Apache Module mod_filter
Description: | Context-sensitive smart filter configuration module |
---|---|
Status: | Base |
ModuleIdentifier: | filter_module |
SourceFile: | mod_filter.c |
Compatibility: | Version 2.1 and later |
Summary
This module enables smart, context-sensitive configuration of output content filters. For example, apache can be configured to process different content-types through different filters, even when the content-type is not known in advance (e.g. in a proxy).
mod_filter
works by introducing indirection into the filter chain. Instead of inserting filters in the chain, we insert a filter harness which in turn dispatches conditionally to a filter provider. Any content filter may be used as a provider to mod_filter
; no change to existing filter modules is required (although it may be possible to simplify them).
Smart Filtering
In the traditional filtering model, filters are inserted unconditionally using AddOutputFilter
and family. Each filter then needs to determine whether to run, and there is little flexibility available for server admins to allow the chain to be configured dynamically.
mod_filter
by contrast gives server administrators a great deal of flexibility in configuring the filter chain. In fact, filters can be inserted based on complex boolean expressions This generalises the limited flexibility offered by AddOutputFilterByType
.
Filter Declarations, Providers and Chains
Figure 1: The traditional filter model
In the traditional model, output filters are a simple chain from the content generator (handler) to the client. This works well provided the filter chain can be correctly configured, but presents problems when the filters need to be configured dynamically based on the outcome of the handler.
Figure 2: The mod_filter
model
mod_filter
works by introducing indirection into the filter chain. Instead of inserting filters in the chain, we insert a filter harness which in turn dispatches conditionally to a filter provider. Any content filter may be used as a provider to mod_filter
; no change to existing filter modules is required (although it may be possible to simplify them). There can be multiple providers for one filter, but no more than one provider will run for any single request.
A filter chain comprises any number of instances of the filter harness, each of which may have any number of providers. A special case is that of a single provider with unconditional dispatch: this is equivalent to inserting the provider filter directly into the chain.
Configuring the Chain
There are three stages to configuring a filter chain with mod_filter
. For details of the directives, see below.
- Declare Filters
- The
FilterDeclare
directive declares a filter, assigning it a name and filter type. Required only if the filter is not the default type AP_FTYPE_RESOURCE. - Register Providers
- The
FilterProvider
directive registers a provider with a filter. The filter may have been declared withFilterDeclare
; if not, FilterProvider will implicitly declare it with the default type AP_FTYPE_RESOURCE. The provider must have been registered withap_register_output_filter
by some module. The final argument toFilterProvider
is an expression: the provider will be selected to run for a request if and only if the expression evaluates to true. The expression may evaluate HTTP request or response headers, environment variables, or the Handler used by this request. Unlike earlier versions, mod_filter now supports complex expressions involving multiple criteria with AND / OR logic (&& / ||) and brackets. The details of the expression syntax are described in the ap_expr documentation. - Configure the Chain
- The above directives build components of a smart filter chain, but do not configure it to run. The
FilterChain
directive builds a filter chain from smart filters declared, offering the flexibility to insert filters at the beginning or end of the chain, remove a filter, or clear the chain.
Filtering and Response Status
mod_filter normally only runs filters on responses with HTTP status 200 (OK). If you want to filter documents with other response statuses, you can set the filter-errordocs environment variable, and it will work on all responses regardless of status. To refine this further, you can use expression conditions with FilterProvider
.
Upgrading from Apache HTTP Server 2.2 Configuration
The FilterProvider
directive has changed from httpd 2.2: the match and dispatch arguments are replaced with a single but more versatile expression. In general, you can convert a match/dispatch pair to the two sides of an expression, using something like:
"dispatch = 'match'"
The Request headers, Response headers and Environment variables are now interpreted from syntax %{req:foo}, %{resp:foo} and %{env:foo} respectively. The variables %{HANDLER} and %{CONTENT_TYPE} are also supported.
Note that the match no longer support substring matches. They can be replaced by regular expression matches.
