diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'debian/vendor-h2o/srcdoc/configure/access_control.mt')
-rw-r--r-- | debian/vendor-h2o/srcdoc/configure/access_control.mt | 273 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 273 deletions
diff --git a/debian/vendor-h2o/srcdoc/configure/access_control.mt b/debian/vendor-h2o/srcdoc/configure/access_control.mt deleted file mode 100644 index 4a613ac..0000000 --- a/debian/vendor-h2o/srcdoc/configure/access_control.mt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,273 +0,0 @@ -? my $ctx = $main::context; -? $_mt->wrapper_file("wrapper.mt", "Configure", "Access Control")->(sub { - -<p> -Starting from version 2.1, H2O comes with a DSL-like mruby library which makes it easy to write access control list (ACL). -</p> - -<h2 id="example" class="section-head">Example</h2> - -<p> -Below example uses this Access Control feature to write various access control. -</p> - -<?= $ctx->{example}->('Access Control', <<'EOT'); -paths: - "/": - mruby.handler: | - acl { - allow { addr == "127.0.0.1" } - deny { user_agent.match(/curl/i) && ! addr.start_with?("192.168.") } - respond(503, {}, ["Service Unavailable"]) { addr == malicious_ip } - redirect("https://example.com/", 301) { path =~ /moved/ } - use Htpasswd.new("/path/to/.htpasswd", "realm") { path.start_with?("/admin") } - } - file.dir: /path/to/doc_root -EOT -?> - -<p> -In the example, the handler you get by calling <code>acl</code> method will do the following: -<ul> - <li> - if the remote IP address is exactly equal to "127.0.0.1", the request will be delegated to the next handler (i.e. serve files under /path/to/doc_root) and all following acl settings are ignored - </li> - <li> - otherwise, if the user agent string includes "curl" and the remote IP address doesn't start with "192.168.", this handler immediately returns <code>403 Forbidden</code> response - </li> - <li> - otherwise, if the remote IP address is exactly equal to the <code>malicious_ip</code> variable, this handler immediately returns <code>503 Service Unavailable</code> response - </li> - <li> - otherwise, if the request path matches with the pattern <code>/moved/i</code>, this handler immediately redirects the client to <code>"https://example.com"</code> with <code>301</code> status code - </li> - <li> - otherwise, if the request path starts with <code>/admin</code>, apply Basic Authentication to the request (for details of Basic Authentication, see <a href="configure/basic_auth.html">here</a>). - </li> - <li> - otherwise, the request will be delegated to the next handler (i.e. serve files under /path/to/doc_root) - </li> - -</ul> - -<h2 id="acl-methods" class="section-head">ACL Methods</h2> - -<p> -An ACL handler is built by calling ACL methods, which can be used like directives. -ACL methods can only be used in <code>acl</code> block. -</p> - -<p> -Each ACL method adds a filter to the handler, which checks whether the request matches the provided condition or not. -Every ACL method can be accompanied by a condition block, which should return boolean value. -</p> - -<p> -The filter defined by the method that first matched the accompanying condition gets applied (e.g. response <code>403 Forbidden</code>, redirect to somewhere). -If a condition block is omitted, all requests matches. -If none of the conditions matches the request, the handler returns <code>399</code> and the request will be delegated to the next handler. -</p> - -<? -$ctx->{mruby_method}->( - name => "allow", - desc => q{ Adds a filter which delegates the request to the next handler if the request matches the provided condition. }, -)->(sub { -?> -<pre><code>allow { ..condition.. }</code></pre> -? }) - -<? -$ctx->{mruby_method}->( - name => "deny", - desc => q{ Adds a filter which returns <code>403 Forbidden</code> if the request matches the provided condition. }, -)->(sub { -?> -<pre><code>deny { ..condition.. }</code></pre> -? }) - -<? -$ctx->{mruby_method}->( - name => "redirect", - params => [ - { label => 'location', desc => 'Location to which the client will be redirected. Required.' }, - { label => 'status', desc => 'Status code of the response. Default value: 302' }, - ], - desc => q{ Adds a filter which redirects the client if the request matches the provided condition. }, -)->(sub { -?