Key features:
- Both nginx and Tarantool features accessible over HTTP(S).
- Tarantool methods callable via JSON-RPC or REST.
- Load balancing with elastic configuration.
- Backup and fault tolerance.
- Low overhead.
See more about:
- WebSockets are not supported until Tarantool supports out-of-band replies.
- This module does not support Tarantool 1.6.x starting with 2.4.0. Since then it uses Tarantool 1.7 protocol features.
Tarantool NginX upstream module: https://hub.docker.com/r/tarantool/tarantool-nginx
Tarantool: https://hub.docker.com/r/tarantool/tarantool
- v0.1.4 - Production ready.
- v0.2.0 - Stable.
- v0.2.1 - Production ready.
- v0.2.2 - Stable.
- v2.3.1 - Production ready.
- v2.3.2 - production ready.
- v2.3.7 - Production ready.
- v2.4.0-beta - Beta.
- v2.4.6-rc1 - Stable.
- v2.5-rc{1,2} - Stable.
- v2.5-stable - Stable.
- v2.6-rc3 - Stable.
- How to install
- Test run and notes for contributors
- REST
- JSON
- HTTP headers and status
- Directives
- tnt_pass
- tnt_http_methods
- tnt_http_rest_methods
- tnt_pass_http_request
- tnt_pass_http_request_buffer_size
- tnt_method
- tnt_set_header
- tnt_send_timeout
- tnt_read_timeout
- tnt_buffer_size
- tnt_next_upstream
- tnt_connect_timeout
- tnt_next_upstream
- tnt_next_upstream_tries
- tnt_next_upstream_timeout
- tnt_pure_result
- tnt_multireturn_skip_count
- Format
- tnt_insert
- tnt_replace
- tnt_delete
- tnt_select
- tnt_select_limit_max
- tnt_allowed_spaces
- tnt_allowed_indexes
- tnt_update
- tnt_upsert
- Performance tuning
- Examples
- Copyright & license
- See also
- Contacts
git clone https://github.com/tarantool/nginx_upstream_module.git nginx_upstream_module
cd nginx_upstream_module
git submodule update --init --recursive
git clone https://github.com/nginx/nginx.git nginx
# Ubuntu
apt-get install libpcre++0 gcc unzip libpcre3-dev zlib1g-dev libssl-dev libxslt-dev
make build-all
Requirements (for details, see REPO_ROOT/Makefile)
libyajl >= 2.0(https://lloyd.github.io/yajl/)
libmsgpuck >= 2.0 (https://github.com/rtsisyk/msgpuck)
$ ./configure --add-module=REPO_ROOT && make
brew tap denji/nginx
brew install nginx-full --with-tarantool-module
## Typical configuration, for more see http://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_upstream_module.html#upstream
upstream backend {
server 127.0.0.1:9999 max_fails=1 fail_timeout=30s;
server 127.0.0.1:10000;
# ...
server 127.0.0.1:10001 backup;
# ...
}
server {
location = /tnt {
tnt_pass backend;
}
}
This paragraph is actual only if you choose build from source
installation. So that, nginx git repository should be placed into
nginx
directory within the module repository. But now, you should use
make configure-for-testing
. It points the path to the necessary for testing
configs, so it is needed to run tests.
To run all tests with different nginx versions use ./test/auto.sh
. It
will checkout several nginx versions, rebuild nginx with the module and
run tests on each of those nginx versions.
For selective running, start:
- nginx in other terminal with
./nginx/objs/nginx -c conf/nginx.conf
, - Tarantool in another terminal with
tarantool test/test.lua
, - run separate test file, e.g.
./test/basic_features.py
.
If you want to add new test, see examples: *_features.py
files.
Don't forget to include it to test/run_all.sh
.
You can set VERBOSE
environment variable to True
to enable
debug info.
Note: since v0.2.0
With this module, you can call Tarantool stored procedures via HTTP REST methods (GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, DELETE).
