pound

Langue: en

Version: 385966 (fedora - 01/12/10)

Section: 8 (Commandes administrateur)

NAME

pound - HTTP/HTTPS reverse-proxy and load-balancer

SYNOPSIS

pound
[-v] [-c] [-V] [-f config_file] [-p pid_file]

DESCRIPTION

Pound is a reverse-proxy load balancing server. It accepts requests from HTTP/HTTPS clients and distributes them to one or more Web servers. The HTTPS requests are decrypted and passed to the back-ends as plain HTTP.

If more than one back-end server is defined, Pound chooses one of them randomly, based on defined priorities. By default, Pound keeps track of associations between clients and back-end servers (sessions).

GENERAL PRINCIPLES

In general Pound needs three types of objects defined in order to function: listeners, services and back-ends.
Listeners
A listener is a definition of how Pound receives requests from the clients (browsers). Two types of listeners may be defined: regular HTTP listeners and HTTPS (HTTP over SSL/TLS) listeners. At the very least a listener must define the address and port to listen on, with additional requirements for HTTPS listeners.
Services
A service is the definition of how the requests are answered. The services may be defined within a listener or at the top level (global). When a request is received Pound attempts to match them to each service in turn, starting with the services defined in the listener itself and, if needed, continuing with the services defined at the global level. The services may define their own conditions as to which requests they can answer: typically this involves certain URLs (images only, or a certain path) or specific headers (such as the Host header). A service may also define a session mechanism: if defined future requests from a given client will always be answered by the same back-end.
Back-ends
The back-ends are the actual servers for the content requested. By itself, Pound supplies no responses - all contents must be received from a "real" web server. The back-end defines how the server should be contacted.
Three types of back-ends may be defined: a "regular" back-end which receives requests and returns responses, a "redirect" back-end in which case Pound will respond with a redirect response, without accessing any back-end at all, or an "emergency" back-end which will be used only if all other backends are "dead".
Multiple back-ends may be defined within a service, in which case Pound will load-balance between the available back-ends.
If a back-end fails to respond it will be considered "dead", in which case Pound will stop sending requests to it. Dead back-ends are periodically checked for availability, and once they respond again they are "resurected" and requests are sent again their way. If no back-ends are available (none were defined, or all are "dead") then Pound will reply with "503 Service Unavailable", without checking additional services.
The connection between Pound and the back-ends is always via HTTP, regardless of the actual protocol used between Pound and the client.

OPTIONS

Options available (see also below for configuration file options):
-v
Verbose mode: error messages will be sent to stdout even if Pound was configured to log to syslog. This applies only to startup messages, before Pound puts itself in the background. Normal operational messages will still go to syslog.
-V
Print version: Pound will exit immediately after printing the current version and configuration flags.
-c
Check only: Pound will exit immediately after parsing the configuration file. This may be used for running a quick syntax check before actually activating a server.
-f config_file
Location of the configuration file (see below for a full description of the format). Default: /usr/local/etc/pound.cfg
-p pid_file
Location of the pid file. Pound will write its own pid into this file. Normally this is used for shell scripts that control starting and stopping of the daemon. Default: /var/run/pound.pid

In general, any number of back-end servers may be specified. Use the priority to affect the load distribution among unequal-performance servers.

One (or more) copies of Pound should be started at boot time. Use "big iron" if you expect heavy loads: while Pound is as light-weight as I know how to make it, with a lot of simultaneous requests it will use quite a bit of CPU and memory. Multiple CPUs are your friend.

CONFIGURATION FILE

Each line in the file is considered a complete configuration directive. The directives are case-insensitive. Empty lines or lines starting in '#' are ignored. There are three types of directives: global directives (they affect the settings for the entire program instance), listener directives (they define which requests Pound will listen for), and service directives (they affect only a specific group of requests).

