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authorBob Beck <beck@cvs.openbsd.org>1998-10-01 17:20:20 +0000
committerBob Beck <beck@cvs.openbsd.org>1998-10-01 17:20:20 +0000
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+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2 Final//EN">
+<HTML><HEAD>
+<TITLE>An In-Depth Discussion of VirtualHost Matching</TITLE>
+</HEAD>
+
+<!-- Background white, links blue (unvisited), navy (visited), red (active) -->
+<BODY
+ BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF"
+ TEXT="#000000"
+ LINK="#0000FF"
+ VLINK="#000080"
+ ALINK="#FF0000"
+>
+<DIV ALIGN="CENTER">
+ <IMG SRC="../images/sub.gif" ALT="[APACHE DOCUMENTATION]">
+ <H3>
+ Apache HTTP Server Version 1.3
+ </H3>
+</DIV>
+
+<H1 ALIGN="CENTER">An In-Depth Discussion of VirtualHost Matching</H1>
+
+<P>This is a very rough document that was probably out of date the moment
+it was written. It attempts to explain exactly what the code does when
+deciding what virtual host to serve a hit from. It's provided on the
+assumption that something is better than nothing. The server version
+under discussion is Apache 1.2.
+
+<P>If you just want to &quot;make it work&quot; without understanding
+how, there's a <A HREF="#whatworks">What Works</A> section at the bottom.
+
+<H3>Config File Parsing</H3>
+
+<P>There is a main_server which consists of all the definitions appearing
+outside of <CODE>VirtualHost</CODE> sections. There are virtual servers,
+called <EM>vhosts</EM>, which are defined by
+<A
+ HREF="../mod/core.html#virtualhost"
+><SAMP>VirtualHost</SAMP></A>
+sections.
+
+<P>The directives
+<A
+ HREF="../mod/core.html#port"
+><SAMP>Port</SAMP></A>,
+<A
+ HREF="../mod/core.html#servername"
+><SAMP>ServerName</SAMP></A>,
+<A
+ HREF="../mod/core.html#serverpath"
+><SAMP>ServerPath</SAMP></A>,
+and
+<A
+ HREF="../mod/core.html#serveralias"
+><SAMP>ServerAlias</SAMP></A>
+can appear anywhere within the definition of
+a server. However, each appearance overrides the previous appearance
+(within that server).
+
+<P>The default value of the <CODE>Port</CODE> field for main_server
+is 80. The main_server has no default <CODE>ServerName</CODE>,
+<CODE>ServerPath</CODE>, or <CODE>ServerAlias</CODE>.
+
+<P>In the absence of any
+<A
+ HREF="../mod/core.html#listen"
+><SAMP>Listen</SAMP></A>
+directives, the (final if there
+are multiple) <CODE>Port</CODE> directive in the main_server indicates
+which port httpd will listen on.
+
+<P> The <CODE>Port</CODE> and <CODE>ServerName</CODE> directives for
+any server main or virtual are used when generating URLs such as during
+redirects.
+
+<P> Each address appearing in the <CODE>VirtualHost</CODE> directive
+can have an optional port. If the port is unspecified it defaults to
+the value of the main_server's most recent <CODE>Port</CODE> statement.
+The special port <SAMP>*</SAMP> indicates a wildcard that matches any port.
+Collectively the entire set of addresses (including multiple
+<SAMP>A</SAMP> record
+results from DNS lookups) are called the vhost's <EM>address set</EM>.
+
+<P> The magic <CODE>_default_</CODE> address has significance during
+the matching algorithm. It essentially matches any unspecified address.
+
+<P> After parsing the <CODE>VirtualHost</CODE> directive, the vhost server
+is given a default <CODE>Port</CODE> equal to the port assigned to the
+first name in its <CODE>VirtualHost</CODE> directive. The complete
+list of names in the <CODE>VirtualHost</CODE> directive are treated
+just like a <CODE>ServerAlias</CODE> (but are not overridden by any
+<CODE>ServerAlias</CODE> statement). Note that subsequent <CODE>Port</CODE>
+statements for this vhost will not affect the ports assigned in the
+address set.
+
+<P>
+All vhosts are stored in a list which is in the reverse order that
+they appeared in the config file. For example, if the config file is:
+
+<BLOCKQUOTE><PRE>
+ &lt;VirtualHost A&gt;
+ ...