> -<pre><code>redirect(location, status) { ..condition.. }</code></pre> -? }) - -<? -$ctx->{mruby_method}->( - name => "respond", - params => [ - { label => 'status', desc => 'Status code of the response. Required.' }, - { label => 'header', desc => 'Header key-value pairs of the response. Default value: {}' }, - { label => 'body', desc => 'Body array of the response. Default value: []' }, - ], - desc => q{ Adds a filter which returns arbitrary response if the request matches the provided condition. }, -)->(sub { -?> -<pre><code>respond(status, header, body) { ..condition.. }</code></pre> -? }) - -<? -$ctx->{mruby_method}->( - name => "use", - params => [ - { label => 'proc', desc => 'Callable object that should be applied' }, - ], - desc => q{ Adds a filter which applies the provided handler (callable object) if the request matches the provided condition. }, -)->(sub { -?> -<pre><code>use(proc) { ..condition.. }</code></pre> -? }) - -<h2 id="matching-methods" class="section-head">Matching Methods</h2> - -<p> -In a condition block, you can use helpful methods which return particular properties of the request as string values. -Matching methods can only be used in a condition block of the ACL methods. -</p> - -<? -$ctx->{mruby_method}->( - name => "addr", - params => [ - { label => 'forwarded', desc => 'If true, returns the value of X-Forwarded-For header if it exists. Default value: true' }, - ], - desc => q{ Returns the remote IP address of the request. }, -)->(sub { -?> -<pre><code>addr(forwarded)</code></pre> -? }) - -<? -$ctx->{mruby_method}->( - name => "path", - desc => q{ Returns the requested path string of the request. }, -)->(sub { -?> -<pre><code>path()</code></pre> -? }) - -<? -$ctx->{mruby_method}->( - name => "method", - desc => q{ Returns the HTTP method of the request. }, -)->(sub { -?> -<pre><code>method()</code></pre> -? }) - -<? -$ctx->{mruby_method}->( - name => "header", - params => [ - { label => 'name', desc => 'Case-insensitive header name. Required.' }, - ], - desc => q{ Returns the header value of the request associated with the provided name. }, -)->(sub { -?> -<pre><code>header(name)</code></pre> -? }) - -<? -$ctx->{mruby_method}->( - name => "user_agent", - desc => q{ Shortcut for header("user-agent"). }, -)->(sub { -?> -<pre><code>user_agent()</code></pre> -? }) - -<h2 id="caution" class="section-head">Caution</h2> - -<p> -Several restrictions are introduced to avoid misconfiguration when using <code>acl</code> method. -<ul> -<li><code>acl</code> method can be called only once in each handler configuration</li> -<li>If <code>acl</code> method is used, the handler returned by the configuration directive must be the one returned by the <code>acl</code> method</li> -</ul> -If a configuration violates these restrictions, the server will detect it and refuse to launch with error message. -</p> - -<p> -For example, both of the following examples violate the restrictions above, so the server will refuse to start up. -</p> - -<?= $ctx->{example}->('Misconfiguration Example 1', <<'EOT'); -paths: - "/": - mruby.handler: | - acl { # this block will be ignored! - allow { addr == "127.0.0.1" } - } - acl { - deny - } - file.dir: /path/to/doc_root -EOT -?> - -<?= $ctx->{example}->('Misconfiguration Example 2', <<'EOT'); -paths: - "/": - mruby.handler: | - acl { # this block will be ignored! - allow { addr == "127.0.0.1" } - deny - } - proc {|env| [399, {}, []} - file.dir: /path/to/doc_root -EOT -?> - -<p> -You can correct these like the following: -</p> - -<?= $ctx->{example}->('Valid Configuration Example', <<'EOT'); -paths: - "/": - mruby.handler: | - acl { - allow { addr == "127.0.0.1" } - deny - } - file.dir: /path/to/doc_root -EOT -?> - -<h2 id="how-to" class="section-head">How-To</h2> - -<h3 id="matching-ip-address-blocks">Matching IP Address Blocks</h3> - -<p> -You can match an IP address against predefined list of address blocks using a script named <a href="">trie_addr.rb</a>. -</p> -<p> -Below is an example. -</p> - -<?= $ctx->{example}->('Address Block Matching Example', <<'EOT'); -paths: - "/": - mruby.handler: | - require "trie_addr.rb" - trie = TrieAddr.new.add(["192.168.0.0/16", "172.16.0.0/12"]) - acl { - allow { trie.match?(addr) } - deny - } - file.dir: /path/to/doc_root -EOT -?> - -<p> -This library currently supports only IPv4 addresses. <code>TrieAddr#match?</code> returns <code>false</code> when it receives an invalid IPv4 address (including an IPv6 address) as an argument.. -</p> - -? }) |