GLOBAL DIRECTIVES

Global directives may appear anywhere within the configuration file, though it is customary for them to be at the start. They may appear in any order.
User "user_name"
Specify the user Pound will run as (must be defined in /etc/passwd).
Group "group_name"
Specify the group Pound will run as (must be defined in /etc/group).
RootJail "directory_path_and_name"
Specify the directory that Pound will chroot to at runtime. Please note that OpenSSL requires access to /dev/urandom, so make sure you create a device by that name, accessible from the root jail directory. Pound may also require access to /dev/syslog or similar.
Daemon 0|1
Have Pound run in the foreground (if 0) or as a daemon (if 1). By default Pound runs as a daemon (detaches itself from the controlling terminal and puts itself in the background). By specifying this option you can force Pound to work like a regular process. Useful for debugging or if you want to use something like daemontools.
LogFacility value
Specify the log facility to use. value (default: daemon) must be one of the symbolic facility names defined in syslog.h. This facility shall be used for logging. Using a - for the facility name causes Pound to log to stdout/stderr.
LogLevel value
Specify the logging level: 0 for no logging, 1 (default) for regular logging, 2 for extended logging (show chosen backend server as well), 3 for Apache-like format (Combined Log Format with Virtual Host), 4 (same as 3 but without the virtual host information) and 5 (same as 4 but with information about the Service and BackEnd used). This value can be overridden for specific listeners.
IgnoreCase 0|1
Ignore case when matching URLs (default: 0). This value can be overridden for specific services.
DynScale 0|1
Enable or disable the dynamic rescaling code (default: 0). If enabled Pound will periodically try to modify the back-end priorities in order to equalise the response times from the various back-ends. This value can be overridden for specific services.
Alive value
Specify how often Pound will check for resurected back-end hosts (default: 30 seconds). In general, it is a good idea to set this as low as possible - it will find resurected hosts faster. However, if you set it too low it will consume resources - so beware.
Client value
Specify for how long Pound will wait for a client request (default: 10 seconds). After this long has passed without the client sending any data Pound will close the connection. Set it higher if your clients time-out on a slow network or over-loaded server, lower if you start getting DOS attacks or run into problems with IE clients. This value can be overridden for specific listeners.
TimeOut value
How long should Pound wait for a response from the back-end (in seconds). Default: 15 seconds. This value can be overridden for specific back-ends.
ConnTO value
How long should Pound wait for a connection to the back-end (in seconds). Default: the TimeOut value. This value can be overridden for specific back-ends.
Grace value
How long should Pound continue to answer existing connections after a receiving and INT or HUP signal (default: 30 seconds). The configured listeners are closed immediately. You can bypass this behaviour by stopping Pound with a TERM or QUIT signal, in which case the program exits without any delay.
SSLEngine "name"
Use an OpenSSL hardware acceleration card called name. Available only if OpenSSL-engine is installed on your system.
Control "/path/to/socket"
Set the control socket path. If not defined Pound does not listen for any commands. The commands may be issued by using the poundctl(8) program.