Example:
upstream backend {
# Tarantool hosts
server 127.0.0.1:9999;
}
server {
# HTTP [GET | POST | PUT | PATCH | DELETE] /tnt_rest?q=1&q=2&q=3
location /tnt_rest {
# REST mode on
tnt_http_rest_methods get post put patch delete; # or all
# Pass http headers and uri
tnt_pass_http_request on;
# Module on
tnt_pass backend;
}
}
-- Tarantool procedure
function tnt_rest(req)
req.headers -- http headers
req.uri -- uri
return { 'ok' }
end
$> wget NGX_HOST/tnt_rest?arg1=1&argN=N
Note: since v0.1.4
The module expects JSON posted with HTTP POST, PUT (since v0.2.0), or PATCH (since v2.3.8) and carried in request body.
Server HTTP statuses:
-
OK - response body contains a result or an error; the error may appear only if something wrong happened within Tarantool, for instance: 'method not found'.
-
INTERNAL SERVER ERROR - may appear in many cases, most of them being 'out of memory' error.
-
NOT ALLOWED - in response to anything but a POST request.
-
BAD REQUEST - JSON parse error, empty request body, etc.
-
BAD GATEWAY - lost connection to Tarantool server(s). Since both (i.e. json -> tp and tp -> json) parsers work asynchronously, this error may appear if 'params' or 'method' does not exists in the structure of the incoming JSON, please see the protocol description for more details.
Note: this behavior will change in the future.
[ { "method": STR, "params":[arg0 ... argN], "id": UINT }, ...N ]
- method - a string containing the name of the Tarantool method to be invoked (i.e. Tarantool "call")
- params - a structured array. Each element is an argument of the Tarantool "call".
- id - an identifier established by the Client. MUST contain an unsigned number not greater than unsigned int. May be 0.
These all are required fields.
[ { "result": JSON_RESULT_OBJECT, "id":UINT, "error": { "message": STR, "code": INT } }, ...N ]
-
result - Tarantool execution result (a json object/array, etc). Version 2.4.0+ outputs a raw result, i.e.
JSON_RESULT_OBJECT
. May be null or undefined. -
id - DEPRECATED in 2.4.0+ - request id. May be null or undefined.
-
error - a structured object which contains an internal error message. This field exists only if an internal error occurred, for instance: "too large request", "input json parse error", etc.
If this field exists, the input message was probably not passed to the Tarantool backend.
See "message"/"code" fields for details.
For instance, Tarantool has a stored procedure echo
:
function echo(a, b, c, d)
return a, b, c, d
end
Syntax:
--> data sent to Server
<-- data sent to Client
rpc call 1:
--> { "method": "echo", "params": [42, 23], "id": 1 }
<-- { "id": 1, "result": [42, 23]
rpc call 2:
--> { "method": "echo", "params": [ [ {"hello": "world"} ], "!" ], "id": 2 }
<-- { "id": 2, "result": [ {"hello": "world"} ], "!" ]}
rpc call of a non-existent method:
--> { "method": "echo_2", "id": 1 }
<-- { "error": {"code": -32601, "message": "Method not found"}, "id": 1 }
rpc call with invalid JSON:
--> { "method": "echo", "params": [1, 2, 3, __wrong__ ] }
<-- { "error": { "code": -32700, "message": "Parse error" } }
rpc call Batch:
--> [
{ "method": "echo", "params": [42, 23], "id": 1 },
{ "method": "echo", "params": [ [ {"hello": "world"} ], "!" ], "id": 2 }
]
<-- [
{ "id": 1, "result": [42, 23]},
{ "id": 2, "result" : [{"hello": "world"} ], "!" ]},
]
rpc call Batch of a non-existent method:
--> [
{ "method": "echo_2", "params": [42, 23], "id": 1 },
{ "method": "echo", "params": [ [ {"hello": "world"} ], "!" ], "id": 2 }
]
<-- [
{ "error": {"code": -32601, "message": "Method not found"}, "id": 1 },
{"id": 2, "result": [ {"hello": "world"} ], "!" ]}
]
rpc call Batch with invalid JSON:
--> [
{ "method": "echo", "params": [42, 23, __wrong__], "id": 1 },
{ "method": "echo", "params": [ [ {"hello": "world"} ], "!" ], "id": 2 }
]
<-- { "error": { "code": -32700, "message": "Parse error" } }
Sometimes you have to set status or headers which came from Tarantool. For this purpose, you have to use something like ngx_lua or ngx_perl, etc.
