Perlbal::Plugin::Throttle(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Perlbal::Plugin::Throttle(3pm) |
Perlbal::Plugin::Throttle - Perlbal plugin that throttles connections from hosts that connect too frequently.
# in perlbal.conf LOAD Throttle CREATE POOL web POOL web ADD 10.0.0.1:80 CREATE SERVICE throttler SET role = reverse_proxy SET listen = 0.0.0.0:80 SET pool = web # adjust throttler aggressiveness SET initial_delay = 10 SET max_delay = 60 SET throttle_threshold_seconds = 3 SET max_concurrent = 2 SET ban_threshold = 4 SET ban_expiration = 180 # limit which requests are throttled SET path_regex = ^/webapp/ SET method_regex = ^GET$ # allow or ban specific addresses or range (requires Net::CIDR::Lite) SET whitelist_file = conf/whitelist.txt SET blacklist_file = conf/blacklist.txt # granular logging (requires Perlbal::Plugin::Syslogger) SET log_events = ban,unban,throttled,banned SET log_only = false # share state between perlbals (requires Cache::Memcached::Async) SET memcached_servers = 10.0.2.1:11211,10.0.2.2:11211 SET memcached_async_clients = 4 SET instance_name = mywebapp SET plugins = Throttle ENABLE throttler
This plugin intercepts HTTP requests to a Perlbal service and slows or drops connections from IP addresses which are determined to be connecting too fast.
An IP address address may be in one of four states depending on its recent activity; that state determines how new requests from the IP are handled:
An IP begins in the allowed state. When a request is received from an IP in this state, the request is handled immediately and the IP enters the probation state.
If no requests are received from an IP in the probation state for throttle_threshold_seconds, it returns to the allowed state.
When a new request is received from an IP in the probation state, the IP enters the throttled state and is assigned a delay property initially equal to initial_delay. Connection to a backend is postponed for delay seconds while perlbal continues to work. If the connection is still open after the delay, the request is then handled normally. A dropped connection does not change the IP's delay value.
If no requests are received from an IP in the throttled state for delay seconds, it returns to the probation state.
When a new request is received from an IP in the throttled state, its violations property is incremented, and its delay property is doubled (up to a maximum of max_delay). The request is postponed for the new value of delay.
Only after the most recently created connection from a given IP exits the throttled state do violations and delay reset to 0.
Furthermore, if the violations exceeds ban_threshold, the connection is closed and the IP moves to the banned state.
IPs in the throttled state may have no more than max_concurrent connections being delayed at once. Any additional requests received in that circumstance are sent a "503 Too many connections" response. Long-running requests which have already been connected to a backend do not count towards this limit.
New connections from IPs in the banned state are immediately closed with a 403 error response.
An IP leaves the banned state after ban_expiration seconds have elapsed.
Connections from IPs/CIDRs listed in the file specified by whitelist_file are always allowed.
Connections from IPs/CIDRs listed in the file specified by blacklist_file immediately sent a "403 Forbidden" response.
For services where throttling should not normally be enabled, use the default_action tunable. When default_action is set to "allow", new connections from non-white/blacklisted IPs will not be throttled.
Furthermore, if throttling should only apply to specific clients, set blacklist_action to "throttle". Blacklisted connections will then be throttled instead of denied.
Most service tunables may be updated from the management port, after which the new values will be respected (although see "CAVEATS"). To reload the whitelist and blacklist files, issue the throttle reload whitelist or throttle reload blacklist command to the service.
Throttling may be restricted to URI paths matching the path_regex regex.
The plugin stores state which IPs have been seen in a memcached(1) instance. This allows many throttlers to share their state and also minimizes memory use within the perlbal. If state exceeds the capacity of the memcacheds, the least-recently seen IPs will be forgotten, effectively resetting them to the allowed state.
Orthogonally, multiple throttlers which need to share memcacheds but not state may specify distinct instance_name values.
If Perlbal::Plugin::Syslogger is installed and registered with the service, Throttle can use it to send syslog messages regarding actions that are taken. Granular control for which events are logged is available via the log_events parameter. log_events is composed of one or more of the following events, separated by commas:
Log when a temporary local ban is added for an IP address.
Log when a temporary local ban is removed for an IP address.
Log when a request is allowed because the source IP is on the whitelist.
Log when a request is denied or throttled because the source IP is on the blacklist.
Log when a request is denied because the source IP is on the temporary ban list for connecting excessively.
Log when a request is denied because the source IP has too many open connections waiting to be unthrottled.
Log when a request is throttled because the source IP was not on the whitelist or blacklist.
Enables all the above logging options.
Disables all the above logging options.
Changes to certain service tunables will not be noticed until the throttle reload config management command is issued. These include log_events, path_regex, and method_regex).
Changes to certain other tunables will not be respected after the plugin has been registered. These include memcached_servers and memcached_async_clients.
The throttle reload whitelist and throttle reload blacklist management commands load the whitelist and blacklist files synchronously, which will cause the perlbal to hang until it completes.
If a handled request returns a 30x response code and the redirect URI is also throttled, then the client's attempt to follow the redirect will necessarily be delayed by initial_delay. Fixing this would require that the plugin inspect the HTTP response headers, which would incur a lot of overhead. To workaround, try to have your backend not return 30x's if both the original and redirect URI are proxied by the same throttler instance (yes, this is difficult for the case where a backend 302s to add a trailing / to a directory).
Required for memcached support. This is the supported way to share state between different perlbal instances.
Required for blacklist/whitelist support.
Required for event logging support.
Load CIDR lists asynchronously (perhaps in the manner of Perlbal::Pool::_load_nodefile_async).
Adam Thomason, <athomason@cpan.org>
Copyright (C) 2007-2011 by Say Media Inc, <cpan@sixapart.com>
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.6 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
2012-02-01 | perl v5.20.2 |