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<!DOCTYPE html SYSTEM "about:legacy-compat"> <html lang="en"><head><META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8"><link href="../images/docs-stylesheet.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"><title>Apache Tomcat 8 Configuration Reference (8.5.97) - The Valve Component</title><meta name="author" content="Craig R. McClanahan"></head><body><div id="wrapper"><header><div id="header"><div><div><div class="logo noPrint"><a href="https://tomcat.apache.org/"><img alt="Tomcat Home" src="../images/tomcat.png"></a></div><div style="height: 1px;"></div><div class="asfLogo noPrint"><a href="https://www.apache.org/" target="_blank"><img src="../images/asf-logo.svg" alt="The Apache Software Foundation" style="width: 266px; height: 83px;"></a></div><h1>Apache Tomcat 8 Configuration Reference</h1><div class="versionInfo"> Version 8.5.97, <time datetime="2023-12-07">Dec 7 2023</time></div><div style="height: 1px;"></div><div style="clear: left;"></div></div></div></div></header><div id="middle"><div><div id="mainLeft" class="noprint"><div><nav><div><h2>Links</h2><ul><li><a href="../index.html">Docs Home</a></li><li><a href="index.html">Config Ref. Home</a></li><li><a href="https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/TOMCAT/FAQ">FAQ</a></li><li><a href="#comments_section">User Comments</a></li></ul></div><div><h2>Top Level Elements</h2><ul><li><a href="server.html">Server</a></li><li><a href="service.html">Service</a></li></ul></div><div><h2>Executors</h2><ul><li><a href="executor.html">Executor</a></li></ul></div><div><h2>Connectors</h2><ul><li><a href="http.html">HTTP/1.1</a></li><li><a href="http2.html">HTTP/2</a></li><li><a href="ajp.html">AJP</a></li></ul></div><div><h2>Containers</h2><ul><li><a href="context.html">Context</a></li><li><a href="engine.html">Engine</a></li><li><a href="host.html">Host</a></li><li><a href="cluster.html">Cluster</a></li></ul></div><div><h2>Nested Components</h2><ul><li><a href="cookie-processor.html">CookieProcessor</a></li><li><a href="credentialhandler.html">CredentialHandler</a></li><li><a href="globalresources.html">Global Resources</a></li><li><a href="jar-scanner.html">JarScanner</a></li><li><a href="jar-scan-filter.html">JarScanFilter</a></li><li><a href="listeners.html">Listeners</a></li><li><a href="loader.html">Loader</a></li><li><a href="manager.html">Manager</a></li><li><a href="realm.html">Realm</a></li><li><a href="resources.html">Resources</a></li><li><a href="sessionidgenerator.html">SessionIdGenerator</a></li><li><a href="valve.html">Valve</a></li></ul></div><div><h2>Cluster Elements</h2><ul><li><a href="cluster.html">Cluster</a></li><li><a href="cluster-manager.html">Manager</a></li><li><a href="cluster-channel.html">Channel</a></li><li><a href="cluster-membership.html">Channel/Membership</a></li><li><a href="cluster-sender.html">Channel/Sender</a></li><li><a href="cluster-receiver.html">Channel/Receiver</a></li><li><a href="cluster-interceptor.html">Channel/Interceptor</a></li><li><a href="cluster-valve.html">Valve</a></li><li><a href="cluster-deployer.html">Deployer</a></li><li><a href="cluster-listener.html">ClusterListener</a></li></ul></div><div><h2>web.xml</h2><ul><li><a href="filter.html">Filter</a></li></ul></div><div><h2>Other</h2><ul><li><a href="systemprops.html">System properties</a></li><li><a href="jaspic.html">JASPIC</a></li></ul></div></nav></div></div><div id="mainRight"><div id="content"><h2>The Valve Component</h2><h3 id="Table_of_Contents">Table of Contents</h3><div class="text"> <ul><li><a href="#Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Access_Logging">Access Logging</a><ol><li><a href="#Access_Log_Valve">Access Log Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Access_Log_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Access_Log_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Extended_Access_Log_Valve">Extended Access Log Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Extended_Access_Log_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Extended_Access_Log_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#JSON_Access_Log_Valve">JSON Access Log Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#JSON_Access_Log_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#JSON_Access_Log_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Access_Control">Access Control</a><ol><li><a href="#Remote_Address_Valve">Remote Address Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Remote_Address_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Remote_Address_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li><li><a href="#Remote_Address_Valve/Example_localhost">Example 1</a></li><li><a href="#Remote_Address_Valve/Example_localhost_port">Example 2</a></li><li><a href="#Remote_Address_Valve/Example_port_auth">Example 3</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Remote_Host_Valve">Remote Host Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Remote_Host_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Remote_Host_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Remote_CIDR_Valve">Remote CIDR Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Remote_CIDR_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Remote_CIDR_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li><li><a href="#Remote_CIDR_Valve/Example_localhost">Example 1</a></li><li><a href="#Remote_CIDR_Valve/Example_localhost_port">Example 2</a></li><li><a href="#Remote_CIDR_Valve/Example_port_auth">Example 3</a></li></ol></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Proxies_Support">Proxies Support</a><ol><li><a href="#Load_Balancer_Draining_Valve">Load Balancer Draining Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Load_Balancer_Draining_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Load_Balancer_Draining_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Remote_IP_Valve">Remote IP Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Remote_IP_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Remote_IP_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#SSL_Valve">SSL Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#SSL_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#SSL_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Single_Sign_On_Valve">Single Sign On Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Single_Sign_On_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Single_Sign_On_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Authentication">Authentication</a><ol><li><a