With the methods, you can also transform the result from Tarantool
into
something else.
Here is an example with ngx_lua
:
-- Tarantool, stored procedure
function foo(req, ...)
local status = 200
local headers = {
["X-Tarantool"] = "FROM_TNT",
}
local body = 'It works!'
return status, headers, body
end
# Nginx, configuration
# If you're experience an problem with lua-resty-core like
# https://github.com/openresty/lua-nginx-module/issues/1509
# it can be disabled by the following directive.
#
# lua_load_resty_core off;
# If you're not using lua-resty-core you may need to manually specify a path
# to cjson module. See the documentation:
# https://github.com/openresty/lua-nginx-module#lua_package_cpath
#
# lua_package_cpath "/path/in/lua/cpath/format/?.so";
upstream tnt_upstream {
server 127.0.0.1:9999;
keepalive 10000;
}
location /tnt_proxy {
internal;
tnt_method foo;
tnt_buffer_size 100k;
tnt_pass_http_request on parse_args;
tnt_pass tnt_upstream;
}
location /api {
default_type application/json;
rewrite_by_lua '
local cjson = require("cjson")
local map = {
GET = ngx.HTTP_GET,
POST = ngx.HTTP_POST,
PUT = ngx.HTTP_PUT,
-- ...
}
-- hide `{"params": [...]}` from a user
ngx.req.read_body()
local body = ngx.req.get_body_data()
if body then
body = "{\\"params\\": [" .. body .. "]}"
end
local res = ngx.location.capture("/tnt_proxy", {
args = ngx.var.args,
method = map[ngx.var.request_method],
body = body
})
if res.status == ngx.HTTP_OK then
local answ = cjson.decode(res.body)
-- Read reply
local result = answ["result"]
if result ~= nil then
ngx.status = result[1]
for k, v in pairs(result[2]) do
ngx.header[k] = v
end
local body = result[3]
if type(body) == "string" then
ngx.header["content_type"] = "text/plain"
ngx.print(body)
elseif type(body) == "table" then
local body = cjson.encode(body)
ngx.say(body)
else
ngx.status = 502
ngx.say("Unexpected response from Tarantool")
end
else
ngx.status = 502
ngx.say("Tarantool does not work")
end
-- Finalize execution
ngx.exit(ngx.OK)
else
ngx.status = res.status
ngx.say(res.body)
end
';
}
syntax: tnt_pass UPSTREAM
default: no
context: location
Specify the Tarantool server backend.
upstream tnt_upstream {
127.0.0.1:9999
};
location = /tnt {
tnt_pass 127.0.0.1:9999;
}
location = /tnt_next_location {
tnt_pass tnt_upstream;
}
syntax: tnt_http_methods post, put, patch, delete, all
default: post, delete
context: location
Allow to accept one or many http methods.
If a method is allowed, the module expects JSON carried in the request
body.
If tnt_method
is not set, then the name of the Tarantool stored procedure is
the protocol JSON.
Example:
location tnt {
tnt_http_methods delete;
tnt_pass 127.0.0.1:9999;
}
# Call tarantool_stored_procedure_name()
$> wget --method=delete --body-data='{"method":"lua_function", "params": [], "id": 0}' NGINX_HOST/tnt
syntax: tnt_http_rest_methods get, post, put, patch, delete, all
default: no
context: location
NOTICE: This does not restrict anything. The option just says to NGINX: use this methods for allowing REST requests.
If you have a wish to set some methods as not allowed methods, then please use "if" inside locations.
For example:
if ($request_method !~ ^(GET|POST|HEAD)$) {
return 405 "Please use HEAD, PATCH and so on";
}
Allow to accept one or more REST methods.
