Provided by: nghttp2-proxy_1.49.0-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       nghttpx - HTTP/2 proxy

SYNOPSIS

       nghttpx [OPTIONS]... [<PRIVATE_KEY> <CERT>]

DESCRIPTION

       A reverse proxy for HTTP/3, HTTP/2, and HTTP/1.

       <PRIVATE_KEY>
              Set  path  to  server's private  key.   Required  unless "no-tls" parameter is used
              in --frontend option.

       <CERT> Set  path  to  server's  certificate.   Required   unless  "no-tls"   parameter  is
              used  in  --frontend option.   To make OCSP stapling work, this must be an absolute
              path.

OPTIONS

       The options are categorized into several groups.

   Connections
       -b, --backend=(<HOST>,<PORT>|unix:<PATH>)[;[<PATTERN>[:...]][[;<PARAM>]...]
              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.   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   a  match
              against  the request host.   For a  request received on  the frontend listener with
              "sni-fwd" parameter enabled, SNI  host is used instead of a 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/").
              CONNECT method  is treated specially.  It  does not have  path, and we  don't allow
              empty path.  To workaround  this, we assume that CONNECT method has "/" as path.

              Patterns with  host take  precedence over  patterns with just path.   Then,  longer
              patterns take  precedence over shorter ones.

              Host   can   include "*"  in  the  left most  position  to indicate  wildcard match
              (only suffix  match is  done).  The "*" must match at  least  one  character.   For
              example, host    pattern    "*.nghttp2.org"    matches    against "www.nghttp2.org"
              and  "git.ngttp2.org", but  does  not match  against   "nghttp2.org".    The  exact
              hosts  match takes precedence over the wildcard hosts match.

              If  path  part ends with  "*", it is treated  as wildcard path.  The  wildcard path
              behaves differently  from the normal path.  For normal path,  match is made  around
              the  boundary  of  path  component  separator,"/".  On the other hand, the wildcard
              path does not take  into account the path component  separator.   All  paths  which
              include  the  wildcard   path   without   last   "*" as  prefix,  and  are strictly
              longer than wildcard  path without last "*" are matched.  "*"  must match  at least
              one   character.   For  example,   the    pattern   "/foo*"  matches   "/foo/"  and
              "/foobar".  But it does not match "/foo", or "/fo".

              If <PATTERN> is omitted or  empty string, "/" 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.

              Several parameters <PARAM> are  accepted  after  <PATTERN>.   The   parameters  are
              delimited   by   ";".   The   available parameters       are:      "proto=<PROTO>",
              "tls",       "sni=<SNI_HOST>",                "fall=<N>",               "rise=<N>",
              "affinity=<METHOD>",       "dns",       "redirect-if-not-tls",    "upgrade-scheme",
              "mruby=<PATH>",      "read-timeout=<DURATION>",         "write-timeout=<DURATION>",
              "group=<GROUP>",   "group-weight=<N>",  "weight=<N>",  and "dnf".    The  parameter
              consists   of  keyword,   and optionally followed by "="  and value.  For  example,
              the  parameter  "proto=h2"  consists  of  the  keyword "proto" and value "h2".  The
              parameter "tls" consists of the keyword "tls"  without value.   Each parameter   is
              described  as follows.

              The  backend  application  protocol   can  be  specified  using  optional   "proto"
              parameter,  and   in  the   form  of "proto=<PROTO>".  <PROTO> should be one of the
              following list  without  quotes:  "h2", "http/1.1".   The  default value of <PROTO>
              is  "http/1.1".  Note that usually "h2" refers to HTTP/2  over TLS.   But  in  this
              option,  it  may mean HTTP/2  over cleartext TCP unless  "tls" keyword is used (see
              below).

              TLS  can   be  enabled  by  specifying   optional  "tls"  parameter.   TLS  is  not
              enabled by default.

              With  "sni=<SNI_HOST>"  parameter,  it can override the TLS SNI  field  value  with
              given  <SNI_HOST>.   This  will default to the backend <HOST> name

              The  feature  to detect  whether  backend  is online  or  offline  can  be  enabled
              using  optional  "fall"  and "rise" parameters.   Using  "fall=<N>"  parameter,  if
              nghttpx cannot connect  to a  this backend <N>  times in  a row, this  backend   is
              assumed   to  be  offline,  and  it  is excluded from load balancing.  If <N> is 0,
              this backend never  be excluded   from  load   balancing  whatever   times  nghttpx
              cannot  connect   to  it,  and  this   is  the  default.  There is  also "rise=<N>"
              parameter.   After   backend  was  excluded  from  load  balancing  group,  nghttpx
              periodically  attempts  to  make  a  connection  to  the failed backend, and if the
              connection is made  successfully <N> times  in a row, the backend is assumed to  be
              online,  and  it  is  now  eligible  for load  balancing target.   If <N>  is 0,  a
              backend  is permanently  offline, once  it goes  in that state,  and  this  is  the
              default behaviour.

              The       session      affinity     is      enabled      using  "affinity=<METHOD>"
              parameter.   If  "ip" is  given  in <METHOD>, client  IP based session affinity  is
              enabled.   If  "cookie"   is  given  in <METHOD>,  cookie based session affinity is
              enabled.  If  "none" is given  in <METHOD>, session affinity  is disabled, and this
              is  the  default.   The  session  affinity is  enabled per <PATTERN>.   If at least
              one backend  has  "affinity"  parameter, and  its <METHOD> is not "none",   session
              affinity  is  enabled  for all backend  servers sharing the same  <PATTERN>.  It is
              advised  to  set  "affinity" parameter  to   all   backend  explicitly  if  session
              affinity   is  desired.   The  session  affinity   may    break   if   one  of  the
              backend  gets unreachable,  or   backend  settings  are   reloaded  or replaced  by
              API.

              If      "affinity=cookie"      is     used,      the     additional   configuration
              is                required.  "affinity-cookie-name=<NAME>" must be  used to specify
              a      name         of         cookie          to         use.          Optionally,
              "affinity-cookie-path=<PATH>" can  be used to   specify  a  path    which    cookie
              is    applied.     The    optional "affinity-cookie-secure=<SECURE>"  controls  the
              Secure attribute of a  cookie.   The  default  value  is  "auto",  and  the  Secure
              attribute is  determined by a request scheme.  If a request scheme is "https", then
              Secure attribute is set.  Otherwise, it  is not set.  If  <SECURE>  is  "yes",  the
              Secure   attribute   is   always  set.    If  <SECURE>   is  "no",    the    Secure
              attribute   is     always     omitted.    "affinity-cookie-stickiness=<STICKINESS>"
              controls stickiness  of   this  affinity.   If   <STICKINESS>  is "loose", removing
              or adding a backend server might break the affinity  and  the   request  might   be
              forwarded   to  a different backend server.   If <STICKINESS> is "strict", removing
              the designated  backend server breaks affinity, but adding  new backend server does
              not  cause  breakage.  If  the designated  backend server  becomes unavailable, new
              backend server is chosen  as if the request does not have   an   affinity   cookie.
              <STICKINESS>  defaults  to "loose".

              By  default,  name  resolution  of  backend  host  name  is done at  start  up,  or
              reloading  configuration.   If  "dns" parameter    is   given,    name   resolution
              takes   place  dynamically.  This is useful  if backend address changes frequently.
              If  "dns"  is given,  name  resolution  of backend   host   name   at  start    up,
              or   reloading configuration is skipped.

              If  "redirect-if-not-tls"  parameter  is used, the matched backend  requires   that
              frontend  connection   is  TLS encrypted.  If it isn't,  nghttpx  responds  to  the
              request  with  308   status code, and  https URI the  client should use instead  is
              included in Location  header field.  The port number in  redirect  URI  is  443  by
              default, and can be  changed using  --redirect-https-port option.   If at least one
              backend has  "redirect-if-not-tls" parameter, this  feature  is  enabled   for  all
              backend  servers  sharing  the   same   <PATTERN>.    It    is   advised   to   set
              "redirect-if-no-tls"    parameter   to    all   backends explicitly if this feature
              is desired.