HTTP Listener

An HTTP listener defines an address and port that Pound will listen on for HTTP requests. All configuration directives enclosed between ListenHTTP and End are specific to a single HTTP listener. At the very least you must specify and address and a port for each listener. The following directives are available:
Address address
The address that Pound will listen on. This can be a numeric IP address, or a symbolic host name that must be resolvable at run-time. This is a mandatory parameter. The address 0.0.0.0 may be used as an alias for 'all available addresses on this machine', but this practice is strongly discouraged, as it will interfere with the rewriting mechanisms (see below).
Port port
The port number that Pound will listen on. This is a mandatory parameter.
xHTTP value
Defines which HTTP verbs are accepted. The possible values are:
0 (default) accept only standard HTTP requests (GET, POST, HEAD).
1 additionally allow extended HTTP requests (PUT, DELETE).
2 additionally allow standard WebDAV verbs (LOCK, UNLOCK, PROPFIND, PROPPATCH, SEARCH, MKCOL, MOVE, COPY, OPTIONS, TRACE, MKACTIVITY, CHECKOUT, MERGE, REPORT).
3 additionally allow MS extensions WebDAV verbs (SUBSCRIBE, UNSUBSCRIBE, NOTIFY, BPROPFIND, BPROPPATCH, POLL, BMOVE, BCOPY, BDELETE, CONNECT).
4 additionally allow MS RPC extensions verbs (RPC_IN_DATA, RPC_OUT_DATA).
Client value
Override the global Client time-out value.
CheckURL "pattern to match"
Define a pattern that must be matched by each request sent to this listener. A request that does not match is considered to be illegal. By default Pound accepts all requests (i.e. the pattern is ".*"), but you are free to limit it to something more reasonable. Please note that this applies only to the request path - Pound will still check that the request is syntactically correct.
Err414 "filename"
A file with the text to be displayed if an Error 414 occurs. Default: "Request URI is too long.".
Err500 "filename"
A file with the text to be displayed if an Error 500 occurs. Default: "An internal server error occurred. Please try again later.".
Err501 "filename"
A file with the text to be displayed if an Error 501 occurs. Default: "This method may not be used.".
Err503 "filename"
A file with the text to be displayed if an Error 503 occurs. Default: "The service is not available. Please try again later.".
MaxRequest nnn
Request maximal size. All requests will be limited to these many bytes. If a request contains more data than allowed an error 414 is returned. Default: unlimited.
HeadRemove "header pattern"
Remove certain headers from the incoming requests. All occurences of the matching specified header will be removed. Please note that this filtering is done prior to other checks (such as HeadRequire or HeadDeny), so you should not try to check for these headers in later matches. Multiple directives may be specified in order to remove more than one header, and the header itself may be a regular pattern (though this should be used with caution).
AddHeader "header: to add"
Add the defined header to the request passed to the back-end server. The header is added verbatim.
RewriteLocation 0|1|2
If 1 force Pound to change the Location: and Content-location: headers in responses. If they point to the back-end itself or to the listener (but with the wrong protocol) the response will be changed to show the virtual host in the request. Default: 1 (active). If the value is set to 2 only the back-end address is compared; this is useful for redirecting a request to an HTTPS listener on the same server as the HTTP listener.
RewriteDestination 0|1
If 1 force Pound to change the Destination: header in requests. The header is changed to point to the back-end itself with the correct protocol. Default: 0.
LogLevel value
Override the global LogLevel value.
Service [ "name" ]
This defines a private service (see below for service definition syntax). This service will be used only by this listener. The service may be optionally named, with the name showing in the poundctl listings.

HTTPS Listener

An HTTPS listener defines an address and port that Pound will listen on for HTTPS requests. All configuration directives enclosed between ListenHTTPS and End are specific to a single HTTPS listener. At the very least you must specify and address, a port and a server certificate for each listener. All directives defined for HTTP listeners are applicable to HTTPS listeners as well. The following additional directives are also available:
Cert "certificate file"
Specify the server certificate. The certificate file is the file containing the certificate, possibly a certificate chain and the signature for this server. This directive is mandatory for HTTPS listeners.
ClientCert 0|1|2|3 depth
Ask for the client's HTTPS certificate: 0 - don't ask (default), 1 - ask, 2 - ask and fail if no certificate was presented, 3 - ask but do not verify. depth is the depth of verification for a client certificate (up to 9).
Ciphers "acceptable:cipher:list"
This is the list of ciphers that will be accepted by the SSL connection; it is a string in the same format as in OpenSSL ciphers(1) and SSL_CTX_set_cipher_list(3).
CAlist "CAcert_file"
Set the list of "trusted" CA's for this server. The CAcert_file is a file containing a sequence of CA certificates (PEM format). The names of the defined CA certificates will be sent to the client on connection.
VerifyList "Verify_file"
Set the CA (Certificate Authority). The Verify_file is a file that contains the CA root certificates (in PEM format).
Please note: there is an important difference between the CAlist and the VerifyList. The CAlist tells the client (browser) which client certificates it should send. The VerifyList defines which CAs are actually used for the verification of the returned certificate.
CRLlist "CRL_file"
Set the CRL (Certificate Revocation List) file. The CRL_file is a file that contains the CRLs (in PEM format).
NoHTTPS11 0|1|2
Behave like an HTTP/1.0 server for HTTPS clients. If this value is 0 disable the check. If the value is 1 do not allow multiple requests on SSL connections. If the value is 2 (default) disable multiple requests on SSL connections only for MSIE clients. Required work-around for a bug in certain versions of IE.

