resty.limit.conn - Lua module for limiting request concurrency (or concurrent connections) for OpenResty/ngx_lua.
- Name
- Synopsis
- Description
- Methods
- Caveats
- Instance Sharing
- Limiting Granularity
- Installation
- Community
- Bugs and Patches
- Author
- Copyright and License
- See Also
# demonstrate the usage of the resty.limit.conn module (alone!)
http {
lua_shared_dict my_limit_conn_store 100m;
server {
location / {
access_by_lua_block {
-- well, we could put the require() and new() calls in our own Lua
-- modules to save overhead. here we put them below just for
-- convenience.
local limit_conn = require "resty.limit.conn"
-- limit the requests under 200 concurrent requests (normally just
-- incoming connections unless protocols like SPDY is used) with
-- a burst of 100 extra concurrent requests, that is, we delay
-- requests under 300 concurrent connections and above 200
-- connections, and reject any new requests exceeding 300
-- connections.
-- also, we assume a default request time of 0.5 sec, which can be
-- dynamically adjusted by the leaving() call in log_by_lua below.
local lim, err = limit_conn.new("my_limit_conn_store", 200, 100, 0.5)
if not lim then
ngx.log(ngx.ERR,
"failed to instantiate a resty.limit.conn object: ", err)
return ngx.exit(500)
end
-- the following call must be per-request.
-- here we use the remote (IP) address as the limiting key
local key = ngx.var.binary_remote_addr
local delay, err = lim:incoming(key, true)
if not delay then
if err == "rejected" then
return ngx.exit(503)
end
ngx.log(ngx.ERR, "failed to limit req: ", err)
return ngx.exit(500)
end
if lim:is_committed() then
local ctx = ngx.ctx
ctx.limit_conn = lim
ctx.limit_conn_key = key
ctx.limit_conn_delay = delay
end
-- the 2nd return value holds the current concurrency level
-- for the specified key.
local conn = err
if delay >= 0.001 then
-- the request exceeding the 200 connections ratio but below
-- 300 connections, so
-- we intentionally delay it here a bit to conform to the
-- 200 connection limit.
-- ngx.log(ngx.WARN, "delaying")
ngx.sleep(delay)
end
}
# content handler goes here. if it is content_by_lua, then you can
# merge the Lua code above in access_by_lua into your
# content_by_lua's Lua handler to save a little bit of CPU time.
log_by_lua_block {
local ctx = ngx.ctx
local lim = ctx.limit_conn
if lim then
-- if you are using an upstream module in the content phase,
-- then you probably want to use $upstream_response_time
-- instead of ($request_time - ctx.limit_conn_delay) below.
local latency = tonumber(ngx.var.request_time) - ctx.limit_conn_delay
local key = ctx.limit_conn_key
assert(key)
local conn, err = lim:leaving(key, latency)
if not conn then
ngx.log(ngx.ERR,
"failed to record the connection leaving ",
"request: ", err)
return
end
end
}
}
}
}
This module provides APIs to help the OpenResty/ngx_lua user programmers limit request concurrency levels.
If you want to use multiple different instances of this class at once or use one instance of this class with instances of other classes (like resty.limit.req), then you must use the resty.limit.traffic module to combine them.
In contrast with NGINX's standard ngx_limit_conn module, this Lua module supports connection delaying in addition to immediate rejection when the concurrency level threshold is exceeded.
syntax: obj, err = class.new(shdict_name, conn, burst, default_conn_delay)
Instantiates an object of this class. The class
value is returned by the call require "resty.limit.conn"
.
This method takes the following arguments:
-
shdict_name
is the name of the lua_shared_dict shm zone.It is best to use separate shm zones for different kinds of limiters.
-
conn
is the maximum number of concurrent requests allowed. Requests exceeding this ratio (and belowconn
+burst
) will get delayed to conform to this threshold. -
burst
is the number of excessive concurrent requests (or connections) allowed to be delayed.Requests exceeding this hard limit should get rejected immediately.
-
default_conn_delay
is the default processing latency of a typical connection (or request).This delay is used as a basic unit for the extra delay introduced for excessive concurrent requests (or connections), which can later get adjusted dynamically by the subsequent leaving method calls in log_by_lua*.
On failure, this method returns nil
and a string describing the error (like a bad lua_shared_dict
name).
syntax: delay, err = obj:incoming(key, commit)
Fires a new concurrent request (or new connection) incoming event and calculates the delay needed (if any) for the current request upon the specified key or whether the user should reject it immediately.
This method accepts the following arguments:
-
key
is the user specified key to limit the concurrency level.For example, one can use the host name (or server zone) as the key so that we limit concurrency per host name. Otherwise, we can also use the client address as the key so that we can avoid a single client from flooding our service with too many parallel connections or requests.