              If  "upgrade-scheme"  parameter is used along  with "tls" parameter, HTTP/2 :scheme
              pseudo header field is changed to "https" from "http" when forwarding a request  to
              this  particular  backend.   This  is   a  workaround  for  a backend server  which
              requires  "https" :scheme  pseudo  header field on TLS encrypted connection.

              "mruby=<PATH>"  parameter  specifies  a  path  to  mruby script   file   which   is
              invoked when  this  pattern  is matched.  All backends which share the same pattern
              must have the same mruby path.

              "read-timeout=<DURATION>" and "write-timeout=<DURATION>"  parameters   specify  the
              read and  write timeout  of the backend connection  when this  pattern is  matched.
              All backends which share the same pattern must have the same  timeouts.   If  these
              timeouts   are  entirely  omitted  for a pattern,            --backend-read-timeout
              and --backend-write-timeout are used.

              "group=<GROUP>"  parameter specifies  the  name   of  group  this  backend  address
              belongs  to.  By default, it belongs to  the unnamed  default group.   The name  of
              group  is unique   per   pattern.   "group-weight=<N>"    parameter  specifies  the
              weight  of  the group.  The  higher weight gets  more frequently  selected  by  the
              load  balancing algorithm.  <N> must be  [1, 256] inclusive.  The weight  8  has  4
              times  more  weight  than 2.  <N> must be the same for  all addresses  which  share
              the  same <GROUP>.   If "group-weight" is  omitted in an address,   but  the  other
              address   which   belongs   to   the   same  group  specifies "group-weight",   its
              weight   is   used.     If   no "group-weight"  is  specified  for  all  addresses,
              the weight of a group becomes 1.  "group" and "group-weight" are ignored if session
              affinity is enabled.

              "weight=<N>"  parameter  specifies  the  weight  of  the backend   address   inside
              a   group   which   this   address  belongs   to.   The   higher  weight  gets more
              frequently selected by  the load balancing  algorithm.    <N>  must  be  [1,   256]
              inclusive.    The   weight  8  has  4 times  more weight  than weight  2.  If  this
              parameter  is omitted, weight  becomes  1.   "weight"   is   ignored   if   session
              affinity is enabled.

              If "dnf" parameter is  specified, an incoming request is not forwarded to a backend
              and just consumed along with the  request body  (actually a  backend server   never
              be  contacted).   It   is  expected   that the HTTP  response is generated by mruby
              script (see "mruby=<PATH>" parameter above).  "dnf" is an abbreviation of  "do  not
              forward".

              Since  ";"  and  ":"  are   used  as  delimiter,  <PATTERN> must not contain  these
              characters.  In order  to include ":" in  <PATTERN>,  one  has  to  specify   "%3A"
              (which   is  percent-encoded   from  of   ":")  instead.    Since  ";"  has special
              meaning  in shell,  the  option  value must  be quoted.

              Default: 127.0.0.1,80

       -f, --frontend=(<HOST>,<PORT>|unix:<PATH>)[[;<PARAM>]...]
              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).   This
              option can  be used  multiple times  to listen  to multiple addresses.

              This  option   can take  0 or  more parameters,  which are described  below.   Note
              that  "api"  and  "healthmon" parameters are mutually exclusive.

              Optionally, TLS  can be disabled by  specifying "no-tls" parameter.  TLS is enabled
              by default.

              If  "sni-fwd"  parameter  is   used,  when  performing  a match to select a backend
              server,  SNI host name received from the client  is used  instead of   the  request
              host.  See --backend option about the pattern match.

              To   make  this   frontend  as  API endpoint,  specify "api" parameter.   This   is
              disabled  by  default.    It  is important  to  limit  the   access   to   the  API
              frontend.   Otherwise,  someone   may  change   the backend  server, and break your
              services,  or expose confidential information to the outside the world.

              To  make  this  frontend   as   health   monitor   endpoint,  specify   "healthmon"
              parameter.   This is  disabled  by default.  Any  requests which come through  this
              address are replied with 200 HTTP status, without no body.

              To accept  PROXY protocol  version 1   and  2   on  frontend  connection,   specify
              "proxyproto" parameter.   This  is disabled by default.

              To   receive    HTTP/3   (QUIC)   traffic,    specify  "quic" parameter.  It  makes
              nghttpx listen on  UDP port rather  than   TCP    port.    UNIX    domain   socket,
              "api",  and "healthmon"  parameters  cannot   be  used  with  "quic" parameter.

              Default: *,3000

       --backlog=<N>
              Set listen backlog size.

              Default: 65536

       --backend-address-family=(auto|IPv4|IPv6)
              Specify  address  family  of  backend  connections.   If "auto" is given, both IPv4
              and IPv6 are considered.  If "IPv4" is  given, only  IPv4 address  is   considered.
              If "IPv6" is given, only IPv6 address is considered.

              Default: auto

       --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.

   Performance
       -n, --workers=<N>
              Set the number of worker threads.

              Default: 1

       --single-thread
              Run  everything  in  one   thread  inside  the worker process.  This   feature   is
              provided  for   better   debugging experience,  or  for  the platforms  which  lack
              thread support.   If  threading  is disabled,  this  option  is always enabled.

       --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-connections-per-host=<N>
              Set  maximum number  of  backend concurrent  connections (and/or  streams in   case
              of  HTTP/2)   per  origin   host.   This  option   is meaningful when --http2-proxy
              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-connections-per-frontend.

              Default: 8

       --backend-connections-per-frontend=<N>
              Set   maximum  number  of  backend concurrent  connections (and/or streams  in case
              of HTTP/2)  per frontend.  This option  is   only  used  for  default    mode.    0
              means   unlimited.    To   limit   the    number   of  connections  per  host  with
              --http2-proxy         option,          use --backend-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

       --rlimit-memlock=<N>
              Set  maximum  number  of  bytes  of  memory that may be locked into  RAM.  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

       --no-kqueue
              Don't use  kqueue.  This  option is only  applicable for the platforms  which  have
              kqueue.  For  other platforms, this option will be simply ignored.

   Timeout
       --frontend-http2-read-timeout=<DURATION>
              Specify read timeout for HTTP/2 frontend connection.

              Default: 3m

       --frontend-http3-read-timeout=<DURATION>
              Specify read timeout for HTTP/3 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

       --frontend-keep-alive-timeout=<DURATION>
              Specify   keep-alive   timeout   for   frontend   HTTP/1 connection.

              Default: 1m

       --stream-read-timeout=<DURATION>
              Specify  read timeout  for HTTP/2  streams.  0  means no timeout.

              Default: 0

       --stream-write-timeout=<DURATION>
              Specify write  timeout for  HTTP/2 streams.  0  means no timeout.

              Default: 1m

       --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-connect-timeout=<DURATION>
              Specify  timeout before  establishing TCP  connection to backend.

              Default: 30s

       --backend-keep-alive-timeout=<DURATION>
              Specify   keep-alive   timeout    for   backend   HTTP/1 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

       --frontend-http2-setting-timeout=<DURATION>
              Specify  timeout before  SETTINGS ACK  is received  from client.

              Default: 10s

       --backend-http2-settings-timeout=<DURATION>
              Specify  timeout before  SETTINGS ACK  is received  from backend server.

              Default: 10s

       --backend-max-backoff=<DURATION>
              Specify  maximum backoff  interval.   This   is  used   when  doing  health   check
              against  offline  backend   (see  "fail"  parameter  in --backend  option).   It is
              also used  to limit  the  maximum    interval   to   temporarily   disable  backend
              when  nghttpx   failed  to   connect to  it.  These intervals are calculated  using
              exponential backoff, and consecutive failed attempts increase the  interval.   This
              option caps its maximum value.

              Default: 2m

   SSL/TLS
       --ciphers=<SUITE>
              Set  allowed   cipher  list  for frontend  connection.  The format of the string is
              described in OpenSSL ciphers(1).  This option  sets cipher suites for   TLSv1.2  or
              earlier.  Use --tls13-ciphers for TLSv1.3.

