Development guide

Introduction
     Code layout
     Include files
     Integers
     Common return codes
     Error handling
Strings
     Overview
     Formatting
     Numeric conversion
     Regular expressions
Time
Containers
     Array
     List
     Queue
     Red-Black tree
     Hash
Memory management
     Heap
     Pool
     Shared memory
Logging
Cycle
Buffer
Networking
     Connection
Events
     Event
     I/O events
     Timer events
     Posted events
     Event loop
Processes
Threads
Modules
     Adding new modules
     Core Modules
     Configuration Directives
HTTP
     Connection
     Request
     Configuration
     Phases
     Variables
     Complex values
     Request redirection
     Subrequests
     Request finalization
     Request body
     Request body filters
     Response
     Response body
     Response body filters
     Building filter modules
     Buffer reuse
     Load balancing
Code style
     General rules
     Files
     Comments
     Preprocessor
     Types
     Variables
     Functions
     Expressions
     Conditionals and Loops
     Labels
Debugging memory issues
Common Pitfalls
     Writing a C module
     C Strings
     Global Variables
     Manual Memory Management
     Threads
     Blocking Libraries
     HTTP Requests to External Services

Introduction

Code layout

Include files

The following two #include statements must appear at the beginning of every nginx file:

#include <ngx_config.h>
#include <ngx_core.h>

In addition to that, HTTP code should include

#include <ngx_http.h>

Mail code should include

#include <ngx_mail.h>

Stream code should include

#include <ngx_stream.h>

Integers

For general purposes, nginx code uses two integer types, ngx_int_t and ngx_uint_t, which are typedefs for intptr_t and uintptr_t respectively.

Common return codes

Most functions in nginx return the following codes:

Error handling

The ngx_errno macro returns the last system error code. It's mapped to errno on POSIX platforms and to GetLastError() call in Windows. The ngx_socket_errno macro returns the last socket error number. Like the ngx_errno macro, it's mapped to errno on POSIX platforms. It's mapped to the WSAGetLastError() call on Windows. Accessing the values of ngx_errno or ngx_socket_errno more than once in a row can cause performance issues. If the error value might be used multiple times, store it in a local variable of type ngx_err_t. To set errors, use the ngx_set_errno(errno) and ngx_set_socket_errno(errno) macros.

The values of ngx_errno and ngx_socket_errno can be passed to the logging functions ngx_log_error() and ngx_log_debugX(), in which case system error text is added to the log message.

Example using ngx_errno:

ngx_int_t
ngx_my_kill(ngx_pid_t pid, ngx_log_t *log, int signo)
{
    ngx_err_t  err;

    if (kill(pid, signo) == -1) {
        err = ngx_errno;

        ngx_log_error(NGX_LOG_ALERT, log, err, "kill(%P, %d) failed", pid, signo);

        if (err == NGX_ESRCH) {
            return 2;
        }

        return 1;
    }

    return 0;
}

Strings

Overview

For C strings, nginx uses the unsigned character type pointer u_char *.

The nginx string type ngx_str_t is defined as follows:

typedef struct {
    size_t      len;
    u_char     *data;
} ngx_str_t;

The len field holds the string length and data holds the string data. The string, held in ngx_str_t, may or may not be null-terminated after the len bytes. In most cases it’s not. However, in certain parts of the code (for example, when parsing configuration), ngx_str_t objects are known to be null-terminated, which simplifies string comparison and makes it easier to pass the strings to syscalls.

The string operations in nginx are declared in src/core/ngx_string.h Some of them are wrappers around standard C functions:

Other string functions are nginx-specific

The following functions perform case conversion and comparison:

The following macros simplify string initialization:

Formatting

The following formatting functions support nginx-specific types:

The full list of formatting options, supported by these functions is in src/core/ngx_string.c. Some of them are:

You can prepend u on most types to make them unsigned. To convert output to hex, use X or x.

For example:

u_char      buf[NGX_INT_T_LEN];
size_t      len;
ngx_uint_t  n;

/* set n here */

len = ngx_sprintf(buf, "%ui", n) — buf;

Numeric conversion

Several functions for numeric conversion are implemented in nginx. The first four each convert a string of given length to a positive integer of the indicated type. They return NGX_ERROR on error.

There are two additional numeric conversion functions. Like the first four, they return NGX_ERROR on error.

Regular expressions

The regular expressions interface in nginx is a wrapper around the PCRE library. The corresponding header file is src/core/ngx_regex.h.

To use a regular expression for string matching, it first needs to be compiled, which is usually done at the configuration phase. Note that since PCRE support is optional, all code using the interface must be protected by the surrounding NGX_PCRE macro:

#if (NGX_PCRE)
ngx_regex_t          *re;
ngx_regex_compile_t   rc;

u_char                errstr[NGX_MAX_CONF_ERRSTR];

ngx_str_t  value = ngx_string("message (\\d\\d\\d).*Codeword is '(?<cw>\\w+)'");

ngx_memzero(&rc, sizeof(ngx_regex_compile_t));

rc.pattern = value;
rc.pool = cf->pool;
rc.err.len = NGX_MAX_CONF_ERRSTR;
rc.err.data = errstr;
/* rc.options can be set to NGX_REGEX_CASELESS */

if (ngx_regex_compile(&rc) != NGX_OK) {
    ngx_conf_log_error(NGX_LOG_EMERG, cf, 0, "%V", &rc.err);
    return NGX_CONF_ERROR;
}

re = rc.regex;
#endif

After successful compilation, the captures and named_captures fields in the ngx_regex_compile_t structure contain the count of all captures and named captures, respectively, found in the regular expression.

The compiled regular expression can then be used for matching against strings:

ngx_int_t  n;
int        captures[(1 + rc.captures) * 3];

ngx_str_t input = ngx_string("This is message 123. Codeword is 'foobar'.");

n = ngx_regex_exec(re, &input, captures, (1 + rc.captures) * 3);
if (n >= 0) {
    /* string matches expression */

} else if (n == NGX_REGEX_NO_MATCHED) {
    /* no match was found */

} else {
    /* some error */
    ngx_log_error(NGX_LOG_ALERT, log, 0, ngx_regex_exec_n " failed: %i", n);
}

The arguments to ngx_regex_exec() are the compiled regular expression re, the string to match input, an optional array of integers to hold any captures that are found, and the array's size. The size of the captures array must be a multiple of three, as required by the PCRE API. In the example, the size is calculated from the total number of captures plus one for the matched string itself.

If there are matches, captures can be accessed as follows:

u_char     *p;
size_t      size;
ngx_str_t   name, value;

/* all captures */
for (i = 0; i < n * 2; i += 2) {
    value.data = input.data + captures[i];
    value.len = captures[i + 1] — captures[i];
}

/* accessing named captures */

size = rc.name_size;
p = rc.names;

for (i = 0; i < rc.named_captures; i++, p += size) {

    /* capture name */
    name.data = &p[2];
    name.len = ngx_strlen(name.data);

    n = 2 * ((p[0] << 8) + p[1]);

    /* captured value */
    value.data = &input.data[captures[n]];
    value.len = captures[n + 1] — captures[n];
}

The ngx_regex_exec_array() function accepts the array of ngx_regex_elt_t elements (which are just compiled regular expressions with associated names), a string to match, and a log. The function applies expressions from the array to the string until either a match is found or no more expressions are left. The return value is NGX_OK when there is a match and NGX_DECLINED otherwise, or NGX_ERROR in case of error.

Time

The ngx_time_t structure represents time with three separate types for seconds, milliseconds, and the GMT offset:

typedef struct {
    time_t      sec;
    ngx_uint_t  msec;
    ngx_int_t   gmtoff;
} ngx_time_t;

The ngx_tm_t structure is an alias for struct tm on UNIX platforms and SYSTEMTIME on Windows.

To obtain the current time, it is usually sufficient to access one of the available global variables, representing the cached time value in the desired format.

The available string representations are:

The ngx_time() and ngx_timeofday() macros return the current time value in seconds and are the preferred way to access the cached time value.

To obtain the time explicitly, use ngx_gettimeofday(), which updates its argument (pointer to struct timeval). The time is always updated when nginx returns to the event loop from system calls. To update the time immediately, call ngx_time_update(), or ngx_time_sigsafe_update() if updating the time in the signal handler context.

The following functions convert time_t into the indicated broken-down time representation. The first function in each pair converts time_t to ngx_tm_t and the second (with the _libc_ infix) to struct tm:

The ngx_http_time(buf, time) function returns a string representation suitable for use in HTTP headers (for example, "Mon, 28 Sep 1970 06:00:00 GMT"). The ngx_http_cookie_time(buf, time) returns a string representation function returns a string representation suitable for HTTP cookies ("Thu, 31-Dec-37 23:55:55 GMT").

Containers

Array

The nginx array type ngx_array_t is defined as follows

typedef struct {
    void        *elts;
    ngx_uint_t   nelts;
    size_t       size;
    ngx_uint_t   nalloc;
    ngx_pool_t  *pool;
} ngx_array_t;

The elements of the array are available in the elts field. The nelts field holds the number of elements. The size field holds the size of a single element and is set when the array is initialized.

Use the ngx_array_create(pool, n, size) call to create an array in a pool, and the ngx_array_init(array, pool, n, size) call to initialize an array object that has already been allocated.

ngx_array_t  *a, b;

/* create an array of strings with preallocated memory for 10 elements */
a = ngx_array_create(pool, 10, sizeof(ngx_str_t));

/* initialize string array for 10 elements */
ngx_array_init(&b, pool, 10, sizeof(ngx_str_t));

Use the following functions to add elements to an array:

If the currently allocated amount of memory is not large enough to accommodate the new elements, a new block of memory is allocated and the existing elements are copied to it. The new memory block is normally twice as large as the existing one.

s = ngx_array_push(a);
ss = ngx_array_push_n(&b, 3);

List

In nginx a list is a sequence of arrays, optimized for inserting a potentially large number of items. The ngx_list_t list type is defined as follows:

typedef struct {
    ngx_list_part_t  *last;
    ngx_list_part_t   part;
    size_t            size;
    ngx_uint_t        nalloc;
    ngx_pool_t       *pool;
} ngx_list_t;

The actual items are stored in list parts, which are defined as follows:

typedef struct ngx_list_part_s  ngx_list_part_t;

struct ngx_list_part_s {
    void             *elts;
    ngx_uint_t        nelts;
    ngx_list_part_t  *next;
};

Before use, a list must be initialized by calling ngx_list_init(list, pool, n, size) or created by calling ngx_list_create(pool, n, size). Both functions take as arguments the size of a single item and a number of items per list part. To add an item to a list, use the ngx_list_push(list) function. To iterate over the items, directly access the list fields as shown in the example:

ngx_str_t        *v;
ngx_uint_t        i;
ngx_list_t       *list;
ngx_list_part_t  *part;

list = ngx_list_create(pool, 100, sizeof(ngx_str_t));
if (list == NULL) { /* error */ }

/* add items to the list */

v = ngx_list_push(list);
if (v == NULL) { /* error */ }
ngx_str_set(v, "foo");

v = ngx_list_push(list);
if (v == NULL) { /* error */ }
ngx_str_set(v, "bar");

/* iterate over the list */

part = &list->part;
v = part->elts;

for (i = 0; /* void */; i++) {

    if (i >= part->nelts) {
        if (part->next == NULL) {
            break;
        }

        part = part->next;
        v = part->elts;
        i = 0;
    }

    ngx_do_smth(&v[i]);
}

Lists are primarily used for HTTP input and output headers.

Lists do not support item removal. However, when needed, items can internally be marked as missing without actually being removed from the list. For example, to mark HTTP output headers (which are stored as ngx_table_elt_t objects) as missing, set the hash field in ngx_table_elt_t to zero. Items marked in this way are explicitly skipped when the headers are iterated over.

Queue

In nginx a queue is an intrusive doubly linked list, with each node defined as follows:

typedef struct ngx_queue_s  ngx_queue_t;

struct ngx_queue_s {
    ngx_queue_t  *prev;
    ngx_queue_t  *next;
};

The head queue node is not linked with any data. Use the ngx_queue_init(q) call to initialize the list head before use. Queues support the following operations:

An example:

typedef struct {
    ngx_str_t    value;
    ngx_queue_t  queue;
} ngx_foo_t;

ngx_foo_t    *f;
ngx_queue_t   values, *q;

ngx_queue_init(&values);

f = ngx_palloc(pool, sizeof(ngx_foo_t));
if (f == NULL) { /* error */ }
ngx_str_set(&f->value, "foo");

ngx_queue_insert_tail(&values, &f->queue);

/* insert more nodes here */

for (q = ngx_queue_head(&values);
     q != ngx_queue_sentinel(&values);
     q = ngx_queue_next(q))
{
    f = ngx_queue_data(q, ngx_foo_t, queue);

    ngx_do_smth(&f->value);
}

Red-Black tree

The src/core/ngx_rbtree.h header file provides access to the effective implementation of red-black trees.

typedef struct {
    ngx_rbtree_t       rbtree;
    ngx_rbtree_node_t  sentinel;

    /* custom per-tree data here */
} my_tree_t;

typedef struct {
    ngx_rbtree_node_t  rbnode;

    /* custom per-node data */
    foo_t              val;
} my_node_t;

To deal with a tree as a whole, you need two nodes: root and sentinel. Typically, they are added to a custom structure, allowing you to organize your data into a tree in which the leaves contain a link to or embed your data.