+ &lt;/VirtualHost&gt;
+
+ &lt;VirtualHost B&gt;
+ ...
+ &lt;/VirtualHost&gt;
+
+ &lt;VirtualHost C&gt;
+ ...
+ &lt;/VirtualHost&gt;
+</PRE></BLOCKQUOTE>
+
+Then the list will be ordered: main_server, C, B, A. Keep this in mind.
+
+<P>
+After parsing has completed, the list of servers is scanned, and various
+merges and default values are set. In particular:
+
+<OL>
+<LI>If a vhost has no
+ <A
+ HREF="../mod/core.html#serveradmin"
+ ><CODE>ServerAdmin</CODE></A>,
+ <A
+ HREF="../mod/core.html#resourceconfig"
+ ><CODE>ResourceConfig</CODE></A>,
+ <A
+ HREF="../mod/core.html#accessconfig"
+ ><CODE>AccessConfig</CODE></A>,
+ <A
+ HREF="../mod/core.html#timeout"
+ ><CODE>Timeout</CODE></A>,
+ <A
+ HREF="../mod/core.html#keepalivetimeout"
+ ><CODE>KeepAliveTimeout</CODE></A>,
+ <A
+ HREF="../mod/core.html#keepalive"
+ ><CODE>KeepAlive</CODE></A>,
+ <A
+ HREF="../mod/core.html#maxkeepaliverequests"
+ ><CODE>MaxKeepAliveRequests</CODE></A>,
+ or
+ <A
+ HREF="../mod/core.html#sendbuffersize"
+ ><CODE>SendBufferSize</CODE></A>
+ directive then the respective value is
+ inherited from the main_server. (That is, inherited from whatever
+ the final setting of that value is in the main_server.)
+
+<LI>The &quot;lookup defaults&quot; that define the default directory
+ permissions
+ for a vhost are merged with those of the main server. This includes
+ any per-directory configuration information for any module.
+
+<LI>The per-server configs for each module from the main_server are
+ merged into the vhost server.
+</OL>
+
+Essentially, the main_server is treated as &quot;defaults&quot; or a
+&quot;base&quot; on
+which to build each vhost. But the positioning of these main_server
+definitions in the config file is largely irrelevant -- the entire
+config of the main_server has been parsed when this final merging occurs.
+So even if a main_server definition appears after a vhost definition
+it might affect the vhost definition.
+
+<P> If the main_server has no <CODE>ServerName</CODE> at this point,
+then the hostname of the machine that httpd is running on is used
+instead. We will call the <EM>main_server address set</EM> those IP
+addresses returned by a DNS lookup on the <CODE>ServerName</CODE> of
+the main_server.
+
+<P> Now a pass is made through the vhosts to fill in any missing
+<CODE>ServerName</CODE> fields and to classify the vhost as either
+an <EM>IP-based</EM> vhost or a <EM>name-based</EM> vhost. A vhost is
+considered a name-based vhost if any of its address set overlaps the
+main_server (the port associated with each address must match the
+main_server's <CODE>Port</CODE>). Otherwise it is considered an IP-based
+vhost.
+
+<P> For any undefined <CODE>ServerName</CODE> fields, a name-based vhost
+defaults to the address given first in the <CODE>VirtualHost</CODE>
+statement defining the vhost. Any vhost that includes the magic
+<SAMP>_default_</SAMP> wildcard is given the same <CODE>ServerName</CODE> as
+the main_server. Otherwise the vhost (which is necessarily an IP-based
+vhost) is given a <CODE>ServerName</CODE> based on the result of a reverse
+DNS lookup on the first address given in the <CODE>VirtualHost</CODE>
+statement.
+
+<P>
+
+<H3>Vhost Matching</H3>
+
+
+<P><STRONG>Apache 1.3 differs from what is documented
+here, and documentation still has to be written.</STRONG>
+
+<P>
+The server determines which vhost to use for a request as follows:
+
+<P> <CODE>find_virtual_server</CODE>: When the connection is first made
+by the client, the local IP address (the IP address to which the client
+connected) is looked up in the server list. A vhost is matched if it
+is an IP-based vhost, the IP address matches and the port matches
+(taking into account wildcards).
+
+<P> If no vhosts are matched then the last occurrence, if it appears,
+of a <SAMP>_default_</SAMP> address (which if you recall the ordering of the
+server list mentioned above means that this would be the first occurrence
+of <SAMP>_default_</SAMP> in the config file) is matched.