              Default:
              ECDHE-ECDSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-ECDSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305:ECDHE-RSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305:DHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:DHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384

       --tls13-ciphers=<SUITE>
              Set  allowed   cipher  list  for frontend  connection.  The format of the string is
              described  in  OpenSSL  ciphers(1).   This   option   sets   cipher    suites   for
              TLSv1.3.   Use --ciphers for TLSv1.2 or earlier.

              Default: TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256:TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384:TLS_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256

       --client-ciphers=<SUITE>
              Set   allowed  cipher   list for  backend connection.   The format of the string is
              described in OpenSSL ciphers(1).  This option  sets cipher suites for   TLSv1.2  or
              earlier.  Use --tls13-client-ciphers for TLSv1.3.

              Default:
              ECDHE-ECDSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE-ECDSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305:ECDHE-RSA-CHACHA20-POLY1305:DHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:DHE-RSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384

       --tls13-client-ciphers=<SUITE>
              Set   allowed  cipher   list for  backend connection.   The format of the string is
              described  in  OpenSSL  ciphers(1).   This   option   sets   cipher    suites   for
              TLSv1.3.   Use --tls13-client-ciphers for TLSv1.2 or earlier.

              Default: TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256:TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384:TLS_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256

       --ecdh-curves=<LIST>
              Set   supported   curve   list   for   frontend   connections.   <LIST> is a  colon
              separated list of curve  NID or names  in  the  preference  order.   The  supported
              curves  depend  on the  linked  OpenSSL  library.  This  function  requires OpenSSL
              >= 1.0.2.

              Default: X25519:P-256:P-384:P-521

       -k, --insecure
              Don't  verify backend  server's   certificate   if  TLS   is  enabled  for  backend
              connections.

       --cacert=<PATH>
              Set  path  to trusted CA  certificate file.  It is used in backend  TLS connections
              to verify  peer's certificate.  It is also used to  verify OCSP response  from  the
              script  set  by  --fetch-ocsp-response-file.  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>[[;<PARAM>]...]
              Specify  additional certificate  and  private  key   file.   nghttpx  will   choose
              certificates  based  on   the hostname indicated by client using TLS SNI extension.
              If nghttpx is  built with  OpenSSL  >= 1.0.2,  the shared  elliptic  curves  (e.g.,
              P-256)  between  client and server are also taken into  consideration.  This allows
              nghttpx  to send ECDSA certificate  to modern clients,  while   sending  RSA  based
              certificate  to  older   clients.   This  option can be used  multiple  times.   To
              make  OCSP  stapling  work, <CERTPATH> must be absolute path.

              Additional parameter  can be specified  in   <PARAM>.   The  available  <PARAM>  is
              "sct-dir=<DIR>".

              "sct-dir=<DIR>"   specifies  the   path  to   directory which contains        *.sct
              files        for         TLS  signed_certificate_timestamp  extension  (RFC  6962).
              This feature   requires   OpenSSL   >=   1.0.2.    See   also --tls-sct-dir option.

       --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,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.

       --verify-client-tolerate-expired
              Accept  expired   client   certificate.    Operator   should  handle   the  expired
              client   certificate   by  some   means  (e.g.,   mruby  script).   Otherwise, this
              option  might cause a security risk.

       --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-min-proto-version=<VER>
              Specify minimum SSL/TLS protocol.   The name matching is done in   case-insensitive
              manner.  The  versions between --tls-min-proto-version and  --tls-max-proto-version
              are enabled.  If the protocol list advertised by client  does  not   overlap   this
              range,   you   will   receive the  error message "unknown protocol".  If a protocol
              version lower than TLSv1.2 is specified, make sure that the compatible ciphers  are
              included  in --ciphers option.   The default cipher  list  only   includes  ciphers
              compatible  with TLSv1.2 or above.  The available versions are:  TLSv1.3,  TLSv1.2,
              TLSv1.1, and TLSv1.0

              Default: TLSv1.2

       --tls-max-proto-version=<VER>
              Specify  maximum SSL/TLS protocol.   The name matching is done in  case-insensitive
              manner.  The  versions between --tls-min-proto-version and  --tls-max-proto-version
              are  enabled.   If  the  protocol list advertised by client does not  overlap  this
              range,  you  will  receive the  error message "unknown  protocol".   The  available
              versions are: TLSv1.3, TLSv1.2, TLSv1.1, and TLSv1.0

              Default: TLSv1.3

       --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>[;tls]
              Specify  address   of  memcached   server  to  get   TLS  ticket  keys for  session
              resumption.   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.
              Optionally, memcached  connection  can  be  encrypted   with   TLS   by  specifying
              "tls" parameter.

       --tls-ticket-key-memcached-address-family=(auto|IPv4|IPv6)
              Specify  address   family  of  memcached  connections   to get TLS ticket keys.  If
              "auto" is given, both IPv4 and IPv6 are considered.   If  "IPv4"  is  given,   only
              IPv4 address is considered.  If "IPv6" is given, only IPv6 address is considered.

              Default: auto

       --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.

       --tls-ticket-key-memcached-cert-file=<PATH>
              Path to client certificate  for memcached connections to get TLS ticket keys.

       --tls-ticket-key-memcached-private-key-file=<PATH>
              Path to client private  key for memcached connections to get TLS ticket keys.

       --fetch-ocsp-response-file=<PATH>
              Path to  fetch-ocsp-response script file.  It  should be absolute path.

              Default: /usr/local/share/nghttp2/fetch-ocsp-response

       --ocsp-update-interval=<DURATION>
              Set interval to update OCSP response cache.

              Default: 4h

       --ocsp-startup
              Start  accepting  connections   after  initial   attempts  to  get  OCSP  responses
              finish.   It  does  not   matter  some  of  the  attempts  fail.  This  feature  is
              useful  if   OCSP  responses    must     be     available      before     accepting
              connections.

       --no-verify-ocsp
              nghttpx does not verify OCSP response.

       --no-ocsp
              Disable OCSP stapling.

       --tls-session-cache-memcached=<HOST>,<PORT>[;tls]
              Specify   address  of   memcached  server  to store  session cache.   This  enables
              shared  session   cache   between  multiple    nghttpx   instances.     Optionally,
              memcached connection can be encrypted with TLS by specifying "tls" parameter.

       --tls-session-cache-memcached-address-family=(auto|IPv4|IPv6)
              Specify address family of memcached connections to store session cache.  If  "auto"
              is given, both  IPv4 and IPv6 are considered.   If  "IPv4"  is  given,   only  IPv4
              address is considered.  If "IPv6" is given, only IPv6 address is considered.

              Default: auto

       --tls-session-cache-memcached-cert-file=<PATH>
              Path to client certificate  for memcached connections to store session cache.

       --tls-session-cache-memcached-private-key-file=<PATH>
              Path to client private  key for memcached connections to store session cache.

       --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

       --no-http2-cipher-block-list
              Allow    block    listed    cipher   suite    on    frontend    HTTP/2  connection.
              See https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7540#appendix-A  for  the complete HTTP/2 cipher
              suites block list.

       --client-no-http2-cipher-block-list
              Allow    block    listed    cipher    suite    on    backend    HTTP/2  connection.
              See https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7540#appendix-A  for  the complete HTTP/2 cipher
              suites block list.

       --tls-sct-dir=<DIR>
              Specifies  the  directory where  *.sct files  exist.  All *.sct   files   in  <DIR>
              are   read,   and  sent   as extension_data  of   TLS  signed_certificate_timestamp
              (RFC  6962)   to   client.    These    *.sct   files   are   for   the  certificate
              specified   in   positional   command-line argument <CERT>, or  certificate  option
              in  configuration  file.   For   additional  certificates,   use  --subcert option.
              This option requires OpenSSL >= 1.0.2.