Please note that this module does not prefix nor suffix the user key so it is the user's responsibility to ensure the key is unique in the
lua_shared_dict
shm zone). -
commit
is a boolean value. If set totrue
, the object will actually record the event in the shm zone backing the current object; otherwise it would just be a "dry run" (which is the default).
The return values depend on the following cases:
-
If the request does not exceed the
conn
value specified in the new method, then this method returns0
as the delay as well as the number of concurrent requests (or connections) at the current time (as the 2nd return value). -
If the request (or connection) exceeds the
conn
limit specified in the new method but not theconn
+burst
value, then this method returns a proper delay (in seconds) for the current request so that it still conform to theconn
threshold as if it came a bit later rather than now.In addition, like the previous case, this method also returns a second return value indicating the number of concurrent requests (or connections) at this point (including the current request). This 2nd return value can be used to monitor the unadjusted incoming concurrency level.
-
If the request exceeds the
conn
+burst
limit, then this method returnsnil
and the error string"rejected"
. -
If an error occurred (like failures when accessing the
lua_shared_dict
shm zone backing the current object), then this method returnsnil
and a string describing the error.
This method does not sleep itself. It simply returns a delay if necessary and requires the caller to later invoke the ngx.sleep method to sleep.
This method must be paired with a leaving method call typically in the log_by_lua* context if and only if this method actually records the event in the shm zone (designated by a subsequent is_committed method call.
syntax: bool = obj:is_committed()
Returns true
if the previous incoming call actually commits the event
into the lua_shared_dict
shm store; returns false
otherwise.
This result is important in that one should only pair the leaving method call
with a incoming call
if and only if this is_committed
method call returns true
.
syntax: conn = obj:leaving(key, req_latency?)
Fires an event that the current request (or connection) is being finalized. Such events essentially reduce the current concurrency level.
This method call usually pairs with an earlier incoming call unless
the is_committed call returns false
after that incoming call.
This method takes the following parameters:
-
key
is the same key string used in the paired incoming method call. -
req_latency
is the actual latency of the current request (or connection), which is optional.Often we use the value of either the
$request_time
or$upstream_response_time
nginx builtin variables here. One can, of course, record the latency himself.
The method returns the new concurrency level (or number of active connections). Unlike incoming, this method always commits the changes to the shm zone.
syntax: obj:set_conn(conn)
Overwrites the conn
threshold value as specified in the new method.
syntax: obj:set_burst(burst)
Overwrites the burst
threshold value as specified in the new method.
syntax: ok, err = obj:uncommit(key)
This tries to undo the commit of the incoming
call. This method is mainly for being used in the resty.limit.traffic
Lua module when combining multiple limiters at the same time.
This method should not be used replace of the leaving method though they are similar in effect and implementation.
Under extreme conditions, like nginx worker processes crash in the middle of request processing,
the counters stored in the shm zones can go out of sync. This can lead to catastrophic
consequences like blindly rejecting all the incoming connections for ever. (Note that
the standard ngx_limit_conn
module also suffers from this issue.) We may
add automatic protection for such cases to this Lua module in the near future.
Also, it is very important to ensure that the leaving
call appears first in your
log_by_lua*
handler code to minimize the chance that other log_by_lua*
Lua code
throws out an exception and prevents the leaving
call from running.
Each instance of this class carries no state information but the conn
and burst
threshold values. The real limiting states based on keys are stored in the lua_shared_dict
shm zone specified in the new method. So it is safe to share instances of
this class on the nginx worker process level
as long as the combination of conn
and burst
do not change.
Even if the conn
and burst
combination does change, one can still share a single instance as long as he always
calls the set_conn and/or set_burst methods right before
the incoming call.
The limiting works on the granularity of an individual NGINX server instance (including all its worker processes). Thanks to the shm mechanism; we can share state cheaply across all the workers in a single NGINX server instance.
If you are running multiple NGINX server instances (like running multiple boxes), then
you need to ensure that the incoming traffic is (more or less) evenly distributed across
all the different NGINX server instances (or boxes). So if you want a limit of N connections
across all the servers, then you just need to specify a limit of N/n
in each server's configuration. This simple strategy can save all the (big) overhead of sharing a global state across
machine boundaries.
Please see library installation instructions.
The openresty-en mailing list is for English speakers.
The openresty mailing list is for Chinese speakers.
Please report bugs or submit patches by
- creating a ticket on the GitHub Issue Tracker,
- or posting to the OpenResty community.
Yichun "agentzh" Zhang (章亦春) agentzh@gmail.com, CloudFlare Inc.
This module is licensed under the BSD license.
Copyright (C) 2015-2016, by Yichun "agentzh" Zhang, CloudFlare Inc.
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
-
Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
-
Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
- module resty.limit.req
- module resty.limit.count
- module resty.limit.traffic
- library lua-resty-limit-traffic
- the ngx_lua module: https://github.com/openresty/lua-nginx-module
- OpenResty: https://openresty.org/