href="#Basic_Authenticator_Valve">Basic Authenticator Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Basic_Authenticator_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Basic_Authenticator_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Digest_Authenticator_Valve">Digest Authenticator Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Digest_Authenticator_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Digest_Authenticator_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Form_Authenticator_Valve">Form Authenticator Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Form_Authenticator_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Form_Authenticator_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#SSL_Authenticator_Valve">SSL Authenticator Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#SSL_Authenticator_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#SSL_Authenticator_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#SPNEGO_Valve">SPNEGO Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#SPNEGO_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#SPNEGO_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Error_Report_Valve">Error Report Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Error_Report_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Error_Report_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Json_Error_Report_Valve">Json Error Report Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Json_Error_Report_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Json_Error_Report_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Proxy_Error_Report_Valve">Proxy Error Report Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Proxy_Error_Report_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Proxy_Error_Report_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li><li><a href="#Configuration">Configuration</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Crawler_Session_Manager_Valve">Crawler Session Manager Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Crawler_Session_Manager_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Crawler_Session_Manager_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Stuck_Thread_Detection_Valve">Stuck Thread Detection Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Stuck_Thread_Detection_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Stuck_Thread_Detection_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Semaphore_Valve">Semaphore Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Semaphore_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Semaphore_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li><li><a href="#Persistent_Valve">Persistent Valve</a><ol><li><a href="#Persistent_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</a></li><li><a href="#Persistent_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</a></li></ol></li></ul> </div><h3 id="Introduction">Introduction</h3><div class="text"> <p>A <strong>Valve</strong> element represents a component that will be inserted into the request processing pipeline for the associated Catalina container (<a href="engine.html">Engine</a>, <a href="host.html">Host</a>, or <a href="context.html">Context</a>). Individual Valves have distinct processing capabilities, and are described individually below.</p> <p><em>The description below uses the variable name $CATALINA_BASE to refer the base directory against which most relative paths are resolved. If you have not configured Tomcat for multiple instances by setting a CATALINA_BASE directory, then $CATALINA_BASE will be set to the value of $CATALINA_HOME, the directory into which you have installed Tomcat.</em></p> </div><h3 id="Access_Logging">Access Logging</h3><div class="text"> <p>Access logging is performed by valves that implement <strong>org.apache.catalina.AccessLog</strong> interface.</p> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Access_Log_Valve">Access Log Valve</h4><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Access_Log_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Access Log Valve</strong> creates log files in the same format as those created by standard web servers. These logs can later be analyzed by standard log analysis tools to track page hit counts, user session activity, and so on. This <code>Valve</code> uses self-contained logic to write its log files, which can be automatically rolled over at midnight each day. (The essential requirement for access logging is to handle a large continuous stream of data with low overhead. This <code>Valve</code> does not use Apache Commons Logging, thus avoiding additional overhead and potentially complex configuration).</p> <p>This <code>Valve</code> may be associated with any Catalina container (<code>Context</code>, <code>Host</code>, or <code>Engine</code>), and will record ALL requests processed by that container.</p> <p>Some requests may be handled by Tomcat before they are passed to a container. These include redirects from /foo to /foo/ and the rejection of invalid requests. Where Tomcat can identify the <code>Context</code> that would have handled the request, the request/response will be logged in the <code>AccessLog</code>(s) associated <code>Context</code>, <code>Host</code> and <code>Engine</code>. Where Tomcat cannot identify the <code>Context</code> that would have handled the request, e.g. in cases where the URL is invalid, Tomcat will look first in the <code>Engine</code>, then the default <code>Host</code> for the <code>Engine</code> and finally the ROOT (or default) <code>Context</code> for the default <code>Host</code> for an <code>AccessLog</code> implementation. Tomcat will use the first <code>AccessLog</code> implementation found to log those requests that are rejected before they are passed to a container.</p> <p>The output file will be placed in the directory given by the <code>directory</code> attribute. The name of the file is composed by concatenation of the configured <code>prefix</code>, timestamp and <code>suffix</code>. The format of the timestamp in the file name can be set using the <code>fileDateFormat</code> attribute. This timestamp will be omitted if the file rotation is switched off by setting <code>rotatable</code> to <code>false</code>.</p> <p><strong>Warning:</strong> If multiple AccessLogValve instances are used, they should be configured to use different output files.