To initialize a tree:

my_tree_t  root;

ngx_rbtree_init(&root.rbtree, &root.sentinel, insert_value_function);

To traverse a tree and insert new values, use the "insert_value" functions. For example, the ngx_str_rbtree_insert_value function deals with the ngx_str_t type. Its arguments are pointers to a root node of an insertion, the newly created node to be added, and a tree sentinel.

void ngx_str_rbtree_insert_value(ngx_rbtree_node_t *temp,
                                 ngx_rbtree_node_t *node,
                                 ngx_rbtree_node_t *sentinel)

The traversal is pretty straightforward and can be demonstrated with the following lookup function pattern:

my_node_t *
my_rbtree_lookup(ngx_rbtree_t *rbtree, foo_t *val, uint32_t hash)
{
    ngx_int_t           rc;
    my_node_t          *n;
    ngx_rbtree_node_t  *node, *sentinel;

    node = rbtree->root;
    sentinel = rbtree->sentinel;

    while (node != sentinel) {

        n = (my_node_t *) node;

        if (hash != node->key) {
            node = (hash < node->key) ? node->left : node->right;
            continue;
        }

        rc = compare(val, node->val);

        if (rc < 0) {
            node = node->left;
            continue;
        }

        if (rc > 0) {
            node = node->right;
            continue;
        }

        return n;
    }

    return NULL;
}

The compare() function is a classic comparator function that returns a value less than, equal to, or greater than zero. To speed up lookups and avoid comparing user objects that can be big, an integer hash field is used.

To add a node to a tree, allocate a new node, initialize it and call ngx_rbtree_insert():

    my_node_t          *my_node;
    ngx_rbtree_node_t  *node;

    my_node = ngx_palloc(...);
    init_custom_data(&my_node->val);

    node = &my_node->rbnode;
    node->key = create_key(my_node->val);

    ngx_rbtree_insert(&root->rbtree, node);

To remove a node, call the ngx_rbtree_delete() function:

ngx_rbtree_delete(&root->rbtree, node);

Hash

Hash table functions are declared in src/core/ngx_hash.h. Both exact and wildcard matching are supported. The latter requires extra setup and is described in a separate section below.

Before initializing a hash, you need to know the number of elements it will hold so that nginx can build it optimally. Two parameters that need to be configured are max_size and bucket_size, as detailed in a separate document. They are usually configurable by the user. Hash initialization settings are stored with the ngx_hash_init_t type, and the hash itself is ngx_hash_t:

ngx_hash_t       foo_hash;
ngx_hash_init_t  hash;

hash.hash = &foo_hash;
hash.key = ngx_hash_key;
hash.max_size = 512;
hash.bucket_size = ngx_align(64, ngx_cacheline_size);
hash.name = "foo_hash";
hash.pool = cf->pool;
hash.temp_pool = cf->temp_pool;

The key is a pointer to a function that creates the hash integer key from a string. There are two generic key-creation functions: ngx_hash_key(data, len) and ngx_hash_key_lc(data, len). The latter converts a string to all lowercase characters, so the passed string must be writable. If that is not true, pass the NGX_HASH_READONLY_KEY flag to the function, initializing the key array (see below).

The hash keys are stored in ngx_hash_keys_arrays_t and are initialized with ngx_hash_keys_array_init(arr, type): The second parameter (type) controls the amount of resources preallocated for the hash and can be either NGX_HASH_SMALL or NGX_HASH_LARGE. The latter is appropriate if you expect the hash to contain thousands of elements.

ngx_hash_keys_arrays_t  foo_keys;

foo_keys.pool = cf->pool;
foo_keys.temp_pool = cf->temp_pool;

ngx_hash_keys_array_init(&foo_keys, NGX_HASH_SMALL);

To insert keys into a hash keys array, use the ngx_hash_add_key(keys_array, key, value, flags) function:

ngx_str_t k1 = ngx_string("key1");
ngx_str_t k2 = ngx_string("key2");

ngx_hash_add_key(&foo_keys, &k1, &my_data_ptr_1, NGX_HASH_READONLY_KEY);
ngx_hash_add_key(&foo_keys, &k2, &my_data_ptr_2, NGX_HASH_READONLY_KEY);

To build the hash table, call the ngx_hash_init(hinit, key_names, nelts) function:

ngx_hash_init(&hash, foo_keys.keys.elts, foo_keys.keys.nelts);

The function fails if max_size or bucket_size parameters are not big enough.

When the hash is built, use the ngx_hash_find(hash, key, name, len) function to look up elements:

my_data_t   *data;
ngx_uint_t   key;

key = ngx_hash_key(k1.data, k1.len);

data = ngx_hash_find(&foo_hash, key, k1.data, k1.len);
if (data == NULL) {
    /* key not found */
}

Wildcard matching

To create a hash that works with wildcards, use the ngx_hash_combined_t type. It includes the hash type described above and has two additional keys arrays: dns_wc_head and dns_wc_tail. The initialization of basic properties is similar to a regular hash:

ngx_hash_init_t      hash
ngx_hash_combined_t  foo_hash;

hash.hash = &foo_hash.hash;
hash.key = ...;

It is possible to add wildcard keys using the NGX_HASH_WILDCARD_KEY flag:

/* k1 = ".example.org"; */
/* k2 = "foo.*";        */
ngx_hash_add_key(&foo_keys, &k1, &data1, NGX_HASH_WILDCARD_KEY);
ngx_hash_add_key(&foo_keys, &k2, &data2, NGX_HASH_WILDCARD_KEY);

The function recognizes wildcards and adds keys into the corresponding arrays. Please refer to the map module documentation for the description of the wildcard syntax and the matching algorithm.

Depending on the contents of added keys, you may need to initialize up to three key arrays: one for exact matching (described above), and two more to enable matching starting from the head or tail of a string:

if (foo_keys.dns_wc_head.nelts) {

    ngx_qsort(foo_keys.dns_wc_head.elts,
              (size_t) foo_keys.dns_wc_head.nelts,
              sizeof(ngx_hash_key_t),
              cmp_dns_wildcards);

    hash.hash = NULL;
    hash.temp_pool = pool;

    if (ngx_hash_wildcard_init(&hash, foo_keys.dns_wc_head.elts,
                               foo_keys.dns_wc_head.nelts)
        != NGX_OK)
    {
        return NGX_ERROR;
    }

    foo_hash.wc_head = (ngx_hash_wildcard_t *) hash.hash;
}

The keys array needs to be sorted, and initialization results must be added to the combined hash. The initialization of dns_wc_tail array is done similarly.

The lookup in a combined hash is handled by the ngx_hash_find_combined(chash, key, name, len):

/* key = "bar.example.org"; — will match ".example.org" */
/* key = "foo.example.com"; — will match "foo.*"        */

hkey = ngx_hash_key(key.data, key.len);
res = ngx_hash_find_combined(&foo_hash, hkey, key.data, key.len);

Memory management

Heap

To allocate memory from system heap, use the following functions:

Pool

Most nginx allocations are done in pools. Memory allocated in an nginx pool is freed automatically when the pool is destroyed. This provides good allocation performance and makes memory control easy.

A pool internally allocates objects in continuous blocks of memory. Once a block is full, a new one is allocated and added to the pool memory block list. When the requested allocation is too large to fit into a block, the request is forwarded to the system allocator and the returned pointer is stored in the pool for further deallocation.

The type for nginx pools is ngx_pool_t. The following operations are supported:

u_char      *p;
ngx_str_t   *s;
ngx_pool_t  *pool;

pool = ngx_create_pool(1024, log);
if (pool == NULL) { /* error */ }

s = ngx_palloc(pool, sizeof(ngx_str_t));
if (s == NULL) { /* error */ }
ngx_str_set(s, "foo");

p = ngx_pnalloc(pool, 3);
if (p == NULL) { /* error */ }
ngx_memcpy(p, "foo", 3);

Chain links (ngx_chain_t) are actively used in nginx, so the nginx pool implementation provides a way to reuse them. The chain field of ngx_pool_t keeps a list of previously allocated links ready for reuse. For efficient allocation of a chain link in a pool, use the ngx_alloc_chain_link(pool) function. This function looks up a free chain link in the pool list and allocates a new chain link if the pool list is empty. To free a link, call the ngx_free_chain(pool, cl) function.

Cleanup handlers can be registered in a pool. A cleanup handler is a callback with an argument which is called when pool is destroyed. A pool is usually tied to a specific nginx object (like an HTTP request) and is destroyed when the object reaches the end of its lifetime. Registering a pool cleanup is a convenient way to release resources, close file descriptors or make final adjustments to the shared data associated with the main object.

To register a pool cleanup, call ngx_pool_cleanup_add(pool, size), which returns a ngx_pool_cleanup_t pointer to be filled in by the caller. Use the size argument to allocate context for the cleanup handler.

ngx_pool_cleanup_t  *cln;

cln = ngx_pool_cleanup_add(pool, 0);
if (cln == NULL) { /* error */ }

cln->handler = ngx_my_cleanup;
cln->data = "foo";

...

static void
ngx_my_cleanup(void *data)
{
    u_char  *msg = data;

    ngx_do_smth(msg);
}

Shared memory

Shared memory is used by nginx to share common data between processes. The ngx_shared_memory_add(cf, name, size, tag) function adds a new shared memory entry ngx_shm_zone_t to a cycle. The function receives the name and size of the zone. Each shared zone must have a unique name. If a shared zone entry with the provided name and tag already exists, the existing zone entry is reused. The function fails with an error if an existing entry with the same name has a different tag. Usually, the address of the module structure is passed as tag, making it possible to reuse shared zones by name within one nginx module.

The shared memory entry structure ngx_shm_zone_t has the following fields:

Shared zone entries are mapped to actual memory in ngx_init_cycle() after the configuration is parsed. On POSIX systems, the mmap() syscall is used to create the shared anonymous mapping. On Windows, the CreateFileMapping()/ MapViewOfFileEx() pair is used.

For allocating in shared memory, nginx provides the slab pool ngx_slab_pool_t type. A slab pool for allocating memory is automatically created in each nginx shared zone. The pool is located in the beginning of the shared zone and can be accessed by the expression (ngx_slab_pool_t *) shm_zone->shm.addr. To allocate memory in a shared zone, call either ngx_slab_alloc(pool, size) or ngx_slab_calloc(pool, size). To free memory, call ngx_slab_free(pool, p).

Slab pool divides all shared zone into pages. Each page is used for allocating objects of the same size. The specified size must be a power of 2, and greater than the minimum size of 8 bytes. Nonconforming values are rounded up. A bitmask for each page tracks which blocks are in use and which are free for allocation. For sizes greater than a half page (which is usually 2048 bytes), allocation is done an entire page at a time

To protect data in shared memory from concurrent access, use the mutex available in the mutex field of ngx_slab_pool_t. A mutex is most commonly used by the slab pool while allocating and freeing memory, but it can be used to protect any other user data structures allocated in the shared zone. To lock or unlock a mutex, call ngx_shmtx_lock(&shpool->mutex) or ngx_shmtx_unlock(&shpool->mutex) respectively.

ngx_str_t        name;
ngx_foo_ctx_t   *ctx;
ngx_shm_zone_t  *shm_zone;

ngx_str_set(&name, "foo");

/* allocate shared zone context */
ctx = ngx_pcalloc(cf->pool, sizeof(ngx_foo_ctx_t));
if (ctx == NULL) {
    /* error */
}

/* add an entry for 64k shared zone */
shm_zone = ngx_shared_memory_add(cf, &name, 65536, &ngx_foo_module);
if (shm_zone == NULL) {
    /* error */
}

/* register init callback and context */
shm_zone->init = ngx_foo_init_zone;
shm_zone->data = ctx;


...


static ngx_int_t
ngx_foo_init_zone(ngx_shm_zone_t *shm_zone, void *data)
{
    ngx_foo_ctx_t  *octx = data;

    size_t            len;
    ngx_foo_ctx_t    *ctx;
    ngx_slab_pool_t  *shpool;

    value = shm_zone->data;

    if (octx) {
        /* reusing a shared zone from old cycle */
        ctx->value = octx->value;
        return NGX_OK;
    }

    shpool = (ngx_slab_pool_t *) shm_zone->shm.addr;

    if (shm_zone->shm.exists) {
        /* initialize shared zone context in Windows nginx worker */
        ctx->value = shpool->data;
        return NGX_OK;
    }

    /* initialize shared zone */

    ctx->value = ngx_slab_alloc(shpool, sizeof(ngx_uint_t));
    if (ctx->value == NULL) {
        return NGX_ERROR;
    }

    shpool->data = ctx->value;

    return NGX_OK;
}

Logging

For logging nginx uses ngx_log_t objects. The nginx logger supports several types of output:

A logger instance can be a chain of loggers, linked to each other with the next field. In this case, each message is written to all loggers in the chain.

For each logger, a severity level controls which messages are written to the log (only events assigned that level or higher are logged). The following severity levels are supported:

For debug logging, the debug mask is checked as well. The debug masks are:

Normally, loggers are created by existing nginx code from error_log directives and are available at nearly every stage of processing in cycle, configuration, client connection and other objects.

Nginx provides the following logging macros:

A log message is formatted in a buffer of size NGX_MAX_ERROR_STR (currently, 2048 bytes) on stack. The message is prepended with the severity level, process ID (PID), connection ID (stored in log->connection), and the system error text. For non-debug messages log->handler is called as well to prepend more specific information to the log message. HTTP module sets ngx_http_log_error() function as log handler to log client and server addresses, current action (stored in log->action), client request line, server name etc.