       --psk-secrets=<PATH>
              Read list of PSK identity and secrets from  <PATH>.   This  is  used  for  frontend
              connection.     The    each    line    of    input    file    is    formatted    as
              <identity>:<hex-secret>,  where <identity> is  PSK identity, and  <hex-secret>   is
              secret  in  hex.  An  empty line, and line which  starts with '#' are skipped.  The
              default  enabled cipher list might not contain any PSK cipher suite.  In that case,
              desired  PSK cipher suites  must be  enabled using  --ciphers option.  The  desired
              PSK  cipher suite  may be  block listed   by  HTTP/2.    To   use   those    cipher
              suites  with  HTTP/2, consider  to  use  --no-http2-cipher-block-list  option.  But
              be aware its implications.

       --client-psk-secrets=<PATH>
              Read PSK identity and secrets from <PATH>.  This is used  for  backend  connection.
              The  each   line  of  input  file  is formatted  as <identity>:<hex-secret>,  where
              <identity> is PSK identity, and <hex-secret>  is secret in hex.  An empty line, and
              line  which   starts  with  '#'  are  skipped.  The first identity and  secret pair
              encountered is used.  The default  enabled cipher  list might not  contain any  PSK
              cipher  suite.   In  that case,  desired PSK  cipher suites  must be  enabled using
              --client-ciphers option.  The  desired PSK  cipher suite  may be  block listed   by
              HTTP/2.    To   use   those    cipher   suites   with   HTTP/2,  consider   to  use
              --client-no-http2-cipher-block-list option.  But be aware its implications.

       --tls-no-postpone-early-data
              By  default,   except  for  QUIC   connections,  nghttpx postpones forwarding  HTTP
              requests  sent  in  early data, including  those  sent in  partially  in  it, until
              TLS handshake  finishes.  If  all backend  server recognizes  "Early-Data"   header
              field,   using   this  option  makes nghttpx  not postpone  forwarding request  and
              get  full potential of 0-RTT data.

       --tls-max-early-data=<SIZE>
              Sets  the  maximum  amount  of 0-RTT  data  that  server accepts.

              Default: 16K

       --tls-ktls
              Enable      ktls.        For       server,      ktls       is       enable       if
              --tls-session-cache-memcached is not configured.

   HTTP/2
       -c, --frontend-http2-max-concurrent-streams=<N>
              Set the maximum number of  the concurrent streams in one frontend HTTP/2 session.

              Default: 100

       --backend-http2-max-concurrent-streams=<N>
              Set  the  maximum number of  the concurrent streams in one backend  HTTP/2 session.
              This sets  maximum number  of concurrent opened pushed streams.  The maximum number
              of concurrent requests are set by a remote server.

              Default: 100

       --frontend-http2-window-size=<SIZE>
              Sets  the  per-stream  initial  window  size  of  HTTP/2 frontend connection.

              Default: 65535

       --frontend-http2-connection-window-size=<SIZE>
              Sets the  per-connection window size of  HTTP/2 frontend connection.

              Default: 65535

       --backend-http2-window-size=<SIZE>
              Sets  the   initial  window   size  of   HTTP/2  backend connection.

              Default: 65535

       --backend-http2-connection-window-size=<SIZE>
              Sets the  per-connection window  size of  HTTP/2 backend connection.

              Default: 2147483647

       --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  in  default  mode.   In   this case, server push from backend
              session is relayed  to frontend, and server push via  Link  header  field  is  also
              supported.

       --frontend-http2-optimize-write-buffer-size
              (Experimental)  Enable  write   buffer  size  optimization  in  frontend HTTP/2 TLS
              connection.  This optimization aims to reduce  write buffer  size so  that it  only
              contains  bytes   which can  send immediately.   This makes  server more responsive
              to prioritized HTTP/2 stream because the buffering  of lower  priority  stream   is
              reduced.   This option is only effective on recent Linux platform.

       --frontend-http2-optimize-window-size
              (Experimental)    Automatically   tune    connection  level window size of frontend
              HTTP/2 TLS connection.  If this feature is  enabled, connection window size  starts
              with  the    default   window    size,    65535   bytes.     nghttpx  automatically
              adjusts connection  window size  based on TCP receiving  window size.  The  maximum
              window   size   is   capped        by       the      value       specified       by
              --frontend-http2-connection-window-size.      Since    the  stream  is  subject  to
              stream  level window size, it should be adjusted using --frontend-http2-window-size
              option as well.   This option  is only  effective on  recent Linux platform.

       --frontend-http2-encoder-dynamic-table-size=<SIZE>
              Specify the maximum dynamic  table size of HPACK encoder  in  the  frontend  HTTP/2
              connection.   The  decoder  (client) specifies  the maximum  dynamic table  size it
              accepts.  Then the negotiated dynamic table size is  the  minimum  of  this  option
              value and the value which client specified.

              Default: 4K

       --frontend-http2-decoder-dynamic-table-size=<SIZE>
              Specify  the  maximum  dynamic   table size of HPACK decoder in the frontend HTTP/2
              connection.

              Default: 4K

       --backend-http2-encoder-dynamic-table-size=<SIZE>
              Specify the maximum dynamic  table size of HPACK  encoder  in  the  backend  HTTP/2
              connection.   The  decoder (backend) specifies  the maximum  dynamic table  size it
              accepts.  Then the negotiated dynamic table size is  the  minimum  of  this  option
              value and the value which backend specified.

              Default: 4K

       --backend-http2-decoder-dynamic-table-size=<SIZE>
              Specify  the  maximum  dynamic   table  size of HPACK decoder in the backend HTTP/2
              connection.

              Default: 4K

   Mode
       (default mode)
              Accept  HTTP/2,  and  HTTP/1.1 over  SSL/TLS.    "no-tls"  parameter  is   used  in
              --frontend  option,   accept HTTP/2 and HTTP/1.1 over cleartext  TCP.  The incoming
              HTTP/1.1 connection  can  be  upgraded  to  HTTP/2  through  HTTP Upgrade.

       -s, --http2-proxy
              Like default mode, but enable forward proxy.  This is so called HTTP/2 proxy mode.

   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.

              • $tls_cipher: cipher used for SSL/TLS connection.

              • $tls_client_fingerprint_sha256: SHA-256 fingerprint of client certificate.

              • $tls_client_fingerprint_sha1:  SHA-1   fingerprint  of client certificate.

              • $tls_client_subject_name:   subject  name   in  client certificate.

              • $tls_client_issuer_name:   issuer   name   in   client certificate.

              • $tls_client_serial:    serial    number   in    client certificate.

              • $tls_protocol: protocol for SSL/TLS connection.

              • $tls_session_id: session ID for SSL/TLS connection.

              • $tls_session_reused:  "r"   if  SSL/TLS   session  was reused.  Otherwise, "."

              • $tls_sni: SNI server name for SSL/TLS connection.

              • $backend_host:   backend   host   used  to  fulfill  the request.  "-" if backend
                host is not available.

              • $backend_port:  backend  port   used  to  fulfill  the request.  "-"  if  backend
                host is not available.

              • $method: HTTP method

              • $path:   Request   path   including  query.    For  CONNECT request, authority is
                recorded.

              • $path_without_query:   $path    up   to   the    first   '?'  character.      For
                CONNECT  request,   authority   is recorded.

              • $protocol_version:   HTTP  version   (e.g.,  HTTP/1.1, HTTP/2)

              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"

       --accesslog-write-early
              Write   access   log  when   response  header  fields  are received   from  backend
              rather   than  when   request transaction finishes.

       --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.

       --no-add-x-forwarded-proto
              Don't  append   additional  X-Forwarded-Proto   header  field  to   the     backend
              request.         If        inbound        client       sets      X-Forwarded-Proto,
              and --no-strip-incoming-x-forwarded-proto  option  is  used, they are passed to the
              backend.

       --no-strip-incoming-x-forwarded-proto
              Don't strip X-Forwarded-Proto  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.  In case of UNIX domain  socket, "localhost"
              is used instead of address and  port.  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.   In  case   of  UNIX  domain
              socket, "localhost" is used instead of address.

              Default: obfuscated

       --no-via
              Don't append to  Via header field.  If  Via header field is received,  it  is  left
              unaltered.

