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authorDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2018-11-07 12:22:44 +0000
committerDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2018-11-07 12:22:44 +0000
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Merging upstream version 1.11.0+dfsg.
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+# netdata web server
+
+netdata supports 3 implementation of its internal web server:
+
+- `static-threaded` is a web server with a fix (configured number of threads)
+- `single-threaded` is a simple web server running with a single thread
+- `multi-threaded` is a web server that spawns a thread for each client connection
+- `none` to disable the web server
+
+We suggest to use the `static-threaded` one. It is the most efficient.
+
+All versions of the web servers use non-blocking I/O.
+
+All web servers respect the `keep-alive` HTTP header to serve multiple HTTP requests via the same connection.
+
+
+## Configuration
+
+#### selecting the web server
+
+You can select the web server implementation by editing `netdata.conf` and setting:
+
+```
+[web]
+ mode = none | single-threaded | multi-threaded | static-threaded
+```
+
+The `static` web server supports also these settings:
+
+```
+[web]
+ mode = static-threaded
+ web server threads = 4
+ web server max sockets = 512
+```
+
+The default number of processor threads is `min(cpu cores, 6)`.
+
+The `web server max sockets` setting is automatically adjusted to 50% of the max number of open files
+netdata is allowed to use (via `/etc/security/limits.conf` or systemd), to allow enough file descriptors
+to be available for data collection.
+
+#### binding netdata to multiple ports
+
+netdata can bind to multiple IPs and ports. Up to 100 sockets can be used
+(you can increase it at compile time with `CFLAGS="-DMAX_LISTEN_FDS=200" ./netdata-installer.sh ...`).
+
+The ports to bind are controlled via `[web].bind to`, like this:
+
+```
+[web]
+ default port = 19999
+ bind to = 127.0.0.1 10.1.1.1:19998 hostname:19997 [::]:19996 localhost:19995 *:http unix:/tmp/netdata.sock
+```
+
+Using the above, netdata will bind to:
+ - IPv4 127.0.0.1 at port 19999 (port was used from `default port`)
+ - IPv4 10.1.1.1 at port 19998
+ - All the IPs `hostname` resolves to (both IPv4 and IPv6 depending on the resolved IPs) at port 19997
+ - All IPv6 IPs at port 19996
+ - All the IPs `localhost` resolves to (both IPv4 and IPv6 depending the resolved IPs) at port 19996
+ - All IPv4 and IPv6 IPs at port `http` as set in `/etc/services`
+ - Unix domain socket `/tmp/netdata.sock`
+
+The option `[web].default port` is used when an entries in `[web].bind to` do not specify a port.
+
+#### access lists
+
+Netdata supports access lists in `netdata.conf`:
+
+```
+[web]
+ allow connections from = localhost *
+ allow dashboard from = localhost *
+ allow badges from = *
+ allow streaming from = *
+ allow netdata.conf from = localhost fd* 10.* 192.168.* 172.16.* 172.17.* 172.18.* 172.19.* 172.20.* 172.21.* 172.22.* 172.23.* 172.24.* 172.25.* 172.26.* 172.27.* 172.28.* 172.29.* 172.30.* 172.31.*
+```
+
+`*` does string matches on the IPs of the clients.
+
+- `allow connections from` matches anyone that connects on the netdata port(s).
+ So, if someone is not allowed, it will be connected and disconnected immediately, without reading even
+ a single byte from its connection. This is a global settings with higher priority to any of the ones below.
+
+- `allow dashboard from` receives the request and examines if it is a static dashboard file or an API call the
+ dashboards do.
+
+- `allow badges from` checks if the API request is for a badge. Badges are not matched by `allow dashboard from`.
+
+- `allow streaming from` checks if the slave willing to stream metrics to this netdata is allowed.
+ This can be controlled per API KEY and MACHINE GUID in [stream.conf](../../streaming/stream.conf).
+ The setting in `netdata.conf` is checked before the ones in [stream.conf](../../streaming/stream.conf).
+
+- `allow netdata.conf from` checks the IP to allow `http://netdata.host:19999/netdata.conf`.
+ By default it allows only private lans.
+
+## DDoS protection
+
+If you publish your netdata to the internet, you may want to apply some protection against DDoS:
+
+1. Use the `static-threaded` web server (it is the default)
+2. Use reasonable `[web].web server max sockets` (the default is)
+3. Don't use all your cpu cores for netdata (lower `[web].web server threads`)
+4. Run netdata with a low process scheduling priority (the default is the lowest)
+5. If possible, proxy netdata via a full featured web server (nginx, apache, etc)
+