I'm brand new to haproxy, having just implemented it this week. So far,
it's been great.
We are using it in front of a series of Apache web servers using mod_php.
I've seen some notes around that indicate you can (or should) disable
KeepAlive on your Apache servers and use option
something like :
block if is_stats !is_owner
or better: (latest haproxy 1.5):
http-request deny if is_stats !is_owner
Baptiste
On Wed, Mar 13, 2013 at 9:22 PM, Jay Christopherson
jc.listm...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm playing with filter access to a specific URI by IP, like listed
below.
What
I have a use case where I need to setup an acl to simply check for the
existence of a cookie by name. I don't really care what's in it. I was
thinking to use hdr_sub for this, but part of the syntax seems to be a
string to look for. In my case, I either don't care what the string is
or it might
Never mind, seems like hdr_cnt will probably be the best solution here.
On Tue, May 21, 2013 at 2:22 PM, Jay Christopherson
jc.listm...@gmail.comwrote:
I have a use case where I need to setup an acl to simply check for the
existence of a cookie by name. I don't really care what's in it. I
Is there a way to log specific acl's? I have some ACL's that I'm using to
filter specific traffic - something like this:
acl forbidden something something
acl forbidden something_else something_else
acl forbidden this that
acl forbidden and_the other
block if forbidden
On the whole, it seems to
It appears that HAproxy is not honoring q-values in the Accept-Encoding
header, when requesting compression.
When I run a curl command with Accept-Encoding:gzip (no q-value), I get
back an expected response:
#curl -svo /dev/null
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