/* specify what is currently done */
log->action = "sending mp4 to client";

/* error and debug log */
ngx_log_error(NGX_LOG_INFO, c->log, 0, "client prematurely
              closed connection");

ngx_log_debug2(NGX_LOG_DEBUG_HTTP, mp4->file.log, 0,
               "mp4 start:%ui, length:%ui", mp4->start, mp4->length);

The example above results in log entries like these:

2016/09/16 22:08:52 [info] 17445#0: *1 client prematurely closed connection while
sending mp4 to client, client: 127.0.0.1, server: , request: "GET /file.mp4 HTTP/1.1"
2016/09/16 23:28:33 [debug] 22140#0: *1 mp4 start:0, length:10000

Cycle

A cycle object stores the nginx runtime context created from a specific configuration. Its type is ngx_cycle_t. The current cycle is referenced by the ngx_cycle global variable and inherited by nginx workers as they start. Each time the nginx configuration is reloaded, a new cycle is created from the new nginx configuration; the old cycle is usually deleted after the new one is successfully created.

A cycle is created by the ngx_init_cycle() function, which takes the previous cycle as its argument. The function locates the previous cycle's configuration file and inherits as many resources as possible from the previous cycle. A placeholder cycle called "init cycle" is created as nginx start, then is replaced by an actual cycle built from configuration.

Members of the cycle include:

Buffer

For input/output operations, nginx provides the buffer type ngx_buf_t. Normally, it's used to hold data to be written to a destination or read from a source. A buffer can reference data in memory or in a file and it's technically possible for a buffer to reference both at the same time. Memory for the buffer is allocated separately and is not related to the buffer structure ngx_buf_t.

The ngx_buf_t structure has the following fields:

For input and output operations buffers are linked in chains. A chain is a sequence of chain links of type ngx_chain_t, defined as follows:

typedef struct ngx_chain_s  ngx_chain_t;

struct ngx_chain_s {
    ngx_buf_t    *buf;
    ngx_chain_t  *next;
};

Each chain link keeps a reference to its buffer and a reference to the next chain link.

An example of using buffers and chains:

ngx_chain_t *
ngx_get_my_chain(ngx_pool_t *pool)
{
    ngx_buf_t    *b;
    ngx_chain_t  *out, *cl, **ll;

    /* first buf */
    cl = ngx_alloc_chain_link(pool);
    if (cl == NULL) { /* error */ }

    b = ngx_calloc_buf(pool);
    if (b == NULL) { /* error */ }

    b->start = (u_char *) "foo";
    b->pos = b->start;
    b->end = b->start + 3;
    b->last = b->end;
    b->memory = 1; /* read-only memory */

    cl->buf = b;
    out = cl;
    ll = &cl->next;

    /* second buf */
    cl = ngx_alloc_chain_link(pool);
    if (cl == NULL) { /* error */ }

    b = ngx_create_temp_buf(pool, 3);
    if (b == NULL) { /* error */ }

    b->last = ngx_cpymem(b->last, "foo", 3);

    cl->buf = b;
    cl->next = NULL;
    *ll = cl;

    return out;
}

Networking

Connection

The connection type ngx_connection_t is a wrapper around a socket descriptor. It includes the following fields:

An nginx connection can transparently encapsulate the SSL layer. In this case the connection's ssl field holds a pointer to an ngx_ssl_connection_t structure, keeping all SSL-related data for the connection, including SSL_CTX and SSL. The recv, send, recv_chain, and send_chain handlers are set to SSL-enabled functions as well.

The worker_connections directive in the nginx configuration limits the number of connections per nginx worker. All connection structures are precreated when a worker starts and stored in the connections field of the cycle object. To retrieve a connection structure, use the ngx_get_connection(s, log) function. It takes as its s argument a socket descriptor, which needs to be wrapped in a connection structure.

Because the number of connections per worker is limited, nginx provides a way to grab connections that are currently in use. To enable or disable reuse of a connection, call the ngx_reusable_connection(c, reusable) function. Calling ngx_reusable_connection(c, 1) sets the reuse flag in the connection structure and inserts the connection into the reusable_connections_queue of the cycle. Whenever ngx_get_connection() finds out there are no available connections in the cycle's free_connections list, it calls ngx_drain_connections() to release a specific number of reusable connections. For each such connection, the close flag is set and its read handler is called which is supposed to free the connection by calling ngx_close_connection(c) and make it available for reuse. To exit the state when a connection can be reused ngx_reusable_connection(c, 0) is called. HTTP client connections are an example of reusable connections in nginx; they are marked as reusable until the first request byte is received from the client.

Events

Event

Event object ngx_event_t in nginx provides a mechanism for notification that a specific event has occurred.

Fields in ngx_event_t include:

I/O events

Each connection obtained by calling the ngx_get_connection() function has two attached events, c->read and c->write, which are used for receiving notification that the socket is ready for reading or writing. All such events operate in Edge-Triggered mode, meaning that they only trigger notifications when the state of the socket changes. For example, doing a partial read on a socket does not make nginx deliver a repeated read notification until more data arrives on the socket. Even when the underlying I/O notification mechanism is essentially Level-Triggered (poll, select etc), nginx converts the notifications to Edge-Triggered. To make nginx event notifications consistent across all notifications systems on different platforms, the functions ngx_handle_read_event(rev, flags) and ngx_handle_write_event(wev, lowat) must be called after handling an I/O socket notification or calling any I/O functions on that socket. Normally, the functions are called once at the end of each read or write event handler.

Timer events

An event can be set to send a notification when a timeout expires. The timer used by events counts milliseconds since some unspecified point in the past truncated to ngx_msec_t type. Its current value can be obtained from the ngx_current_msec variable.

The function ngx_add_timer(ev, timer) sets a timeout for an event, ngx_del_timer(ev) deletes a previously set timeout. The global timeout red-black tree ngx_event_timer_rbtree stores all timeouts currently set. The key in the tree is of type ngx_msec_t and is the time when the event occurs. The tree structure enables fast insertion and deletion operations, as well as access to the nearest timeouts, which nginx uses to find out how long to wait for I/O events and for expiring timeout events.

Posted events

An event can be posted which means that its handler will be called at some point later within the current event loop iteration. Posting events is a good practice for simplifying code and escaping stack overflows. Posted events are held in a post queue. The ngx_post_event(ev, q) macro posts the event ev to the post queue q. The ngx_delete_posted_event(ev) macro deletes the event ev from the queue it's currently posted in. Normally, events are posted to the ngx_posted_events queue, which is processed late in the event loop — after all I/O and timer events are already handled. The function ngx_event_process_posted() is called to process an event queue. It calls event handlers until the queue is not empty. This means that a posted event handler can post more events to be processed within the current event loop iteration.

An example:

void
ngx_my_connection_read(ngx_connection_t *c)
{
    ngx_event_t  *rev;

    rev = c->read;

    ngx_add_timer(rev, 1000);

    rev->handler = ngx_my_read_handler;

    ngx_my_read(rev);
}


void
ngx_my_read_handler(ngx_event_t *rev)
{
    ssize_t            n;
    ngx_connection_t  *c;
    u_char             buf[256];

    if (rev->timedout) { /* timeout expired */ }

    c = rev->data;

    while (rev->ready) {
        n = c->recv(c, buf, sizeof(buf));

        if (n == NGX_AGAIN) {
            break;
        }

        if (n == NGX_ERROR) { /* error */ }

        /* process buf */
    }

    if (ngx_handle_read_event(rev, 0) != NGX_OK) { /* error */ }
}

Event loop

Except for the nginx master process, all nginx processes do I/O and so have an event loop. (The nginx master process instead spends most of its time in the sigsuspend() call waiting for signals to arrive.) The nginx event loop is implemented in the ngx_process_events_and_timers() function, which is called repeatedly until the process exits.

The event loop has the following stages:

All nginx processes handle signals as well. Signal handlers only set global variables which are checked after the ngx_process_events_and_timers() call.

Processes

There are several types of processes in nginx. The type of a process is kept in the ngx_process global variable, and is one of the following:

The nginx processes handle the following signals:

While all nginx worker processes are able to receive and properly handle POSIX signals, the master process does not use the standard kill() syscall to pass signals to workers and helpers. Instead, nginx uses inter-process socket pairs which allow sending messages between all nginx processes. Currently, however, messages are only sent from the master to its children. The messages carry the standard signals.

Threads

It is possible to offload into a separate thread tasks that would otherwise block the nginx worker process. For example, nginx can be configured to use threads to perform file I/O. Another use case is a library that doesn't have asynchronous interface and thus cannot be normally used with nginx. Keep in mind that the threads interface is a helper for the existing asynchronous approach to processing client connections, and by no means intended as a replacement.

To deal with synchronization, the following wrappers over pthreads primitives are available:

Instead of creating a new thread for each task, nginx implements a thread_pool strategy. Multiple thread pools may be configured for different purposes (for example, performing I/O on different sets of disks). Each thread pool is created at startup and contains a limited number of threads that process a queue of tasks. When a task is completed, a predefined completion handler is called.

The src/core/ngx_thread_pool.h header file contains relevant definitions:

struct ngx_thread_task_s {
    ngx_thread_task_t   *next;
    ngx_uint_t           id;
    void                *ctx;
    void               (*handler)(void *data, ngx_log_t *log);
    ngx_event_t          event;
};

typedef struct ngx_thread_pool_s  ngx_thread_pool_t;

ngx_thread_pool_t *ngx_thread_pool_add(ngx_conf_t *cf, ngx_str_t *name);
ngx_thread_pool_t *ngx_thread_pool_get(ngx_cycle_t *cycle, ngx_str_t *name);

ngx_thread_task_t *ngx_thread_task_alloc(ngx_pool_t *pool, size_t size);
ngx_int_t ngx_thread_task_post(ngx_thread_pool_t *tp, ngx_thread_task_t *task);

At configuration time, a module willing to use threads has to obtain a reference to a thread pool by calling ngx_thread_pool_add(cf, name), which either creates a new thread pool with the given name or returns a reference to the pool with that name if it already exists.

To add a task into a queue of a specified thread pool tp at runtime, use the ngx_thread_task_post(tp, task) function. To execute a function in a thread, pass parameters and setup a completion handler using the ngx_thread_task_t structure:

typedef struct {
    int    foo;
} my_thread_ctx_t;


static void
my_thread_func(void *data, ngx_log_t *log)
{
    my_thread_ctx_t *ctx = data;

    /* this function is executed in a separate thread */
}


static void
my_thread_completion(ngx_event_t *ev)
{
    my_thread_ctx_t *ctx = ev->data;

    /* executed in nginx event loop */
}


ngx_int_t
my_task_offload(my_conf_t *conf)
{
    my_thread_ctx_t    *ctx;
    ngx_thread_task_t  *task;

    task = ngx_thread_task_alloc(conf->pool, sizeof(my_thread_ctx_t));
    if (task == NULL) {
        return NGX_ERROR;
    }

    ctx = task->ctx;

    ctx->foo = 42;

    task->handler = my_thread_func;
    task->event.handler = my_thread_completion;
    task->event.data = ctx;

    if (ngx_thread_task_post(conf->thread_pool, task) != NGX_OK) {
        return NGX_ERROR;
    }

    return NGX_OK;
}

Modules

Adding new modules

Each standalone nginx module resides in a separate directory that contains at least two files: config and a file with the module source code. The config file contains all information needed for nginx to integrate the module, for example:

ngx_module_type=CORE
ngx_module_name=ngx_foo_module
ngx_module_srcs="$ngx_addon_dir/ngx_foo_module.c"

. auto/module

ngx_addon_name=$ngx_module_name

The config file is a POSIX shell script that can set and access the following variables:

To compile a module into nginx statically, use the --add-module=/path/to/module argument to the configure script. To compile a module for later dynamic loading into nginx, use the --add-dynamic-module=/path/to/module argument.

Core Modules

Modules are the building blocks of nginx, and most of its functionality is implemented as modules. The module source file must contain a global variable of type ngx_module_t, which is defined as follows:

struct ngx_module_s {

    /* private part is omitted */

    void                 *ctx;
    ngx_command_t        *commands;
    ngx_uint_t            type;

    ngx_int_t           (*init_master)(ngx_log_t *log);

    ngx_int_t           (*init_module)(ngx_cycle_t *cycle);

    ngx_int_t           (*init_process)(ngx_cycle_t *cycle);
    ngx_int_t           (*init_thread)(ngx_cycle_t *cycle);
    void                (*exit_thread)(ngx_cycle_t *cycle);
    void                (*exit_process)(ngx_cycle_t *cycle);

    void                (*exit_master)(ngx_cycle_t *cycle);

    /* stubs for future extensions are omitted */
};

The omitted private part includes the module version and a signature and is filled using the predefined macro NGX_MODULE_V1.

Each module keeps its private data in the ctx field, recognizes the configuration directives, specified in the commands array, and can be invoked at certain stages of nginx lifecycle. The module lifecycle consists of the following events:

Because threads are used in nginx only as a supplementary I/O facility with its own API, init_thread and exit_thread handlers are not currently called. There is also no init_master handler, because it would be unnecessary overhead.

The module type defines exactly what is stored in the ctx field. Its value is one of the following types:

The NGX_CORE_MODULE is the most basic and thus the most generic and most low-level type of module. The other module types are implemented on top of it and provide a more convenient way to deal with corresponding domains, like handling events or HTTP requests.

