FastCGI#
The module allows passing requests to a FastCGI server.
Configuration Example#
location / {
fastcgi_pass localhost:9000;
fastcgi_index index.php;
fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME /home/www/scripts/php$fastcgi_script_name;
fastcgi_param QUERY_STRING $query_string;
fastcgi_param REQUEST_METHOD $request_method;
fastcgi_param CONTENT_TYPE $content_type;
fastcgi_param CONTENT_LENGTH $content_length;
}
Directives#
fastcgi_bind#
Makes outgoing connections to a FastCGI server originate from the specified local IP address with an optional port. Parameter value can contain variables. The special value off
cancels the effect of the fastcgi_bind directive inherited from the previous configuration level, which allows the system to auto-assign the local IP address and port.
The transparent
parameter allows outgoing connections to a FastCGI server originate from a non-local IP address, for example, from a real IP address of a client:
fastcgi_bind $remote_addr transparent;
For this parameter to work,
Angie worker processes usually need to run
with superuser privileges.
On Linux, this is not required:
if the transparent
parameter is specified,
worker processes inherit the CAP_NET_RAW capability from the master process.
Important
The kernel routing table should also be configured to intercept network traffic from the FastCGI server.
fastcgi_buffer_size#
Sets the size of the buffer used for reading the first part of the response received from the FastCGI server. This part usually contains a small response header. By default, the buffer size is equal to one memory page. This is either 4K or 8K, depending on a platform. It can be made smaller, however.
fastcgi_buffering#
Enables or disables buffering of responses from the FastCGI server.
|
Angie receives a response from the FastCGI server as soon as possible, saving it into the buffers set by the fastcgi_buffer_size and fastcgi_buffers directives. If the whole response does not fit into memory, a part of it can be saved to a temporary file on the disk. Writing to temporary files is controlled by the fastcgi_max_temp_file_size and fastcgi_temp_file_write_size directives. |
|
the response is passed to a client synchronously, immediately as it is received. Angie will not try to read the whole response from the FastCGI server. The maximum size of the data that Angie can receive from the server at a time is set by the fastcgi_buffer_size directive. |
Buffering can also be enabled or disabled by passing "yes" or "no" in the "X-Accel-Buffering" response header field. This capability can be disabled using the fastcgi_ignore_headers directive.
fastcgi_buffers#
Sets the number and size of the buffers used for reading a response from the FastCGI server, for a single connection.
By default, the buffer size is equal to one memory page. This is either 4K or 8K, depending on a platform.
fastcgi_busy_buffers_size#
|
|
Default |
|
http, server, location |
When buffering of responses from the FastCGI server is enabled, limits the total size of buffers that can be busy sending a response to the client while the response is not yet fully read. In the meantime, the rest of the buffers can be used for reading the response and, if needed, buffering part of the response to a temporary file. By default, size is limited by the size of two buffers set by the fastcgi_buffer_size and fastcgi_buffers directives.
fastcgi_cache#
Defines a shared memory zone used for caching. The same zone can be used in several places. Parameter value can contain variables. The off
parameter disables caching inherited from the previous configuration level.
fastcgi_cache_background_update#
|
|
Default |
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http, server, location |
Allows starting a background subrequest to update an expired cache item, while a stale cached response is returned to the client. Note that it is necessary to allow the usage of a stale cached response when it is being updated.
fastcgi_cache_bypass#
Defines conditions under which the response will not be taken from a cache. If at least one value of the string parameters is not empty and is not equal to "0" then the response will not be taken from the cache:
fastcgi_cache_bypass $cookie_nocache $arg_nocache$arg_comment;
fastcgi_cache_bypass $http_pragma $http_authorization;
Can be used along with the fastcgi_no_cache directive.
fastcgi_cache_key#
Defines a key for caching, for example
fastcgi_cache_key localhost:9000$request_uri;
fastcgi_cache_lock#
When enabled, only one request at a time will be allowed to populate a new cache element identified according to the fastcgi_cache_key directive by passing a request to a FastCGI server. Other requests of the same cache element will either wait for a response to appear in the cache or the cache lock for this element to be released, up to the time set by the fastcgi_cache_lock_timeout directive.
fastcgi_cache_lock_age#
|
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Default |
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http, server, location |
If the last request sent to the FastCGI server to fill a new cache entry has not completed in the specified time, another request may be sent to the FastCGI server.
fastcgi_cache_lock_timeout#
|
|
Default |
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http, server, location |
Sets a timeout for fastcgi_cache_lock. When the time expires, the request will be passed to the FastCGI server, however, the response will not be cached.