</p> <p>If sendfile is used, the response bytes will be written asynchronously in a separate thread and the access log valve will not know how many bytes were actually written. In this case, the number of bytes that was passed to the sendfile thread for writing will be recorded in the access log valve. </p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Access_Log_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Access Log Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">buffered</code></td><td> <p>Flag to determine if logging will be buffered. If set to <code>false</code>, then access logging will be written after each request. Default value: <code>true</code> </p> </td></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.AccessLogValve</strong> to use the default access log valve.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">condition</code></td><td> <p>The same as <code>conditionUnless</code>. This attribute is provided for backwards compatibility. </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">conditionIf</code></td><td> <p>Turns on conditional logging. If set, requests will be logged only if <code>ServletRequest.getAttribute()</code> is not null. For example, if this value is set to <code>important</code>, then a particular request will only be logged if <code>ServletRequest.getAttribute("important") != null</code>. The use of Filters is an easy way to set/unset the attribute in the ServletRequest on many different requests. </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">conditionUnless</code></td><td> <p>Turns on conditional logging. If set, requests will be logged only if <code>ServletRequest.getAttribute()</code> is null. For example, if this value is set to <code>junk</code>, then a particular request will only be logged if <code>ServletRequest.getAttribute("junk") == null</code>. The use of Filters is an easy way to set/unset the attribute in the ServletRequest on many different requests. </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">directory</code></td><td> <p>Absolute or relative pathname of a directory in which log files created by this valve will be placed. If a relative path is specified, it is interpreted as relative to $CATALINA_BASE. If no directory attribute is specified, the default value is "logs" (relative to $CATALINA_BASE).</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">encoding</code></td><td> <p>Character set used to write the log file. An empty string means to use the default character set. Default value: UTF-8. </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">fileDateFormat</code></td><td> <p>Allows a customized timestamp in the access log file name. The file is rotated whenever the formatted timestamp changes. The default value is <code>.yyyy-MM-dd</code>. If you wish to rotate every hour, then set this value to <code>.yyyy-MM-dd.HH</code>. The date format will always be localized using the locale <code>en_US</code>. </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">ipv6Canonical</code></td><td> <p>Flag to determine if IPv6 addresses should be represented in canonical representation format as defined by RFC 5952. If set to <code>true</code>, then IPv6 addresses will be written in canonical format (e.g. <code>2001:db8::1:0:0:1</code>, <code>::1</code>), otherwise it will be represented in full form (e.g. <code>2001:db8:0:0:1:0:0:1</code>, <code>0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1</code>). Default value: <code>false</code> </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">locale</code></td><td> <p>The locale used to format timestamps in the access log lines. Any timestamps configured using an explicit SimpleDateFormat pattern (<code>%{xxx}t</code>) are formatted in this locale. By default the default locale of the Java process is used. Switching the locale after the AccessLogValve is initialized is not supported. Any timestamps using the common log format (<code>CLF</code>) are always formatted in the locale <code>en_US</code>. </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">maxDays</code></td><td> <p>The maximum number of days rotated access logs will be retained for before being deleted. If not specified, the default value of <code>-1</code> will be used which means never delete old files.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">maxLogMessageBufferSize</code></td><td> <p>Log message buffers are usually recycled and re-used. To prevent excessive memory usage, if a buffer grows beyond this size it will be discarded. The default is <code>256</code> characters. This should be set to larger than the typical access log message size.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">pattern</code></td><td> <p>A formatting layout identifying the various information fields from the request and response to be logged, or the word <code>common</code> or <code>combined</code> to select a standard format. See below for more information on configuring this attribute.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">prefix</code></td><td> <p>The prefix added to the start of each log file's name. If not specified, the default value is "access_log".</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">renameOnRotate</code></td><td> <p>By default for a rotatable log the active access log file name will contain the current timestamp in <code>fileDateFormat</code>. During rotation the file is closed and a new file with the next timestamp in the name is created and used. When setting <code>renameOnRotate</code> to <code>true</code>, the timestamp is no longer part of the active log file name. Only during rotation the file is closed and then renamed to include the timestamp. This is similar to the behavior of most log frameworks when doing time based rotation. Default value: <code>false</code> </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">requestAttributesEnabled</code></td><td> <p>Set to <code>true</code> to check for the existence of request attributes (typically set by the RemoteIpValve and similar) that should be used to override the values returned by the request for remote address, remote host, server port and protocol. If the attributes are not set, or this attribute is set to <code>false</code> then the values from the request will be used. If not set, the default value of <code>false</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">resolveHosts</code></td><td> <p>This attribute is no longer supported. Use the connector attribute <code>enableLookups</code> instead.