+
+<P> In any event, if nothing above has matched, then the main_server is
+matched.
+
+<P> The vhost resulting from the above search is stored with data
+about the connection. We'll call this the <EM>connection vhost</EM>.
+The connection vhost is constant over all requests in a particular TCP/IP
+session -- that is, over all requests in a KeepAlive/persistent session.
+
+<P> For each request made on the connection the following sequence of
+events further determines the actual vhost that will be used to serve
+the request.
+
+<P> <CODE>check_fulluri</CODE>: If the requestURI is an absoluteURI, that
+is it includes <CODE>http://hostname/</CODE>, then an attempt is made to
+determine if the hostname's address (and optional port) match that of
+the connection vhost. If it does then the hostname portion of the URI
+is saved as the <EM>request_hostname</EM>. If it does not match, then the
+URI remains untouched. <STRONG>Note</STRONG>: to achieve this address
+comparison,
+the hostname supplied goes through a DNS lookup unless it matches the
+<CODE>ServerName</CODE> or the local IP address of the client's socket.
+
+<P> <CODE>parse_uri</CODE>: If the URI begins with a protocol
+(<EM>i.e.</EM>, <CODE>http:</CODE>, <CODE>ftp:</CODE>) then the request is
+considered a proxy request. Note that even though we may have stripped
+an <CODE>http://hostname/</CODE> in the previous step, this could still
+be a proxy request.
+
+<P> <CODE>read_request</CODE>: If the request does not have a hostname
+from the earlier step, then any <CODE>Host:</CODE> header sent by the
+client is used as the request hostname.
+
+<P> <CODE>check_hostalias</CODE>: If the request now has a hostname,
+then an attempt is made to match for this hostname. The first step
+of this match is to compare any port, if one was given in the request,
+against the <CODE>Port</CODE> field of the connection vhost. If there's
+a mismatch then the vhost used for the request is the connection vhost.
+(This is a bug, see observations.)
+
+<P>
+If the port matches, then httpd scans the list of vhosts starting with
+the next server <STRONG>after</STRONG> the connection vhost. This scan does not
+stop if there are any matches, it goes through all possible vhosts,
+and in the end uses the last match it found. The comparisons performed
+are as follows:
+
+<UL>
+<LI>Compare the request hostname:port with the vhost
+ <CODE>ServerName</CODE> and <CODE>Port</CODE>.
+
+<LI>Compare the request hostname against any and all addresses given in
+ the <CODE>VirtualHost</CODE> directive for this vhost.
+
+<LI>Compare the request hostname against the <CODE>ServerAlias</CODE>
+ given for the vhost.
+</UL>
+
+<P>
+<CODE>check_serverpath</CODE>: If the request has no hostname
+(back up a few paragraphs) then a scan similar to the one
+in <CODE>check_hostalias</CODE> is performed to match any
+<CODE>ServerPath</CODE> directives given in the vhosts. Note that the
+<STRONG>last match</STRONG> is used regardless (again consider the ordering of
+the virtual hosts).
+
+<H3>Observations</H3>
+
+<UL>
+
+<LI>It is difficult to define an IP-based vhost for the machine's
+ &quot;main IP address&quot;. You essentially have to create a bogus
+ <CODE>ServerName</CODE> for the main_server that does not match the
+ machine's IPs.
+ <P>
+
+<LI>During the scans in both <CODE>check_hostalias</CODE> and
+ <CODE>check_serverpath</CODE> no check is made that the vhost being
+ scanned is actually a name-based vhost. This means, for example, that
+ it's possible to match an IP-based vhost through another address. But
+ because the scan starts in the vhost list at the first vhost that
+ matched the local IP address of the connection, not all IP-based vhosts
+ can be matched.
+ <P>
+ Consider the config file above with three vhosts A, B, C. Suppose
+ that B is a named-based vhost, and A and C are IP-based vhosts. If
+ a request comes in on B or C's address containing a header
+ &quot;<SAMP>Host: A</SAMP>&quot; then
+ it will be served from A's config. If a request comes in on A's
+ address then it will always be served from A's config regardless of
+ any Host: header.
