Getting Started
The Traffic Server API enables you to create plugins, using the C programming language, that customize the behavior of your Traffic Server installation. This chapter contains the following sections:
Understanding Traffic Server Plugins – a brief introduction to plugins.
A Simple Plugin – walks through compiling and loading an example
hello world
plugin.Plugin Registration and Version Checking – shows you how to register your plugin and make sure it’s compatible with the version of Traffic Server you’re using.
Naming Conventions – outlines Traffic Server API naming conventions. For guidelines on creating plugin source code, see Plugin Development Introduction.
Understanding Traffic Server Plugins
Traffic Server enables sophisticated caching and processing of web-related traffic, such as DNS and HTTP requests and responses.
Traffic Server itself consists of an event-driven loop that can be simplified as follows:
for (;;) {
event = get_next_event();
handle_event (event);
}
The Role of Plugins
You compile your plugin source code to create a shared library that Traffic Server loads when it is started. Your plugin contains callback functions that are registered for specific Traffic Server events. When Traffic Server needs to process an event, it invokes any and all call-back functions you’ve registered for that event type.
Caution
Since plugins add object code to Traffic Server, programming errors in a plugin can have serious implications. Bugs in your plugin, such as an out-of-range pointer, can cause Traffic Server processes to crash and may ultimately result in unpredictable behavior.
Plugin Process
Possible Uses for Plugins
Possible uses for plugins include the following:
HTTP processing: plugins can filter, deny access, authorize users, transform content
Protocol support: plugins can enable Traffic Server to proxy-cache new protocol content
Some examples of plugins include:
Denylisting plugin: denies attempts to access web sites that are off-limits.
Append transform plugin: adds text to HTTP response content.
Image conversion plugin: transforms JPEG images to GIF images.
Compression plugin: sends response content to a compression server that compresses the data (alternatively, a compression library local to the Traffic Server host machine could do the compression).
Authorization plugin: checks a user’s permissions to access particular web sites. The plugin could consult a local authorization program or send queries to an authorization server.
A plugin that gathers client information from request headers and enters this information in a database.
Protocol plugin: listens for specific protocol requests on a designated port and then uses Traffic Server’s proxy server & cache to serve client requests.
The figure below, Possible Traffic Server Plugins, illustrates several types of plugins.
Possible Traffic Server Plugins
You can find basic examples for many plugins in the SDK sample code:
append_transform.c
adds text from a specified file to HTTP/text responses. This plugin is explained in Append Transform PluginThe compression plugin in the figure communicates with the server that actually does the compression. The
server-transform.c
plugin shows how to open a connection to a transformation server, have the server do the transformation, and send transformed data back to the client. Although the transformation is null inserver-transform.c
, a compression or image translation plugin could be implemented in a similar way.basic_auth.c
performs basic HTTP proxy authorization.denylist_1.c
reads a list of servers from a configuration file and denies client access to these servers. This plugin is explained in Denylist Plugin.
Plugin Loading
When Traffic Server is first started, it consults the plugin.config
file to determine the names of all shared plugin libraries that need to
be loaded. The plugin.config
file also defines arguments that are to
be passed to each plugin’s initialization function, TSPluginInit
.
The records.config
file defines the path to each plugin shared
library, as described in Specify the Plugin’s Location.
Note
The path for each of these files is <root_dir>/config/
, where <root_dir> is where you installed Traffic Server.
Plugin Configuration
The sample plugin.config
file below contains a comment line, a blank
line, and two plugin configurations:
# This is a comment line.
my-plugin.so junk.example.com trash.example.org garbage.example.edu
some-plugin.so arg1 arg2 $proxy.config.http.cache.on
Each plugin configuration in the plugin.config
file resembles a UNIX
or DOS shell command; each line in plugin.config
cannot exceed 1023
characters.
The first plugin configuration is for a plugin named my-plugin.so
.
It contains three arguments that are to be passed to that plugin’s
initialization routine. The second configuration is for a plugin named
some-plugin.so
; it contains three arguments. The last argument,
``$proxy.config.http.cache.on``, is actually a configuration variable.
Traffic Server will look up the specified configuration variable and
substitute its value.
Plugins with global variables should not appear more than once in
plugin.config
. For example, if you enter:
add_header.so header1
add_header.so header2
then the second global variable, header2
, will be used for both
instances. A simple workaround is to give different names to different
instances of the same plugin. For example:
cp add_header.so add_header1.so
cp add_header.so add_header2.so
These entries will produce the desired result below:
add_header1.so header1
add_header2.so header2
Configuration File Rules
Comment lines begin with # and continue to the end of the line.
Blank lines are ignored.
Plugins are loaded and initialized by Traffic Server in the order they appear in the
plugin.config
file.
Plugin Initialization
Each plugin must define an initialization function named
TSPluginInit
that Traffic Server invokes when the plugin is loaded.
The TSPluginInit
function is commonly used to read configuration
information and register hooks for event notification.
The TSPluginInit
function has two arguments:
The
argc
argument represents the number of arguments defined in theplugin.config
file for that particular pluginThe
argv
argument is an array of pointers to the actual arguments defined in theplugin.config
file for that plugin
See TSPluginInit()
for details about TSPluginInit
.