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The ngx_http_limit_conn_module module allows
to limit the number of connections per defined key, in
particular, the number of connections from a single IP address.
Not all connections are counted; only those that have requests
currently being processed by the server, in which request header has
been fully read.
Example Configuration
http {
limit_conn_zone $binary_remote_addr zone=addr:10m;
...
server {
...
location /download/ {
limit_conn addr 1;
}
Directives
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syntax:
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limit_conn zone number;
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default:
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—
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context:
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http, server, location
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Sets a shared memory zone
and the maximum allowed number of connections for a given key value.
When this limit is exceeded, the server will return error
503 (Service Temporarily Unavailable)
in reply to a request.
For example, the directives
limit_conn_zone $binary_remote_addr zone=addr:10m;
server {
location /download/ {
limit_conn addr 1;
}
allow for only a single connection at a time, per unique IP address.
When several limit_conn directives are specified,
any configured limit will apply.
For example, the following configuration will limit the number
of connections to the server per client IP and at the same time
will limit the total number of connections to the virtual host:
limit_conn_zone $binary_remote_addr zone=perip:10m;
limit_conn_zone $server_name zone=perserver:10m;
server {
...
limit_conn perip 10;
limit_conn perserver 100;
}
These directives are inherited from the previous level if and
only if there are no
limit_conn
directives on the current level.
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syntax:
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limit_conn_log_level
info |
notice |
warn |
error;
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default:
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limit_conn_log_level error;
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context:
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http, server, location
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This directive appeared in version 0.8.18.
Sets the desired logging level for cases when the server
limits the number of connections.
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syntax:
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limit_conn_zone
$variable
zone=name:size;
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default:
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—
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context:
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http
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Sets parameters of a shared memory zone that keeps states
for various keys.
This state stores the current number of connections in particular.
The key is any non-empty value of the specified variable
(empty values are not accounted).
Example usage:
limit_conn_zone $binary_remote_addr zone=addr:10m;
Here, an IP address of the client serves as a key.
Note that instead of $remote_addr, the
$binary_remote_addr variable is used here.
The length of the $remote_addr variable’s value can
range from 7 to 15 bytes, and the stored state occupies either
32 or 64 bytes of memory on 32-bit platforms, and always 64
bytes on 64-bit platforms.
The length of the $binary_remote_addr variable’s value
is always 4 bytes, and the stored state always occupies 32 bytes
on 32-bit platforms, and 64 bytes on 64-bit platforms.
One megabyte zone can keep about 32 thousand 32-byte states,
and about 16 thousand 64-byte states.
If the storage for a zone is exhausted, the server will return error
503 (Service Temporarily Unavailable)
to all further requests.
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syntax:
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limit_zone
name
$variable
size;
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default:
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—
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context:
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http
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This directive is made obsolete in version 1.1.8,
an equivalent limit_conn_zone directive
with a changed syntax should be used instead:
limit_conn_zone
$variable
zone=name:size;
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