If tnt_method
is not set, then the name of the Tarantool stored procedure is
the first part of the URL path.
Example:
location tnt {
tnt_http_rest_methods get;
tnt_pass 127.0.0.1:9999;
}
# Call tarantool_stored_procedure_name()
$> wget NGINX_HOST/tarantool_stored_procedure_name/some/mega/path?q=1
syntax: tnt_pass_http_request [on|off|parse_args|unescape|pass_body|pass_headers_out|parse_urlencoded|pass_subrequest_uri]
default: off
context: location, location if
Allow to pass HTTP headers and queries to Tarantool stored procedures.
Examples #1:
location tnt {
# Also, tnt_pass_http_request can be used together with JSON communication
tnt_http_rest_methods get;
# [on|of]
tnt_pass_http_request on;
tnt_pass 127.0.0.1:9999;
}
function tarantool_stored_procedure_name(req, ...)
req.headers -- lua table
req.query -- string
return { 'OK' }
end
-- With parse_args
function tarantool_stored_procedure_name_1(req, ...)
req.headers -- lua table
req.query -- string
req.args -- query args as lua table
return { 'OK' }
end
-- With pass_body
function tarantool_stored_procedure_name_2(req, ...)
req.body -- request body, type string
end
Examples #2 (pass_headers_out):
location @tnt {
tnt_http_rest_methods get;
tnt_pass_http_request on pass_headers_out;
tnt_method tarantool_stored_procedure_name;
tnt_pass 127.0.0.1:9999;
}
location / {
add_header "X-Req-time" "$request_time";
proxy_pass http://backend;
post_action @tnt;
}
function tarantool_stored_procedure_name(req, ...)
req.headers -- lua table
req.headers['X-Req-time'] -- set by add_header
req.query -- string
return true
end
Examples #3 (parse_urlencoded):
location /tnt {
tnt_http_rest_methods post;
tnt_pass_http_request on parse_urlencoded;
tnt_method tarantool_stored_procedure_name;
tnt_pass 127.0.0.1:9999;
}
function tarantool_stored_procedure_name(req, ...)
req.headers -- a lua table
req.query -- a string
req.args.q -- 1
req.args_urlencoded.p -- 2
return true
end
# Call tarantool_stored_procedure_name()
$> wget NGINX_HOST/tarantool_stored_procedure_name/some/mega/path?q=1 --post-data='p=2'
Examples #4 (pass_subrequest_uri):
- Origin (unparsed) uri
location /web {
# Backend processing /web/foo and replying with X-Accel-Redirect to
# internal /tnt/bar
proxy_pass http://x-accel-redirect-backend;
}
location /tnt {
internal;
tnt_pass_http_request on;
tnt_method tarantool_xar_handler;
tnt_pass 127.0.0.1:9999;
}
function tarantool_xar_handler(req, ...)
print(req.uri) -- /web/foo
return true
end
- Subrequest uri
location /web {
# Backend processing /web/foo and replying with X-Accel-Redirect to
# internal /tnt/bar
proxy_pass http://x-accel-redirect-backend;
}
location /tnt {
internal;
tnt_pass_http_request on pass_subrequest_uri;
tnt_method tarantool_xar_handler;
tnt_pass 127.0.0.1:9999;
}
function tarantool_xar_handler(req, ...)
print(req.uri) -- /tnt/bar
return true
end
syntax: tnt_pass_http_request_buffer_size SIZE
default: 4k, 8k
context: location
Specify the size of the buffer used for tnt_pass_http_request
.
syntax: tnt_method STR
default: no
context: location, location if
Specify the Tarantool call method. It can take a nginx's variable.