+ </P>
+
+<LI>Unless you have a <SAMP>_default_</SAMP> vhost,
+ it doesn't matter if you mix name-based vhosts in amongst IP-based
+ vhosts. During the <CODE>find_virtual_server</CODE> phase above no
+ named-based vhost will be matched, so the main_server will remain the
+ connection vhost. Then scans will cover all vhosts in the vhost list.
+ <P>
+ If you do have a <SAMP>_default_</SAMP> vhost, then you cannot place
+ named-based vhosts after it in the config. This is because on any
+ connection to the main server IPs the connection vhost will always be
+ the <SAMP>_default_</SAMP> vhost since none of the name-based are
+ considered during <CODE>find_virtual_server</CODE>.
+ </P>
+
+<LI>You should never specify DNS names in <CODE>VirtualHost</CODE>
+ directives because it will force your server to rely on DNS to boot.
+ Furthermore it poses a security threat if you do not control the
+ DNS for all the domains listed.
+ <A HREF="dns-caveats.html">There's more information
+ available on this and the next two topics</A>.
+ <P>
+
+<LI><CODE>ServerName</CODE> should always be set for each vhost. Otherwise
+ A DNS lookup is required for each vhost.
+ <P>
+
+<LI>A DNS lookup is always required for the main_server's
+ <CODE>ServerName</CODE> (or to generate that if it isn't specified
+ in the config).
+ <P>
+
+<LI>If a <CODE>ServerPath</CODE> directive exists which is a prefix of
+ another <CODE>ServerPath</CODE> directive that appears later in
+ the configuration file, then the former will always be matched
+ and the latter will never be matched. (That is assuming that no
+ Host header was available to disambiguate the two.)
+ <P>
+
+<LI>If a vhost that would otherwise be a name-vhost includes a
+ <CODE>Port</CODE> statement that doesn't match the main_server
+ <CODE>Port</CODE> then it will be considered an IP-based vhost.
+ Then <CODE>find_virtual_server</CODE> will match it (because
+ the ports associated with each address in the address set default
+ to the port of the main_server) as the connection vhost. Then
+ <CODE>check_hostalias</CODE> will refuse to check any other name-based
+ vhost because of the port mismatch. The result is that the vhost
+ will steal all hits going to the main_server address.
+ <P>
+
+<LI>If two IP-based vhosts have an address in common, the vhost appearing
+ later in the file is always matched. Such a thing might happen
+ inadvertently. If the config has name-based vhosts and for some reason
+ the main_server <CODE>ServerName</CODE> resolves to the wrong address
+ then all the name-based vhosts will be parsed as ip-based vhosts.
+ Then the last of them will steal all the hits.
+ <P>
+
+<LI>The last name-based vhost in the config is always matched for any hit
+ which doesn't match one of the other name-based vhosts.
+
+</UL>
+
+<H3><A NAME="whatworks">What Works</A></H3>
+
+<P>In addition to the tips on the <A HREF="dns-caveats.html#tips">DNS
+Issues</A> page, here are some further tips:
+
+<UL>
+
+<LI>Place all main_server definitions before any VirtualHost definitions.
+(This is to aid the readability of the configuration -- the post-config
+merging process makes it non-obvious that definitions mixed in around
+virtualhosts might affect all virtualhosts.)
+<P>
+
+<LI>Arrange your VirtualHosts such
+that all name-based virtual hosts come first, followed by IP-based
+virtual hosts, followed by any <SAMP>_default_</SAMP> virtual host
+<P>
+
+<LI>Avoid <CODE>ServerPaths</CODE> which are prefixes of other
+<CODE>ServerPaths</CODE>. If you cannot avoid this then you have to
+ensure that the longer (more specific) prefix vhost appears earlier in
+the configuration file than the shorter (less specific) prefix
+(<EM>i.e.</EM>, &quot;ServerPath /abc&quot; should appear after
+&quot;ServerPath /abcdef&quot;).
+<P>
+
+<LI>Do not use <EM>port-based</EM> vhosts in the same server as
+name-based vhosts. A loose definition for port-based is a vhost which
+is determined by the port on the server (<EM>i.e.</EM>, one server with
+ports 8000, 8080, and 80 - all of which have different configurations).
+<P>
+
+</UL>
+
+<HR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="CENTER">
+ Apache HTTP Server Version 1.3
+</H3>
+
+<A HREF="./"><IMG SRC="../images/index.gif" ALT="Index"></A>
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+
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