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I need to deploy different apps on the same domain, thus I've set up the backend to rewrite URL with reqrep ^([^\ ]*\ /)appA[/]?(.*) \1\2. It works when I only deploy the HTTP or HTTPS version of the app.

However, if I try to redirect all HTTP traffic to HTTPS, it doesn't work. The problem is that HAProxy has already rewritten the URL and stripped out the /appA part before the redirection. Thus if I try to visit http://myserver.com/appA, the page https://myserver.com will eventually be requested instead of https://myserver.com/appA.

I can't put the redirect rule before the reqrep rule as it seems that HAProxy must process all the rewrites before the redirects.

What can I do to make my configuration work as I intended? This should be obvious but I can't seem to find a relevant answer online.

My configuration:

frontend http_front
  bind *:80
  reqadd X-Forwarded-Proto:\ http
  acl appA_url url_beg /appA
  use_backend appA if appA_url

frontend https_front
  bind *:443 ssl crt /etc/haproxy/certs/myserver.com.pem
  reqadd X-Forwarded-Proto:\ https
  acl appA_url url_beg /appA
  use_backend appA if appA_url

backend appA
  reqrep ^([^\ ]*\ /)appA[/]?(.*)     \1\2
  redirect scheme https if !{ ssl_fc }
  balance roundrobin
  server web1 127.0.0.1:5001 check

1 Answer 1

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Use http-request directives, which are processed in declararion order. They are also newer features, and usually cleaner, more intuitive, more flexible, and more internally efficient than reqxxx.

http-request redirect scheme https if ! { ssl_fc }
http-request set-path %[path,regsub(^/appA/,/)]

See http-request. Requires 1.6 or later, where the regsub() converter is available.

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  • Thanks. I looked at haproxy.com/documentation/aloha/9-5/traffic-management/… though I didn't realize the use of regsub. Also, it should be regsub(^/appA,/), i.e. without the second slash in the path.
    – xji
    Jun 30, 2018 at 18:16
  • You are right, my solution doesn't handle the bare value without a trailing slash, but hours won't be quite right either, because then /appA/foo becomes //foo. Jun 30, 2018 at 20:13
  • The most correct solution would actually be to redirect the exact path /appA to append the slash to make it /appA/, because otherwise, all relative paths are off-by-one, since /appA + ./foo is resolved as /foo while /appA/ + ./foo is resolved as /appA/foo. Paths can become a little delicate when the back-end doesn't know the actual path as understood by the browser. Jun 30, 2018 at 20:19
  • *yours, not "hours" Jun 30, 2018 at 20:19
  • That makes sense. Currently the double slash doesn't seem to break my app but I know one shouldn't rely on this behavior. Changing the backend routing rules so that /appA/ is prefixed to every route, instead of trying to use HAProxy rewrite to create a discrepency between the browser and the backend seems to be a solution in this case then.
    – xji
    Jun 30, 2018 at 20:55

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