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Request Rewriting

Path Rewriting

HTTPProxy supports rewriting the HTTP request URL path prior to delivering the request to the backend service. Rewriting is performed after a routing decision has been made, and never changes the request destination.

The pathRewritePolicy field specifies how the path prefix should be rewritten. The replacePrefix rewrite policy specifies a replacement string for a HTTP request path prefix match. When this field is present, the path prefix that the request matched is replaced by the text specified in the replacement field. If the HTTP request path is longer than the matched prefix, the remainder of the path is unchanged.

apiVersion: projectcontour.io/v1
kind: HTTPProxy
metadata:
  name: rewrite-example
  namespace: default
spec:
  virtualhost:
    fqdn: rewrite.bar.com
  routes:
  - services:
    - name: s1
      port: 80
    pathRewritePolicy:
      replacePrefix:
      - replacement: /new/prefix

The replacePrefix field accepts an array of possible replacements. When more than one replacePrefix array element is present, the prefix field can be used to disambiguate which replacement to apply.

If no prefix field is present, the replacement is applied to all prefix matches made against the route. If a prefix field is present, the replacement is applied only to routes that have an exactly matching prefix condition. Specifying more than one replacePrefix entry is mainly useful when a HTTPProxy document is included into multiple parent documents.

apiVersion: projectcontour.io/v1
kind: HTTPProxy
metadata:
  name: rewrite-example
  namespace: default
spec:
  virtualhost:
    fqdn: rewrite.bar.com
  routes:
  - services:
    - name: s1
      port: 80
    conditions:
    - prefix: /v1/api
    pathRewritePolicy:
      replacePrefix:
      - prefix: /v1/api
        replacement: /app/api/v1
      - prefix: /
        replacement: /app

Header Rewriting

HTTPProxy supports rewriting HTTP request and response headers. The Set operation sets a HTTP header value, creating it if it doesn’t already exist or overwriting it if it does. The Remove operation removes a HTTP header. The requestHeadersPolicy field is used to rewrite headers on a HTTP request, and the responseHeadersPolicy is used to rewrite headers on a HTTP response. These fields can be specified on a route or on a specific service, depending on the rewrite granularity you need.

apiVersion: projectcontour.io/v1
kind: HTTPProxy
metadata:
  name: header-rewrite-example
spec:
  virtualhost:
    fqdn: header.bar.com
  routes:
  - services:
    - name: s1
      port: 80
    requestHeadersPolicy:
      set:
      - name: Host
        value: external.dev
      remove:
      - Some-Header
      - Some-Other-Header

Manipulating headers is also supported per-Service or per-Route. Headers can be set or removed from the request or response as follows:

per-Service:

apiVersion: projectcontour.io/v1
kind: HTTPProxy
metadata:
  name: header-manipulation
  namespace: default
spec:
  virtualhost:
    fqdn: headers.bar.com
  routes:
   - services:
     - name: s1
       port: 80
       requestHeadersPolicy:
         set:
         - name: X-Foo
           value: bar
         remove:
         - X-Baz
       responseHeadersPolicy:
         set:
         - name: X-Service-Name
           value: s1
         remove:
         - X-Internal-Secret

per-Route:

apiVersion: projectcontour.io/v1
kind: HTTPProxy
metadata:
  name: header-manipulation
  namespace: default
spec:
  virtualhost:
    fqdn: headers.bar.com
  routes:
  - services:
    - name: s1
      port: 80
    requestHeadersPolicy:
      set:
      - name: X-Foo
        value: bar
      remove:
      - X-Baz
    responseHeadersPolicy:
      set:
      - name: X-Service-Name
        value: s1
      remove:
      - X-Internal-Secret

In these examples we are setting the header X-Foo with value baz on requests and stripping X-Baz. We are then setting X-Service-Name on the response with value s1, and removing X-Internal-Secret.