Examples:
location tnt {
# Also tnt_pass_http_request can mix with JSON communication [[
tnt_http_rest_methods get;
tnt_method tarantool_stored_procedure_name;
#]]
# [on|of]
tnt_pass_http_request on;
tnt_pass 127.0.0.1:9999;
}
location ~ /api/([-_a-zA-Z0-9/]+)/ {
# Also tnt_pass_http_request can mix with JSON communication [[
tnt_http_rest_methods get;
tnt_method $1;
#]]
# [on|of]
tnt_pass_http_request on;
tnt_pass 127.0.0.1:9999;
}
function tarantool_stored_procedure_name(req, ...)
req.headers -- lua table
req.query -- string
return { 'OK' }
end
function call(req, ...)
req.headers -- lua table
req.query -- string
return req, ...
end
# OK Call tarantool_stored_procedure_name()
$> wget NGINX_HOST/tarantool_stored_procedure_name/some/mega/path?q=1
# Error Call tarantool_stored_procedure_XXX()
$> wget NGINX_HOST/tarantool_stored_procedure_XXX/some/mega/path?q=1
# OK Call api_function
$> wget NGINX_HOST/api/call/path?q=1
syntax: tnt_set_header STR STR
default: no
context: location, location if
Allows redefining or appending fields to the request header passed to the Tarantool proxied server. The value can contain text, variables, and their combinations.
Examples:
location tnt {
# Also tnt_pass_http_request can mix with JSON communication [[
tnt_http_rest_methods get;
tnt_method tarantool_stored_procedure_name;
#]]
tnt_set_header X-Host $host;
tnt_set_header X-GEO-COUNTRY $geoip_country_code;
# [on|of]
tnt_pass_http_request on;
tnt_pass 127.0.0.1:9999;
}
function tarantool_stored_procedure_name(req, ...)
req.headers['X-Host'] -- a hostname
req.headers['X-GEO-COUNTRY'] -- a geo country
return { 'OK' }
end
# OK Call tarantool_stored_procedure_name()
$> wget NGINX_HOST/tarantool_stored_procedure_name/some/mega/path?q=1
syntax: tnt_send_timeout TIME
default: 60s
context: http, server, location
The timeout for sending TCP requests to the Tarantool server, in seconds by default.
It's wise to always explicitly specify the time unit to avoid confusion.
Time units supported are:
s
(seconds), ms
(milliseconds), y
(years), M
(months), w
(weeks),
d
(days), h
(hours), and m
(minutes).
syntax: tnt_read_timeout TIME
default: 60s
context: http, server, location
The timeout for reading TCP responses from the Tarantool server, in seconds by default.
It's wise to always explicitly specify the time unit to avoid confusion.
Time units supported are: s
(seconds), ms
(milliseconds), y
(years),
M
(months), w
(weeks), d
(days), h
(hours), and m
(minutes).
syntax: tnt_connect_timeout TIME
default: 60s
context: http, server, location
The timeout for connecting to the Tarantool server, in seconds by default.
It's wise to always explicitly specify the time unit to avoid confusion.
Time units supported are: s
(seconds), ms
(milliseconds), y
(years),
M
(months), w
(weeks), d
(days), h
(hours), and m
(minutes).
This time must be strictly less than 597 hours.
syntax: tnt_buffer_size SIZE
default: 4k, 8k
context: http, server, location
This buffer size is used for reading Tarantool replies, but it's not required to be as big as the largest possible Tarantool reply.
syntax: tnt_next_upstream [ error | timeout | invalid_response | off ]
default: error timeout
context: http, server, location
Specify which failure conditions should cause the request to be forwarded to another upstream server. Applies only when the value in tnt_pass is an upstream with two or more servers.
syntax: tnt_next_upstream_tries SIZE
default: 0
context: http, server, location
Limit the number of possible tries for passing a request to the next server. The 0 value turns off this limitation.
syntax: tnt_next_upstream_timeout TIME
default: 0
context: http, server, location
Limit the time during which a request can be passed to the next server. The 0 value turns off this limitation.
syntax: tnt_pure_result [on|off]
default: off
context: http, server, location
Whether to wrap Tarantool response or not.
When this option is off:
{"id":0, "result": [ 1 ]}
When this option is on:
[[1]]
DEPRECATED in 2.4.0+, RETURNED IN 2.5.0-rc2+
syntax: tnt_multireturn_skip_count [0|1|2]
default: 0
context: http, server, location
Note: Use this option wisely, it does not validate the outgoing JSON! For details you can check this issue: #102
The module will skip one or more multireturn parts when this option is > 0.
