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Standalone (x-)forwarded* Filter

The (x-)forwarded* Http-Headers family are a pseudo standard with varying and mostly lacking support in most proxies, frameworks and webservers.

This filter supports the following Http Headers:

  • Forwarded as of RFC 7239
  • or if a Forwarded header is NOT found:
    • X-Forwarded-Host
    • X-Forwarded-Port
    • X-Forwarded-Proto
  • Additionally for both cases: X-Forwarded-Prefix is supported to adapt the getContextPath result.

Features:

  • Supports adapting HttpServletRequest's scheme, host, port and prefix(contextPath)by replacing them transparently using the information from (x-)forwarded* http header(s).
  • Supports HttpServletResponse.sendRedirect(location) by rewriting it accordingly
  • Processing of headers and extracting parts (e.g. form Forwarded ) is case insensitive
    • valid: X-Forwarded-Host, x-forwarded-host, X-forwarded-HOST,..
  • Supports multiple headers of same name in request -> use Find-First-Strategy
    • e.g.
      X-Forwarded-Host: "hostA"
      X-Forwarded-Host: "hostB" => filter will use "hostA"
  • Supports multiple COMMA-SPACE separated values inside a headers value ->use Find-First-Strategy
    • e.g. X-Forwarded-Host: "hostA, hostB" => filter will use "hostA"
  • Configurable processing strategy for X-Forwarded-Prefix => PREPEND or REPLACE the contextPath ForwardedFilter.xForwardedPrefixStrategy=[PREPEND, REPLACE]
  • Configurable header processing and removal strategy ForwardedFilter.headerProcessingStrategy=[EVAL_AND_KEEP, EVAL_AND_REMOVE, DONT_EVAL_AND_REMOVE]
    • EVAL_AND_KEEP - process headers and keep them in the list of headers for downstream processing
    • EVAL_AND_REMOVE - process headers and remove them. Wont be visible any more when accessing getHeader(s)
    • DONT_EVAL_AND_REMOVE - don't process the headers, just remove them.
    • DONT_EVAL_AND_DONT_REMOVE => just don't activate this filter - same effect

Table of contents

Usage

You probably should disable all other x-forwarded processing code - like done by your underlying webserver. See: Disable other (x-)forwarded* header processing in various products

Dependencies

  • Only slf4j, commons-lang3 and commons-collections4
  • No Spring required

The JARs are available via Maven Central and JCenter.

Maven

If you are using Maven to build your project, add the following to the pom.xml file.

<!-- https://mvnrepository.com/artifact/de.qaware.xff/x-forwarded-filter -->
<dependency>
    <groupId>de.qaware.xff</groupId>
    <artifactId>x-forwarded-filter</artifactId>
    <version>1.0</version>
</dependency>

Gradle

In case you are using Gradle to build your project, add the following to the build.gradle file:

repositories {
    jcenter()
    mavenCentral()
}

dependencies {
    // https://mvnrepository.com/artifact/de.qaware.xff/x-forwarded-filter
    compile group: 'de.qaware.xff', name: 'x-forwarded-filter', version: '1.0'
}

SpringBoot

Simple:

    @Bean
    FilterRegistrationBean forwardedHeaderFilter() {
        FilterRegistrationBean frb = new FilterRegistrationBean();
        frb.setFilter(new ForwardedHeaderFilter());
        //must run as first filter
        frb.setOrder(Ordered.HIGHEST_PRECEDENCE);
        //Configuration options and their defaults
        frb.addInitParameter(ForwardedHeaderFilter.ENABLE_RELATIVE_REDIRECTS_INIT_PARAM, Boolean.FALSE.toString());//false is default
        frb.addInitParameter(ForwardedHeaderFilter.HEADER_PROCESSING_STRATEGY, HeaderProcessingStrategy.EVAL_AND_REMOVE.name());//EVAL_AND_REMOVE is default
        frb.addInitParameter(ForwardedHeaderFilter.X_FORWARDED_PREFIX_STRATEGY, XForwardedPrefixStrategy.REPLACE.name()); //Replace is default
        return frb;
    }
}

Extended Configuration:

import de.qaware.xff.filter.ForwardedHeaderFilter;  //warning! dont trust the autoimport as it will likley use org.springframework.web.filter.ForwardedHeaderFilter 
//..
@Configuration
@ConditionalOnProperty(value = "de.qaware.xff.enabled", havingValue = "true")
public class FilterRegistrationConfiguration {