The set of core modules includes ngx_core_module, ngx_errlog_module, ngx_regex_module, ngx_thread_pool_module and ngx_openssl_module modules. The HTTP module, the stream module, the mail module and event modules are core modules too. The context of a core module is defined as:

typedef struct {
    ngx_str_t             name;
    void               *(*create_conf)(ngx_cycle_t *cycle);
    char               *(*init_conf)(ngx_cycle_t *cycle, void *conf);
} ngx_core_module_t;

where the name is a module name string, create_conf and init_conf are pointers to functions that create and initialize module configuration respectively. For core modules, nginx calls create_conf before parsing a new configuration and init_conf after all configuration is parsed successfully. The typical create_conf function allocates memory for the configuration and sets default values.

For example, a simplistic module called ngx_foo_module might look like this:

/*
 * Copyright (C) Author.
 */


#include <ngx_config.h>
#include <ngx_core.h>


typedef struct {
    ngx_flag_t  enable;
} ngx_foo_conf_t;


static void *ngx_foo_create_conf(ngx_cycle_t *cycle);
static char *ngx_foo_init_conf(ngx_cycle_t *cycle, void *conf);

static char *ngx_foo_enable(ngx_conf_t *cf, void *post, void *data);
static ngx_conf_post_t  ngx_foo_enable_post = { ngx_foo_enable };


static ngx_command_t  ngx_foo_commands[] = {

    { ngx_string("foo_enabled"),
      NGX_MAIN_CONF|NGX_DIRECT_CONF|NGX_CONF_FLAG,
      ngx_conf_set_flag_slot,
      0,
      offsetof(ngx_foo_conf_t, enable),
      &ngx_foo_enable_post },

      ngx_null_command
};


static ngx_core_module_t  ngx_foo_module_ctx = {
    ngx_string("foo"),
    ngx_foo_create_conf,
    ngx_foo_init_conf
};


ngx_module_t  ngx_foo_module = {
    NGX_MODULE_V1,
    &ngx_foo_module_ctx,                   /* module context */
    ngx_foo_commands,                      /* module directives */
    NGX_CORE_MODULE,                       /* module type */
    NULL,                                  /* init master */
    NULL,                                  /* init module */
    NULL,                                  /* init process */
    NULL,                                  /* init thread */
    NULL,                                  /* exit thread */
    NULL,                                  /* exit process */
    NULL,                                  /* exit master */
    NGX_MODULE_V1_PADDING
};


static void *
ngx_foo_create_conf(ngx_cycle_t *cycle)
{
    ngx_foo_conf_t  *fcf;

    fcf = ngx_pcalloc(cycle->pool, sizeof(ngx_foo_conf_t));
    if (fcf == NULL) {
        return NULL;
    }

    fcf->enable = NGX_CONF_UNSET;

    return fcf;
}


static char *
ngx_foo_init_conf(ngx_cycle_t *cycle, void *conf)
{
    ngx_foo_conf_t *fcf = conf;

    ngx_conf_init_value(fcf->enable, 0);

    return NGX_CONF_OK;
}


static char *
ngx_foo_enable(ngx_conf_t *cf, void *post, void *data)
{
    ngx_flag_t  *fp = data;

    if (*fp == 0) {
        return NGX_CONF_OK;
    }

    ngx_log_error(NGX_LOG_NOTICE, cf->log, 0, "Foo Module is enabled");

    return NGX_CONF_OK;
}

Configuration Directives

The ngx_command_t type defines a single configuration directive. Each module that supports configuration provides an array of such structures that describe how to process arguments and what handlers to call:

typedef struct ngx_command_s  ngx_command_t;

struct ngx_command_s {
    ngx_str_t             name;
    ngx_uint_t            type;
    char               *(*set)(ngx_conf_t *cf, ngx_command_t *cmd, void *conf);
    ngx_uint_t            conf;
    ngx_uint_t            offset;
    void                 *post;
};

Terminate the array with the special value ngx_null_command. The name is the name of a directive as it appears in the configuration file, for example "worker_processes" or "listen". The type is a bit-field of flags that specify the number of arguments the directive takes, its type, and the context in which it appears. The flags are:

The flags for directive types are:

A directive's context defines where it may appear in the configuration:

The configuration parser uses these flags to throw an error in case of a misplaced directive and calls directive handlers supplied with a proper configuration pointer, so that the same directives in different locations can store their values in distinct places.

The set field defines a handler that processes a directive and stores parsed values into the corresponding configuration. There's a number of functions that perform common conversions:

The conf field defines which configuration structure is passed to the directory handler. Core modules only have the global configuration and set NGX_DIRECT_CONF flag to access it. Modules like HTTP, Stream or Mail create hierarchies of configurations. For example, a module's configuration is created for server, location and if scopes.

The offset defines the offset of a field in a module configuration structure that holds values for this particular directive. The typical use is to employ the offsetof() macro.

The post field has two purposes: it may be used to define a handler to be called after the main handler has completed, or to pass additional data to the main handler. In the first case, the ngx_conf_post_t structure needs to be initialized with a pointer to the handler, for example:

static char *ngx_do_foo(ngx_conf_t *cf, void *post, void *data);
static ngx_conf_post_t  ngx_foo_post = { ngx_do_foo };

The post argument is the ngx_conf_post_t object itself, and the data is a pointer to the value, converted from arguments by the main handler with the appropriate type.

HTTP

Connection

Each HTTP client connection runs through the following stages:

Request

For each client HTTP request the ngx_http_request_t object is created. Some of the fields of this object are:

Configuration

Each HTTP module can have three types of configuration:

Configuration structures are created at the nginx configuration stage by calling functions, which allocate the structures, initialize them and merge them. The following example shows how to create a simple location configuration for a module. The configuration has one setting, foo, of type unsigned integer.

typedef struct {
    ngx_uint_t  foo;
} ngx_http_foo_loc_conf_t;


static ngx_http_module_t  ngx_http_foo_module_ctx = {
    NULL,                                  /* preconfiguration */
    NULL,                                  /* postconfiguration */

    NULL,                                  /* create main configuration */
    NULL,                                  /* init main configuration */

    NULL,                                  /* create server configuration */
    NULL,                                  /* merge server configuration */

    ngx_http_foo_create_loc_conf,          /* create location configuration */
    ngx_http_foo_merge_loc_conf            /* merge location configuration */
};


static void *
ngx_http_foo_create_loc_conf(ngx_conf_t *cf)
{
    ngx_http_foo_loc_conf_t  *conf;

    conf = ngx_pcalloc(cf->pool, sizeof(ngx_http_foo_loc_conf_t));
    if (conf == NULL) {
        return NULL;
    }

    conf->foo = NGX_CONF_UNSET_UINT;

    return conf;
}


static char *
ngx_http_foo_merge_loc_conf(ngx_conf_t *cf, void *parent, void *child)
{
    ngx_http_foo_loc_conf_t *prev = parent;
    ngx_http_foo_loc_conf_t *conf = child;

    ngx_conf_merge_uint_value(conf->foo, prev->foo, 1);
}

As seen in the example, the ngx_http_foo_create_loc_conf() function creates a new configuration structure, and ngx_http_foo_merge_loc_conf() merges a configuration with configuration from a higher level. In fact, server and location configuration do not exist only at the server and location levels, but are also created for all levels above them. Specifically, a server configuration is also created at the main level and location configurations are created at the main, server, and location levels. These configurations make it possible to specify server- and location-specific settings at any level of an nginx configuration file. Eventually configurations are merged down. A number of macros like NGX_CONF_UNSET and NGX_CONF_UNSET_UINT are provided for indicating a missing setting and ignoring it while merging. Standard nginx merge macros like ngx_conf_merge_value() and ngx_conf_merge_uint_value() provide a convenient way to merge a setting and set the default value if none of the configurations provided an explicit value. For complete list of macros for different types, see src/core/ngx_conf_file.h.

The following macros are available. for accessing configuration for HTTP modules at configuration time. They all take ngx_conf_t reference as the first argument.

The following example gets a pointer to a location configuration of standard nginx core module ngx_http_core_module and replaces the location content handler kept in the handler field of the structure.

static ngx_int_t ngx_http_foo_handler(ngx_http_request_t *r);


static ngx_command_t  ngx_http_foo_commands[] = {

    { ngx_string("foo"),
      NGX_HTTP_LOC_CONF|NGX_CONF_NOARGS,
      ngx_http_foo,
      0,
      0,
      NULL },

      ngx_null_command
};


static char *
ngx_http_foo(ngx_conf_t *cf, ngx_command_t *cmd, void *conf)
{
    ngx_http_core_loc_conf_t  *clcf;

    clcf = ngx_http_conf_get_module_loc_conf(cf, ngx_http_core_module);
    clcf->handler = ngx_http_bar_handler;

    return NGX_CONF_OK;
}

The following macros are available for accessing configuration for HTTP modules at runtime.

These macros receive a reference to an HTTP request ngx_http_request_t. The main configuration of a request never changes. Server configuration can change from the default after the virtual server for the request is chosen. Location configuration selected for processing a request can change multiple times as a result of a rewrite operation or internal redirect. The following example shows how to access a module's HTTP configuration at runtime.

static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_foo_handler(ngx_http_request_t *r)
{
    ngx_http_foo_loc_conf_t  *flcf;

    flcf = ngx_http_get_module_loc_conf(r, ngx_http_foo_module);

    ...
}

Phases

Each HTTP request passes through a sequence of phases. In each phase a distinct type of processing is performed on the request. Module-specific handlers can be registered in most phases, and many standard nginx modules register their phase handlers as a way to get called at a specific stage of request processing. Phases are processed successively and the phase handlers are called once the request reaches the phase. Following is the list of nginx HTTP phases.

Following is the example of a preaccess phase handler.

static ngx_http_module_t  ngx_http_foo_module_ctx = {
    NULL,                                  /* preconfiguration */
    ngx_http_foo_init,                     /* postconfiguration */

    NULL,                                  /* create main configuration */
    NULL,                                  /* init main configuration */

    NULL,                                  /* create server configuration */
    NULL,                                  /* merge server configuration */

    NULL,                                  /* create location configuration */
    NULL                                   /* merge location configuration */
};


static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_foo_handler(ngx_http_request_t *r)
{
    ngx_table_elt_t  *ua;

    ua = r->headers_in.user_agent;

    if (ua == NULL) {
        return NGX_DECLINED;
    }

    /* reject requests with "User-Agent: foo" */
    if (ua->value.len == 3 && ngx_strncmp(ua->value.data, "foo", 3) == 0) {
        return NGX_HTTP_FORBIDDEN;
    }

    return NGX_DECLINED;
}


static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_foo_init(ngx_conf_t *cf)
{
    ngx_http_handler_pt        *h;
    ngx_http_core_main_conf_t  *cmcf;

    cmcf = ngx_http_conf_get_module_main_conf(cf, ngx_http_core_module);

    h = ngx_array_push(&cmcf->phases[NGX_HTTP_PREACCESS_PHASE].handlers);
    if (h == NULL) {
        return NGX_ERROR;
    }

    *h = ngx_http_foo_handler;

    return NGX_OK;
}

Phase handlers are expected to return specific codes:

For some phases, return codes are treated in a slightly different way. At the content phase, any return code other that NGX_DECLINED is considered a finalization code. Any return code from the location content handlers is considered a finalization code. At the access phase, in satisfy any mode, any return code other than NGX_OK, NGX_DECLINED, NGX_AGAIN, NGX_DONE is considered a denial. If no subsequent access handlers allow or deny access with a different code, the denial code will become the finalization code.

Variables

Accessing existing variables

Variables can be referenced by index (this is the most common method) or name (see below). The index is created at configuration stage, when a variable is added to the configuration. To obtain the variable index, use ngx_http_get_variable_index():

ngx_str_t  name;  /* ngx_string("foo") */
ngx_int_t  index;

index = ngx_http_get_variable_index(cf, &name);

Here, cf is a pointer to nginx configuration and name points to a string containing the variable name. The function returns NGX_ERROR on error or a valid index otherwise, which is typically stored somewhere in the module's configuration for future use.

All HTTP variables are evaluated in the context of a given HTTP request, and results are specific to and cached in that HTTP request. All functions that evaluate variables return the ngx_http_variable_value_t type, representing the variable value:

typedef ngx_variable_value_t  ngx_http_variable_value_t;

typedef struct {
    unsigned    len:28;

    unsigned    valid:1;
    unsigned    no_cacheable:1;
    unsigned    not_found:1;
    unsigned    escape:1;

    u_char     *data;
} ngx_variable_value_t;

where:

The ngx_http_get_flushed_variable() and ngx_http_get_indexed_variable() functions are used to obtain the value of a variable. They have the same interface - accepting an HTTP request r as a context for evaluating the variable and an index that identifies it. An example of typical usage:

ngx_http_variable_value_t  *v;

v = ngx_http_get_flushed_variable(r, index);

if (v == NULL || v->not_found) {
    /* we failed to get value or there is no such variable, handle it */
    return NGX_ERROR;
}

/* some meaningful value is found */

The difference between functions is that the ngx_http_get_indexed_variable() returns a cached value and ngx_http_get_flushed_variable() flushes the cache for non-cacheable variables.

