I want to redirect all the HTTP request to https request on ELB. I have two EC2 instances. I am using nginx for the server. I have tried a rewriting the nginx conf files without any success. I would love some advice on it.
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1It seems that the Internet cannot agree on a single, complete and working solution to this problem. Hopefully you can get some help here in my post. I had to jump through hoops to come up with this, finally.– ADTCNov 12, 2017 at 0:08
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1This ans has the latest solution, not the accepted anser– AsifMFeb 22, 2019 at 12:17
12 Answers
AWS Application Load Balancers now support native HTTP to HTTPS redirect.
To enable this in the console, do the the following:
- Go to your Load Balancer in EC2 and tab "Listeners"
- Select "View/edit rules" on your HTTP listener
- Delete all rules except for the default one (bottom)
- Edit default rule: choose "Redirect to" as an action, leave everything as default and enter "443" as a port.
The same can be achieved by using the CLI as described here.
It is also possible to do this in Cloudformation, where you need to set up a Listener object like this:
HttpListener:
Type: AWS::ElasticLoadBalancingV2::Listener
Properties:
LoadBalancerArn: !Ref LoadBalancer
Port: 80
Protocol: HTTP
DefaultActions:
- Type: redirect
RedirectConfig:
Protocol: HTTPS
StatusCode: HTTP_301
Port: 443
If you still use Classic Load Balancers, go with one of the NGINX configs described by the others.
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1Very useful to know its easier now. But this would be a better answer with more info about what to configure instead of just a link. Aug 7, 2018 at 20:20
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1
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3@florian you seem to be using a Classic Load Balancer. Switch to Application Load Balancer to get that option– UlliNov 13, 2018 at 8:09
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how do I assign the Application Load Balancer to my instance ? (as there is no
instances
tab) Nov 14, 2018 at 18:14
ELB sets X-Forwarded-Proto
header, you can use it to detect if original request was to HTTP and redirect to HTTPS then.
You can try this in your server
conf:
if ($http_x_forwarded_proto = 'http') {
return 301 https://yourdomain.com$request_uri;
}
Take a look at ELB docs.
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3
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2@ericpeters0n the snippet in the answer is for
nginx
config, but the principle is applicable to any web server. Mar 10, 2016 at 9:26 -
1if you're using beanstalk with passenger-standalone, follow this link for how-to on changing nginx configuration. qiita.com/tak_nishida/items/cf30a2d373744943b943– YeonhoApr 15, 2016 at 6:35
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3Make sure you have HTTP and HTTPS listeners on your load balancer. May 13, 2016 at 1:19
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1@Ronald, by server conf in the response I mean nginx server on ec2 instances that are running behind ELB. Jan 30, 2019 at 10:37
I had the same problem, in my situation HTTPS was handled entirely by ELB and I didn't know my source domain ahead of time so I ended up doing something like:
server {
listen 81;
return 301 https://$host$request_uri;
}
server {
listen 80;
# regular server rules ...
}
And then of course pointing the ELB 'https' to the instance port 80 and then the 'http' route to the instance port 81.
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5
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2
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@CodyBugstein if you have nginx in front of your application (I, for example, don't - it's routed directly to a container running ExpressJS)– timursoApr 20, 2018 at 10:54
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Where would the nginx go? Inside the ELB? Inside the EC2? Is this configured in Elastic Beanstalk somewhere? Apr 20, 2018 at 18:17
The Amazon Elastic Load Balancer (ELB) supports a HTTP header called X-FORWARDED-PROTO. All the HTTPS requests going through the ELB will have the value of X-FORWARDED-PROTO equal to “HTTPS”. For the HTTP requests, you can force HTTPS by adding following simple rewrite rule. For me it works fine!
Apache
You can add following lines in your .htaccess file:
RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{HTTP:X-Forwarded-Proto} !https
RewriteRule ^.*$ https://%{SERVER_NAME}%{REQUEST_URI}
Or if you use vhost.conf for managing multiple domains in same EC2 web server then you can add following to the vhost.conf (add it to the domain you want to use https for it):
<VirtualHost *:80>
...
RewriteEngine On
RewriteCond %{HTTP:X-Forwarded-Proto} !https
RewriteRule ^.*$ https://%{SERVER_NAME}%{REQUEST_URI}
...
</VirtualHost>
IIS
Install IIS Url-Rewrite module, using the configuration GUI add these settings:
<rewrite xdt:Transform="Insert">
<rules>
<rule name="HTTPS rewrite behind ELB rule" stopProcessing="true">
<match url="^(.*)$" ignoreCase="false" />
<conditions>
<add input="{HTTP_X_FORWARDED_PROTO}" pattern="^http$" ignoreCase="false" />
</conditions>
<action type="Redirect" redirectType="Found" url="https://{SERVER_NAME}{URL}" />
</rule>
</rules>
</rewrite>
Read more here
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We had the issue of having our instance redirect normal http traffic because the header was not even present. I solve it by making the condition:
RewriteCond %{HTTP:X-Forwarded-Proto} !(https|^$)
Jul 27, 2016 at 9:15 -
This is causing infinite redirects. I am using IIS with windows server. Oct 25, 2016 at 4:56
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@It'satrap : For IIS if it didn't work then try the script in this URL: stephen.genoprime.com/2012/01/01/aws-elb-ssl-with-iis.html Oct 25, 2016 at 12:29
The htaccess solutions above caused ELB health check to fail. I had some trouble finding the solution until I discovered an article online in which someone had the same issues I had. His solution was to add this to the beginning of the htaccess file instead:
RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{HTTP:X-Forwarded-Proto} ^http$
RewriteRule .* https://%{HTTP_HOST}%{REQUEST_URI} [R=301,L]
To allow this and other local requests over HTTP while redirecting external requests through the ELB to HTTPS, adjust the rewrite condition to match on http instead of a negative match on https.