fastcgi_cache_max_range_offset#
Sets an offset in bytes for byte-range requests. If the range is beyond the offset, the range request will be passed to the FastCGI server and the response will not be cached.
fastcgi_cache_methods#
|
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Default |
|
http, server, location |
If the client request method is listed in this directive then the response will be cached. "GET" and "HEAD" methods are always added to the list, though it is recommended to specify them explicitly. See also the fastcgi_no_cache directive.
fastcgi_cache_min_uses#
|
|
Default |
|
http, server, location |
Sets the number of requests after which the response will be cached.
fastcgi_cache_path#
|
|
Default |
— |
http, server, location |
Sets the path and other parameters of a cache. Cache data are stored in files. Both the key and file name in a cache are a result of applying the MD5 function to the proxied URL.
The levels
parameter defines hierarchy levels of a cache: from 1 to 3, each level accepts values 1 or 2. For example, in the following configuration
fastcgi_cache_path /data/angie/cache levels=1:2 keys_zone=one:10m;
file names in a cache will look like this:
/data/angie/cache/c/29/b7f54b2df7773722d382f4809d65029c
A cached response is first written to a temporary file, and then the file is renamed. Temporary files and the cache can be put on different file systems. However, be aware that in this case a file is copied across two file systems instead of the cheap renaming operation. It is thus recommended that for any given location both cache and a directory holding temporary files are put on the same file system.
A directory for temporary files is set based on the use_temp_path
parameter.
|
If this parameter is omitted or set to the value "on", the directory set by the fastcgi_temp_path directive for the given location will be used. |
|
temporary files will be put directly in the cache directory. |
In addition, all active keys and information about data are stored in a shared memory zone, whose name and size are configured by the keys_zone
parameter. One megabyte zone can store about 8 thousand keys.
Cached data that are not accessed during the time specified by the inactive
parameter get removed from the cache regardless of their freshness.
By default, inactive is set to 10 minutes.
A special cache manager process monitors the maximum cache size, and the minimum amount of free space on the file system with cache. When the size is exceeded or there is not enough free space, it removes the least recently used data. The data is removed in iterations.
|
maximum cache size |
|
minimum amount of free space on the file system with cache |
|
limits the number of items to be deleted during one iteration By default, |
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limits the duration of one iteration By default, |
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configures a pause between interactions By default, |
A minute after Angie starts, the special cache loader process is activated. It loads information about previously cached data stored on file system into a cache zone. The loading is also done in iterations.
|
limits the number of items to load during one iteration By default, |
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limits the duration of one iteration By default, |
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configures a pause between interactions By default, |
fastcgi_cache_revalidate#
|
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Default |
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http, server, location |
Enables revalidation of expired cache items using conditional requests with the "If-Modified-Since" and "If-None-Match" header fields.
fastcgi_cache_use_stale#
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|
Default |
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http, server, location |
Determines in which cases a stale cached response can be used when an error occurs during communication with the FastCGI server. The directive's parameters match the parameters of the fastcgi_next_upstream directive.
|
permits using a stale cached response if a FastCGI server to process a request cannot be selected. |
|
additional parameter, permits using a stale cached response if it is currently being updated. This allows minimizing the number of accesses to FastCGI servers when updating cached data. |
Using a stale cached response can also be enabled directly in the response header for a specified number of seconds after the response became stale.
The stale-while-revalidate extension of the "Cache-Control" header field permits using a stale cached response if it is currently being updated.
The stale-if-error extension of the "Cache-Control" header field permits using a stale cached response in case of an error.
Note
This has lower priority than using the directive parameters.
To minimize the number of accesses to FastCGI servers when populating a new cache element, the fastcgi_cache_lock directive can be used.
fastcgi_cache_valid#
Sets caching time for different response codes. For example, the following directives
fastcgi_cache_valid 200 302 10m;
fastcgi_cache_valid 404 1m;
set 10 minutes of caching for responses with codes 200 and 302 and 1 minute for responses with code 404.
If only caching time is specified
fastcgi_cache_valid 5m;
then only 200, 301, and 302 responses are cached.
In addition, the any
parameter can be specified to cache any responses:
fastcgi_cache_valid 200 302 10m;
fastcgi_cache_valid 301 1h;
fastcgi_cache_valid any 1m;
Note
Parameters of caching can also be set directly in the response header. This has higher priority than setting of caching time using the directive.
The "X-Accel-Expires" header field sets caching time of a response in seconds. The zero value disables caching for a response. If the value starts with the @ prefix, it sets an absolute time in seconds since Epoch, up to which the response may be cached.
If the header does not include the "X-Accel-Expires" field, parameters of caching may be set in the header fields "Expires" or "Cache-Control".