Some modules, such as SSI and Perl, need to deal with variables for which the name is not known at configuration time. An index therefore cannot be used to access them, but the ngx_http_get_variable(r, name, key) function is available. It searches for a variable with a given name and its hash key derived from the name.

Creating variables

To create a variable, use the ngx_http_add_variable() function. It takes as arguments a configuration (where the variable is registered), the variable name and flags that control the function's behaviour:

The function returns NULL in case of error or a pointer to ngx_http_variable_t otherwise:

struct ngx_http_variable_s {
    ngx_str_t                     name;
    ngx_http_set_variable_pt      set_handler;
    ngx_http_get_variable_pt      get_handler;
    uintptr_t                     data;
    ngx_uint_t                    flags;
    ngx_uint_t                    index;
};

The get and set handlers are called to obtain or set the variable value, data is passed to variable handlers, and index holds assigned variable index used to reference the variable.

Usually, a null-terminated static array of ngx_http_variable_t structures is created by a module and processed at the preconfiguration stage to add variables into the configuration, for example:

static ngx_http_variable_t  ngx_http_foo_vars[] = {

    { ngx_string("foo_v1"), NULL, ngx_http_foo_v1_variable, 0, 0, 0 },

      ngx_http_null_variable
};

static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_foo_add_variables(ngx_conf_t *cf)
{
    ngx_http_variable_t  *var, *v;

    for (v = ngx_http_foo_vars; v->name.len; v++) {
        var = ngx_http_add_variable(cf, &v->name, v->flags);
        if (var == NULL) {
            return NGX_ERROR;
        }

        var->get_handler = v->get_handler;
        var->data = v->data;
    }

    return NGX_OK;
}

This function in the example is used to initialize the preconfiguration field of the HTTP module context and is called before the parsing of HTTP configuration, so that the parser can refer to these variables.

The get handler is responsible for evaluating a variable in the context of a specific request, for example:

static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_variable_connection(ngx_http_request_t *r,
    ngx_http_variable_value_t *v, uintptr_t data)
{
    u_char  *p;

    p = ngx_pnalloc(r->pool, NGX_ATOMIC_T_LEN);
    if (p == NULL) {
        return NGX_ERROR;
    }

    v->len = ngx_sprintf(p, "%uA", r->connection->number) - p;
    v->valid = 1;
    v->no_cacheable = 0;
    v->not_found = 0;
    v->data = p;

    return NGX_OK;
}

It returns NGX_ERROR in case of internal error (for example, failed memory allocation) or NGX_OK otherwise. To learn the status of variable evaluation, inspect the flags in ngx_http_variable_value_t (see the description above).

The set handler allows setting the property referenced by the variable. For example, the set handler of the $limit_rate variable modifies the request's limit_rate field:

...
{ ngx_string("limit_rate"), ngx_http_variable_request_set_size,
  ngx_http_variable_request_get_size,
  offsetof(ngx_http_request_t, limit_rate),
  NGX_HTTP_VAR_CHANGEABLE|NGX_HTTP_VAR_NOCACHEABLE, 0 },
...

static void
ngx_http_variable_request_set_size(ngx_http_request_t *r,
    ngx_http_variable_value_t *v, uintptr_t data)
{
    ssize_t    s, *sp;
    ngx_str_t  val;

    val.len = v->len;
    val.data = v->data;

    s = ngx_parse_size(&val);

    if (s == NGX_ERROR) {
        ngx_log_error(NGX_LOG_ERR, r->connection->log, 0,
                      "invalid size \"%V\"", &val);
        return;
    }

    sp = (ssize_t *) ((char *) r + data);

    *sp = s;

    return;
}

Complex values

A complex value, despite its name, provides an easy way to evaluate expressions which can contain text, variables, and their combination.

The complex value description in ngx_http_compile_complex_value is compiled at the configuration stage into ngx_http_complex_value_t which is used at runtime to obtain results of expression evaluation.

ngx_str_t                         *value;
ngx_http_complex_value_t           cv;
ngx_http_compile_complex_value_t   ccv;

value = cf->args->elts; /* directive arguments */

ngx_memzero(&ccv, sizeof(ngx_http_compile_complex_value_t));

ccv.cf = cf;
ccv.value = &value[1];
ccv.complex_value = &cv;
ccv.zero = 1;
ccv.conf_prefix = 1;

if (ngx_http_compile_complex_value(&ccv) != NGX_OK) {
    return NGX_CONF_ERROR;
}

Here, ccv holds all parameters that are required to initialize the complex value cv:

The zero flag is useful when results are to be passed to libraries that require zero-terminated strings, and prefixes are handy when dealing with filenames.

Upon successful compilation, cv.lengths contains information about the presence of variables in the expression. The NULL value means that the expression contained static text only, and so can be stored in a simple string rather than as a complex value.

The ngx_http_set_complex_value_slot() is a convenient function used to initialize a complex value completely in the directive declaration itself.

At runtime, a complex value can be calculated using the ngx_http_complex_value() function:

ngx_str_t  res;

if (ngx_http_complex_value(r, &cv, &res) != NGX_OK) {
    return NGX_ERROR;
}

Given the request r and previously compiled value cv, the function evaluates the expression and writes the result to res.

Request redirection

An HTTP request is always connected to a location via the loc_conf field of the ngx_http_request_t structure. This means that at any point the location configuration of any module can be retrieved from the request by calling ngx_http_get_module_loc_conf(r, module). Request location can change several times during the request's lifetime. Initially, a default server location of the default server is assigned to a request. If the request switches to a different server (chosen by the HTTP “Host” header or SSL SNI extension), the request switches to the default location of that server as well. The next change of the location takes place at the NGX_HTTP_FIND_CONFIG_PHASE request phase. At this phase a location is chosen by request URI among all non-named locations configured for the server. The ngx_http_rewrite_module can change the request URI at the NGX_HTTP_REWRITE_PHASE request phase as a result of the rewrite directive and send the request back to the NGX_HTTP_FIND_CONFIG_PHASE phase for selection of a new location based on the new URI.

It is also possible to redirect a request to a new location at any point by calling one of ngx_http_internal_redirect(r, uri, args) or ngx_http_named_location(r, name).

The ngx_http_internal_redirect(r, uri, args) function changes the request URI and returns the request to the NGX_HTTP_SERVER_REWRITE_PHASE phase. The request proceeds with a server default location. Later at NGX_HTTP_FIND_CONFIG_PHASE a new location is chosen based on the new request URI.

The following example performs an internal redirect with the new request arguments.

ngx_int_t
ngx_http_foo_redirect(ngx_http_request_t *r)
{
    ngx_str_t  uri, args;

    ngx_str_set(&uri, "/foo");
    ngx_str_set(&args, "bar=1");

    return ngx_http_internal_redirect(r, &uri, &args);
}

The function ngx_http_named_location(r, name) redirects a request to a named location. The name of the location is passed as the argument. The location is looked up among all named locations of the current server, after which the requests switches to the NGX_HTTP_REWRITE_PHASE phase.

The following example performs a redirect to a named location @foo.

ngx_int_t
ngx_http_foo_named_redirect(ngx_http_request_t *r)
{
    ngx_str_t  name;

    ngx_str_set(&name, "foo");

    return ngx_http_named_location(r, &name);
}

Both functions - ngx_http_internal_redirect(r, uri, args) and ngx_http_named_location(r, name) can be called when nginx modules have already stored some contexts in a request's ctx field. It's possible for these contexts to become inconsistent with the new location configuration. To prevent inconsistency, all request contexts are erased by both redirect functions.

Calling ngx_http_internal_redirect(r, uri, args) or ngx_http_named_location(r, name) increases the request count. For consistent request reference counting, call ngx_http_finalize_request(r, NGX_DONE) after redirecting the request. This will finalize current request code path and decrease the counter.

Redirected and rewritten requests become internal and can access the internal locations. Internal requests have the internal flag set.

Subrequests

Subrequests are primarily used to insert output of one request into another, possibly mixed with other data. A subrequest looks like a normal request, but shares some data with its parent. In particular, all fields related to client input are shared because a subrequest does not receive any other input from the client. The request field parent for a subrequest contains a link to its parent request and is NULL for the main request. The field main contains a link to the main request in a group of requests.

A subrequest starts in the NGX_HTTP_SERVER_REWRITE_PHASE phase. It passes through the same subsequent phases as a normal request and is assigned a location based on its own URI.

The output header in a subrequest is always ignored. The ngx_http_postpone_filter places the subrequest's output body in the right position relative to other data produced by the parent request.

Subrequests are related to the concept of active requests. A request r is considered active if c->data == r, where c is the client connection object. At any given point, only the active request in a request group is allowed to output its buffers to the client. An inactive request can still send its output to the filter chain, but it does not pass beyond the ngx_http_postpone_filter and remains buffered by that filter until the request becomes active. Here are some rules of request activation:

Create a subrequest by calling the function ngx_http_subrequest(r, uri, args, psr, ps, flags), where r is the parent request, uri and args are the URI and arguments of the subrequest, psr is the output parameter, which receives the newly created subrequest reference, ps is a callback object for notifying the parent request that the subrequest is being finalized, and flags is bitmask of flags. The following flags are available:

The following example creates a subrequest with the URI of /foo.

ngx_int_t            rc;
ngx_str_t            uri;
ngx_http_request_t  *sr;

...

ngx_str_set(&uri, "/foo");

rc = ngx_http_subrequest(r, &uri, NULL, &sr, NULL, 0);
if (rc == NGX_ERROR) {
    /* error */
}

This example clones the current request and sets a finalization callback for the subrequest.

ngx_int_t
ngx_http_foo_clone(ngx_http_request_t *r)
{
    ngx_http_request_t          *sr;
    ngx_http_post_subrequest_t  *ps;

    ps = ngx_palloc(r->pool, sizeof(ngx_http_post_subrequest_t));
    if (ps == NULL) {
        return NGX_ERROR;
    }

    ps->handler = ngx_http_foo_subrequest_done;
    ps->data = "foo";

    return ngx_http_subrequest(r, &r->uri, &r->args, &sr, ps,
                               NGX_HTTP_SUBREQUEST_CLONE);
}


ngx_int_t
ngx_http_foo_subrequest_done(ngx_http_request_t *r, void *data, ngx_int_t rc)
{
    char  *msg = (char *) data;

    ngx_log_error(NGX_LOG_INFO, r->connection->log, 0,
                  "done subrequest r:%p msg:%s rc:%i", r, msg, rc);

    return rc;
}

Subrequests are normally created in a body filter, in which case their output can be treated like the output from any explicit request. This means that eventually the output of a subrequest is sent to the client, after all explicit buffers that are passed before subrequest creation and before any buffers that are passed after creation. This ordering is preserved even for large hierarchies of subrequests. The following example inserts output from a subrequest after all request data buffers, but before the final buffer with the last_buf flag.

ngx_int_t
ngx_http_foo_body_filter(ngx_http_request_t *r, ngx_chain_t *in)
{
    ngx_int_t                   rc;
    ngx_buf_t                  *b;
    ngx_uint_t                  last;
    ngx_chain_t                *cl, out;
    ngx_http_request_t         *sr;
    ngx_http_foo_filter_ctx_t  *ctx;

    ctx = ngx_http_get_module_ctx(r, ngx_http_foo_filter_module);
    if (ctx == NULL) {
        return ngx_http_next_body_filter(r, in);
    }

    last = 0;

    for (cl = in; cl; cl = cl->next) {
        if (cl->buf->last_buf) {
            cl->buf->last_buf = 0;
            cl->buf->last_in_chain = 1;
            cl->buf->sync = 1;
            last = 1;
        }
    }

    /* Output explicit output buffers */

    rc = ngx_http_next_body_filter(r, in);

    if (rc == NGX_ERROR || !last) {
        return rc;
    }

    /*
     * Create the subrequest.  The output of the subrequest
     * will automatically be sent after all preceding buffers,
     * but before the last_buf buffer passed later in this function.
     */

    if (ngx_http_subrequest(r, ctx->uri, NULL, &sr, NULL, 0) != NGX_OK) {
        return NGX_ERROR;
    }

    ngx_http_set_ctx(r, NULL, ngx_http_foo_filter_module);

    /* Output the final buffer with the last_buf flag */

    b = ngx_calloc_buf(r->pool);
    if (b == NULL) {
        return NGX_ERROR;
    }

    b->last_buf = 1;

    out.buf = b;
    out.next = NULL;

    return ngx_http_output_filter(r, &out);
}

A subrequest can also be created for other purposes than data output. For example, the ngx_http_auth_request_module module creates a subrequest at the NGX_HTTP_ACCESS_PHASE phase. To disable output at this point, the header_only flag is set on the subrequest. This prevents the subrequest body from being sent to the client. Note that the subrequest's header is never sent to the client. The result of the subrequest can be analyzed in the callback handler.

Request finalization

An HTTP request is finalized by calling the function ngx_http_finalize_request(r, rc). It is usually finalized by the content handler after all output buffers are sent to the filter chain. At this point all of the output might not be sent to the client, with some of it remaining buffered somewhere along the filter chain. If it is, the ngx_http_finalize_request(r, rc) function automatically installs a special handler ngx_http_writer(r) to finish sending the output. A request is also finalized in case of an error or if a standard HTTP response code needs to be returned to the client.

The function ngx_http_finalize_request(r, rc) expects the following rc values:

Request body

For dealing with the body of a client request, nginx provides the ngx_http_read_client_request_body(r, post_handler) and ngx_http_discard_request_body(r) functions. The first function reads the request body and makes it available via the request_body request field. The second function instructs nginx to discard (read and ignore) the request body. One of these functions must be called for every request. Normally, the content handler makes the call.