When it is set to 0:
{"id":0, "result": [[1]]}
When it is set to 1:
{"id":0, "result": [1]}
When it is set to 2:
{"id": 0, "result": 1}
syntax: tnt_{OPT} [ARGS] [FMT]
Tarantool stores data in tuples. A tuple is a list of elements. Each element is a value or an object, and each element should have a strong type. The tuple format is called MsgPack, it's like JSON in a binary format.
The main goal of Format (see [FMT] above) is to enable conversion between a query string and MsgPack without losing type information or value.
The syntax is: {QUERY_ARG_NAME}=%{FMT_TYPE}
Please look carefully for yours url encoding!
A good example is (also see examples tnt_update and tnt_upsert):
HTTP GET ... /url?space_id=512&value=some+string
it could be matched by using the following format 'space_id=%%space_id,value=%s'
Also this works with HTTP forms, i.e. HTTP POST, HTTP PUT and so on.
Here is a full list of {FMT_TYPE} types:
TUPLES
%n - int64
%f - float
%d - double
%s - string
%b - boolean
Special types
%%space_id - space_id
%%idx_id - index_id
%%off - [select](#tnt_select) offset
%%lim - [select](#tnt_select) limit
%%it - [select](#tnt_select) iterator type, allowed values are:
eq,req,all,lt,le,ge,gt,all_set,any_set,
all_non_set,overlaps,neighbor
KEYS (for [tnt_update](#tnt_update))
%kn - int64
%kf - float
%kd - double
%ks - string
%kb - boolean
Operations (for [tnt_upsert](#tnt_upsert))
%on - int64
%of - float
%od - double
%os - string
%ob - boolean
Examples can be found at:
examples/simple_rest_client.py
examples/simple_rest_client.sh
syntax: tnt_insert [SIZE or off] [FMT]
default: None
context: location, location if
HTTP methods GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, DELETE
Content-Typer default, application/x-www-form-urlencoded
This directive allows executing an insert query with Tarantool.
- The first argument is a space id.
- The second argument is a format string.
Returns HTTP code 4XX if client's request doesn't well formatted. It means, that this error raised if some of values missed or has wrong type.
Returns HTTP code 5XX if upstream is dead (no ping).
Also it can return an HTTP code 200 with an error formatted in JSON. It happens when Tarantool can't issue a query.
Here is a description:
{"error": { "message": STR, "code": INT } }
-
error - a structured object which contains an internal error message. This field exists only if an internal error occurred, for instance: "too large request", "input json parse error", etc.
If this field exists, the input message was probably not passed to the Tarantool backend.
See "message"/"code" fields for details.
Examples can be found at:
simple_rest_client.py
simple_rest_client.sh
syntax: tnt_replace [SIZE or off] [FMT]
default: None
context: location, location if
HTTP methods GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, DELETE
Content-Typer default, application/x-www-form-urlencoded
This directive allows executing a replace query with Tarantool.
- The first argument is a space id.
- The second argument is a format string.
Returns HTTP code 4XX if client's request doesn't well formatted. It means, that this error raised if some of values missed or has wrong type.
Returns HTTP code 5XX if upstream is dead (no ping).
Also it can return an HTTP code 200 with an error formatted in JSON. It happens when Tarantool can't issue a query.
Here is a description:
{"error": { "message": STR, "code": INT } }
-
error - a structured object which contains an internal error message. This field exists only if an internal error occurred, for instance: "too large request", "input json parse error", etc.
If this field exists, the input message was probably not passed to the Tarantool backend.
See "message"/"code" fields for details.
Examples can be found at:
examples/simple_rest_client.py
examples/simple_rest_client.sh
syntax: tnt_delete [SIZE or off] [SIZE or off] [FMT]
default: None
context: location, location if
HTTP methods GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, DELETE
Content-Typer default, application/x-www-form-urlencoded
This directive allows executing a delete query with Tarantool.