If the header includes the "Set-Cookie" field, such a response will not be cached.
If the header includes the "Vary" field with the special value "*", such a response will not be cached. If the header includes the "Vary" field with another value, such a response will be cached taking into account the corresponding request header fields.
Processing of one or more of these response header fields can be disabled using the fastcgi_ignore_headers directive.
fastcgi_catch_stderr#
Sets a string to search for in the error stream of a response received from a FastCGI server. If the string is found then it is considered that the FastCGI server has returned an invalid response. This allows handling application errors in Angie, for example:
location /php/ {
fastcgi_pass backend:9000;
...
fastcgi_catch_stderr "PHP Fatal error";
fastcgi_next_upstream error timeout invalid_header;
}
fastcgi_connect_timeout#
|
|
Default |
|
http, server, location |
Defines a timeout for establishing a connection with a FastCGI server. It should be noted that this timeout cannot usually exceed 75 seconds.
fastcgi_connection_drop#
|
|
Default |
|
http, server, location |
Enables termination of all connections to the proxied server after it has been
removed from the group or marked as permanently unavailable by a reresolve process or the API command
DELETE
.
A connection is terminated when the next read or write event is processed for either the client or the proxied server.
Setting time enables a connection termination timeout;
with on
set, connections are dropped immediately.
fastcgi_force_ranges#
|
|
Default |
|
http, server, location |
Enables byte-range support for both cached and uncached responses from the FastCGI server regardless of the "Accept-Ranges" field in these responses.
fastcgi_hide_header#
By default, Angie does not pass the header fields "Status" and "X-Accel-..." from the response of a FastCGI server to a client. The fastcgi_hide_header directive sets additional fields that will not be passed. If, on the contrary, the passing of fields needs to be permitted, the fastcgi_pass_header directive can be used.
fastcgi_ignore_client_abort#
|
|
Default |
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http, server, location |
Determines whether the connection with a FastCGI server should be closed when a client closes the connection without waiting for a response.
fastcgi_ignore_headers#
Disables processing of certain response header fields from the FastCGI server. The following fields can be ignored: "X-Accel-Redirect", "X-Accel-Expires", "X-Accel-Limit-Rate", "X-Accel-Buffering", "X-Accel-Charset", "Expires", "Cache-Control", "Set-Cookie", and "Vary".
If not disabled, processing of these header fields has the following effect:
"X-Accel-Expires", "Expires", "Cache-Control", "Set-Cookie", and "Vary" set the parameters of response caching;
"X-Accel-Redirect" performs an internal redirect to the specified URI;
"X-Accel-Limit-Rate" sets the rate limit for transmission of a response to a client;
"X-Accel-Buffering" enables or disables buffering of a response;
"X-Accel-Charset" sets the desired charset of a response.
fastcgi_index#
Sets a file name that will be appended after a URI that ends with a slash, in the value of the $fastcgi_script_name variable. For example, with these settings
fastcgi_index index.php;
fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME /home/www/scripts/php$fastcgi_script_name;
and the /page.php
request, the SCRIPT_FILENAME parameter will be equal to /home/www/scripts/php/page.php
,
and with the /
request it will be equal to - /home/www/scripts/php/index.php
.
fastcgi_intercept_errors#
|
|
Default |
|
http, server, location |
Determines whether FastCGI server responses with codes greater than or equal to 300 should be passed to a client or be intercepted and redirected to Angie for processing with the error_page directive.
fastcgi_keep_conn#
By default, a FastCGI server will close a connection right after sending the response. However, when this directive is set to the value on
, Angie will instruct a FastCGI server to keep connections open. This is necessary, in particular, for keepalive connections to FastCGI servers to function.
fastcgi_limit_rate#
Limits the speed of reading the response from the FastCGI server. The rate is specified in bytes per second and can contain variables.
|
disables rate limiting |
Note
The limit is set per a request, and so if Angie simultaneously opens two connections to the FastCGI server, the overall rate will be twice as much as the specified limit. The limitation works only if buffering of responses from the FastCGI server is enabled.
fastcgi_max_temp_file_size#
|
|
Default |
|
http, server, location |
When buffering of responses from the FastCGI server is enabled, and the whole response does not fit into the buffers set by the fastcgi_buffer_size and fastcgi_buffers directives, a part of the response can be saved to a temporary file. This directive sets the maximum size of the temporary file. The size of data written to the temporary file at a time is set by the fastcgi_temp_file_write_size directive.
