ProxyMachine
By Tom Preston-Werner (tom@mojombo.com)
WARNING: This software is alpha and should not be used in production without
extensive testing. You should not consider this project production ready until
it is released as 1.0.
Description
ProxyMachine is a simple content aware (layer 7) TCP routing proxy built on
EventMachine that lets you configure the routing logic in Ruby.
If you need to proxy connections to different backend servers depending on the
contents of the transmission, then ProxyMachine will make your life easy!
The idea here is simple. For each client connection, start receiving data
chunks and placing them into a buffer. Each time a new chunk arrives, send the
buffer to a user specified block. The block's job is to parse the buffer to
determine where the connection should proxied. If the buffer contains enough
data to make a determination, the block returns the address and port of the
correct backend server. If not, it can choose to either do nothing and wait
for more data to arrive, or close the connection. Once the block returns an
address, a connection to the backend is made, the buffer is replayed to the
backend, and the client and backend connections are hooked up to form a
straight proxy. This bidirectional proxy continues to exist until either the
client or backend close the connection.
Installation
gem install mojombo-proxymachine -s http://gems.github.com
Running
Usage:
proxymachine -c <config file> [-h <host>] [-p <port>]
Options:
-c, --config CONFIG Configuration file
-h, --host HOST Hostname to bind. Default 0.0.0.0
-p, --port PORT Port to listen on. Default 5432
Example routing config file
class GitRouter
# Look at the routing table and return the correct address for +name+
# Returns "<host>:<port>" e.g. "ae8f31c.example.com:9418"
def self.lookup(name)
...
end
end
# Perform content-aware routing based on the stream data. Here, the
# header information from the Git protocol is parsed to find the
# username and a lookup routine is run on the name to find the correct
# backend server. If no match can be made yet, do nothing with the
# connection yet.
proxy do |data|
if data =~ %r{^....git-upload-pack /([\w\.\-]+)/[\w\.\-]+\000host=\w+\000}
name = $1
{ :remote => GitRouter.lookup(name) }
else
{ :noop => true }
end
end
Valid return values
{ :remote => String }
- String is the host:port of the backend server that will be proxied.
{ :remote => String, :data => String }
- Same as above, but send the given data instead.
{ :noop => true }
- Do nothing.
{ :close
=> true } - Close the connection.
{ :close => String }
- Close the connection after sending the String.
Contribute
If you'd like to hack on ProxyMachine, start by forking my repo on GitHub:
http://github.com/mojombo/proxymachine
To get all of the dependencies, install the gem first. The best way to get
your changes merged back into core is as follows:
- Clone down your fork
- Create a topic branch to contain your change
- Hack away
- Add tests and make sure everything still passes by running
rake
- If you are adding new functionality, document it in the README.md
- Do not change the version number, I will do that on my end
- If necessary, rebase your commits into logical chunks, without errors
- Push the branch up to GitHub
- Send me (mojombo) a pull request for your branch
Copyright
Copyright (c) 2009 Tom Preston-Werner. See LICENSE for details.