.. _admin-plugins-mysql-remap: MySQL Remap Plugin ****************** .. Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. This is a basic plugin for doing dynamic "remaps" from a database. It essentially rewrites the incoming request's Host header / origin server connection to one retrieved from a database. The generic proxying setup is the following:: UA ----> Traffic Server ----> Origin Server Without the plugin a request like:: GET /path/to/something HTTP/1.1 Host: original.host.com Ends up requesting ``http://original.host.com/path/to/something`` With this plugin enabled, you can easily change that to anywhere you desire. Imagine the many possibilities.... We have benchmarked the plugin with ab at about 9200 requests/sec (1.7k object) on a commodity hardware with a local setup of both, MySQL and Traffic Server local. Real performance is likely to be substantially higher, up to the MySQL's max queries / second. Installation ============ This plugin is only built if the configure option :: --enable-experimental-plugins is given at build time. Configuration ============= Import the default schema to a database you create:: mysql -u root -p -e "CREATE DATABASE mysql_remap;" # create a new database mysql -u root -p mysql_remap < schema/import.sql # import the provided schema insert some interesting values in mysql_remap.hostname & mysql_remap.map Traffic Server plugin configuration is done inside a global configuration file: ``/etc/trafficserver/plugin.config``:: mysql_remap.so /etc/trafficserver/mysql_remap.ini The INI file should contain the following values:: [mysql_remap] mysql_host = localhost #default mysql_port = 3306 #default mysql_username = remap_user mysql_password = mysql_database = mysql_remap #default To debug errors, start trafficserver manually using:: traffic_server -T "mysql_remap" And resolve any errors or warnings displayed.