</p> <p>If you have <code>enableLookups</code> on the connector set to <code>true</code> and want to ignore it, use <b>%a</b> instead of <b>%h</b> in the value of <code>pattern</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">rotatable</code></td><td> <p>Flag to determine if log rotation should occur. If set to <code>false</code>, then this file is never rotated and <code>fileDateFormat</code> is ignored. Default value: <code>true</code> </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">suffix</code></td><td> <p>The suffix added to the end of each log file's name. If not specified, the default value is "" (a zero-length string), meaning that no suffix will be added.</p> </td></tr></table> <p>Values for the <code>pattern</code> attribute are made up of literal text strings, combined with pattern identifiers prefixed by the "%" character to cause replacement by the corresponding variable value from the current request and response. The following pattern codes are supported:</p> <ul> <li><b><code>%a</code></b> - Remote IP address. See also <code>%{xxx}a</code> below.</li> <li><b><code>%A</code></b> - Local IP address</li> <li><b><code>%b</code></b> - Bytes sent, excluding HTTP headers, or '-' if zero</li> <li><b><code>%B</code></b> - Bytes sent, excluding HTTP headers</li> <li><b><code>%D</code></b> - Time taken to process the request in millis. Note: In httpd %D is microseconds. Behaviour will be aligned to httpd in Tomcat 10 onwards.</li> <li><b><code>%F</code></b> - Time taken to commit the response, in milliseconds</li> <li><b><code>%h</code></b> - Remote host name (or IP address if <code>enableLookups</code> for the connector is false)</li> <li><b><code>%H</code></b> - Request protocol</li> <li><b><code>%I</code></b> - Current request thread name (can compare later with stacktraces)</li> <li><b><code>%l</code></b> - Remote logical username from identd (always returns '-')</li> <li><b><code>%m</code></b> - Request method (GET, POST, etc.)</li> <li><b><code>%p</code></b> - Local port on which this request was received. See also <code>%{xxx}p</code> below.</li> <li><b><code>%q</code></b> - Query string (prepended with a '?' if it exists)</li> <li><b><code>%r</code></b> - First line of the request (method and request URI)</li> <li><b><code>%s</code></b> - HTTP status code of the response</li> <li><b><code>%S</code></b> - User session ID</li> <li><b><code>%t</code></b> - Date and time, in Common Log Format</li> <li><b><code>%T</code></b> - Time taken to process the request, in seconds. Note: This value has millisecond resolution whereas in httpd it has second resolution. Behaviour will be align to httpd in Tomcat 10 onwards.</li> <li><b><code>%u</code></b> - Remote user that was authenticated (if any), else '-' (escaped if required)</li> <li><b><code>%U</code></b> - Requested URL path</li> <li><b><code>%v</code></b> - Local server name</li> <li><b><code>%X</code></b> - Connection status when response is completed: <ul> <li><code>X</code> = Connection aborted before the response completed.</li> <li><code>+</code> = Connection may be kept alive after the response is sent.</li> <li><code>-</code> = Connection will be closed after the response is sent.</li> </ul> </li> </ul> <p> There is also support to write information incoming or outgoing headers, cookies, session or request attributes and special timestamp formats. It is modeled after the <a href="https://httpd.apache.org/">Apache HTTP Server</a> log configuration syntax. Each of them can be used multiple times with different <code>xxx</code> keys: </p> <ul> <li><b><code>%{xxx}a</code></b> write remote address (client) (<code>xxx==remote</code>) or connection peer address (<code>xxx=peer</code>)</li> <li><b><code>%{xxx}i</code></b> write value of incoming header with name <code>xxx</code> (escaped if required)</li> <li><b><code>%{xxx}o</code></b> write value of outgoing header with name <code>xxx</code> (escaped if required)</li> <li><b><code>%{xxx}c</code></b> write value of cookie(s) with name <code>xxx</code> (comma separated and escaped if required)</li> <li><b><code>%{xxx}r</code></b> write value of ServletRequest attribute with name <code>xxx</code> (escaped if required, value <code>??</code> if request is null)</li> <li><b><code>%{xxx}s</code></b> write value of HttpSession attribute with name <code>xxx</code> (escaped if required, value <code>??</code> if request is null)</li> <li><b><code>%{xxx}p</code></b> write local (server) port (<code>xxx==local</code>) or remote (client) port (<code>xxx=remote</code>)</li> <li><b><code>%{xxx}t</code></b> write timestamp at the end of the request formatted using the enhanced SimpleDateFormat pattern <code>xxx</code></li> </ul> <p>All formats supported by SimpleDateFormat are allowed in <code>%{xxx}t</code>. In addition the following extensions have been added:</p> <ul> <li><b><code>sec</code></b> - number of seconds since the epoch</li> <li><b><code>msec</code></b> - number of milliseconds since the epoch</li> <li><b><code>msec_frac</code></b> - millisecond fraction</li> </ul> <p>These formats cannot be mixed with SimpleDateFormat formats in the same format token.</p> <p>Furthermore one can define whether to log the timestamp for the request start time or the response finish time:</p> <ul> <li><b><code>begin</code></b> or prefix <b><code>begin:</code></b> chooses the request start time</li> <li><b><code>end</code></b> or prefix <b><code>end:</code></b> chooses the response finish time</li> </ul> <p>By adding multiple <code>%{xxx}t</code> tokens to the pattern, one can also log both timestamps.</p> <p>Escaping is applied as follows:</p> <ul> <li><code>"</code> is escaped as <code>\"</code></li> <li><code>\</code> is escaped as <code>\\</code></li> <li>Standard C escaping are used for <code>\f</code>, <code>\n</code>, <code>\r</code> and <code>\t</code></li> <li>Any other control characters or characters with code points above 127 are encoded using the standard Java unicode escaping (<code>\uXXXX</code>)</li> </ul> <p>The shorthand pattern <code>pattern="common"</code> corresponds to the Common Log Format defined by <strong>'%h %l %u %t "%r" %s %b'</strong>.</p> <p>The shorthand pattern <code>pattern="combined"</code> appends the values of the <code>Referer</code> and <code>User-Agent</code> headers, each in double quotes, to the <code>common</code> pattern.</p> <p>Fields using unknown pattern identifiers will be logged as <code>???X???</code> where <code>X</code> is the unknown identifier. Fields with unknown pattern identifier plus <code>{xxx}</code> key will be logged as <code>???