Reading or discarding the client request body from a subrequest is not allowed. It must always be done in the main request. When a subrequest is created, it inherits the parent's request_body object which can be used by the subrequest if the main request has previously read the request body.

The function ngx_http_read_client_request_body(r, post_handler) starts the process of reading the request body. When the body is completely read, the post_handler callback is called to continue processing the request. If the request body is missing or has already been read, the callback is called immediately. The function ngx_http_read_client_request_body(r, post_handler) allocates the request_body request field of type ngx_http_request_body_t. The field bufs of this object keeps the result as a buffer chain. The body can be saved in memory buffers or file buffers, if the capacity specified by the client_body_buffer_size directive is not enough to fit the entire body in memory.

The following example reads a client request body and returns its size.

ngx_int_t
ngx_http_foo_content_handler(ngx_http_request_t *r)
{
    ngx_int_t  rc;

    rc = ngx_http_read_client_request_body(r, ngx_http_foo_init);

    if (rc >= NGX_HTTP_SPECIAL_RESPONSE) {
        /* error */
        return rc;
    }

    return NGX_DONE;
}


void
ngx_http_foo_init(ngx_http_request_t *r)
{
    off_t         len;
    ngx_buf_t    *b;
    ngx_int_t     rc;
    ngx_chain_t  *in, out;

    if (r->request_body == NULL) {
        ngx_http_finalize_request(r, NGX_HTTP_INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR);
        return;
    }

    len = 0;

    for (in = r->request_body->bufs; in; in = in->next) {
        len += ngx_buf_size(in->buf);
    }

    b = ngx_create_temp_buf(r->pool, NGX_OFF_T_LEN);
    if (b == NULL) {
        ngx_http_finalize_request(r, NGX_HTTP_INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR);
        return;
    }

    b->last = ngx_sprintf(b->pos, "%O", len);
    b->last_buf = (r == r->main) ? 1 : 0;
    b->last_in_chain = 1;

    r->headers_out.status = NGX_HTTP_OK;
    r->headers_out.content_length_n = b->last - b->pos;

    rc = ngx_http_send_header(r);

    if (rc == NGX_ERROR || rc > NGX_OK || r->header_only) {
        ngx_http_finalize_request(r, rc);
        return;
    }

    out.buf = b;
    out.next = NULL;

    rc = ngx_http_output_filter(r, &out);

    ngx_http_finalize_request(r, rc);
}

The following fields of the request determine how the request body is read:

The request_body_no_buffering flag enables the unbuffered mode of reading a request body. In this mode, after calling ngx_http_read_client_request_body(), the bufs chain might keep only a part of the body. To read the next part, call the ngx_http_read_unbuffered_request_body(r) function. The return value NGX_AGAIN and the request flag reading_body indicate that more data is available. If bufs is NULL after calling this function, there is nothing to read at the moment. The request callback read_event_handler will be called when the next part of request body is available.

Request body filters

After a request body part is read, it's passed to the request body filter chain by calling the first body filter handler stored in the ngx_http_top_request_body_filter variable. It's assumed that every body handler calls the next handler in the chain until the final handler ngx_http_request_body_save_filter(r, cl) is called. This handler collects the buffers in r->request_body->bufs and writes them to a file if necessary. The last request body buffer has nonzero last_buf flag.

If a filter is planning to delay data buffers, it should set the flag r->request_body->filter_need_buffering to 1 when called for the first time.

Following is an example of a simple request body filter that delays request body by one second.

#include <ngx_config.h>
#include <ngx_core.h>
#include <ngx_http.h>


#define NGX_HTTP_DELAY_BODY  1000


typedef struct {
    ngx_event_t   event;
    ngx_chain_t  *out;
} ngx_http_delay_body_ctx_t;


static ngx_int_t ngx_http_delay_body_filter(ngx_http_request_t *r,
    ngx_chain_t *in);
static void ngx_http_delay_body_cleanup(void *data);
static void ngx_http_delay_body_event_handler(ngx_event_t *ev);
static ngx_int_t ngx_http_delay_body_init(ngx_conf_t *cf);


static ngx_http_module_t  ngx_http_delay_body_module_ctx = {
    NULL,                          /* preconfiguration */
    ngx_http_delay_body_init,      /* postconfiguration */

    NULL,                          /* create main configuration */
    NULL,                          /* init main configuration */

    NULL,                          /* create server configuration */
    NULL,                          /* merge server configuration */

    NULL,                          /* create location configuration */
    NULL                           /* merge location configuration */
};


ngx_module_t  ngx_http_delay_body_filter_module = {
    NGX_MODULE_V1,
    &ngx_http_delay_body_module_ctx, /* module context */
    NULL,                          /* module directives */
    NGX_HTTP_MODULE,               /* module type */
    NULL,                          /* init master */
    NULL,                          /* init module */
    NULL,                          /* init process */
    NULL,                          /* init thread */
    NULL,                          /* exit thread */
    NULL,                          /* exit process */
    NULL,                          /* exit master */
    NGX_MODULE_V1_PADDING
};


static ngx_http_request_body_filter_pt   ngx_http_next_request_body_filter;


static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_delay_body_filter(ngx_http_request_t *r, ngx_chain_t *in)
{
    ngx_int_t                   rc;
    ngx_chain_t                *cl, *ln;
    ngx_http_cleanup_t         *cln;
    ngx_http_delay_body_ctx_t  *ctx;

    ngx_log_debug0(NGX_LOG_DEBUG_HTTP, r->connection->log, 0,
                   "delay request body filter");

    ctx = ngx_http_get_module_ctx(r, ngx_http_delay_body_filter_module);

    if (ctx == NULL) {
        ctx = ngx_pcalloc(r->pool, sizeof(ngx_http_delay_body_ctx_t));
        if (ctx == NULL) {
            return NGX_HTTP_INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR;
        }

        ngx_http_set_ctx(r, ctx, ngx_http_delay_body_filter_module);

        r->request_body->filter_need_buffering = 1;
    }

    if (ngx_chain_add_copy(r->pool, &ctx->out, in) != NGX_OK) {
        return NGX_HTTP_INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR;
    }

    if (!ctx->event.timedout) {
        if (!ctx->event.timer_set) {

            /* cleanup to remove the timer in case of abnormal termination */

            cln = ngx_http_cleanup_add(r, 0);
            if (cln == NULL) {
                return NGX_HTTP_INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR;
            }

            cln->handler = ngx_http_delay_body_cleanup;
            cln->data = ctx;

            /* add timer */

            ctx->event.handler = ngx_http_delay_body_event_handler;
            ctx->event.data = r;
            ctx->event.log = r->connection->log;

            ngx_add_timer(&ctx->event, NGX_HTTP_DELAY_BODY);
        }

        return ngx_http_next_request_body_filter(r, NULL);
    }

    rc = ngx_http_next_request_body_filter(r, ctx->out);

    for (cl = ctx->out; cl; /* void */) {
        ln = cl;
        cl = cl->next;
        ngx_free_chain(r->pool, ln);
    }

    ctx->out = NULL;

    return rc;
}


static void
ngx_http_delay_body_cleanup(void *data)
{
    ngx_http_delay_body_ctx_t *ctx = data;

    if (ctx->event.timer_set) {
        ngx_del_timer(&ctx->event);
    }
}


static void
ngx_http_delay_body_event_handler(ngx_event_t *ev)
{
    ngx_connection_t    *c;
    ngx_http_request_t  *r;

    r = ev->data;
    c = r->connection;

    ngx_log_debug0(NGX_LOG_DEBUG_HTTP, c->log, 0,
                   "delay request body event");

    ngx_post_event(c->read, &ngx_posted_events);
}


static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_delay_body_init(ngx_conf_t *cf)
{
    ngx_http_next_request_body_filter = ngx_http_top_request_body_filter;
    ngx_http_top_request_body_filter = ngx_http_delay_body_filter;

    return NGX_OK;
}

Response

In nginx an HTTP response is produced by sending the response header followed by the optional response body. Both header and body are passed through a chain of filters and eventually get written to the client socket. An nginx module can install its handler into the header or body filter chain and process the output coming from the previous handler.

Response header

The ngx_http_send_header(r) function sends the output header. Do not call this function until r->headers_out contains all of the data required to produce the HTTP response header. The status field in r->headers_out must always be set. If the response status indicates that a response body follows the header, content_length_n can be set as well. The default value for this field is -1, which means that the body size is unknown. In this case, chunked transfer encoding is used. To output an arbitrary header, append the headers list.

static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_foo_content_handler(ngx_http_request_t *r)
{
    ngx_int_t         rc;
    ngx_table_elt_t  *h;

    /* send header */

    r->headers_out.status = NGX_HTTP_OK;
    r->headers_out.content_length_n = 3;

    /* X-Foo: foo */

    h = ngx_list_push(&r->headers_out.headers);
    if (h == NULL) {
        return NGX_ERROR;
    }

    h->hash = 1;
    ngx_str_set(&h->key, "X-Foo");
    ngx_str_set(&h->value, "foo");

    rc = ngx_http_send_header(r);

    if (rc == NGX_ERROR || rc > NGX_OK || r->header_only) {
        return rc;
    }

    /* send body */

    ...
}

Header filters

The ngx_http_send_header(r) function invokes the header filter chain by calling the first header filter handler stored in the ngx_http_top_header_filter variable. It's assumed that every header handler calls the next handler in the chain until the final handler ngx_http_header_filter(r) is called. The final header handler constructs the HTTP response based on r->headers_out and passes it to the ngx_http_writer_filter for output.

To add a handler to the header filter chain, store its address in the global variable ngx_http_top_header_filter at configuration time. The previous handler address is normally stored in a static variable in a module and is called by the newly added handler before exiting.

The following example of a header filter module adds the HTTP header "X-Foo: foo" to every response with status 200.

#include <ngx_config.h>
#include <ngx_core.h>
#include <ngx_http.h>


static ngx_int_t ngx_http_foo_header_filter(ngx_http_request_t *r);
static ngx_int_t ngx_http_foo_header_filter_init(ngx_conf_t *cf);


static ngx_http_module_t  ngx_http_foo_header_filter_module_ctx = {
    NULL,                                   /* preconfiguration */
    ngx_http_foo_header_filter_init,        /* postconfiguration */

    NULL,                                   /* create main configuration */
    NULL,                                   /* init main configuration */

    NULL,                                   /* create server configuration */
    NULL,                                   /* merge server configuration */

    NULL,                                   /* create location configuration */
    NULL                                    /* merge location configuration */
};


ngx_module_t  ngx_http_foo_header_filter_module = {
    NGX_MODULE_V1,
    &ngx_http_foo_header_filter_module_ctx, /* module context */
    NULL,                                   /* module directives */
    NGX_HTTP_MODULE,                        /* module type */
    NULL,                                   /* init master */
    NULL,                                   /* init module */
    NULL,                                   /* init process */
    NULL,                                   /* init thread */
    NULL,                                   /* exit thread */
    NULL,                                   /* exit process */
    NULL,                                   /* exit master */
    NGX_MODULE_V1_PADDING
};


static ngx_http_output_header_filter_pt  ngx_http_next_header_filter;


static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_foo_header_filter(ngx_http_request_t *r)
{
    ngx_table_elt_t  *h;

    /*
     * The filter handler adds "X-Foo: foo" header
     * to every HTTP 200 response
     */

    if (r->headers_out.status != NGX_HTTP_OK) {
        return ngx_http_next_header_filter(r);
    }

    h = ngx_list_push(&r->headers_out.headers);
    if (h == NULL) {
        return NGX_ERROR;
    }

    h->hash = 1;
    ngx_str_set(&h->key, "X-Foo");
    ngx_str_set(&h->value, "foo");

    return ngx_http_next_header_filter(r);
}


static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_foo_header_filter_init(ngx_conf_t *cf)
{
    ngx_http_next_header_filter = ngx_http_top_header_filter;
    ngx_http_top_header_filter = ngx_http_foo_header_filter;

    return NGX_OK;
}

Response body

To send the response body, call the ngx_http_output_filter(r, cl) function. The function can be called multiple times. Each time, it sends a part of the response body in the form of a buffer chain. Set the last_buf flag in the last body buffer.

The following example produces a complete HTTP response with "foo" as its body. For the example to work as subrequest as well as a main request, the last_in_chain flag is set in the last buffer of the output. The last_buf flag is set only for the main request because the last buffer for a subrequest does not end the entire output.

static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_bar_content_handler(ngx_http_request_t *r)
{
    ngx_int_t     rc;
    ngx_buf_t    *b;
    ngx_chain_t   out;

    /* send header */

    r->headers_out.status = NGX_HTTP_OK;
    r->headers_out.content_length_n = 3;

    rc = ngx_http_send_header(r);

    if (rc == NGX_ERROR || rc > NGX_OK || r->header_only) {
        return rc;
    }

    /* send body */

    b = ngx_calloc_buf(r->pool);
    if (b == NULL) {
        return NGX_ERROR;
    }

    b->last_buf = (r == r->main) ? 1 : 0;
    b->last_in_chain = 1;

    b->memory = 1;

    b->pos = (u_char *) "foo";
    b->last = b->pos + 3;

    out.buf = b;
    out.next = NULL;

    return ngx_http_output_filter(r, &out);
}

Response body filters

The function ngx_http_output_filter(r, cl) invokes the body filter chain by calling the first body filter handler stored in the ngx_http_top_body_filter variable. It's assumed that every body handler calls the next handler in the chain until the final handler ngx_http_write_filter(r, cl) is called.