Service

A service is a definition of which back-end servers Pound will use to reply to incoming requests. A service may be defined as part of a listener (in which case it will be used only by that listener), or globally (which makes it available to all listeners). Pound will always try the private services in the order defined, followed by the global ones. All configuration directives enclosed between Service and End are specific to a single service. The following directives are available:
URL "pattern"
Match the incoming request. If a request fails to match than this service will be skipped and next one tried. If all services fail to match Pound returns an error. You may define multiple URL conditions per service. If no URL was defined then all requests match. The matching is by default case-sensitive, but this can be overridden by specifying IgnoreCase 1
IgnoreCase 0|1
Override the global IgnoreCase setting.
HeadRequire "pattern"
The request must contain at least on header matching the given pattern. Multiple HeadRequire directives may be defined per service, in which case all of them must be satisfied.
HeadDeny "pattern"
The request may not contain any header matching the given pattern. Multiple HeadDeny directives may be defined per service, in which case all of them must be satisfied.
Please note: if the listener defined a HeadRemove directive, the matching headers are removed before the service matching is attempted.
DynScale 0|1
Enable or disable dynamic rescaling for the current service. This value will override the value globally defined.
BackEnd
Directives enclosed between a BackEnd and the following End directives define a single back-end server (see below for details). You may define multiple back-ends per service, in which case Pound will attempt to load-balance between them.
Redirect [code] "url"
This is a special type of back-end. Instead of sending the request to a back-end Pound replies immediately with a redirection to the given URL. You may define multiple redirectors in a service, as well as mixing them with regular back-ends.
The address the client is redirected to is determined by the actual url you specify: if it is a "pure" host (i.e. with no path) then the client will be redirected to the host you specified, with the original request path appended. If your url does contain a path then the request path is ignored.
Examples: if you specified



    Redirect "http://abc.example"


and the client requested http://xyz/a/b/c then it will be redirected to http://abc.example/a/b/c, but if you specified



    Redirect "http://abc.example/index.html"


it will be sent to http://abc.example/index.html.
Technical note: in an ideal world Pound should reply with a "307 Temporary Redirect" status. Unfortunately, that is not yet supported by all clients (in particular HTTP 1.0 ones), so Pound currently replies by default with a "302 Found" instead. You may override this behaviour by specifying the code to be used (301, 302 or 307).
Emergency
Directives enclosed between an Emergency and the following End directives define an emergency back-end server (see below for details). You may define only one emergency server per service, which Pound will attempt to use if all backends are down.
Session
Directives enclosed between a Session and the following End directives define a session-tracking mechanism for the current service. See below for details.

BackEnd

A back-end is a definition of a single back-end server Pound will use to reply to incoming requests. All configuration directives enclosed between BackEnd and End are specific to a single service. The following directives are available:
Address address
The address that Pound will connect to. This can be a numeric IP address, or a symbolic host name that must be resolvable at run-time. If the name cannot be resolved to a valid address, Pound will assume that it represents the path for a Unix-domain socket. This is a mandatory parameter.
Port port
The port number that Pound will connect to. This is a mandatory parameter for non Unix-domain back-ends.
HTTPS [ "cert" ]
The back-end is using HTTPS. If the optional parameter cert is specified, Pound will present this certificate to the back-end.
Priority val
The priority of this back-end (between 1 and 9, 5 is default). Higher priority back-ends will be used more often than lower priority ones, so you should define higher priorities for more capable servers.
TimeOut val
Override the global TimeOut value.
ConnTO val
Override the global ConnTO value.
HAport [ address ] port
A port (and optional address) to be used for server function checks. See below the "High Availability" section for a more detailed discussion. By default Pound uses the same address as the back-end server, but you may use a separate address if you wish. This directive applies only to non Unix-domain servers.

Emergency

The emergency server will be used once all existing back-ends are "dead". All configuration directives enclosed between Emergency and End are specific to a single service. The following directives are available:
Address address
The address that Pound will connect to. This can be a numeric IP address, or a symbolic host name that must be resolvable at run-time. If the name cannot be resolved to a valid address, Pound will assume that it represents the path for a Unix-domain socket. This is a mandatory parameter.
Port port
The port number that Pound will connect to. This is a mandatory parameter for non Unix-domain back-ends.