- The first argument is a space id.
- The second argument is an index id.
- The third argument is a format string.
Returns HTTP code 4XX if client's request doesn't well formatted. It means, that this error raised if some of values missed or has wrong type.
Returns HTTP code 5XX if upstream is dead (no ping).
Also it can return an HTTP code 200 with an error formatted in JSON. It happens when Tarantool can't issue a query.
Here is a description:
{"error": { "message": STR, "code": INT } }
-
error - a structured object which contains an internal error message. This field exists only if an internal error occurred, for instance: "too large request", "input json parse error", etc.
If this field exists, the input message was probably not passed to the Tarantool backend.
See "message"/"code" fields for details.
Examples can be found at:
examples/simple_rest_client.py
examples/simple_rest_client.sh
syntax: tnt_select [SIZE or off] [SIZE or off] [SIZE] [SIZE] [ENUM] [FMT]
default: None
context: location, location if
HTTP methods GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, DELETE
Content-Typer default, application/x-www-form-urlencoded
This directive allows executing a select query with Tarantool.
- The first argument is a space id.
- The second argument is an index id.
- The third argument is an offset.
- The fourth argument is an limit.
- The fifth argument is an iterator type, allowed values are:
eq
,req
,all
,lt
,le
,ge
,gt
,all_set
,any_set
,all_non_set
,overlaps
,neighbor
. - The six argument is a format string.
Returns HTTP code 4XX if client's request doesn't well formatted. It means, that this error raised if some of values missed or has wrong type.
Returns HTTP code 5XX if upstream is dead (no ping).
Also it can return an HTTP code 200 with an error formatted in JSON. It happens when Tarantool can't issue a query.
Here is a description:
{"error": { "message": STR, "code": INT } }
-
error - a structured object which contains an internal error message. This field exists only if an internal error occurred, for instance: "too large request", "input json parse error", etc.
If this field exists, the input message was probably not passed to the Tarantool backend.
See "message"/"code" fields for details.
Examples can be found at:
examples/simple_rest_client.py
examples/simple_rest_client.sh
syntax: tnt_select_limit_max [SIZE]
default: 100
context: server, location, location if
HTTP methods GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, DELETE
Content-Typer default, application/x-www-form-urlencoded
This is a constraint to avoid large selects. This is the maximum number of returned tuples per select operation. If the client reaches this limit, then the client gets an error on its side.
Returns HTTP code 4XX if client's request doesn't well formatted. It means, that this error raised if some of values missed or has wrong type.
Returns HTTP code 5XX if upstream is dead (no ping).
Also it can return an HTTP code 200 with an error formatted in JSON. It happens when Tarantool can't issue a query.
Here is a description:
{"error": { "message": STR, "code": INT } }
-
error - a structured object which contains an internal error message. This field exists only if an internal error occurred, for instance: "too large request", "input json parse error", etc.
If this field exists, the input message was probably not passed to the Tarantool backend.
See "message"/"code" fields for details.
Examples can be found at:
examples/simple_rest_client.py
examples/simple_rest_client.sh
syntax: tnt_allowed_spaces [STR]
default: **
context: server, location, location if
This is a constraint to prohibit access to some spaces. The directive takes an array of Tarantool space id-s (numbers), and each space in the list is allowed to access from the client side.
Example:
location {
...
tnt_allowed_spaces 512,523;
tnt_insert off "s=%%space_id,i=%%idx_id";
}
syntax: tnt_allowed_indexes [STR]
default: **
context: server, location, location if
This directive works like [tnt_allowed_spaces], but for indexes.
syntax: tnt_update [SIZE or off] [KEYS] [FMT]
default: None
context: location, location if
HTTP methods GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, DELETE
Content-Typer default, application/x-www-form-urlencoded
This directive allows executing an update query with Tarantool.
- The first argument is a space id.