       --no-strip-incoming-early-data
              Don't strip Early-Data header  field from inbound client requests.

       --no-location-rewrite
              Don't   rewrite  location   header field  in default  mode.  When --http2-proxy  is
              used, location header  field will not be altered regardless of this option.

       --host-rewrite
              Rewrite  host and  :authority header  fields in  default mode.  When  --http2-proxy
              is  used, these  headers will not be altered regardless of this option.

       --altsvc=<PROTOID,PORT[,HOST,[ORIGIN[,PARAMS]]]>
              Specify    protocol   ID,    port,   host    and   origin   of alternative service.
              <HOST>,  <ORIGIN> and <PARAMS> are optional.    Empty  <HOST>   and  <ORIGIN>   are
              allowed   and  they   are treated  as  nothing is  specified.  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,,,ma=3600; persist=1"

       --http2-altsvc=<PROTOID,PORT[,HOST,[ORIGIN[,PARAMS]]]>
              Just like --altsvc option, but  this altsvc is only sent in HTTP/2 frontend.

       --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"

       --request-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.   If  trailer  fields  exist,  they  are
              counted towards this number.

              Default: 64K

       --max-request-header-fields=<N>
              Set  maximum  number  of incoming  HTTP   request   header  fields.    If   trailer
              fields exist,  they  are  counted towards this number.

              Default: 100

       --response-header-field-buffer=<SIZE>
              Set   maximum  buffer  size for  incoming  HTTP  response header field list.   This
              is the sum of  header name and value  in  bytes.  If  trailer  fields  exist,  they
              are counted towards this number.

              Default: 64K

       --max-response-header-fields=<N>
              Set   maximum  number   of   incoming   HTTP response  header fields.   If  trailer
              fields exist,  they  are  counted towards this number.

              Default: 500

       --error-page=(<CODE>|*)=<PATH>
              Set file path  to custom error page   served  when  nghttpx  originally   generates
              HTTP  error status  code  <CODE>.  <CODE> must be greater than or equal to 400, and
              at most 599.  If "*"  is used instead of  <CODE>,   it  matches  all  HTTP   status
              code.   If   error  status  code comes  from backend server, the custom error pages
              are not used.

       --server-name=<NAME>
              Change server response header field value to <NAME>.

              Default: nghttpx

       --no-server-rewrite
              Don't rewrite server header field in default mode.   When  --http2-proxy  is  used,
              these headers will not be altered regardless of this option.

       --redirect-https-port=<PORT>
              Specify  the port number which appears in Location header field  when  redirect  to
              HTTPS  URI  is  made  due  to "redirect-if-not-tls" parameter in --backend option.

              Default: 443

       --require-http-scheme
              Always require http or https scheme in HTTP request.  It also  requires that  https
              scheme  must be  used for  an encrypted  connection.  Otherwise,  http scheme  must
              be used.   This   option   is    recommended   for    a   server  deployment  which
              directly  faces  clients  and  the  services it provides only require http or https
              scheme.

   API
       --api-max-request-body=<SIZE>
              Set the maximum size of request body for API request.

              Default: 32M

   DNS
       --dns-cache-timeout=<DURATION>
              Set duration that cached DNS results remain valid.  Note that  nghttpx  caches  the
              unsuccessful results as well.

              Default: 10s

       --dns-lookup-timeout=<DURATION>
              Set  timeout that  DNS server is given to  respond to the initial  DNS  query.  For
              the  2nd  and later  queries, server is  given time based  on this timeout, and  it
              is scaled linearly.

              Default: 5s

       --dns-max-try=<N>
              Set the number of DNS query before nghttpx gives up name lookup.

              Default: 2

       --frontend-max-requests=<N>
              The  number  of requests that single  frontend connection can process.  For HTTP/2,
              this  is the number of streams in  one  HTTP/2 connection.   For  HTTP/1,  this  is
              the  number  of  keep  alive  requests.  This is hint to nghttpx, and it  may allow
              additional few  requests.  The default value is unlimited.

   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.

       --single-process
              Run  this  program  in  a  single process mode for debugging purpose.  Without this
              option,  nghttpx creates at least 2 processes: main and  worker processes.  If this
              option  is  used, main  and  worker are  unified  into a  single process.   nghttpx
              still  spawns  additional process  if neverbleed  is used.   In the  single process
              mode, the signal handling feature is disabled.

       --max-worker-processes=<N>
              The  maximum  number of  worker processes.  nghttpx spawns new worker  process when
              it reloads  its  configuration.   The  previous  worker   process  enters  graceful
              termination  period  and  will  terminate   when  it finishes handling the existing
              connections.      However,     if     reloading   configurations    happen     very
              frequently,    the  worker processes might be piled up if they take a bit long time
              to finish  the existing connections.  With  this option, if  the number  of  worker
              processes    exceeds  the   given  value,    the   oldest    worker    process   is
              terminated immediately.  Specifying 0  means  no   limit  and  it  is  the  default
              behaviour.

       --worker-process-grace-shutdown-period=<DURATION>
              Maximum   period   for   a    worker   process   to  terminate gracefully.  When  a
              worker  process enters  in  graceful  shutdown    period   (e.g.,    when   nghttpx
              reloads   its  configuration)   and   it   does not  finish  handling  the existing
              connections in the given  period of time, it is immediately terminated.  Specifying
              0 means no limit and it is the default behaviour.

   Scripting
       --mruby-file=<PATH>
              Set mruby script file

       --ignore-per-pattern-mruby-error
              Ignore mruby compile error  for per-pattern mruby script file.  If error  occurred,
              it is treated as  if no mruby file were specified for the pattern.

   HTTP/3 and QUIC
       --frontend-quic-idle-timeout=<DURATION>
              Specify an idle timeout for QUIC connection.

              Default: 30s

       --frontend-quic-debug-log
              Output QUIC debug log to /dev/stderr.

       --quic-bpf-program-file=<PATH>
              Specify a path to  eBPF program file reuseport_kern.o to direct  an  incoming  QUIC
              UDP datagram  to  a  correct socket.

              Default: /usr/local/lib/nghttp2/reuseport_kern.o

       --frontend-quic-early-data
              Enable  early data on frontend QUIC connections.  nghttpx sends "Early-Data" header
              field to a backend server if a request is received in early  data and handshake has
              not finished.  All backend servers should deal with possibly replayed requests.

       --frontend-quic-qlog-dir=<DIR>
              Specify   a    directory  where   a  qlog   file  is   written  for  frontend  QUIC
              connections.  A qlog file  is created per each QUIC  connection.  The  file name is
              ISO8601 basic format, followed by "-", server Source Connection ID and ".sqlog".

       --frontend-quic-require-token
              Require an address validation  token for a frontend QUIC connection.   Server sends
              a token  in Retry  packet or NEW_TOKEN frame in the previous connection.

       --frontend-quic-congestion-controller=<CC>
              Specify a congestion controller algorithm for a  frontend  QUIC  connection.   <CC>
              should  be one of "cubic", "bbr", and "bbr2".

              Default: cubic

       --frontend-quic-secret-file=<PATH>
              Path  to file that contains secure random data to be used as QUIC keying materials.
              It is used to derive keys for encrypting tokens and Connection IDs.  It is not used
              to  encrypt   QUIC  packets.  Each  line  of  this file  must contain  exactly  136
              bytes  hex-encoded  string  (when decoded the byte string is  68 bytes long).   The
              first  2  bits of  decoded byte  string are  used to  identify the keying material.
              An  empty line or a  line which starts '#'  is ignored.    The  file   can  contain
              more  than   one  keying  materials.   Because the  identifier is 2 bits, at most 4
              keying materials are  read and the remaining data is discarded.  The  first  keying
              material  in  the  file is primarily  used for  encryption and  decryption for  new
              connection.  The other ones are used to decrypt data for the  existing connections.
              Specifying  multiple   keying  materials enables  key rotation.   Please note  that
              key rotation  does  not  occur automatically.    User   should  update   files   or
              change   options  values  and  restart nghttpx gracefully.   If opening  or reading
              given file fails, all loaded keying  materials 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,  a  keying   material   is   generated
              internally on startup and reload.