Session

Defines how a service deals with possible HTTP sessions. All configuration directives enclosed between Session and End are specific to a single service. Once a sessions is identified, Pound will attempt to send all requests within that session to the same back-end server.

The following directives are available:

Type IP|BASIC|URL|PARM|COOKIE|HEADER
What kind of sessions are we looking for: IP (the client address), BASIC (basic authentication), URL (a request parameter), PARM (a URI parameter), COOKIE (a certain cookie), or HEADER (a certain request header). This is a mandatory parameter.
TTL seconds
How long can a session be idle (in seconds). A session that has been idle for longer than the specified number of seconds will be discarded. This is a mandatory parameter.
ID "name"
The session identifier. This directive is permitted only for sessions of type URL (the name of the request parameter we need to track), COOKIE (the name of the cookie) and HEADER (the header name).

See below for some examples.

HIGH-AVAILABILITY

Pound attempts to keep track of active back-end servers, and will temporarily disable servers that do not respond (though not necessarily dead: an overloaded server that Pound cannot establish a connection to will be considered dead). However, every Alive seconds, an attempt is made to connect to the dead servers in case they have become active again. If this attempt succeeds, connections will be initiated to them again.

In general it is a good idea to set this time interval as low as is consistent with your resources in order to benefit from resurected servers at the earliest possible time. The default value of 30 seconds is probably a good choice.

The clients that happen upon a dead backend server will just receive a 503 Service Unavailable message.

The HAport parameter specifies an additional port (and optionally an address) that is used only for viability checks: if this port is specified in a BackEnd directive, Pound will attempt periodically (every Alive seconds) to connect to this port. If the port does not respond the server is considered dead. It never makes sense to have the HAport identical to the main back-end port: this would only generate extra, unncecessary activity (CPU, network traffic) for no good reason whatsoever. The HAport is meant for applications that offer an additional health monitoring port or for installations that wish to take servers off-line in a controlled manner.

By default the address of the HAport health monitor is the same as that of the back-end server. You may specify a different address though, for example if you have a monitoring program running on another host.

HTTPS HEADERS

If a client browser connects to Pound via HTTPS and if it presents a client certificate Pound adds the following headers to the request it issues to the server:
X-SSL-Subject
Details about the certificate owner.
X-SSL-Issuer
Details about the certificate issuer (Certificate Authority).
X-SSL-notBefore
Starting date of certificate validity.
X-SSL-notAfter
Ending date of certificate validity.
X-SSL-serial
Certificate serial number (decimal).
X-SSL-cipher
The cipher currently in use.
X-SSL-certificate
The full client certificate (PEM-format multi-line)

It is the application's responsibility to actually use these headers - Pound just passes this information without checking it in any way (except for signature and encryption correctness).

SECURITY

In general, Pound does not read or write to the hard-disk. The exceptions are reading the configuration file and (possibly) the server certificate file(s) and error message(s), which are opened read-only on startup, read, and closed, and the pid file which is opened on start-up, written to and immediately closed. Following this there is no disk access whatsoever, so using a RootJail directive is only for extra security bonus points.

Pound tries to sanitise all HTTP/HTTPS requests: the request itself, the headers and the contents are checked for conformance to the RFC's and only valid requests are passed to the back-end servers. This is not absolutely fool-proof - as the recent Apache problem with chunked transfers demonstrated. However, given the current standards, this is the best that can be done - HTTP is an inherently weak protocol.

ADDITIONAL NOTES

Pound uses the system log for messages (default facility LOG_DAEMON). The format is very similar to other web servers, so that if you want to use a log tool:

    fgrep pound /var/log/messages | your_log_tool

Translating HTTPS to HTTP is an iffy proposition: no client information is passed to the server itself (certificates, etc) and the backend server may be misled if it uses absolute URLs. A patch for Zope is included in the distribution to address this issue - for other Web servers you are on your own. May the source be with you.