A body filter handler receives a chain of buffers. The handler is supposed to process the buffers and pass a possibly new chain to the next handler. It's worth noting that the chain links ngx_chain_t of the incoming chain belong to the caller, and must not be reused or changed. Right after the handler completes, the caller can use its output chain links to keep track of the buffers it has sent. To save the buffer chain or to substitute some buffers before passing to the next filter, a handler needs to allocate its own chain links.

Following is an example of a simple body filter that counts the number of bytes in the body. The result is available as the $counter variable which can be used in the access log.

#include <ngx_config.h>
#include <ngx_core.h>
#include <ngx_http.h>


typedef struct {
    off_t  count;
} ngx_http_counter_filter_ctx_t;


static ngx_int_t ngx_http_counter_body_filter(ngx_http_request_t *r,
    ngx_chain_t *in);
static ngx_int_t ngx_http_counter_variable(ngx_http_request_t *r,
    ngx_http_variable_value_t *v, uintptr_t data);
static ngx_int_t ngx_http_counter_add_variables(ngx_conf_t *cf);
static ngx_int_t ngx_http_counter_filter_init(ngx_conf_t *cf);


static ngx_http_module_t  ngx_http_counter_filter_module_ctx = {
    ngx_http_counter_add_variables,        /* preconfiguration */
    ngx_http_counter_filter_init,          /* postconfiguration */

    NULL,                                  /* create main configuration */
    NULL,                                  /* init main configuration */

    NULL,                                  /* create server configuration */
    NULL,                                  /* merge server configuration */

    NULL,                                  /* create location configuration */
    NULL                                   /* merge location configuration */
};


ngx_module_t  ngx_http_counter_filter_module = {
    NGX_MODULE_V1,
    &ngx_http_counter_filter_module_ctx,   /* module context */
    NULL,                                  /* module directives */
    NGX_HTTP_MODULE,                       /* module type */
    NULL,                                  /* init master */
    NULL,                                  /* init module */
    NULL,                                  /* init process */
    NULL,                                  /* init thread */
    NULL,                                  /* exit thread */
    NULL,                                  /* exit process */
    NULL,                                  /* exit master */
    NGX_MODULE_V1_PADDING
};


static ngx_http_output_body_filter_pt  ngx_http_next_body_filter;

static ngx_str_t  ngx_http_counter_name = ngx_string("counter");


static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_counter_body_filter(ngx_http_request_t *r, ngx_chain_t *in)
{
    ngx_chain_t                    *cl;
    ngx_http_counter_filter_ctx_t  *ctx;

    ctx = ngx_http_get_module_ctx(r, ngx_http_counter_filter_module);
    if (ctx == NULL) {
        ctx = ngx_pcalloc(r->pool, sizeof(ngx_http_counter_filter_ctx_t));
        if (ctx == NULL) {
            return NGX_ERROR;
        }

        ngx_http_set_ctx(r, ctx, ngx_http_counter_filter_module);
    }

    for (cl = in; cl; cl = cl->next) {
        ctx->count += ngx_buf_size(cl->buf);
    }

    return ngx_http_next_body_filter(r, in);
}


static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_counter_variable(ngx_http_request_t *r, ngx_http_variable_value_t *v,
    uintptr_t data)
{
    u_char                         *p;
    ngx_http_counter_filter_ctx_t  *ctx;

    ctx = ngx_http_get_module_ctx(r, ngx_http_counter_filter_module);
    if (ctx == NULL) {
        v->not_found = 1;
        return NGX_OK;
    }

    p = ngx_pnalloc(r->pool, NGX_OFF_T_LEN);
    if (p == NULL) {
        return NGX_ERROR;
    }

    v->data = p;
    v->len = ngx_sprintf(p, "%O", ctx->count) - p;
    v->valid = 1;
    v->no_cacheable = 0;
    v->not_found = 0;

    return NGX_OK;
}


static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_counter_add_variables(ngx_conf_t *cf)
{
    ngx_http_variable_t  *var;

    var = ngx_http_add_variable(cf, &ngx_http_counter_name, 0);
    if (var == NULL) {
        return NGX_ERROR;
    }

    var->get_handler = ngx_http_counter_variable;

    return NGX_OK;
}


static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_counter_filter_init(ngx_conf_t *cf)
{
    ngx_http_next_body_filter = ngx_http_top_body_filter;
    ngx_http_top_body_filter = ngx_http_counter_body_filter;

    return NGX_OK;
}

Building filter modules

When writing a body or header filter, pay special attention to the filter's position in the filter order. There's a number of header and body filters registered by nginx standard modules. The nginx standard modules register a number of head and body filters and it's important to register a new filter module in the right place with respect to them. Normally, modules register filters in their postconfiguration handlers. The order in which filters are called during processing is obviously the reverse of the order in which they are registered.

For third-party filter modules nginx provides a special slot HTTP_AUX_FILTER_MODULES. To register a filter module in this slot, set the ngx_module_type variable to HTTP_AUX_FILTER in the module's configuration.

The following example shows a filter module config file assuming for a module with just one source file, ngx_http_foo_filter_module.c.

ngx_module_type=HTTP_AUX_FILTER
ngx_module_name=ngx_http_foo_filter_module
ngx_module_srcs="$ngx_addon_dir/ngx_http_foo_filter_module.c"

. auto/module

Buffer reuse

When issuing or altering a stream of buffers, it's often desirable to reuse the allocated buffers. A standard and widely adopted approach in nginx code is to keep two buffer chains for this purpose: free and busy. The free chain keeps all free buffers, which can be reused. The busy chain keeps all buffers sent by the current module that are still in use by some other filter handler. A buffer is considered in use if its size is greater than zero. Normally, when a buffer is consumed by a filter, its pos (or file_pos for a file buffer) is moved towards last (file_last for a file buffer). Once a buffer is completely consumed, it's ready to be reused. To add newly freed buffers to the free chain it's enough to iterate over the busy chain and move the zero size buffers at the head of it to free. This operation is so common that there is a special function for it, ngx_chain_update_chains(free, busy, out, tag). The function appends the output chain out to busy and moves free buffers from the top of busy to free. Only the buffers with the specified tag are reused. This lets a module reuse only the buffers that it allocated itself.

The following example is a body filter that inserts the string “foo” before each incoming buffer. The new buffers allocated by the module are reused if possible. Note that for this example to work properly, setting up a header filter and resetting content_length_n to -1 is also required, but the relevant code is not provided here.

typedef struct {
    ngx_chain_t  *free;
    ngx_chain_t  *busy;
}  ngx_http_foo_filter_ctx_t;


ngx_int_t
ngx_http_foo_body_filter(ngx_http_request_t *r, ngx_chain_t *in)
{
    ngx_int_t                   rc;
    ngx_buf_t                  *b;
    ngx_chain_t                *cl, *tl, *out, **ll;
    ngx_http_foo_filter_ctx_t  *ctx;

    ctx = ngx_http_get_module_ctx(r, ngx_http_foo_filter_module);
    if (ctx == NULL) {
        ctx = ngx_pcalloc(r->pool, sizeof(ngx_http_foo_filter_ctx_t));
        if (ctx == NULL) {
            return NGX_ERROR;
        }

        ngx_http_set_ctx(r, ctx, ngx_http_foo_filter_module);
    }

    /* create a new chain "out" from "in" with all the changes */

    ll = &out;

    for (cl = in; cl; cl = cl->next) {

        /* append "foo" in a reused buffer if possible */

        tl = ngx_chain_get_free_buf(r->pool, &ctx->free);
        if (tl == NULL) {
            return NGX_ERROR;
        }

        b = tl->buf;
        b->tag = (ngx_buf_tag_t) &ngx_http_foo_filter_module;
        b->memory = 1;
        b->pos = (u_char *) "foo";
        b->last = b->pos + 3;

        *ll = tl;
        ll = &tl->next;

        /* append the next incoming buffer */

        tl = ngx_alloc_chain_link(r->pool);
        if (tl == NULL) {
            return NGX_ERROR;
        }

        tl->buf = cl->buf;
        *ll = tl;
        ll = &tl->next;
    }

    *ll = NULL;

    /* send the new chain */

    rc = ngx_http_next_body_filter(r, out);

    /* update "busy" and "free" chains for reuse */

    ngx_chain_update_chains(r->pool, &ctx->free, &ctx->busy, &out,
                            (ngx_buf_tag_t) &ngx_http_foo_filter_module);

    return rc;
}

Load balancing

The ngx_http_upstream_module provides the basic functionality needed to pass requests to remote servers. Modules that implement specific protocols, such as HTTP or FastCGI, use this functionality. The module also provides an interface for creating custom load-balancing modules and implements a default round-robin method.

The least_conn and hash modules implement alternative load-balancing methods, but are actually implemented as extensions of the upstream round-robin module and share a lot of code with it, such as the representation of a server group. The keepalive module is an independent module that extends upstream functionality.

The ngx_http_upstream_module can be configured explicitly by placing the corresponding upstream block into the configuration file, or implicitly by using directives such as proxy_pass that accept a URL that gets evaluated at some point into a list of servers. The alternative load-balancing methods are available only with an explicit upstream configuration. The upstream module configuration has its own directive context NGX_HTTP_UPS_CONF. The structure is defined as follows:

struct ngx_http_upstream_srv_conf_s {
    ngx_http_upstream_peer_t         peer;
    void                           **srv_conf;

    ngx_array_t                     *servers;  /* ngx_http_upstream_server_t */

    ngx_uint_t                       flags;
    ngx_str_t                        host;
    u_char                          *file_name;
    ngx_uint_t                       line;
    in_port_t                        port;
    ngx_uint_t                       no_port;  /* unsigned no_port:1 */

#if (NGX_HTTP_UPSTREAM_ZONE)
    ngx_shm_zone_t                  *shm_zone;
#endif
};

When nginx has to pass a request to another host for processing, it uses the configured load-balancing method to obtain an address to connect to. The method is obtained from the ngx_http_upstream_t.peer object of type ngx_peer_connection_t:

struct ngx_peer_connection_s {
    ...

    struct sockaddr                 *sockaddr;
    socklen_t                        socklen;
    ngx_str_t                       *name;

    ngx_uint_t                       tries;

    ngx_event_get_peer_pt            get;
    ngx_event_free_peer_pt           free;
    ngx_event_notify_peer_pt         notify;
    void                            *data;

#if (NGX_SSL || NGX_COMPAT)
    ngx_event_set_peer_session_pt    set_session;
    ngx_event_save_peer_session_pt   save_session;
#endif

    ...
};

The structure has the following fields:

All methods accept at least two arguments: a peer connection object pc and the data created by ngx_http_upstream_srv_conf_t.peer.init(). Note that it might differ from pc.data due to “chaining” of load-balancing modules.

Code style

General rules

size_t
ngx_utf8_length(u_char *p, size_t n)
{
    u_char  c, *last;
    size_t  len;

    last = p + n;

    for (len = 0; p < last; len++) {

        c = *p;

        if (c < 0x80) {
            p++;
            continue;
        }

        if (ngx_utf8_decode(&p, last - p) > 0x10ffff) {
            /* invalid UTF-8 */
            return n;
        }
    }

    return len;
}

Files

A typical source file may contain the following sections separated by two empty lines:

Copyright statements look like this:

/*
 * Copyright (C) Author Name
 * Copyright (C) Organization, Inc.
 */

If the file is modified significantly, the list of authors should be updated, the new author is added to the top.