Examples
- Server side Includes (SSI)
- A simple case of replacing
AddOutputFilterByType
FilterDeclare SSI FilterProvider SSI INCLUDES "%{CONTENT_TYPE} =~ m|^text/html|" FilterChain SSI
- Server side Includes (SSI)
- The same as the above but dispatching on handler (classic SSI behaviour; .shtml files get processed).
FilterProvider SSI INCLUDES "%{HANDLER} = 'server-parsed'" FilterChain SSI
- Emulating mod_gzip with mod_deflate
- Insert INFLATE filter only if "gzip" is NOT in the Accept-Encoding header. This filter runs with ftype CONTENT_SET.
FilterDeclare gzip CONTENT_SET FilterProvider gzip inflate "%{req:Accept-Encoding} !~ /gzip/" FilterChain gzip
- Image Downsampling
- Suppose we want to downsample all web images, and have filters for GIF, JPEG and PNG.
FilterProvider unpack jpeg_unpack "%{CONTENT_TYPE} = 'image/jpeg'" FilterProvider unpack gif_unpack "%{CONTENT_TYPE} = 'image/gif'" FilterProvider unpack png_unpack "%{CONTENT_TYPE} = 'image/png'" FilterProvider downsample downsample_filter "%{CONTENT_TYPE} = m|^image/(jpeg|gif|png)|" FilterProtocol downsample "change=yes" FilterProvider repack jpeg_pack "%{CONTENT_TYPE} = 'image/jpeg'" FilterProvider repack gif_pack "%{CONTENT_TYPE} = 'image/gif'" FilterProvider repack png_pack "%{CONTENT_TYPE} = 'image/png'" <Location "/image-filter"> FilterChain unpack downsample repack </Location>
Protocol Handling
Historically, each filter is responsible for ensuring that whatever changes it makes are correctly represented in the HTTP response headers, and that it does not run when it would make an illegal change. This imposes a burden on filter authors to re-implement some common functionality in every filter:
- Many filters will change the content, invalidating existing content tags, checksums, hashes, and lengths.
- Filters that require an entire, unbroken response in input need to ensure they don't get byteranges from a backend.
- Filters that transform output in a filter need to ensure they don't violate a
Cache-Control: no-transform
header from the backend. - Filters may make responses uncacheable.
mod_filter
aims to offer generic handling of these details of filter implementation, reducing the complexity required of content filter modules. This is work-in-progress; the FilterProtocol
implements some of this functionality for back-compatibility with Apache 2.0 modules. For httpd 2.1 and later, the ap_register_output_filter_protocol
and ap_filter_protocol
API enables filter modules to declare their own behaviour.
At the same time, mod_filter
should not interfere with a filter that wants to handle all aspects of the protocol. By default (i.e. in the absence of any FilterProtocol
directives), mod_filter
will leave the headers untouched.
At the time of writing, this feature is largely untested, as modules in common use are designed to work with 2.0. Modules using it should test it carefully.
AddOutputFilterByType Directive
Description: | assigns an output filter to a particular media-type |
---|---|
Syntax: | AddOutputFilterByType filter[;filter...] media-type [media-type] ... |
Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess |
Override: | FileInfo |
Status: | Base |
Module: | mod_filter |
Compatibility: | Had severe limitations before being moved to mod_filter in version 2.3.7 |
This directive activates a particular output filter for a request depending on the response media-type.
The following example uses the DEFLATE
filter, which is provided by mod_deflate
. It will compress all output (either static or dynamic) which is labeled as text/html
or text/plain
before it is sent to the client.
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/html text/plain
If you want the content to be processed by more than one filter, their names have to be separated by semicolons. It's also possible to use one AddOutputFilterByType
directive for each of these filters.
The configuration below causes all script output labeled as text/html
to be processed at first by the INCLUDES
filter and then by the DEFLATE
filter.