</code>.</p> <p>When Tomcat is operating behind a reverse proxy, the client information logged by the Access Log Valve may represent the reverse proxy, the browser or some combination of the two depending on the configuration of Tomcat and the reverse proxy. For Tomcat configuration options see <a href="#Proxies_Support">Proxies Support</a> and the <a href="../proxy-howto.html">Proxy How-To</a>. For reverse proxies that use mod_jk, see the <a href="https://tomcat.apache.org/connectors-doc/generic_howto/proxy.html">generic proxy</a> documentation. For other reverse proxies, consult their documentation.</p> </div></div> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Extended_Access_Log_Valve">Extended Access Log Valve</h4><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Extended_Access_Log_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Extended Access Log Valve</strong> extends the <a href="#Access_Log_Valve">Access Log Valve</a> class, and so uses the same self-contained logging logic. This means it implements many of the same file handling attributes. The main difference to the standard <code>AccessLogValve</code> is that <code>ExtendedAccessLogValve</code> creates log files which conform to the Working Draft for the <a href="https://www.w3.org/TR/WD-logfile.html">Extended Log File Format</a> defined by the W3C.</p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Extended_Access_Log_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Extended Access Log Valve</strong> supports all configuration attributes of the standard <a href="#Access_Log_Valve">Access Log Valve.</a> Only the values used for <code>className</code> and <code>pattern</code> differ.</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.ExtendedAccessLogValve</strong> to use the extended access log valve.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">pattern</code></td><td> <p>A formatting layout identifying the various information fields from the request and response to be logged. See below for more information on configuring this attribute.</p> </td></tr></table> <p>Values for the <code>pattern</code> attribute are made up of format tokens. Some of the tokens need an additional prefix. Possible prefixes are <code>c</code> for "client", <code>s</code> for "server", <code>cs</code> for "client to server", <code>sc</code> for "server to client" or <code>x</code> for "application specific". Furthermore some tokens are completed by an additional selector. See the <a href="https://www.w3.org/TR/WD-logfile.html">W3C specification</a> for more information about the format.</p> <p>The following format tokens are supported:</p> <ul> <li><b>bytes</b> - Bytes sent, excluding HTTP headers, or '-' if zero</li> <li><b>c-dns</b> - Remote host name (or IP address if <code>enableLookups</code> for the connector is false)</li> <li><b>c-ip</b> - Remote IP address</li> <li><b>cs-method</b> - Request method (GET, POST, etc.)</li> <li><b>cs-uri</b> - Request URI</li> <li><b>cs-uri-query</b> - Query string (prepended with a '?' if it exists)</li> <li><b>cs-uri-stem</b> - Requested URL path</li> <li><b>date</b> - The date in yyyy-mm-dd format for GMT</li> <li><b>s-dns</b> - Local host name</li> <li><b>s-ip</b> - Local IP address</li> <li><b>sc-status</b> - HTTP status code of the response</li> <li><b>time</b> - Time the request was served in HH:mm:ss format for GMT</li> <li><b>time-taken</b> - Time (in seconds as floating point) taken to serve the request</li> <li><b>x-threadname</b> - Current request thread name (can compare later with stacktraces)</li> </ul> <p>For any of the <code>x-H(XXX)</code> the following method will be called from the HttpServletRequest object:</p> <ul> <li><b><code>x-H(authType)</code></b>: getAuthType </li> <li><b><code>x-H(characterEncoding)</code></b>: getCharacterEncoding </li> <li><b><code>x-H(contentLength)</code></b>: getContentLength </li> <li><b><code>x-H(locale)</code></b>: getLocale</li> <li><b><code>x-H(protocol)</code></b>: getProtocol </li> <li><b><code>x-H(remoteUser)</code></b>: getRemoteUser</li> <li><b><code>x-H(requestedSessionId)</code></b>: getRequestedSessionId</li> <li><b><code>x-H(requestedSessionIdFromCookie)</code></b>: isRequestedSessionIdFromCookie </li> <li><b><code>x-H(requestedSessionIdValid)</code></b>: isRequestedSessionIdValid</li> <li><b><code>x-H(scheme)</code></b>: getScheme</li> <li><b><code>x-H(secure)</code></b>: isSecure</li> </ul> <p> There is also support to write information about headers cookies, context, request or session attributes and request parameters. </p> <ul> <li><b><code>cs(XXX)</code></b> for incoming request headers with name XXX</li> <li><b><code>sc(XXX)</code></b> for outgoing response headers with name XXX</li> <li><b><code>x-A(XXX)</code></b> for the servlet context attribute with name XXX</li> <li><b><code>x-C(XXX)</code></b> for the cookie(s) with name XXX (comma separated if required)</li> <li><b><code>x-O(XXX)</code></b> for a concatenation of all outgoing response headers with name XXX</li> <li><b><code>x-P(XXX)</code></b> for the URL encoded (using UTF-8) request parameter with name XXX</li> <li><b><code>x-R(XXX)</code></b> for the request attribute with name XXX</li> <li><b><code>x-S(XXX)</code></b> for the session attribute with name XXX</li> </ul> </div></div> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="JSON_Access_Log_Valve">JSON Access Log Valve</h4><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="JSON_Access_Log_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>JSON Access Log Valve</strong> extends the <a href="#Access_Log_Valve">Access Log Valve</a>, and so uses the same self-contained logging logic. This means it implements the same file handling attributes. The main difference to the standard <code>AccessLogValve</code> is that <code>JsonAccessLogValve</code> creates log files which follow the JSON syntax as defined by <a href="https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc8259.html">RFC 8259</a>.</p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="JSON_Access_Log_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>JSON Access Log Valve</strong> supports all configuration attributes of the standard <a href="#Access_Log_Valve">Access Log Valve.</a> Only the values used for <code>className</code> differ.</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.JsonAccessLogValve</strong> to use the extended access log valve.