Squid configuration directive http_upgrade_request_protocols
This directive is not available in the v4 version of Squid.
For older versions than v4 see the linked pages above
Configuration Details:
Option Name: | http_upgrade_request_protocols |
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Replaces: | |
Requires: | |
Default Value: | Upgrade header dropped, effectively blocking an upgrade attempt. |
Suggested Config: |
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Controls client-initiated and server-confirmed switching from HTTP to another protocol (or to several protocols) using HTTP Upgrade mechanism defined in RFC 7230 Section 6.7. Squid itself does not understand the protocols being upgraded to and participates in the upgraded communication only as a dumb TCP proxy. Admins should not allow upgrading to protocols that require a more meaningful proxy participation. Usage: http_upgrade_request_protocols <protocol> allow|deny [!]acl ... The required "protocol" parameter is either an all-caps word OTHER or an explicit protocol name (e.g. "WebSocket") optionally followed by a slash and a version token (e.g. "HTTP/3"). Explicit protocol names and versions are case sensitive. When an HTTP client sends an Upgrade request header, Squid iterates over the client-offered protocols and, for each protocol P (with an optional version V), evaluates the first non-empty set of http_upgrade_request_protocols rules (if any) from the following list: * All rules with an explicit protocol name equal to P. * All rules that use OTHER instead of a protocol name. In other words, rules using OTHER are considered for protocol P if and only if there are no rules mentioning P by name. If both of the above sets are empty, then Squid removes protocol P from the Upgrade offer. If the client sent a versioned protocol offer P/X, then explicit rules referring to the same-name but different-version protocol P/Y are declared inapplicable. Inapplicable rules are not evaluated (i.e. are ignored). However, inapplicable rules still belong to the first set of rules for P. Within the applicable rule subset, individual rules are evaluated in their configuration order. If all ACLs of an applicable "allow" rule match, then the protocol offered by the client is forwarded to the next hop as is. If all ACLs of an applicable "deny" rule match, then the offer is dropped. If no applicable rules have matching ACLs, then the offer is also dropped. The first matching rule also ends rules evaluation for the offered protocol. If all client-offered protocols are removed, then Squid forwards the client request without the Upgrade header. Squid never sends an empty Upgrade request header. An Upgrade request header with a value violating HTTP syntax is dropped and ignored without an attempt to use extractable individual protocol offers. Upon receiving an HTTP 101 (Switching Protocols) control message, Squid checks that the server listed at least one protocol name and sent a Connection:upgrade response header. Squid does not understand individual protocol naming and versioning concepts enough to implement stricter checks, but an admin can restrict HTTP 101 (Switching Protocols) responses further using http_reply_access. Responses denied by http_reply_access rules and responses flagged by the internal Upgrade checks result in HTTP 502 (Bad Gateway) ERR_INVALID_RESP errors and Squid-to-server connection closures. If Squid sends an Upgrade request header, and the next hop (e.g., the origin server) responds with an acceptable HTTP 101 (Switching Protocols), then Squid forwards that message to the client and becomes a TCP tunnel. The presence of an Upgrade request header alone does not preclude cache lookups. In other words, an Upgrade request might be satisfied from the cache, using regular HTTP caching rules. This clause only supports fast acl types. See https://wiki.squid-cache.org/SquidFaq/SquidAcl for details. Each of the following groups of configuration lines represents a separate configuration example: # never upgrade to protocol Foo; all others are OK http_upgrade_request_protocols Foo deny all http_upgrade_request_protocols OTHER allow all # only allow upgrades to protocol Bar (except for its first version) http_upgrade_request_protocols Bar/1 deny all http_upgrade_request_protocols Bar allow all http_upgrade_request_protocols OTHER deny all # this rule is optional # only allow upgrades to protocol Baz, and only if Baz is the only offer acl UpgradeHeaderHasMultipleOffers ... http_upgrade_request_protocols Baz deny UpgradeHeaderHasMultipleOffers http_upgrade_request_protocols Baz allow all |
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