Dynamic Header Values

It is sometimes useful to set a header value using a dynamic value such as the hostname where the Envoy Pod is running (%HOSTNAME%) or the subject of the TLS client certificate (%DOWNSTREAM_PEER_SUBJECT%) or based on another header (%REQ(header)%).

Examples:

    requestHeadersPolicy:
      set:
      - name: X-Envoy-Hostname
        value: "%HOSTNAME%"
      - name: X-Host-Protocol
        value: "%REQ(Host)% - %PROTOCOL%"
    responseHeadersPolicy:
      set:
      - name: X-Envoy-Response-Flags
        value: "%RESPONSE_FLAGS%"

Contour supports most of the custom request/response header variables offered by Envoy - see the Envoy documentation for details of what each of these resolve to:

  • %DOWNSTREAM_REMOTE_ADDRESS%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_REMOTE_ADDRESS_WITHOUT_PORT%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_LOCAL_ADDRESS%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_LOCAL_ADDRESS_WITHOUT_PORT%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_LOCAL_PORT%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_LOCAL_URI_SAN%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_PEER_URI_SAN%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_LOCAL_SUBJECT%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_PEER_SUBJECT%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_PEER_ISSUER%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_TLS_SESSION_ID%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_TLS_CIPHER%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_TLS_VERSION%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_PEER_FINGERPRINT_256%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_PEER_FINGERPRINT_1%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_PEER_SERIAL%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_PEER_CERT%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_PEER_CERT_V_START%
  • %DOWNSTREAM_PEER_CERT_V_END%
  • %HOSTNAME%
  • %REQ(header-name)%
  • %PROTOCOL%
  • %RESPONSE_FLAGS%
  • %RESPONSE_CODE_DETAILS%
  • %UPSTREAM_REMOTE_ADDRESS%

Note that Envoy passes variables that can’t be expanded through unchanged or skips them entirely - for example:

  • %UPSTREAM_REMOTE_ADDRESS% as a request header remains as %UPSTREAM_REMOTE_ADDRESS% because as noted in the Envoy docs: “The upstream remote address cannot be added to request headers as the upstream host has not been selected when custom request headers are generated.”
  • %DOWNSTREAM_TLS_VERSION% is skipped if TLS is not in use
  • Envoy ignores REQ headers that refer to an non-existent header - for example %REQ(Host)% works as expected but %REQ(Missing-Header)% is skipped

Contour already sets the X-Request-Start request header to t=%START_TIME(%s.%3f)% which is the Unix epoch time when the request started.

To enable setting header values based on the destination service Contour also supports:

  • %CONTOUR_NAMESPACE%
  • %CONTOUR_SERVICE_NAME%
  • %CONTOUR_SERVICE_PORT%

For example, with the following HTTPProxy object that has a per-Service requestHeadersPolicy using these variables:

# httpproxy.yaml
apiVersion: projectcontour.io/v1
kind: HTTPProxy
metadata:
  name: basic
  namespace: myns
spec:
  virtualhost:
    fqdn: foo-basic.bar.com
  routes:
    - conditions:
      - prefix: /
      services:
        - name: s1
          port: 80
          requestHeadersPolicy:
            set:
            - name: l5d-dst-override
              value: "%CONTOUR_SERVICE_NAME%.%CONTOUR_NAMESPACE%.svc.cluster.local:%CONTOUR_SERVICE_PORT%"

the values would be:

  • CONTOUR_NAMESPACE: "myns"
  • CONTOUR_SERVICE_NAME: "s1"
  • CONTOUR_SERVICE_PORT: "80"

and the l5-dst-override header would be set to s1.myns.svc.cluster.local:80.

For per-Route requestHeadersPolicy only %CONTOUR_NAMESPACE% is set and using %CONTOUR_SERVICE_NAME% and %CONTOUR_SERVICE_PORT% will end up as the literal values %%CONTOUR_SERVICE_NAME%% and %%CONTOUR_SERVICE_PORT%%, respectively.

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