|
disables buffering of responses to temporary files |
fastcgi_next_upstream#
|
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Default |
|
http, server, location |
Specifies in which cases a request should be passed to the next server:
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an error occurred while establishing a connection with the server, passing a request to it, or reading the response header; |
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a timeout has occurred while establishing a connection with the server, passing a request to it, or reading the response header; |
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a server returned an empty or invalid response; |
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a server returned a response with the code 500; |
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a server returned a response with the code 503; |
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a server returned a response with the code 403; |
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a server returned a response with the code 404; |
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a server returned a response with the code 429; |
|
normally, requests with a non-idempotent method
( |
|
disables passing a request to the next server. |
Note
One should bear in mind that passing a request to the next server is only possible if nothing has been sent to a client yet. That is, if an error or timeout occurs in the middle of the transferring of a response, fixing this is impossible.
The directive also defines what is considered an unsuccessful attempt of communication with a server.
|
always considered unsuccessful attempts, even if they are not specified in the directive |
|
considered unsuccessful attempts only if they are specified in the directive |
|
never considered unsuccessful attempts |
Passing a request to the next server can be limited by the number of tries and by time.
fastcgi_next_upstream_timeout#
|
|
Default |
|
http, server, location |
Limits the time during which a request can be passed to the next server.
|
turns off this limitation |
fastcgi_next_upstream_tries#
|
|
Default |
|
http, server, location |
Limits the number of possible tries for passing a request to the next server.
|
turns off this limitation |
fastcgi_no_cache#
Defines conditions under which the response will not be saved to a cache. If at least one value of the string parameters is not empty and is not equal to "0" then the response will not be saved:
fastcgi_no_cache $cookie_nocache $arg_nocache$arg_comment;
fastcgi_no_cache $http_pragma $http_authorization;
Can be used along with the fastcgi_cache_bypass directive.
fastcgi_param#
Sets a parameter that should be passed to the FastCGI server. The value can contain text, variables, and their combination. These directives are inherited from the previous configuration level if and only if there are no fastcgi_param directives defined on the current level.
The following example shows the minimum required settings for PHP:
fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME /home/www/scripts/php$fastcgi_script_name;
fastcgi_param QUERY_STRING $query_string;
The SCRIPT_FILENAME parameter is used in PHP for determining the script name, and the QUERY_STRING parameter is used to pass request parameters.
For scripts that process POST requests, the following three parameters are also required:
fastcgi_param REQUEST_METHOD $request_method;
fastcgi_param CONTENT_TYPE $content_type;
fastcgi_param CONTENT_LENGTH $content_length;
If PHP was built with the --enable-force-cgi-redirect configuration parameter, the REDIRECT_STATUS parameter should also be passed with the value "200":
fastcgi_param REDIRECT_STATUS 200;
If the directive is specified with if_not_empty
then such a parameter will be passed to the server only if its value is not empty:
fastcgi_param HTTPS $https if_not_empty;
fastcgi_pass#
Sets the address of a FastCGI server. The address can be specified as a domain name or IP address, and a port:
fastcgi_pass localhost:9000;
or as a UNIX domain socket path:
fastcgi_pass unix:/tmp/fastcgi.socket;
If a domain name resolves to several addresses, all of them will be used in a round-robin fashion. In addition, an address can be specified as a server group. If a group is used, you cannot specify the port with it; instead, specify the port for each server within the group individually.
Parameter value can contain variables. In this case, if an address is specified as a domain name, the name is searched among the described server groups, and, if not found, is determined using a resolver.
fastcgi_pass_header#
Permits passing otherwise disabled header fields from a FastCGI server to a client.
fastcgi_pass_request_body#
Indicates whether the original request body is passed to the FastCGI server. See also the fastcgi_pass_request_headers directive.
fastcgi_pass_request_headers#
Indicates whether the header fields of the original request are passed to the FastCGI server. See also the fastcgi_pass_request_body directive.
fastcgi_read_timeout#
Defines a timeout for reading a response from the FastCGI server. The timeout is set only between two successive read operations, not for the transmission of the whole response. If the FastCGI server does not transmit anything within this time, the connection is closed.
fastcgi_request_buffering#
|
|
Default |
|
http, server, location |
Enables or disables buffering of a client request body.
|
the entire request body is read from the client before sending the request to a FastCGI server. |
|
the request body is sent to the FastCGI server immediately as it is received. In this case, the request cannot be passed to the next server, if Angie already started sending the request body. |
fastcgi_send_lowat#
If the directive is set to a non-zero value, Angie will try to minimize the number of send operations on outgoing connections to a FastCGI server by using either NOTE_LOWAT flag of the kqueue method, or the SO_SNDLOWAT socket option, with the specified size.