Pound deals with (and sanitizes) HTTP/1.1 requests. Thus even if you have an HTTP/1.0 server, a single connection to an HTTP/1.1 client is kept, while the connection to the back-end server is re-opened as necessary.

Pound attempts to resolve the names of the hosts that appear in various requests and/or responses. That means it need a functioning resolver of some kind (be it /etc/hosts, DNS or something else).

EXAMPLES

To translate HTTPS requests to a local HTTP server (assuming your network address is 123.123.123.123):
ListenHTTPS

    Address 1.2.3.4

    Port    443

    Cert    "/etc/pound/server.pem"



    Service

        BackEnd

            Address 127.0.0.1

            Port    80

        End

    End
End

To distribute the HTTP/HTTPS requests to three Web servers, where the third one is a newer and faster machine:

ListenHTTP

    Address 123.123.123.123

    Port    80
End
ListenHTTPS

    Address 1.2.3.4

    Port    443

    Cert    "/etc/pound/server.pem"
End


Service

    BackEnd

        Address 192.168.0.10

        Port    80

    End

    BackEnd

        Address 192.168.0.11

        Port    80

    End

    BackEnd

        Address 192.168.0.12

        Port    80

        Priority 3

    End
End

To separate between image requests and other Web content and send all requests for a specific URL to a secure server:

ListenHTTP

    Address 123.123.123.123

    Port    80
End


# Images server(s)
Service

    URL ".*.(jpg|gif)"

    BackEnd

        Address 192.168.0.12

        Port    80

    End
End


# redirect all requests for /forbidden
Service

    Url         "/forbidden.*"

    Redirect    "https://xyzzy.com"
End


# Catch-all server(s)
Service

    BackEnd

        Address 192.168.0.10

        Port    80

    End

    BackEnd

        Address 192.168.0.11

        Port    80

    End

    Session

        Type    BASIC

        TTL     300

    End
End

Here is a more complex example: assume your static images (GIF/JPEG) are to be served from a single back-end 192.168.0.10. In addition, 192.168.0.11 is to do the hosting for www.myserver.com with URL-based sessions, and 192.168.0.20 (a 1GHz PIII) and 192.168.0.21 (800Mhz Duron) are for all other requests (cookie-based sessions). The logging will be done by the back-end servers. The configuration file may look like this:

User "nobody"
Group "nogroup"
RootJail "/var/pound/jail"
Alive 60
LogLevel 0


# Main listening ports
ListenHTTP

    Address 1.2.3.4

    Port    80

    Client  10
End
ListenHTTPS

    Address 1.2.3.4

    Port    443

    Cert    "/etc/pound/pound.pem"

    Client  20
End


# Image server
Service

    URL ".*.(jpg|gif)"

    BackEnd

        Address 192.168.0.10

        Port    80

    End
End


# Virtual host www.myserver.com
Service

    URL         ".*sessid=.*"

    HeadRequire "Host:.*www.myserver.com.*"

    BackEnd

        Address 192.168.0.11

        Port    80

    End

    Session

        Type    URL

        ID      "sessid"

        TTL     120

    End
End


# Everybody else
Service

    BackEnd

        Address 192.168.0.20

        Port    80

        Priority 5

    End

    BackEnd

        Address 192.168.0.21

        Port    80

        Priority 4

    End

    Session

        Type    COOKIE

        ID      "userid"

        TTL     180

    End
End

FILES

/var/run/pound.nnn
this is where Pound will attempt to record its process id.
/usr/local/etc/pound.cfg
the default configuration file (the location may be changed when compiling - see the F_CONF flag in the Makefile).
/usr/local/etc/pound/cert.pem
the certificate file(s) for HTTPS. The location must be defined in the configuration file - this is only a suggestion. The file must contain a PEM-encoded certificate, optionally a certificate chain from a known Certificate Authority to your server certificate and a PEM-encoded private key (not password protected). See OpenSSL(1) for details. This file should be well protected, lest someone gets your server private key.

AUTHOR

Written by Robert Segall, Apsis GmbH.

REPORTING BUGS

Report bugs to <roseg@apsis.ch>. Copyright © 2002-2010 Apsis GmbH.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.