</p> </td></tr></table> <p>While the patterns supported are the same as for the regular <a href="#Access_Log_Valve">Access Log Valve</a>, there are a few differences: <ul> <li>requests are logged as JSON objects.</li> <li>each supported "%X" single character pattern identifier results in a key value pair in this object. See below for the list of keys used for the respective pattern identifiers.</li> <li>each pattern identifiers using a subkey of the form <code>%{xxx}X</code> where "X" is one of "a", "p" or "t" results in a key value pair of the form "key-xxx". See below for the list of keys used for the respective pattern identifiers.</li> <li>each pattern identifiers using a subkey of the form <code>%{xxx}X</code> where "X" is one of "c", "i", "o", "r" or "s" results in a sub object. See below for the key pointing at this sub object. The keys in the sub object are the "xxx" subkeys in the pattern.</li> <li>each unsupported "%X" character pattern identifier results in a key value pair using the key "other-X".</li> <li>the values logged are the same as the ones logged by the standard <a href="#Access_Log_Valve">Access Log Valve</a> for the same pattern identifiers.</li> <li>any "xxx" subkeys get Json escaped.</li> <li>any verbatim text between pattern identifiers gets silently ignored.</li> </ul> The JSON object keys used for the pattern identifiers which do not generate a sub object are the following: <ul> <li><b><code>%a</code></b>: remoteAddr</li> <li><b><code>%A</code></b>: localAddr</li> <li><b><code>%b</code></b>: size</li> <li><b><code>%B</code></b>: byteSentNC</li> <li><b><code>%D</code></b>: elapsedTime</li> <li><b><code>%F</code></b>: firstByteTime</li> <li><b><code>%h</code></b>: host</li> <li><b><code>%H</code></b>: protocol</li> <li><b><code>%I</code></b>: threadName</li> <li><b><code>%l</code></b>: logicalUserName</li> <li><b><code>%m</code></b>: method</li> <li><b><code>%p</code></b>: port</li> <li><b><code>%q</code></b>: query</li> <li><b><code>%r</code></b>: request</li> <li><b><code>%s</code></b>: statusCode</li> <li><b><code>%S</code></b>: sessionId</li> <li><b><code>%t</code></b>: time</li> <li><b><code>%T</code></b>: elapsedTimeS</li> <li><b><code>%u</code></b>: user</li> <li><b><code>%U</code></b>: path</li> <li><b><code>%v</code></b>: localServerName</li> <li><b><code>%X</code></b>: connectionStatus</li> </ul> The JSON object keys used for the pattern identifiers which generate a sub object are the following: <ul> <li><b><code>%c</code></b>: cookies</li> <li><b><code>%i</code></b>: requestHeaders</li> <li><b><code>%o</code></b>: responseHeaders</li> <li><b><code>%r</code></b>: requestAttributes</li> <li><b><code>%s</code></b>: sessionAttributes</li> </ul> </p> </div></div> </div></div> </div><h3 id="Access_Control">Access Control</h3><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_Address_Valve">Remote Address Valve</h4><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_Address_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Remote Address Valve</strong> allows you to compare the IP address of the client that submitted this request against one or more <em>regular expressions</em>, and either allow the request to continue or refuse to process the request from this client. A Remote Address Valve can be associated with any Catalina container (<a href="engine.html">Engine</a>, <a href="host.html">Host</a>, or <a href="context.html">Context</a>), and must accept any request presented to this container for processing before it will be passed on.</p> <p>The syntax for <em>regular expressions</em> is different than that for 'standard' wildcard matching. Tomcat uses the <code>java.util.regex</code> package. Please consult the Java documentation for details of the expressions supported.</p> <p>After setting the attribute <code>addConnectorPort</code> to <code>true</code>, one can append the server connector port separated with a semicolon (";") to allow different expressions for each connector.</p> <p>By setting the attribute <code>usePeerAddress</code> to <code>true</code>, the valve will use the connection peer address in its checks. This will differ from the client IP, if a reverse proxy is used in front of Tomcat in combination with either the AJP protocol, or the HTTP protocol plus the <code>RemoteIp(Valve|Filter)</code>.</p> <p>A refused request will be answered a response with status code <code>403</code>. This status code can be overwritten using the attribute <code>denyStatus</code>.</p> <p>By setting the attribute <code>invalidAuthenticationWhenDeny</code> to <code>true</code>, the behavior when a request is refused can be changed to not deny but instead set an invalid <code>authentication</code> header. This is useful in combination with the context attribute <code>preemptiveAuthentication="true"</code>.</p> <p><strong>Note:</strong> There is a caveat when using this valve with IPv6 addresses. Format of the IP address that this valve is processing depends on the API that was used to obtain it. If the address was obtained from Java socket using Inet6Address class, its format will be <code>x:x:x:x:x:x:x:x</code>. That is, the IP address for localhost will be <code>0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1</code> instead of the more widely used <code>::1</code>. Consult your access logs for the actual value.</p> <p>See also: <a href="#Remote_Host_Valve">Remote Host Valve</a>, <a href="#Remote_CIDR_Valve">Remote CIDR Valve</a>, <a href="#Remote_IP_Valve">Remote IP Valve</a>, <a href="http.html">HTTP Connector</a> configuration.</p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_Address_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Remote Address Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.RemoteAddrValve</strong>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">allow</code></td><td> <p>A regular expression (using <code>java.util.regex</code>) that the remote client's IP address is compared to. If this attribute is specified, the remote address MUST match for this request to be accepted. If this attribute is not specified, all requests will be accepted UNLESS the remote address matches a <code>deny</code> pattern.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">deny</code></td><td> <p>A regular expression (using <code>java.util.regex</code>) that the remote client's IP address is compared to. If this attribute is specified, the remote address MUST NOT match for this request to be accepted. If this attribute is not specified, request acceptance is governed solely by the <code>allow</code> attribute.