	@Data
	@Configuration
	@ConfigurationProperties(prefix = "de.qaware.xff")
	static class ForwardedHeaderFilterConfiguration{
		private boolean enabled = true;
		private boolean enableRelativeRedirects = false;
		private HeaderProcessingStrategy headerProcessingStrategy = HeaderProcessingStrategy.EVAL_AND_KEEP;
		private XForwardedPrefixStrategy xForwardedPrefixStrategy = XForwardedPrefixStrategy.PREPEND;
	}


	@Bean
	FilterRegistrationBean forwardedHeaderFilter(ForwardedHeaderFilterConfiguration c) {
		FilterRegistrationBean frb = new FilterRegistrationBean();
		frb.setFilter(new ForwardedHeaderFilter());
		frb.setOrder(Ordered.HIGHEST_PRECEDENCE);
		frb.setEnabled(c.isEnabled());
		frb.addInitParameter(ForwardedHeaderFilter.ENABLE_RELATIVE_REDIRECTS_INIT_PARAM,
				Boolean.toString(c.isEnableRelativeRedirects()));
		frb.addInitParameter(ForwardedHeaderFilter.HEADER_PROCESSING_STRATEGY, c.getHeaderProcessingStrategy().name());
		frb.addInitParameter(ForwardedHeaderFilter.X_FORWARDED_PREFIX_STRATEGY, c.getXForwardedPrefixStrategy().name());
		return frb;
	}
}

And then in application.yml:

de:
  qaware:
    xff:
      enabled: true
      #enableRelativeRedirects: false
      #headerProcessingStrategy: EVAL_AND_KEEP  # EVAL_AND_KEEP, EVAL_AND_REMOVE, DONT_EVAL_AND_REMOVE , or disable the filter with enabled: false
      #xForwardedPrefixStrategy: PREPEND # one of: PREPEND, REPLACE

web.xml (e.g. Websphere Liberty or Spring)

<!--ForwardedHeaderFilter MUST be first filter in chain -->
<filter>
    <filter-name>ForwardedHeaderFilter</filter-name>
    <filter-class>de.qaware.xff.filter.ForwardedHeaderFilter</filter-class>
    <init-param>
        <param-name>headerProcessingStrategy</param-name>
        <param-value>EVAL_AND_REMOVE</param-value>
    </init-param>
    <init-param>
        <param-name>xForwardedPrefixStrategy</param-name>
        <param-value>REPLACE</param-value>
    </init-param>
    <!-- 
    <init-param>
        <param-name>enableRelativeRedirects</param-name>
        <param-value>false</param-value>
    </init-param>
    -->
</filter>
<filter-mapping>
    <filter-name>ForwardedHeaderFilter</filter-name>
    <url-pattern>/*</url-pattern>
</filter-mapping>

Disable other (x-)forwarded* header processing in various products

Websphere liberty

Disable trustedHeaderOrigin inside server.xml <httpDispatcher trustedHeaderOrigin="none" />

Spring

  1. Don't register the org.springframework.web.filter.ForwardedHeaderFilter
  2. Set server.use-forward-headers=false - generically turns off the forward header handling in the underlying webserver! (e.g. tomcat's RemoteIpValve) see: "howto-use-tomcat-behind-a-proxy-server"

Tomcat

Don't register RemoteIpValve in TomcatEmbeddedServletContainerFactory

void configureTomcatXForwardedHandling(TomcatEmbeddedServletContainerFactory factory){
  if(xForwardedHandlingByTomcat){
	RemoteIpValve remoteIpValve = new RemoteIpValve();
	factory.addContextValves(remoteIpValve);
  }
}	 

What? Why? X-forwarded?

Why do I need (x-)forwarded

  1. Imagine your applications sits behind a proxy or another serivce or a chain of proxies/services
  2. Imagine your application is reachable over different DNS names
  3. You never want to hardcode external URL in the backend service - ever!

Now you need, for whatever reason, the exact external URL as the client calling you sees it. For example, you use an generic Login Proxy 'login.corp.com' in front of you business services e.g. 'biz.corp.com'. And you require 'login.corp.com' to send your user back to your service, after he's done authenticating. For this your business backend service lets call it 'biz.int.corp' (note: internal service URL), needs to tell login.corp.com the exact external URL 'biz.corp.com' your user came from. You do NOT want to hardcode the external URL in your internal service - ever! - it Kills a/b testing and you cannot expose the same service via different URLS. Its just a knightmare. But lets continue. To forward a user back to you, your backend service now needs to dyamically know the protocol, host, port and maybe the prefix form HttpServletRequest to reconstruct the original URL - as your client connecting via the internet sees it.

