Dynamic routing / virtual hosts with nginx, Lua, and Redis.
Simon allows you to very quickly point domains to specific hosts and ports by defining proxy_pass
directives in Redis. Largely inspired by hipache, a standalone proxy that does the same thing.
For every request(!), Simon looks up the Redis Set simon:[hostname]
to find one or more destinations. To define a route, add a destination (ip
or ip:port
or even hostname/path
) to a Redis set simon:[route]
:
> redis-cli sadd simon:example.dev 127.0.0.1:5555
> redis-cli sadd simon:api.example.dev 144.244.222.111
> redis-cli sadd simon:static.example.dev bucket.s3-website.amazonaws.com/folder
Wait, for every request? Isn't that slow? Not at all, we're talking Nginx and Redis here.
Point example.dev
to local port 8080:
> redis-cli sadd simon:example.dev 127.0.0.1:8080
1
> curl example.dev
<h1>Welcome to example.dev</h1>
Distribute requests for api.example.dev
to ports 5566 and 5577:
> redis-cli sadd simon:api.example.dev 127.0.0.1:5566 127.0.0.1:5577
2
> curl api.example.dev
{"success": "definitely"}
If Simon finds multiple destinations, new visitors will be randomly directed to one of them as a rough form of load balancing. If a session ID is present Simon will direct all further visits to the same destination. The session ID is read from the cookie "cookie_connect.sid" by default, see options below for how to change this.
These instructions are specific to the OpenResty distribution on Ubuntu:
# probably as sudo
apt-get update
apt-get install libreadline-dev libncurses5-dev libpcre3-dev libssl-dev perl make build-essential
curl -LO https://openresty.org/download/openresty-1.11.2.2.tar.gz
tar -xzvf openresty-1.11.2.2.tar.gz
cd openresty-1.11.2.2/
./configure --with-luajit --prefix=/opt/openresty
make && make install
/opt/openresty/lualib/
# still as sudo
cd /opt/openresty/lualib/
git clone http://github.com/spro/simon
/opt/openresty/nginx/conf/nginx.conf
to add lua_package_path
(outside the server
block) and the Simon configuration (inside the server location
block):http {
# ...
lua_package_path "/opt/openresty/lualib/resty/?.lua"; # Include Lua libraries
server {
# Pass all requests through Simon
location / {
set $proxy_to "";
set $proxy_host "";
access_by_lua_file "/opt/openresty/lualib/simon/simon.lua";
proxy_http_version 1.1;
proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade;
proxy_set_header Connection "upgrade";
proxy_set_header Host $proxy_host;
proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr;
proxy_pass http://$proxy_to$request_uri;
}
# ...
}
}
The above config first initializes Nginx variables $proxy_to
and $proxy_host
(to make them available in the Lua scope) then runs Simon, then uses those (now defined) variables to set up the proxy_pass
directive.
You can use an asterisk "*" to define a catch-all / fallback for a single level of subdomain. For example, "*.example.dev" will match "hello.example.dev" but not "api.staging.example.dev":
> redis-cli sadd simon:*.example.dev 127.0.0.1:8080
1
> curl ww3.example.dev
<h1>Welcome to example.dev</h1>
Wildcard domains are only used if an exact match is not found.
Some proxied-to servers require a specific hostname to understand the request (maybe you're proxying to a S3 bucket, Wordpress instance, or another Simon instance). By default Simon copies the hostname of the original request (so if the request is to example.dev
, that will be carried along in the proxied request). To send a specific hostname, you can define a ":hostname
" key:
SET simon:[route]:hostname [hostname]
Set up "Static website hosting" on your S3 bucket to get public access and loading index.html for / requests.
> redis-cli sadd simon:static.example.dev bucket.s3-website.amazonaws.com/folder
> redis-cli set simon:static.example.dev:hostname bucket.s3-website.amazonaws.com
To remove a destination, remove it from the Redis set with SREM
:
> redis-cli srem simon:api.example.dev 127.0.0.1:5566
To delete an entire route (all destinations) use the Redis DEL
command:
> redis-cli del simon:api.example.dev
simon-says
helper scriptInstead of using the Redis CLI directly, you can use the provided simon-says
bash script for a slightly nicer experience, such as
127.0.0.1
if not supplied-
# Add a destination
> simon-says api.example.dev :5557
Pointing api.example.dev to 127.0.0.1:5557
1) "127.0.0.1:5557"
2) "127.0.0.1:5555"
# Delete a destination
> simon-says api.example.dev -:5557
Not pointing api.example.dev to 127.0.0.1:5557
1) "127.0.0.1:5555"
# List destinations for a route
> simon-says api.example.dev
1) "127.0.0.1:5555"
simon:static.example.dev /var/nginx/html/static