The ngx_config.h and ngx_core.h files are always included first, followed by one of ngx_http.h, ngx_stream.h, or ngx_mail.h. Then follow optional external header files:

#include <ngx_config.h>
#include <ngx_core.h>
#include <ngx_http.h>

#include <libxml/parser.h>
#include <libxml/tree.h>
#include <libxslt/xslt.h>

#if (NGX_HAVE_EXSLT)
#include <libexslt/exslt.h>
#endif

Header files should include the so called "header protection":

#ifndef _NGX_PROCESS_CYCLE_H_INCLUDED_
#define _NGX_PROCESS_CYCLE_H_INCLUDED_
...
#endif /* _NGX_PROCESS_CYCLE_H_INCLUDED_ */

Comments

Preprocessor

Macro names start from ngx_ or NGX_ (or more specific) prefix. Macro names for constants are uppercase. Parameterized macros and macros for initializers are lowercase. The macro name and value are separated by at least two spaces:

#define NGX_CONF_BUFFER  4096

#define ngx_buf_in_memory(b)  (b->temporary || b->memory || b->mmap)

#define ngx_buf_size(b)                                                      \
    (ngx_buf_in_memory(b) ? (off_t) (b->last - b->pos):                      \
                            (b->file_last - b->file_pos))

#define ngx_null_string  { 0, NULL }

Conditions are inside parentheses, negation is outside:

#if (NGX_HAVE_KQUEUE)
...
#elif ((NGX_HAVE_DEVPOLL && !(NGX_TEST_BUILD_DEVPOLL)) \
       || (NGX_HAVE_EVENTPORT && !(NGX_TEST_BUILD_EVENTPORT)))
...
#elif (NGX_HAVE_EPOLL && !(NGX_TEST_BUILD_EPOLL))
...
#elif (NGX_HAVE_POLL)
...
#else /* select */
...
#endif /* NGX_HAVE_KQUEUE */

Types

Type names end with the “_t” suffix. A defined type name is separated by at least two spaces:

typedef ngx_uint_t  ngx_rbtree_key_t;

Structure types are defined using typedef. Inside structures, member types and names are aligned:

typedef struct {
    size_t      len;
    u_char     *data;
} ngx_str_t;

Keep alignment identical among different structures in the file. A structure that points to itself has the name, ending with “_s”. Adjacent structure definitions are separated with two empty lines:

typedef struct ngx_list_part_s  ngx_list_part_t;

struct ngx_list_part_s {
    void             *elts;
    ngx_uint_t        nelts;
    ngx_list_part_t  *next;
};


typedef struct {
    ngx_list_part_t  *last;
    ngx_list_part_t   part;
    size_t            size;
    ngx_uint_t        nalloc;
    ngx_pool_t       *pool;
} ngx_list_t;

Each structure member is declared on its own line:

typedef struct {
    ngx_uint_t        hash;
    ngx_str_t         key;
    ngx_str_t         value;
    u_char           *lowcase_key;
} ngx_table_elt_t;

Function pointers inside structures have defined types ending with “_pt”:

typedef ssize_t (*ngx_recv_pt)(ngx_connection_t *c, u_char *buf, size_t size);
typedef ssize_t (*ngx_recv_chain_pt)(ngx_connection_t *c, ngx_chain_t *in,
    off_t limit);
typedef ssize_t (*ngx_send_pt)(ngx_connection_t *c, u_char *buf, size_t size);
typedef ngx_chain_t *(*ngx_send_chain_pt)(ngx_connection_t *c, ngx_chain_t *in,
    off_t limit);

typedef struct {
    ngx_recv_pt        recv;
    ngx_recv_chain_pt  recv_chain;
    ngx_recv_pt        udp_recv;
    ngx_send_pt        send;
    ngx_send_pt        udp_send;
    ngx_send_chain_pt  udp_send_chain;
    ngx_send_chain_pt  send_chain;
    ngx_uint_t         flags;
} ngx_os_io_t;

Enumerations have types ending with “_e”:

typedef enum {
    ngx_http_fastcgi_st_version = 0,
    ngx_http_fastcgi_st_type,
    ...
    ngx_http_fastcgi_st_padding
} ngx_http_fastcgi_state_e;

Variables

Variables are declared sorted by length of a base type, then alphabetically. Type names and variable names are aligned. The type and name “columns” are separated with two spaces. Large arrays are put at the end of a declaration block:

u_char                      |  | *rv, *p;
ngx_conf_t                  |  | *cf;
ngx_uint_t                  |  |  i, j, k;
unsigned int                |  |  len;
struct sockaddr             |  | *sa;
const unsigned char         |  | *data;
ngx_peer_connection_t       |  | *pc;
ngx_http_core_srv_conf_t    |  |**cscfp;
ngx_http_upstream_srv_conf_t|  | *us, *uscf;
u_char                      |  |  text[NGX_SOCKADDR_STRLEN];

Static and global variables may be initialized on declaration:

static ngx_str_t  ngx_http_memcached_key = ngx_string("memcached_key");

static ngx_uint_t  mday[] = { 31, 28, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31, 31, 30, 31, 30, 31 };

static uint32_t  ngx_crc32_table16[] = {
    0x00000000, 0x1db71064, 0x3b6e20c8, 0x26d930ac,
    ...
    0x9b64c2b0, 0x86d3d2d4, 0xa00ae278, 0xbdbdf21c
};

There is a bunch of commonly used type/name combinations:

u_char                        *rv;
ngx_int_t                      rc;
ngx_conf_t                    *cf;
ngx_connection_t              *c;
ngx_http_request_t            *r;
ngx_peer_connection_t         *pc;
ngx_http_upstream_srv_conf_t  *us, *uscf;

Functions

All functions (even static ones) should have prototypes. Prototypes include argument names. Long prototypes are wrapped with a single indentation on continuation lines:

static char *ngx_http_block(ngx_conf_t *cf, ngx_command_t *cmd, void *conf);
static ngx_int_t ngx_http_init_phases(ngx_conf_t *cf,
    ngx_http_core_main_conf_t *cmcf);

static char *ngx_http_merge_servers(ngx_conf_t *cf,
    ngx_http_core_main_conf_t *cmcf, ngx_http_module_t *module,
    ngx_uint_t ctx_index);

The function name in a definition starts with a new line. The function body opening and closing braces are on separate lines. The body of a function is indented. There are two empty lines between functions:

static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_find_virtual_server(ngx_http_request_t *r, u_char *host, size_t len)
{
    ...
}


static ngx_int_t
ngx_http_add_addresses(ngx_conf_t *cf, ngx_http_core_srv_conf_t *cscf,
    ngx_http_conf_port_t *port, ngx_http_listen_opt_t *lsopt)
{
    ...
}

There is no space after the function name and opening parenthesis. Long function calls are wrapped such that continuation lines start from the position of the first function argument. If this is impossible, format the first continuation line such that it ends at position 79:

ngx_log_debug2(NGX_LOG_DEBUG_HTTP, r->connection->log, 0,
               "http header: \"%V: %V\"",
               &h->key, &h->value);

hc->busy = ngx_palloc(r->connection->pool,
                  cscf->large_client_header_buffers.num * sizeof(ngx_buf_t *));

The ngx_inline macro should be used instead of inline:

static ngx_inline void ngx_cpuid(uint32_t i, uint32_t *buf);

Expressions

Binary operators except “.” and “−>” should be separated from their operands by one space. Unary operators and subscripts are not separated from their operands by spaces:

width = width * 10 + (*fmt++ - '0');

ch = (u_char) ((decoded << 4) + (ch - '0'));

r->exten.data = &r->uri.data[i + 1];

Type casts are separated by one space from casted expressions. An asterisk inside type cast is separated with space from type name:

len = ngx_sock_ntop((struct sockaddr *) sin6, p, len, 1);

If an expression does not fit into single line, it is wrapped. The preferred point to break a line is a binary operator. The continuation line is lined up with the start of expression:

if (status == NGX_HTTP_MOVED_PERMANENTLY
    || status == NGX_HTTP_MOVED_TEMPORARILY
    || status == NGX_HTTP_SEE_OTHER
    || status == NGX_HTTP_TEMPORARY_REDIRECT
    || status == NGX_HTTP_PERMANENT_REDIRECT)
{
    ...
}

p->temp_file->warn = "an upstream response is buffered "
                     "to a temporary file";

As a last resort, it is possible to wrap an expression so that the continuation line ends at position 79:

hinit->hash = ngx_pcalloc(hinit->pool, sizeof(ngx_hash_wildcard_t)
                                     + size * sizeof(ngx_hash_elt_t *));

The above rules also apply to sub-expressions, where each sub-expression has its own indentation level:

if (((u->conf->cache_use_stale & NGX_HTTP_UPSTREAM_FT_UPDATING)
     || c->stale_updating) && !r->background
    && u->conf->cache_background_update)
{
    ...
}

Sometimes, it is convenient to wrap an expression after a cast. In this case, the continuation line is indented:

node = (ngx_rbtree_node_t *)
           ((u_char *) lr - offsetof(ngx_rbtree_node_t, color));

Pointers are explicitly compared to NULL (not 0):

if (ptr != NULL) {
    ...
}

Conditionals and Loops

The “if” keyword is separated from the condition by one space. Opening brace is located on the same line, or on a dedicated line if the condition takes several lines. Closing brace is located on a dedicated line, optionally followed by “else if / else”. Usually, there is an empty line before the “else if / else” part:

if (node->left == sentinel) {
    temp = node->right;
    subst = node;

} else if (node->right == sentinel) {
    temp = node->left;
    subst = node;

} else {
    subst = ngx_rbtree_min(node->right, sentinel);

    if (subst->left != sentinel) {
        temp = subst->left;

    } else {
        temp = subst->right;
    }
}

Similar formatting rules are applied to “do” and “while” loops:

while (p < last && *p == ' ') {
    p++;
}

do {
    ctx->node = rn;
    ctx = ctx->next;
} while (ctx);

The “switch” keyword is separated from the condition by one space. Opening brace is located on the same line. Closing brace is located on a dedicated line. The “case” keywords are lined up with “switch”:

switch (ch) {
case '!':
    looked = 2;
    state = ssi_comment0_state;
    break;

case '<':
    copy_end = p;
    break;

default:
    copy_end = p;
    looked = 0;
    state = ssi_start_state;
    break;
}

Most “for” loops are formatted like this:

for (i = 0; i < ccf->env.nelts; i++) {
    ...
}

for (q = ngx_queue_head(locations);
     q != ngx_queue_sentinel(locations);
     q = ngx_queue_next(q))
{
    ...
}

If some part of the “for” statement is omitted, this is indicated by the “/* void */” comment:

for (i = 0; /* void */ ; i++) {
    ...
}

A loop with an empty body is also indicated by the “/* void */” comment which may be put on the same line:

for (cl = *busy; cl->next; cl = cl->next) { /* void */ }

An endless loop looks like this:

for ( ;; ) {
    ...
}

Labels

Labels are surrounded with empty lines and are indented at the previous level:

    if (i == 0) {
        u->err = "host not found";
        goto failed;
    }

    u->addrs = ngx_pcalloc(pool, i * sizeof(ngx_addr_t));
    if (u->addrs == NULL) {
        goto failed;
    }

    u->naddrs = i;

    ...

    return NGX_OK;

failed:

    freeaddrinfo(res);
    return NGX_ERROR;

Debugging memory issues

To debug memory issues such as buffer overruns or use-after-free errors, you can use the AddressSanitizer (ASan) supported by some modern compilers. To enable ASan with gcc and clang, use the -fsanitize=address compiler and linker option. When building nginx, this can be done by adding the option to --with-cc-opt and --with-ld-opt parameters of the configure script.

Since most allocations in nginx are made from nginx internal pool, enabling ASan may not always be enough to debug memory issues. The internal pool allocates a big chunk of memory from the system and cuts smaller allocations from it. However, this mechanism can be disabled by setting the NGX_DEBUG_PALLOC macro to 1. In this case, allocations are passed directly to the system allocator giving it full control over the buffers boundaries.

The following configuration line summarizes the information provided above. It is recommended while developing third-party modules and testing nginx on different platforms.

auto/configure --with-cc-opt='-fsanitize=address -DNGX_DEBUG_PALLOC=1'
               --with-ld-opt=-fsanitize=address

Common Pitfalls

Writing a C module

The most common pitfall is an attempt to write a full-fledged C module when it can be avoided. In most cases your task can be accomplished by creating a proper configuration. If writing a module is inevitable, try to make it as small and simple as possible. For example, a module can only export some variables.

Before starting a module, consider the following questions:

C Strings

The most used string type in nginx, ngx_str_t is not a C-Style zero-terminated string. You cannot pass the data to standard C library functions such as strlen() or strstr(). Instead, nginx counterparts that accept either ngx_str_t should be used or pointer to data and a length. However, there is a case when ngx_str_t holds a pointer to a zero-terminated string: strings that come as a result of configuration file parsing are zero-terminated.

Global Variables

Avoid using global variables in your modules. Most likely this is an error to have a global variable. Any global data should be tied to a configuration cycle and be allocated from the corresponding memory pool. This allows nginx to perform graceful configuration reloads. An attempt to use global variables will likely break this feature, because it will be impossible to have two configurations at the same time and get rid of them. Sometimes global variables are required. In this case, special attention is needed to manage reconfiguration properly. Also, check if libraries used by your code have implicit global state that may be broken on reload.

Manual Memory Management

Instead of dealing with malloc/free approach which is error prone, learn how to use nginx pools. A pool is created and tied to an object - configuration, cycle, connection, or HTTP request. When the object is destroyed, the associated pool is destroyed too. So when working with an object, it is possible to allocate the amount needed from the corresponding pool and don't care about freeing memory even in case of errors.

Threads

It is recommended to avoid using threads in nginx because it will definitely break things: most nginx functions are not thread-safe. It is expected that a thread will be executing only system calls and thread-safe library functions. If you need to run some code that is not related to client request processing, the proper way is to schedule a timer in the init_process module handler and perform required actions in timer handler. Internally nginx makes use of threads to boost IO-related operations, but this is a special case with a lot of limitations.

Blocking Libraries

A common mistake is to use libraries that are blocking internally. Most libraries out there are synchronous and blocking by nature. In other words, they perform one operation at a time and waste time waiting for response from other peer. As a result, when a request is processed with such library, whole nginx worker is blocked, thus destroying performance. Use only libraries that provide asynchronous interface and don't block whole process.

HTTP Requests to External Services

Often modules need to perform an HTTP call to some external service. A common mistake is to use some external library, such as libcurl, to perform the HTTP request. It is absolutely unnecessary to bring a huge amount of external (probably blocking!) code for the task which can be accomplished by nginx itself.

There are two basic usage scenarios when an external request is needed:

In the first case, the best is to use subrequests API. Instead of directly accessing external service, you declare a location in nginx configuration and direct your subrequest to this location. This location is not limited to proxying requests, but may contain other nginx directives. An example of such approach is the auth_request directive implemented in ngx_http_auth_request module.

For the second case, it is possible to use basic HTTP client functionality available in nginx. For example, OCSP module implements simple HTTP client.