Without a mechanism aware of "forwarded" headers your HttpServletRequest does only contain the protocol, host and port of the service/proxy infront of your service - which probably is some company internal DNS address and port. Furthermore the service/proxy in front of you may strips some prefix form your request path, for example because it aggregates & maps multiple bakcend services behind a single domain

To support this usecase of forwarding the external URL information to backend services, many proxies and webservers stated supporing various (x-)forwarded* headers. Unfortunately almost all have very bad support for these (pseudo-)standard forwarded headers, implement only parts, implement them poorly or lack the support completely. See: (x-)forwarded* support in various products

This filter will transparently take care of these concerns for you, by wrapping the HttpServletRequest which will overwrite various methods to return the correct information.

Why should i use THIS filter

Because most libraries and webservers have no, very bad or lacking support for these headers. The best filter i could find was the Spring-Web ForwardedHeaderFilter. This implementation is based on the filter from Spring.

Then why not use the Spring filter?

  • because it requires the the full blown spring-web dependency - fine if your are already using Spring, but overkill in a small microservice just requiring this filter
  • it lacks support to PREPEND the value in 'X-Forwarded-Prefix' instead of REPLACE it - is crucial for us, as we use this filter in a proxy and need to pass the values downstream
  • more differences: Implementation details

What this filter is not

  • no support for "client identification" with x-forwarded-for

(x-)forwarded* support in various products

this filter Spring 5.0.4 Tomcat IBM Websphere Liberty Jetty Apache mod_proxy nginx
Forwarded YES YES ? NO YES NO(manually with rewrite engine?) manually with custom proxy_set_header
X-Forwarded-Proto YES YES YES YES YES NO(manually with rewrite engine?) manually with custom proxy_set_header
X-Forwarded-Host YES YES YES*1) NO YES YES manually with custom proxy_set_header
X-Forwarded-Port YES YES YES NO NO NO(manually with rewrite engine?) manually with custom proxy_set_header
X-Forwarded-Prefix YES YES NO NO NO NO(manually with rewrite engine?) manually with custom proxy_set_header
X-Forwarded-By NO NO YES NO NO NO(manually with rewrite engine?) manually with custom proxy_set_header
X-Forwarded-For NO NO YES NO YES YES YES
X-Forwarded-Server NO NO NO NO YES YES manually with custom proxy_set_header
X-Real-IP NO NO NO NO NO NO(manually with rewrite engine?) YES
X-Proxied-Https NO NO NO NO YES NO(manually with rewrite engine?) manually with custom proxy_set_header
X-Forwarded-SSL NO NO YES NO NO NO? manually with custom proxy_set_header
Supports COMMA+SPACE separated values YES YES NO NO YES ? ?
Supports multiple Headers with same name YES YES YES NO NO ? ?
Strip forwarded header from Request YES(toggle) YES(always) ? ? ? ? ?
Supports relative redirects in Response YES YES NO NO NO ? ?
X-Forwarded-Prefix processing strategy PREPEND or REPLACE REPLACE ? ? ? ? ?

*1) x-forwarded-host is supported since 9.0.23,8.5.44,7.0.97

X-Forwarded headers overview and explanation

Header Description
Forwarded same function as x-forwarded-{proto,host,port} see RFC 7239
X-Forwarded-Proto The original protocol requested by the client in the Host HTTP request header
X-Forwarded-Host The original host requested by the client in the Host HTTP request header
X-Forwarded-Port The original port requested by the client in the Host HTTP request header
X-Forwarded-Prefix If a proxy strips a prefix from the path before forwarding it might add an X-Forwarded-Prefix header
X-Forwarded-By Name of the http header created by this valve to hold the list of proxies that have been processed in the incoming remoteIpHeader
X-Forwarded-For The IP address of the client
X-Forwarded-Server The hostname of the proxy server
X-Real-IP nginx synonym for x-forwarded-for
X-Proxied-Https ?
X-Forwarded-SSL ?

Developer Info

Implementation Details

Based on Springs ForwardedHeaderFilter but

  • without Spring dependency -> easily integrable into many projects
  • has toogle to NOT remove the evaluated headers from the request
    • allows using this filter inside a Proxy to forward/append to these headers to downstream services (e.g. Zuul)
  • Selectable processing strategy for X-Forwarded-Prefix
    • PREPEND the Context-Path of the Application with the (first) value from X-forwarded-Prefix
      • example:
    • REPLACE the Context-Path of the Application with the (first) value from X-forwarded-Prefix
      • example:

How to build

Based on Gradle. First trigger of build will take longer and download the buildtool.

gradlew build

Appendix

Maintainer

Michael Frank, [email protected]

Credits

Code was taken from Spring 5.0.4 Thanks to all Contributors who made that possible.

License

This software is provided under the Apache2.0 open source license, read the LICENSE file for details.