       --quic-server-id=<HEXSTRING>
              Specify  server   ID encoded in Connection  ID to identify this  particular  server
              instance.   Connection  ID  is encrypted and  this part is  not visible in  public.
              It  must  be  4   bytes  long and must be encoded  in hex string (which is 8  bytes
              long).  If this option  is omitted, a random   server   ID    is    generated    on
              startup   and configuration reload.

       --frontend-quic-initial-rtt=<DURATION>
              Specify the initial RTT of the frontend QUIC connection.

              Default: 333ms

       --no-quic-bpf
              Disable eBPF.

       --frontend-http3-window-size=<SIZE>
              Sets  the  per-stream  initial  window  size  of  HTTP/3 frontend connection.

              Default: 256K

       --frontend-http3-connection-window-size=<SIZE>
              Sets the  per-connection window size of  HTTP/3 frontend connection.

              Default: 1M

       --frontend-http3-max-window-size=<SIZE>
              Sets   the  maximum  per-stream  window  size  of  HTTP/3 frontend connection.  The
              window  size is adjusted based on the receiving rate of stream data.   The  initial
              value  is the  value specified  by --frontend-http3-window-size and the window size
              grows up to <SIZE> bytes.

              Default: 6M

       --frontend-http3-max-connection-window-size=<SIZE>
              Sets the  maximum per-connection  window size  of HTTP/3 frontend connection.   The
              window   size  is adjusted based on the receiving rate of stream data.  The initial
              value     is             the             value            specified              by
              --frontend-http3-connection-window-size   and  the   window size grows up to <SIZE>
              bytes.

              Default: 8M

       --frontend-http3-max-concurrent-streams=<N>
              Set  the  maximum  number  of   the  concurrent  streams  in  one  frontend  HTTP/3
              connection.

              Default: 100

   Misc
       --conf=<PATH>
              Load   configuration   from   <PATH>.   Please  note  that nghttpx always  tries to
              read the  default configuration file if --conf is not given.

              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.

FILES

       /etc/nghttpx/nghttpx.conf
              The default configuration file path nghttpx searches at startup.  The configuration
              file path can be changed using --conf option.

              Those lines which are staring # are treated as comment.

              The option name in the configuration file is the long command-line option name with
              leading  -- stripped (e.g., frontend).  Put = between option name and value.  Don't
              put extra leading or trailing spaces.

              When specifying arguments including characters which  have  special  meaning  to  a
              shell,  we  usually use quotes so that shell does not interpret them.  When writing
              this configuration file, quotes for this purpose must not be  used.   For  example,
              specify additional request header field, do this:

                 add-request-header=foo: bar

              instead of:

                 add-request-header="foo: bar"

              The  options  which  do  not take argument in the command-line take argument in the
              configuration file.  Specify yes as an argument (e.g., http2-proxy=yes).  If  other
              string is given, it is ignored.

              To specify private key and certificate file which are given as positional arguments
              in command-line, use private-key-file and certificate-file.

              --conf option cannot be used in the configuration  file  and  will  be  ignored  if
              specified.

       Error log
              Error   log  is  written  to  stderr  by  default.   It  can  be  configured  using
              --errorlog-file.  The format of log message is as follows:

              <datetime> <main-pid> <current-pid> <thread-id> <level> (<filename>:<line>) <msg>

              <datetime>
                     It is a combination of date and time when the log is written.  It is in  ISO
                     8601 format.

              <main-pid>
                     It is a main process ID.

              <current-pid>
                     It is a process ID which writes this log.

              <thread-id>
                     It  is  a  thread  ID  which  writes  this  log.   It would be unique within
                     <current-pid>.

              <filename> and <line>
                     They are source file name, and line number which produce this log.

              <msg>  It is a log message body.

SIGNALS

       SIGQUIT
              Shutdown  gracefully.   First  accept  pending  connections  and   stop   accepting
              connection.  After all connections are handled, nghttpx exits.

       SIGHUP Reload configuration file given in --conf.

       SIGUSR1
              Reopen log files.

       SIGUSR2
          Fork  and  execute  nghttpx.   It  will  execute  the binary in the same path with same
          command-line arguments and environment variables.  As of nghttpx  version  1.20.0,  the
          new  main  process sends SIGQUIT to the original main process when it is ready to serve
          requests.  For the earlier versions of  nghttpx,  user  has  to  send  SIGQUIT  to  the
          original main process.

          The difference between SIGUSR2 (+ SIGQUIT) and SIGHUP is that former is usually used to
          execute new binary, and the main process is newly spawned.   On  the  other  hand,  the
          latter just reloads configuration file, and the same main process continues to exist.

       NOTE:
          nghttpx  consists  of multiple processes: one process for processing these signals, and
          another one for processing requests.  The former spawns  the  latter.   The  former  is
          called  main  process,  and  the  latter  is  called  worker process.  If neverbleed is
          enabled, the worker process  spawns  neverbleed  daemon  process  which  does  RSA  key
          processing.  The above signal must be sent to the main process.  If the other processes
          received one of them, it is ignored.  This behaviour of these processes may  change  in
          the  future  release.   In other words, in the future release, the processes other than
          main process may terminate upon  the  reception  of  these  signals.   Therefore  these
          signals should not be sent to the processes other than main process.

SERVER PUSH

       nghttpx supports HTTP/2 server push in default mode with Link header field.  nghttpx looks
       for Link header field (RFC 5988) in response headers  from  backend  server  and  extracts
       URI-reference  with  parameter  rel=preload  (see  preload)  and  pushes those URIs to the
       frontend client. Here is a sample Link header field to initiate server push:

          Link: </fonts/font.woff>; rel=preload
          Link: </css/theme.css>; rel=preload

       Currently, the following restriction is applied for server push:

       1. The associated stream must have method "GET" or "POST".  The associated stream's status
          code must be 200.

       This limitation may be loosened in the future release.

       nghttpx also supports server push if both frontend and backend are HTTP/2 in default mode.
       In this case, in addition to server push via Link header field, server push  from  backend
       is forwarded to frontend HTTP/2 session.

       HTTP/2 server push will be disabled if --http2-proxy is used.

UNIX DOMAIN SOCKET

       nghttpx  supports  UNIX  domain  socket  with  a  filename  for  both frontend and backend
       connections.

       Please note that current nghttpx implementation does not delete a socket with a  filename.
       And  on  start up, if nghttpx detects that the specified socket already exists in the file
       system, nghttpx first deletes it.  However, if SIGUSR2 is used to execute new  binary  and
       both  old  and new configurations use same filename, new binary does not delete the socket
       and continues to use it.

OCSP STAPLING

       OCSP query is done using  external  Python  script  fetch-ocsp-response,  which  has  been
       originally  developed in Perl as part of h2o project (https://github.com/h2o/h2o), and was
       translated into Python.

       The script file is usually installed under $(prefix)/share/nghttp2/ directory.  The actual
       path to script can be customized using --fetch-ocsp-response-file option.

       If OCSP query is failed, previous OCSP response, if any, is continued to be used.

       --fetch-ocsp-response-file  option  provides  wide  range  of  possibility  to manage OCSP
       response.  It can take an arbitrary script or executable.   The  requirement  is  that  it
       supports  the  command-line  interface of fetch-ocsp-response script, and it must return a
       valid DER encoded OCSP response on success.  It must return exit code 0 on success, and 75
       for  temporary  error, and the other error code for generic failure.  For large cluster of
       servers,  it  is  not  efficient  for  each   server   to   perform   OCSP   query   using
       fetch-ocsp-response.  Instead, you can retrieve OCSP response in some way, and store it in
       a disk or a shared database.  Then specify  a  program  in  --fetch-ocsp-response-file  to
       fetch  it  from those stores.  This could provide a way to share the OCSP response between
       fleet of servers, and also any OCSP query strategy can be applied which may be beyond  the
       ability of nghttpx itself or fetch-ocsp-response script.