Note
This directive is ignored on Linux, Solaris, and Windows.
fastcgi_send_timeout#
Sets a timeout for transmitting a request to the FastCGI server. The timeout is set only between two successive write operations, not for the transmission of the whole request. If the FastCGI server does not receive anything within this time, the connection is closed.
fastcgi_socket_keepalive#
|
|
Default |
|
http, server, location |
Configures the "TCP keepalive" behavior for outgoing connections to a FastCGI server.
|
By default, the operating system's settings are in effect for the socket. |
|
the SO_KEEPALIVE socket option is turned on for the socket. |
fastcgi_split_path_info#
Defines a regular expression that captures a value for the $fastcgi_path_info variable. The regular expression should have two captures: the first becomes a value of the $fastcgi_script_name variable, the second becomes a value of the $fastcgi_path_info variable. For example, with these settings
location ~ ^(.+\.php)(.*)$ {
fastcgi_split_path_info ^(.+\.php)(.*)$;
fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME /path/to/php$fastcgi_script_name;
fastcgi_param PATH_INFO $fastcgi_path_info;
and the /show.php/article/0001
request, the SCRIPT_FILENAME parameter will be equal to /path/to/php/show.php
,
and the PATH_INFO parameter will be equal to /article/0001
.
fastcgi_store#
Enables saving of files to a disk.
|
saves files with paths corresponding to the directives alias or root. |
|
disables saving of files |
In addition, the file name can be set explicitly using the string with variables:
fastcgi_store /data/www$original_uri;
The modification time of files is set according to the received "Last-Modified" response header field. The response is first written to a temporary file, and then the file is renamed. Temporary files and the persistent store can be put on different file systems. However, be aware that in this case a file is copied across two file systems instead of the cheap renaming operation. It is thus recommended that for any given location both saved files and a directory holding temporary files, set by the fastcgi_temp_path directive, are put on the same file system.
This directive can be used to create local copies of static unchangeable files, e.g.:
location /images/ {
root /data/www;
error_page 404 = /fetch$uri;
}
location /fetch/ {
internal;
fastcgi_pass backend:9000;
...
fastcgi_store on;
fastcgi_store_access user:rw group:rw all:r;
fastcgi_temp_path /data/temp;
alias /data/www/;
}
fastcgi_store_access#
|
|
Default |
|
http, server, location |
Sets access permissions for newly created files and directories, e.g.:
fastcgi_store_access user:rw group:rw all:r;
If any group or all access permissions are specified then user permissions may be omitted:
fastcgi_store_access group:rw all:r;
fastcgi_temp_file_write_size#
|
|
Default |
|
http, server, location |
Limits the size of data written to a temporary file at a time, when buffering of responses from the FastCGI server to temporary files is enabled. By default, size is limited by two buffers set by the fastcgi_buffer_size and fastcgi_buffers directives. The maximum size of a temporary file is set by the fastcgi_max_temp_file_size directive.
fastcgi_temp_path#
|
|
Default |
|
http, server, location |
Defines a directory for storing temporary files with data received from FastCGI servers. Up to three-level subdirectory hierarchy can be used underneath the specified directory. For example, in the following configuration
fastcgi_temp_path /spool/angie/fastcgi_temp 1 2;
a temporary file might look like this:
/spool/angie/fastcgi_temp/7/45/00000123457
See also the use_temp_path parameter of the fastcgi_cache_path directive.
Parameters Passed to a FastCGI Server#
HTTP request header fields are passed to a FastCGI server as parameters. In applications and scripts running as FastCGI servers, these parameters are usually made available as environment variables. For example, the "User-Agent" header field is passed as the HTTP_USER_AGENT parameter. In addition to HTTP request header fields, it is possible to pass arbitrary parameters using the fastcgi_param directive.
Built-in Variables#
The http_fastcgi module supports built-in variables that can be used to set parameters using the fastcgi_param directive:
$fastcgi_script_name
#
request URI or, if a URI ends with a slash, request URI with an index file name configured by the fastcgi_index directive appended to it. This variable can be used to set the SCRIPT_FILENAME and PATH_TRANSLATED parameters that determine the script name in PHP. For example, for the /info/
request with the following directives
fastcgi_index index.php;
fastcgi_param SCRIPT_FILENAME /home/www/scripts/php$fastcgi_script_name;
the SCRIPT_FILENAME parameter will be equal to /home/www/scripts/php/info/index.php
.
When using the fastcgi_split_path_info directive, the $fastcgi_script_name variable equals the value of the first capture set by the directive.
$fastcgi_path_info
#
the value of the second capture set by the fastcgi_split_path_info directive. This variable can be used to set the PATH_INFO parameter.