- The second argument is a KEYS (for UPDATE) string. it has special request form: [OPERATION_TYPE],[FIELDNO],[VALUE]
Possible OPERATION_TYPE (char) are:
+ for addition (values must be numeric)
- for subtraction (values must be numeric)
& for bitwise AND (values must be unsigned numeric)
| for bitwise OR (values must be unsigned numeric)
^ for bitwise XOR (values must be unsigned numeric)
: for string splice
! for insertion
# for deletion
= for assignment
FIELDNO (number) - what field the operation will apply to. The field number can
be negative, meaning the position from the end of tuple. (#tuple + negative field number + 1)
VALUE (int64, float, double, string, boolean) – what value will be applied
More details could be found here [tarantool.org] (https://tarantool.org/en/doc/1.7/book/box/box_space.html?highlight=update#lua-function.space_object.update)
Before go further and start use this feature please read an example for this section [1].
- The third argument is a format string.
Examples can be found at:
examples/simple_rest_client.py
examples/simple_rest_client.sh
Returns HTTP code 4XX if client's request doesn't well formatted. It means, that this error raised if some of values missed or has wrong type.
Returns HTTP code 5XX if upstream is dead (no ping).
Also it can return an HTTP code 200 with an error formatted in JSON. It happens when Tarantool can't issue a query.
Here is a description:
{"error": { "message": STR, "code": INT } }
-
error - a structured object which contains an internal error message. This field exists only if an internal error occurred, for instance: "too large request", "input json parse error", etc.
If this field exists, the input message was probably not passed to the Tarantool backend.
See "message"/"code" fields for details.
syntax: tnt_upsert [SIZE or off] [FMT] [OPERATIONS]
default: None
context: location, location if
HTTP methods GET, POST, PUT, PATCH, DELETE
Content-Typer default, application/x-www-form-urlencoded
This directive allows executing an upsert query with Tarantool.
- The first argument is a space id.
- The second argument is a format string.
- The third argument is a OPERATIONS (for UPSERT) string. it has special request form: [OPERATION_TYPE],[FIELDNO],[VALUE]
Possible OPERATION_TYPE (char) are:
+ for addition (values must be numeric)
- for subtraction (values must be numeric)
& for bitwise AND (values must be unsigned numeric)
| for bitwise OR (values must be unsigned numeric)
^ for bitwise XOR (values must be unsigned numeric)
: for string splice
! for insertion
# for deletion
= for assignment
FIELDNO (number) - what field the operation will apply to. The field number can
be negative, meaning the position from the end of tuple. (#tuple + negative field number + 1)
VALUE (int64, float, double, string, boolean) – what value will be applied
More details could be found here [tarantool.org] (https://tarantool.org/en/doc/1.7/book/box/box_space.html?highlight=update#box-space-upsert)
Before go further and start use this feature please read an example for this section [1].
[1] Example
Examples can be found at:
examples/simple_rest_client.py
examples/simple_rest_client.sh
Returns HTTP code 4XX if client's request doesn't well formatted. It means, that this error raised if some of values missed or has wrong type.
Returns HTTP code 5XX if upstream is dead (no ping).
Also it can return an HTTP code 200 with an error formatted in JSON. It happens when Tarantool can't issue a query.
Here is a description:
{"error": { "message": STR, "code": INT } }
-
error - a structured object which contains an internal error message. This field exists only if an internal error occurred, for instance: "too large request", "input json parse error", etc.
If this field exists, the input message was probably not passed to the Tarantool backend.
See "message"/"code" fields for details.
Python test: test/basic_features.py
, test/v20_feautres.py
, nginx.dev.conf
.
Client-side javascript example: example/echo.html
, example/echo.lua
.
- Use HttpUpstreamKeepaliveModule.
- Use keepalive.
- Use keepalive_requests.
- Use multiple instances of Tarantool servers on your multi-core machines.
- Turn off unnecessary logging in Tarantool and NginX.
- Tune Linux network.
- Tune nginx buffers.
- Tarantool homepage.
- lua-resty-tarantool
- Tarantool protocol
Please report bugs at https://github.com/tarantool/nginx_upstream_module/issues.
We also warmly welcome your feedback in the discussion mailing list, [email protected]