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"adjust the rewrite condition to match on http instead of a negative match on https" that's the part I was trying to fix. Thank you!– MerricatMar 21, 2019 at 21:12
It may not be the solution you might be looking for, but another option could be to use AWS CloudFront in addition to ELB. CloudFront gives the option to redirect all incoming HTTP traffic to HTTPS.
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1
Based on @Ulli's answer If you want to configure it using Terraform, here is an example >
resource "aws_alb_listener" "web" {
load_balancer_arn = "${aws_alb.web.arn}"
port = "80"
protocol = "HTTP"
default_action {
type = "redirect"
redirect {
port = "443"
protocol = "HTTPS"
status_code = "HTTP_301"
}
}
}
I had strange problem with nginx and ELB configuration. My setup included 3 different services inside one nginx behind ELB. And I had mixed content issue: when your request to ELB is https, but inside ELB http only, and server create relative path to static using http, so browser fails with 'mixed content' issue. And I must create solution for both http/https work without any redirects.
Here is config located in nginx/conf.d/
folder:
# Required for http/https switching
map $http_x_forwarded_port $switch {
default off;
"80" off;
"443" on;
}
This means that we will have knowledge what real client protocol is. As you can see, we will have it in $switch
var.
And at this moment you use this in all location where you need it:
location ~ /softwareapi/index.php {
fastcgi_param HTTPS $switch;
.. other settings here ..
}
With HTTPS setting php application will automatically detect right protocol and carefully build relative path for preventing mixed content issue.
Best regards.
I just went through the process and tested redirects (from ec2 instance shell) with command
curl -Iv [your url]
ex: curl -Iv http://example.com
Requirement
set up Hosted zone for DNS and Name server in AWS Route 53
get certificate using AWS Certificate Manager
add listener on load balancer for port 443 pick the certificate from 2. and the SSL
- Elastic Beanstalk --> click environment --> Configuration --> Find Load Balancer then click Edit --> Add listener; use SSL Policy of 2016-08 (others may give errors)
What I did is:
- Redirect http://yourwebsite.com --> https://www.yourwebsite.com (step 2)
- Redirect http://www.yourwebsite.com --> https://www.yourwebsite.com (step 2)
- Redirect https://yourwebsite.com --> https://www.yourwebsite.com (step 3)
Steps
1. Went to EC2 Load Balancer
2. Go in to Listener ID HTTP : 80 (Click View/edit rules underneath the Rules column)
Edit default action: (click pencil icon on top, use "Switch to full URL", it will be greyed out until you enter #{port}
)
- change THEN block to Redirect to
https://#{host}:443/#{path}?#{query}
- Status code:HTTP_301
Add one more action (click + sign on top)
- choose IF block Host header is yourwebsite.com
- change THEN block to Redirect to
https://www.#{host}:443/#{path}?#{query}
- Status code:HTTP_301
3. Go back and go in to Listener ID HTTPS : 443 (Click View/edit rules)
Add one more action (click + sign on top)
- choose IF block Host header is yourwebsite.com
- change THEN block to Redirect to
https://www.#{host}:443/#{path}?#{query}
- Status code:HTTP_301
Do not edit default action on HTTPS
Here you go with exact answer : Create this file with following name and put the following content in it.
redirect-to-https.json
[
{
"Type": "redirect",
"RedirectConfig": {
"Protocol": "HTTPS",
"Port": "443",
"Host": "#{host}",
"Path": "/#{path}",
"Query": "#{query}",
"StatusCode": "HTTP_301"
}
}
]
Use this awscli command to create a listener rule on port 80 with HTTP protocol which will redirect all traffic to HTTPS port.
aws elbv2 create-listener --load-balancer-arn arn:aws:elasticloadbalancing:us-east-1:12345678910:loadbalancer/app/demo1-alb/b4d5fbc78965417f --port 80 --protocol HTTP --default-actions file://redirect-to-https.json
- Navigate to the AWS Load Balancer Dashboard.
- Visit the cert-manager attached to the Load Balancer Dashboard.
- Open Settings for HTTP:80
- Open Edit listener of HTTP:80 of aws Dashboard.
- Remove the default details from Redirect info tab details.
- Add New Rule with Protocol : HTTPS and PORT: 443
- And Add/Select Status 301-Permanently moved.
- Update the settings and wait for sometime, Redirect should work when we type http with website it will redirect to the https.
Create a file .ebextensions/00_forward_http_to_https.config
with the following content:
files:
/tmp/deployment/http_redirect.sh:
mode: "000755"
content: |
APP_URL=`/opt/elasticbeanstalk/bin/get-config environment --output yaml | grep -oP 'APP_URL: \K([^\s)\"](?!ttp:))+'`
sed -ie 's@$proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;@$proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;\n if ($http_x_forwarded_proto = 'http') { return 301 https://'"$APP_URL"'$request_uri; }@' /tmp/deployment/config/#etc#nginx#conf.d#00_elastic_beanstalk_proxy.conf
container_commands:
http_redirect:
command: "/tmp/deployment/http_redirect.sh"
Make sure to set the APP_URL environment variable from the AWS management console beforehand.
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1I don't see where your answer fits the question ... you are talking about elastic bean stalk and the question is about nginx inside an EC2. Aug 15, 2016 at 19:29