TLS SESSION RESUMPTION

       nghttpx supports TLS session resumption through both session ID and session ticket.

   SESSION ID RESUMPTION
       By default, session ID is shared by all worker threads.

       If  --tls-session-cache-memcached is given, nghttpx will insert serialized session data to
       memcached with nghttpx:tls-session-cache: + lowercase  hex  string  of  session  ID  as  a
       memcached entry key, with expiry time 12 hours.  Session timeout is set to 12 hours.

       By  default, connections to memcached server are not encrypted.  To enable encryption, use
       tls keyword in --tls-session-cache-memcached option.

   TLS SESSION TICKET RESUMPTION
       By default, session ticket is shared by all worker threads.  The automatic key rotation is
       also  enabled  by  default.   Every an hour, new encryption key is generated, and previous
       encryption key becomes decryption only key.  We set session timeout to 12 hours, and  thus
       we keep at most 12 keys.

       If  --tls-ticket-key-memcached  is  given,  encryption  keys are retrieved from memcached.
       nghttpx just reads keys from memcached; one has to deploy key generator program to  update
       keys  frequently  (e.g.,  every  1 hour).  The example key generator tlsticketupdate.go is
       available under contrib  directory  in  nghttp2  archive.   The  memcached  entry  key  is
       nghttpx:tls-ticket-key.   The  data  format  stored  in  memcached  is  the  binary format
       described below:

          +--------------+-------+----------------+
          | VERSION (4)  |LEN (2)|KEY(48 or 80) ...
          +--------------+-------+----------------+
                         ^                        |
                         |                        |
                         +------------------------+
                         (LEN, KEY) pair can be repeated

       All numbers in the above figure is bytes.  All integer fields are network byte order.

       First 4 bytes integer VERSION field, which must be 1.  The 2 bytes integer LEN field gives
       the     length     of     following     KEY     field,    which    contains    key.     If
       --tls-ticket-key-cipher=aes-128-cbc    is    used,     LEN     must     be     48.      If
       --tls-ticket-key-cipher=aes-256-cbc  is  used,  LEN  must  be 80.  LEN and KEY pair can be
       repeated multiple times to store multiple  keys.   The  key  appeared  first  is  used  as
       encryption key.  All the remaining keys are used as decryption only.

       By  default, connections to memcached server are not encrypted.  To enable encryption, use
       tls keyword in --tls-ticket-key-memcached option.

       If --tls-ticket-key-file is given, encryption key is read from the given  file.   In  this
       case,  nghttpx  does  not  rotate  key  automatically.   To rotate key, one has to restart
       nghttpx (see SIGNALS).

CERTIFICATE TRANSPARENCY

       nghttpx supports TLS signed_certificate_timestamp  extension  (RFC  6962).   The  relevant
       options are --tls-sct-dir and sct-dir parameter in --subcert.  They takes a directory, and
       nghttpx reads all files whose extension is .sct under the directory.  The *.sct files  are
       encoded  as SignedCertificateTimestamp struct described in section 3.2 of RFC 69662.  This
       format is the same one used by nginx-ct and mod_ssl_ct.  ct-submit can be used  to  submit
       certificates to log servers, and obtain the SignedCertificateTimestamp struct which can be
       used with nghttpx.

MRUBY SCRIPTING

       WARNING:
          The current mruby extension API is experimental and not frozen.  The API is subject  to
          change in the future release.

       WARNING:
          Almost all string value returned from method, or attribute is a fresh new mruby string,
          which involves memory allocation, and copies.  Therefore, it is strongly recommended to
          store  a  return  value  in  a local variable, and use it, instead of calling method or
          accessing attribute repeatedly.

       nghttpx allows users to extend its capability using mruby scripts.   nghttpx  has  2  hook
       points  to execute mruby script: request phase and response phase.  The request phase hook
       is invoked after all request header fields are received from client.  The  response  phase
       hook  is invoked after all response header fields are received from backend server.  These
       hooks allows users to modify header fields, or common HTTP variables,  like  authority  or
       request  path,  and  even  return  custom  response  without forwarding request to backend
       servers.

       There are 2 levels of mruby script invocations: global and per-pattern.  The global  mruby
       script  is  set  by  --mruby-file  option and is called for all requests.  The per-pattern
       mruby script is set by "mruby" parameter in -b option.  It is invoked for a request  which
       matches  the  particular  pattern.   The order of hook invocation is: global request phase
       hook, per-pattern request phase hook, per-pattern response phase hook, and finally  global
       response  phase hook.  If a hook returns a response, any later hooks are not invoked.  The
       global request hook is invoked before the pattern matching is made  and  changing  request
       path may affect the pattern matching.

       Please  note  that  request  and  response  hooks of per-pattern mruby script for a single
       request might not come from the same script.  This might happen after a  request  hook  is
       executed,  backend  failed for some reason, and at the same time, backend configuration is
       replaced by API request, and then the  request  uses  new  configuration  on  retry.   The
       response hook from new configuration, if it is specified, will be invoked.

       The all mruby script will be evaluated once per thread on startup, and it must instantiate
       object and evaluate it as the return value (e.g., App.new).  This  object  is  called  app
       object.   If  app  object  defines on_req method, it is called with Nghttpx::Env object on
       request hook.  Similarly, if  app  object  defines  on_resp  method,  it  is  called  with
       Nghttpx::Env  object  on  response  hook.  For each method invocation, user can can access
       Nghttpx::Request and Nghttpx::Response objects via Nghttpx::Env#req and  Nghttpx::Env#resp
       respectively.

       Nghttpx::REQUEST_PHASE
              Constant to represent request phase.

       Nghttpx::RESPONSE_PHASE
              Constant to represent response phase.

       class Nghttpx::Env
              Object to represent current request specific context.

              attribute [R] req
                     Return Request object.

              attribute [R] resp
                     Return Response object.

              attribute [R] ctx
                     Return Ruby hash object.  It persists until request finishes.  So values set
                     in request phase hook can be retrieved in response phase hook.

              attribute [R] phase
                     Return the current phase.

              attribute [R] remote_addr
                     Return IP address of a remote client.  If connection is made via UNIX domain
                     socket, this returns the string "localhost".

              attribute [R] server_addr
                     Return  address  of  server  that accepted the connection.  This is a string
                     which specified in --frontend option,  excluding  port  number,  and  not  a
                     resolved  IP address.  For UNIX domain socket, this is a path to UNIX domain
                     socket.

              attribute [R] server_port
                     Return port number of the server frontend which accepted the connection from
                     client.

              attribute [R] tls_used
                     Return true if TLS is used on the connection.

              attribute [R] tls_sni
                     Return the TLS SNI value which client sent in this connection.

              attribute [R] tls_client_fingerprint_sha256
                     Return the SHA-256 fingerprint of a client certificate.

              attribute [R] tls_client_fingerprint_sha1
                     Return the SHA-1 fingerprint of a client certificate.

              attribute [R] tls_client_issuer_name
                     Return the issuer name of a client certificate.

              attribute [R] tls_client_subject_name
                     Return the subject name of a client certificate.

              attribute [R] tls_client_serial
                     Return the serial number of a client certificate.

              attribute [R] tls_client_not_before
                     Return the start date of a client certificate in seconds since the epoch.

              attribute [R] tls_client_not_after
                     Return the end date of a client certificate in seconds since the epoch.

              attribute [R] tls_cipher
                     Return a TLS cipher negotiated in this connection.

              attribute [R] tls_protocol
                     Return a TLS protocol version negotiated in this connection.

              attribute [R] tls_session_id
                     Return a session ID for this connection in hex string.

              attribute [R] tls_session_reused
                     Return true if, and only if a SSL/TLS session is reused.

              attribute [R] alpn
                     Return ALPN identifier negotiated in this connection.

              attribute [R] tls_handshake_finished
                     Return  true  if SSL/TLS handshake has finished.  If it returns false in the
                     request phase hook, the request is received in TLSv1.3  early  data  (0-RTT)
                     and  might be vulnerable to the replay attack.  nghttpx will send Early-Data
                     header field to backend servers to indicate this.

