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I have my config setup to handle a bunch of GET requests which render pixels that work fine to handle analytics and parse query strings for logging. With an additional third party data stream, I need to handle a POST request to a given url that has JSON in an expected loggable format inside of it's request body. I don't want to use a secondary server with proxy_pass and just want to log the whole response into an associated log file like what it does with GET requests. A snippet of some code that I'm using looks like the following:

GET request (which works great):

location ^~ /rl.gif {
set $rl_lcid $arg_lcid;
if ($http_cookie ~* "lcid=(.*\S)")
{
set $rl_lcid $cookie_lcid;
}
empty_gif;
log_format my_tracking '{ "guid" : "$rl_lcid", "data" : "$arg__rlcdnsegs" }';
access_log  /mnt/logs/nginx/my.access.log my_tracking;
rewrite ^(.*)$ http://my/url?id=$cookie_lcid? redirect;
}

Here is kinda what I am trying to do: POST request (which does not work):

location /bk {
  log_format bk_tracking $request_body;
  access_log  /mnt/logs/nginx/bk.access.log bk_tracking;
}

Curling "curl http://myurl/bk -d name=example" gives me a 404 page not found.

Then I tried:

location /bk.gif {
empty_gif;
log_format bk_tracking $request_body;
access_log  /mnt/logs/nginx/bk.access.log bk_tracking;
}

Curling "curl http://myurl/bk.gif -d name=example" gives me a 405 Not Allowed.

My current version is nginx/0.7.62. Any help in the right direction is very much appreciated! Thanks!

* UPDATE * So now my post looks like this:

location /bk {
  if ($request_method != POST) {
    return 405;
  }
  proxy_pass $scheme://127.0.0.1:$server_port/dummy;
  log_format my_tracking $request_body;
  access_log  /mnt/logs/nginx/my.access.log my_tracking;
}
location /dummy { set $test 0; }

It is logging the post data correctly, but returns a 404 on the requesters end. If I change the above code to return a 200 like so:

location /bk {
  if ($request_method != POST) {
    return 405;
  }
  proxy_pass $scheme://127.0.0.1:$server_port/dummy;
  log_format my_tracking $request_body;
  access_log  /mnt/logs/nginx/my.access.log my_tracking;
  return 200;
}
location /dummy { set $test 0; }

Then it return the 200 correctly, but no longer records the post data.

* ANOTHER UPDATE * Kinda found a working solution. Hopefully this can help other on their way.

share|improve this question
did you get anywhere with this? I'm up against a similar problem. – James C Jun 12 '11 at 11:08

5 Answers

This solution works like a charm:

location = /post.php {
  log_format postdata $request_body;
  access_log  /var/log/nginx/postdata.log  postdata;
  fastcgi_pass php_cgi;
}

I think the trick is making nginx believe that you will call a cgi script.

share|improve this answer
I have to move "log_format postdata $request_body;" to server part because nginx says "log_format directive is not allowed here" – Oleg Neumyvakin Feb 15 at 13:09
This is the right answer. Except, like @OlegNeumyvakin mentioned, I had to move the log_format part. But in my case, I had to move it to inside the "http" block, instead of inside the "server" block, for it to work. But this did the trick! – Matt May 7 at 15:44
up vote 3 down vote accepted

Ok. So finally I was able to log the post data and return a 200. It's kind of a hacky solution that I'm not to proud of which basically overrides the natural behavior for error_page, but my inexperience of nginx plus timelines lead me to this solution:

location /bk {
  if ($request_method != POST) {
    return 405;
  }
  proxy_set_header  X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
  proxy_set_header Host $host;
  proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
  proxy_redirect off;
  proxy_pass $scheme://127.0.0.1:$server_port/success;
  log_format my_tracking $request_body;
  access_log  /mnt/logs/nginx/my_tracking.access.log my_tracking;
}
location /success {
  return 200;
}
error_page   500 502 503 504  /50x.html;
location = /50x.html {
  root   /var/www/nginx-default;
  log_format my_tracking $request_body;
  access_log  /mnt/logs/nginx/my_tracking.access.log my_tracking_2;
}

Now according to that config, it would seem that the proxy pass would return a 200 all the time. Occasionally I would get 500 but when I threw in an error_log to see what was going on, all of my request_body data was in there and I couldn't see a problem. So I caught that and wrote to the same log. Since nginx doesn't like the same name for the tracking variable, I just used my_tracking_2 and wrote to the same log as when it returns a 200. Definitely not the most elegant solution and I welcome any better solution. I've seen the post module, but in my scenario, I couldn't recompile from source.

share|improve this answer

I had a similar problem. GET requests worked and their (empty) request bodies got written to the the log file. POST requests failed with a 404. Experimenting a bit, I found that all POST requests were failing. I found a forum posting asking about POST requests and the solution there worked for me. That solution? Add a proxy_header line right before the proxy_pass line, exactly like the one in the example below.

server {
    listen       192.168.0.1:45080;
    server_name  foo.example.org;

    access_log  /path/to/log/nginx/post_bodies.log post_bodies;
    location / {
      ### add the following proxy_header line to get POSTs to work
      proxy_set_header Host $http_host;
      proxy_pass   http://10.1.2.3;
    }
}

(This is with nginx 1.2.1 for what it is worth.)

share|improve this answer

Try echo_read_request_body.

"echo_read_request_body ... Explicitly reads request body so that the $request_body variable will always have non-empty values (unless the body is so big that it has been saved by Nginx to a local temporary file)."

location /log {
  log_format postdata $request_body;
  access_log /mnt/logs/nginx/my_tracking.access.log postdata;
  echo_read_request_body;
}
share|improve this answer

FWIW, this config worked for me:

location = /logpush.html {
  if ($request_method = POST) {
    access_log /var/log/nginx/push.log push_requests;
    proxy_pass $scheme://127.0.0.1/logsink;
    break;
  }   
  return 200 $scheme://$host/serviceup.html;
}   
#
location /logsink {
  return 200;
}
share|improve this answer

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