<Location "/cgi-bin/"> Options Includes AddOutputFilterByType INCLUDES;DEFLATE text/html </Location>
See also
FilterChain Directive
Description: | Configure the filter chain |
---|---|
Syntax: | FilterChain [+=-@!]filter-name ... |
Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess |
Override: | Options |
Status: | Base |
Module: | mod_filter |
This configures an actual filter chain, from declared filters. FilterChain
takes any number of arguments, each optionally preceded with a single-character control that determines what to do:
+filter-name
- Add filter-name to the end of the filter chain
@filter-name
- Insert filter-name at the start of the filter chain
-filter-name
- Remove filter-name from the filter chain
=filter-name
- Empty the filter chain and insert filter-name
!
- Empty the filter chain
filter-name
- Equivalent to
+filter-name
FilterDeclare Directive
Description: | Declare a smart filter |
---|---|
Syntax: | FilterDeclare filter-name [type] |
Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess |
Override: | Options |
Status: | Base |
Module: | mod_filter |
This directive declares an output filter together with a header or environment variable that will determine runtime configuration. The first argument is a filter-name for use in FilterProvider
, FilterChain
and FilterProtocol
directives.
The final (optional) argument is the type of filter, and takes values of ap_filter_type
- namely RESOURCE
(the default), CONTENT_SET
, PROTOCOL
, TRANSCODE
, CONNECTION
or NETWORK
.
FilterProtocol Directive
Description: | Deal with correct HTTP protocol handling |
---|---|
Syntax: | FilterProtocol filter-name [provider-name] proto-flags |
Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess |
Override: | Options |
Status: | Base |
Module: | mod_filter |
This directs mod_filter
to deal with ensuring the filter doesn't run when it shouldn't, and that the HTTP response headers are correctly set taking into account the effects of the filter.
There are two forms of this directive. With three arguments, it applies specifically to a filter-name and a provider-name for that filter. With two arguments it applies to a filter-name whenever the filter runs any provider.
Flags specified with this directive are merged with the flags that underlying providers may have registerd with mod_filter
. For example, a filter may internally specify the equivalent of change=yes
, but a particular configuration of the module can override with change=no
.
proto-flags is one or more of
change=yes|no
- Specifies whether the filter changes the content, including possibly the content length. The "no" argument is supported in 2.4.7 and later.
change=1:1
- The filter changes the content, but will not change the content length
byteranges=no
- The filter cannot work on byteranges and requires complete input
proxy=no
- The filter should not run in a proxy context
proxy=transform
- The filter transforms the response in a manner incompatible with the HTTP
Cache-Control: no-transform
header. cache=no
- The filter renders the output uncacheable (eg by introducing randomised content changes)
FilterProvider Directive
Description: | Register a content filter |
---|---|
Syntax: | FilterProvider filter-name provider-name expression |
Context: | server config, virtual host, directory, .htaccess |
Override: | Options |
Status: | Base |
Module: | mod_filter |
This directive registers a provider for the smart filter. The provider will be called if and only if the expression declared evaluates to true when the harness is first called.
provider-name must have been registered by loading a module that registers the name with ap_register_output_filter
.
expression is an ap_expr.
See also
- Expressions in Apache HTTP Server, for a complete reference and examples.
mod_include
FilterTrace Directive
Description: | Get debug/diagnostic information from mod_filter
|
---|---|
Syntax: | FilterTrace filter-name level |
Context: | server config, virtual host, directory |
Status: | Base |
Module: | mod_filter |
This directive generates debug information from mod_filter
. It is designed to help test and debug providers (filter modules), although it may also help with mod_filter
itself.
The debug output depends on the level set:
-
0
(default) - No debug information is generated.
1
-
mod_filter
will record buckets and brigades passing through the filter to the error log, before the provider has processed them. This is similar to the information generated by mod_diagnostics. -
2
(not yet implemented) - Will dump the full data passing through to a tempfile before the provider. For single-user debug only; this will not support concurrent hits.
Please login to continue.