       class Nghttpx::Request
              Object to represent request from client.  The modification  to  Request  object  is
              allowed only in request phase hook.

              attribute [R] http_version_major
                     Return HTTP major version.

              attribute [R] http_version_minor
                     Return HTTP minor version.

              attribute [R/W] method
                     HTTP  method.   On  assignment,  copy  of given value is assigned.  We don't
                     accept arbitrary method name.  We will document them later, but  well  known
                     methods, like GET, PUT and POST, are all supported.

              attribute [R/W] authority
                     Authority  (i.e.,  example.org),  including  optional  port  component .  On
                     assignment, copy of given value is assigned.

              attribute [R/W] scheme
                     Scheme (i.e., http, https).  On assignment, copy of given value is assigned.

              attribute [R/W] path
                     Request path, including query component (i.e., /index.html).  On assignment,
                     copy  of  given  value  is  assigned.   The  path does not include authority
                     component of URI.  This may include query component.  nghttpx makes  certain
                     normalization   for   path.   It  decodes  percent-encoding  for  unreserved
                     characters   (see   https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986#section-2.3),    and
                     resolves  ".."  and  ".".   But  it  may  leave  characters  which should be
                     percent-encoded as is. So be careful when  comparing  path  against  desired
                     string.

              attribute [R] headers
                     Return  Ruby hash containing copy of request header fields.  Changing values
                     in returned hash does not change request  header  fields  actually  used  in
                     request       processing.       Use      Nghttpx::Request#add_header      or
                     Nghttpx::Request#set_header to change request header fields.

              add_header(key, value)
                     Add header entry associated with key.  The value can  be  single  string  or
                     array  of  string.   It does not replace any existing values associated with
                     key.

              set_header(key, value)
                     Set header entry associated with key.  The value can  be  single  string  or
                     array of string.  It replaces any existing values associated with key.

              clear_headers()
                     Clear all existing request header fields.

              push(uri)
                     Initiate  to push resource identified by uri.  Only HTTP/2 protocol supports
                     this feature.  For the other protocols, this method is  noop.   uri  can  be
                     absolute  URI,  absolute  path or relative path to the current request.  For
                     absolute or relative path, scheme  and  authority  are  inherited  from  the
                     current  request.   Currently,  method  is  always  GET.  nghttpx will issue
                     request to backend  servers  to  fulfill  this  request.   The  request  and
                     response phase hooks will be called for pushed resource as well.

       class Nghttpx::Response
              Object to represent response from backend server.

              attribute [R] http_version_major
                     Return HTTP major version.

              attribute [R] http_version_minor
                     Return HTTP minor version.

              attribute [R/W] status
                     HTTP  status  code.   It  must  be  in the range [200, 999], inclusive.  The
                     non-final status code is not supported in mruby scripting at the moment.

              attribute [R] headers
                     Return Ruby hash containing copy of response header fields.  Changing values
                     in  returned  hash  does  not change response header fields actually used in
                     response     processing.       Use      Nghttpx::Response#add_header      or
                     Nghttpx::Response#set_header to change response header fields.

              add_header(key, value)
                     Add  header  entry  associated  with key.  The value can be single string or
                     array of string.  It does not replace any existing  values  associated  with
                     key.

              set_header(key, value)
                     Set  header  entry  associated  with key.  The value can be single string or
                     array of string.  It replaces any existing values associated with key.

              clear_headers()
                     Clear all existing response header fields.

              return(body)
                     Return custom response body to a client.  When  this  method  is  called  in
                     request  phase  hook,  the  request  is  not  forwarded  to the backend, and
                     response phase hook for this request will not be invoked.  When this  method
                     is  called  in response phase hook, response from backend server is canceled
                     and discarded.  The status code and response header  fields  should  be  set
                     before using this method.  To set status code, use Nghttpx::Response#status.
                     If status code is not set, 200 is used.   To  set  response  header  fields,
                     Nghttpx::Response#add_header  and  Nghttpx::Response#set_header.   When this
                     method is invoked in response phase hook, the response  headers  are  filled
                     with  the  ones  received  from  backend  server.  To send completely custom
                     header fields,  first  call  Nghttpx::Response#clear_headers  to  erase  all
                     existing header fields, and then add required header fields.  It is an error
                     to call this method twice for a given request.

              send_info(status, headers)
                     Send non-final (informational) response to a client.  status must be in  the
                     range  [100,  199], inclusive.  headers is a hash containing response header
                     fields.  Its key must be a string, and the associated value must  be  either
                     string  or  array  of  strings.  Since this is not a final response, even if
                     this method is invoked, request is  still  forwarded  to  a  backend  unless
                     Nghttpx::Response#return  is  called.   This  method  can be called multiple
                     times.  It cannot be called after Nghttpx::Response#return is called.

   MRUBY EXAMPLES
       Modify request path:

          class App
            def on_req(env)
              env.req.path = "/apps#{env.req.path}"
            end
          end

          App.new

       Don't forget to instantiate and evaluate object at the last line.

       Restrict permission of viewing a content to a specific client addresses:

          class App
            def on_req(env)
              allowed_clients = ["127.0.0.1", "::1"]

              if env.req.path.start_with?("/log/") &&
                 !allowed_clients.include?(env.remote_addr) then
                env.resp.status = 404
                env.resp.return "permission denied"
              end
            end
          end

          App.new

API ENDPOINTS

       nghttpx exposes API endpoints to manipulate it  via  HTTP  based  API.   By  default,  API
       endpoint  is  disabled.   To  enable it, add a dedicated frontend for API using --frontend
       option with "api" parameter.  All requests which come from this frontend address, will  be
       treated as API request.

       The response is normally JSON dictionary, and at least includes the following keys:

       status The status of the request processing.  The following values are defined:

              Success
                     The request was successful.

              Failure
                     The request was failed.  No change has been made.

       code   HTTP status code

       Additionally,  depending  on  the  API  endpoint,  data  key may be present, and its value
       contains the API endpoint specific data.

       We wrote "normally", since nghttpx may return ordinal HTML response in  some  cases  where
       the error has occurred before reaching API endpoint (e.g., header field is too large).

       The following section describes available API endpoints.

   POST /api/v1beta1/backendconfig
       This  API  replaces  the  current  backend  server  settings with the requested ones.  The
       request method should be POST, but PUT is also  acceptable.   The  request  body  must  be
       nghttpx configuration file format.  For configuration file format, see FILES section.  The
       line separator inside the request body must be single LF (0x0A).  Currently, only  backend
       option is parsed, the others are simply ignored.  The semantics of this API is replace the
       current backend with the backend options in request body.  Describe  the  desired  set  of
       backend  severs,  and  nghttpx makes it happen.  If there is no backend option is found in
       request body, the current set of backend is replaced with  the  backend  option's  default
       value, which is 127.0.0.1,80.

       The  replacement  is done instantly without breaking existing connections or requests.  It
       also avoids any process creation as is the case with hot swapping with signals.

       The one limitation is that only numeric IP address is allowed in backend in  request  body
       unless  "dns"  parameter  is used while non numeric hostname is allowed in command-line or
       configuration file is read using --conf.

   GET /api/v1beta1/configrevision
       This API returns  configuration  revision  of  the  current  nghttpx.   The  configuration
       revision  is opaque string, and it changes after each reloading by SIGHUP.  With this API,
       an  external  application  knows  that  whether  nghttpx  has   finished   reloading   its
       configuration by comparing the configuration revisions between before and after reloading.
       It is recommended to disable persistent (keep-alive) connection for this purpose in  order
       to avoid to send a request using the reused connection which may bound to an old process.

       This  API  returns response including data key.  Its value is JSON object, and it contains
       at least the following key:

       configRevision
              The configuration revision of the current nghttpx

SEE ALSO

       nghttp(1), nghttpd(1), h2load(1)

AUTHOR

       Tatsuhiro Tsujikawa

COPYRIGHT

       2012, 2015, 2016, Tatsuhiro Tsujikawa