referer header must be in the request but all referers are allowed except ".*.evil.com".

          map_with_referer http://y.foo.bar.com/x/yy/  http://foo.bar.com/x/yy/ http://games.bar.com/error ~* * ~.*\.evil\.com

       Explanation:  Referer  header  is  optional.  However,  if  Referer  header  exists,  only  request  from
       ".*.evil.com" will be redirected to redirect-URL.

PLUGIN CHAINING

       Plugins  can  be  configured  to be evaluated in a specific order, passing the results from one in to the
       next (unless a plugin returns 0, then the "chain" is broken).

   Examples
          map http://url/path http://url/path \
              @plugin=/etc/traffic_server/config/plugins/plugin1.so @pparam=1 @pparam=2 \
              @plugin=/etc/traffic_server/config/plugins/plugin2.so @pparam=3

       will pass "1" and "2" to plugin1.so and "3" to plugin2.so.

       This will pass "1" and "2" to plugin1.so and "3" to plugin2.so

ACL FILTERS

       Acl filters can be created to control access of specific remap lines. The markup is very similar to  that
       of ip_allow.config, with slight changes to accommodate remap markup

   Examples
          map http://foo.example.com/neverpost  http://foo.example.com/neverpost @action=deny @method=post
          map http://foo.example.com/onlypost  http://foo.example.com/onlypost @action=allow @method=post

          map http://foo.example.com/  http://foo.example.com/ @action=deny @src_ip=1.2.3.4
          map http://foo.example.com/  http://foo.example.com/ @action=allow @src_ip=127.0.0.1

          map http://foo.example.com/  http://foo.example.com/ @action=allow @src_ip=10.5.2.1 @in_ip=72.209.23.4

          map http://foo.example.com/  http://foo.example.com/ @action=allow @src_ip=127.0.0.1 @method=post @method=get @method=head

       Note that these Acl filters will return a 403 response if the resource is restricted.

       The  difference  between  @src_ip and @in_ip is that the @src_ip is the client ip and the in_ip is the ip
       address the client is connecting to (the incoming address).

NAMED FILTERS

       Named filters can be created and applied to blocks of mappings using the .definefilter,  .activatefilter,
       and  .deactivatefilter  directives.  Named filters must be defined using .definefilter before being used.
       Once defined, .activatefilter can  used  to  activate  a  filter  for  all  mappings  that  follow  until
       deactivated with .deactivatefilter.

       The  @internal operator can be used to filter on whether a request is generated by Traffic Server itself,
       usually by a plugin.  This operator is helpful for remapping internal requests without allowing access to
       external users. By default both internal and external requests are allowed.

   Examples
          .definefilter disable_delete_purge @action=deny @method=delete @method=purge
          .definefilter local_only @action=allow @src_ip=192.168.0.1-192.168.0.254 @src_ip=10.0.0.1-10.0.0.254

          .activatefilter disable_delete_purge

          map http://foo.example.com/ http://bar.example.com/

          .activatefilter local_only
          map http://www.example.com/admin http://internal.example.com/admin
          .deactivatefilter local_only

          map http://www.example.com/ http://internal.example.com/
          map http://auth.example.com/ http://auth.internal.example.com/ @action=allow @internal

       The  filter disable_delete_purge will be applied to all of the mapping rules. (It is activated before any
       mappings and is never deactivated.) The filter local_only will only be applied to the second mapping.

INCLUDING ADDITIONAL REMAP FILES

       The .include directive allows mapping rules to be spread across  multiple  files.  The  argument  to  the
       .include  directive  is  a list of file names to be parsed for additional mapping rules. Unless the names
       are absolute paths, they are resolved relative to the Traffic Server configuration directory.

       The effect of the .include directive is as if the contents of the listed files is included in the  parent
       and  parsing restarted at the point of inclusion. This means that and filters named in the included files
       are global in scope, and that additional .include directives are allowed.

       NOTE:
          Included remap files are not currently tracked by the configuration  subsystem.  Changes  to  included
          remap  files  will not be noticed by online configuration changes applied by traffic_ctl config reload
          unless remap.config has also changed.

   Examples
       In this example, a top-level remap.config file simply references additional mapping rules files

          .include filters.config
          .include one.example.com.config two.example.com.config

       The file filters.config contains

          .definefilter deny_purge @action=deny @method=purge
          .definefilter allow_purge @action=allow @method=purge

       The file one.example.com.config contains:

          .activatefilter deny_purge
          map http://one.example.com http://origin-one.example.com
          .deactivatefilter deny_purge

       The file two.example.com.config contains:

          .activatefilter allow_purge
          map http://two.example.com http://origin-two.example.com
          .deactivatefilter dallowpurge

COPYRIGHT

       2020, dev@trafficserver.apache.org