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">denyStatus</code></td><td> <p>HTTP response status code that is used when rejecting denied request. The default value is <code>403</code>. For example, it can be set to the value <code>404</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">addConnectorPort</code></td><td> <p>Append the server connector port to the client IP address separated with a semicolon (";"). If this is set to <code>true</code>, the expressions configured with <code>allow</code> and <code>deny</code> is compared against <code>ADDRESS;PORT</code> where <code>ADDRESS</code> is the client IP address and <code>PORT</code> is the Tomcat connector port which received the request. The default value is <code>false</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">invalidAuthenticationWhenDeny</code></td><td> <p>When a request should be denied, do not deny but instead set an invalid <code>authentication</code> header. This only works if the context has the attribute <code>preemptiveAuthentication="true"</code> set. An already existing <code>authentication</code> header will not be overwritten. In effect this will trigger authentication instead of deny even if the application does not have a security constraint configured.</p> <p>This can be combined with <code>addConnectorPort</code> to trigger authentication depending on the client and the connector that is used to access an application.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">usePeerAddress</code></td><td> <p>Use the connection peer address instead of the client IP address. They will differ, if a reverse proxy is used in front of Tomcat in combination with either the AJP protocol, or the HTTP protocol plus the <code>RemoteIp(Valve|Filter)</code>.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_Address_Valve/Example_localhost">Example 1</h4><div class="text"> <p>To allow access only for the clients connecting from localhost:</p> <div class="codeBox"><pre><code><Valve className="org.apache.catalina.valves.RemoteAddrValve" allow="127\.\d+\.\d+\.\d+|::1|0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1"/></code></pre></div> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_Address_Valve/Example_localhost_port">Example 2</h4><div class="text"> <p>To allow unrestricted access for the clients connecting from localhost but for all other clients only to port 8443:</p> <div class="codeBox"><pre><code><Valve className="org.apache.catalina.valves.RemoteAddrValve" addConnectorPort="true" allow="127\.\d+\.\d+\.\d+;\d*|::1;\d*|0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1;\d*|.*;8443"/></code></pre></div> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_Address_Valve/Example_port_auth">Example 3</h4><div class="text"> <p>To allow unrestricted access to port 8009, but trigger basic authentication if the application is accessed on another port:</p> <div class="codeBox"><pre><code><Context> ... <Valve className="org.apache.catalina.valves.RemoteAddrValve" addConnectorPort="true" invalidAuthenticationWhenDeny="true" allow=".*;8009"/> <Valve className="org.apache.catalina.authenticator.BasicAuthenticator" /> ... </Context></code></pre></div> </div></div> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_Host_Valve">Remote Host Valve</h4><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_Host_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Remote Host Valve</strong> allows you to compare the hostname of the client that submitted this request against one or more <em>regular expressions</em>, and either allow the request to continue or refuse to process the request from this client. A Remote Host Valve can be associated with any Catalina container (<a href="engine.html">Engine</a>, <a href="host.html">Host</a>, or <a href="context.html">Context</a>), and must accept any request presented to this container for processing before it will be passed on.</p> <p>The syntax for <em>regular expressions</em> is different than that for 'standard' wildcard matching. Tomcat uses the <code>java.util.regex</code> package. Please consult the Java documentation for details of the expressions supported.</p> <p>After setting the attribute <code>addConnectorPort</code> to <code>true</code>, one can append the server connector port separated with a semicolon (";") to allow different expressions for each connector.</p> <p>A refused request will be answered a response with status code <code>403</code>. This status code can be overwritten using the attribute <code>denyStatus</code>.</p> <p>By setting the attribute <code>invalidAuthenticationWhenDeny</code> to <code>true</code>, the behavior when a request is refused can be changed to not deny but instead set an invalid <code>authentication</code> header. This is useful in combination with the context attribute <code>preemptiveAuthentication="true"</code>.</p> <p><strong>Note:</strong> This valve processes the value returned by method <code>ServletRequest.getRemoteHost()</code>. To allow the method to return proper host names, you have to enable "DNS lookups" feature on a <strong>Connector</strong>.</p> <p>See also: <a href="#Remote_Address_Valve">Remote Address Valve</a>, <a href="#Remote_CIDR_Valve">Remote CIDR Valve</a>, <a href="#Remote_IP_Valve">Remote IP Valve</a>, <a href="http.html">HTTP Connector</a> configuration.</p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_Host_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Remote Host Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.RemoteHostValve</strong>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">allow</code></td><td> <p>A regular expression (using <code>java.util.regex</code>) that the remote client's hostname is compared to. If this attribute is specified, the remote hostname MUST match for this request to be accepted. If this attribute is not specified, all requests will be accepted UNLESS the remote hostname matches a <code>deny</code> pattern.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">deny</code></td><td> <p>A regular expression (using <code>java.util.regex</code>) that the remote client's hostname is compared to. If this attribute is specified, the remote hostname MUST NOT match for this request to be accepted. If this attribute is not specified, request acceptance is governed solely by the <code>allow</code> attribute.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">denyStatus</code></td><td> <p>HTTP response status code that is used when rejecting denied request. The default value is <code>403</code>. For example, it can be set to the value <code>404</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">addConnectorPort</code></td><td> <p>Append the server connector port to the client hostname separated with a semicolon (";"). If this is set to <code>true</code>, the expressions configured with <code>allow</code> and <code>deny</code> is compared against <code>HOSTNAME;PORT</code> where <code>HOSTNAME</code> is the client hostname and <code>PORT</code> is the Tomcat connector port which received the request. The default value is <code>false</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">invalidAuthenticationWhenDeny</code></td><td> <p>When a request should be denied, do not deny but instead set an invalid <code>authentication</code> header. This only works if the context has the attribute <code>preemptiveAuthentication="true"</code> set. An already existing <code>authentication</code> header will not be overwritten. In effect this will trigger authentication instead of deny even if the application does not have a security constraint configured.</p> <p>This can be combined with <code>addConnectorPort</code> to trigger authentication depending on the client and the connector that is used to access an application.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_CIDR_Valve">Remote CIDR Valve</h4><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_CIDR_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Remote CIDR Valve</strong> allows you to compare the IP address of the client that submitted this request against one or more netmasks following the CIDR notation, and either allow the request to continue or refuse to process the request from this client. IPv4 and IPv6 are both fully supported. A Remote CIDR Valve can be associated with any Catalina container (<a href="engine.html">Engine</a>, <a href="host.html">Host</a>, or <a href="context.html">Context</a>), and must accept any request presented to this container for processing before it will be passed on. </p> <p>This valve mimics Apache's <code>Order</code>, <code>Allow from</code> and <code>Deny from</code> directives, with the following limitations: </p> <ul> <li><code>Order</code> will always be <code>allow, deny</code>;</li> <li>dotted quad notations for netmasks are not supported (that is, you cannot write <code>192.168.1.0/255.255.255.0</code>, you must write <code>192.168.1.0/24</code>; </li> <li>shortcuts, like <code>10.10.</code>, which is equivalent to <code>10.10.0.0/16</code>, are not supported; </li> <li>as the valve name says, this is a CIDR only valve, therefore subdomain notations like <code>.mydomain.com</code> are not supported either. </li> </ul> <p>After setting the attribute <code>addConnectorPort</code> to <code>true</code>, one can append the server connector port separated with a semicolon (";") to allow different expressions for each connector.</p> <p>By setting the attribute <code>usePeerAddress</code> to <code>true</code>, the valve will use the connection peer address in its checks. This will differ from the client IP, if a reverse proxy is used in front of Tomcat in combination with either the AJP protocol, or the HTTP protocol plus the <code>RemoteIp(Valve|Filter)</code>.</p> <p>A refused request will be answered a response with status code <code>403</code>. This status code can be overwritten using the attribute <code>denyStatus</code>.</p> <p>By setting the attribute <code>invalidAuthenticationWhenDeny</code> to <code>true</code>, the behavior when a request is refused can be changed to not deny but instead set an invalid <code>authentication</code> header. This is useful in combination with the context attribute <code>preemptiveAuthentication="true"</code>.</p> <p>Some more features of this valve are: </p> <ul> <li>if you omit the CIDR prefix, this valve becomes a single IP valve;</li> <li>unlike the <a href="#Remote_Host_Valve">Remote Host Valve</a>, it can handle IPv6 addresses in condensed form (<code>::1</code>, <code>fe80::/71</code>, etc).</li> </ul> <p>See also: <a href="#Remote_Address_Valve">Remote Address Valve</a>, <a href="#Remote_Host_Valve">Remote Host Valve</a>, <a href="#Remote_IP_Valve">Remote IP Valve</a>, <a href="http.html">HTTP Connector</a> configuration.</p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_CIDR_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Remote CIDR Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.RemoteCIDRValve</strong>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">allow</code></td><td> <p>A comma-separated list of IPv4 or IPv6 netmasks or addresses that the remote client's IP address is matched against. If this attribute is specified, the remote address MUST match for this request to be accepted. If this attribute is not specified, all requests will be accepted UNLESS the remote IP is matched by a netmask in the <code>deny</code> attribute. </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">deny</code></td><td> <p>A comma-separated list of IPv4 or IPv6 netmasks or addresses that the remote client's IP address is matched against. If this attribute is specified, the remote address MUST NOT match for this request to be accepted. If this attribute is not specified, request acceptance is governed solely by the <code>accept</code> attribute. </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">denyStatus</code></td><td> <p>HTTP response status code that is used when rejecting denied request. The default value is <code>403</code>. For example, it can be set to the value <code>404</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">addConnectorPort</code></td><td> <p>Append the server connector port to the client IP address separated with a semicolon (";"). If this is set to <code>true</code>, the expressions configured with <code>allow</code> and <code>deny</code> is compared against <code>ADDRESS;PORT</code> where <code>ADDRESS</code> is the client IP address and <code>PORT</code> is the Tomcat connector port which received the request. The default value is <code>false</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">invalidAuthenticationWhenDeny</code></td><td> <p>When a request should be denied, do not deny but instead set an invalid <code>authentication</code> header. This only works if the context has the attribute <code>preemptiveAuthentication="true"</code> set. An already existing <code>authentication</code> header will not be overwritten. In effect this will trigger authentication instead of deny even if the application does not have a security constraint configured.</p> <p>This can be combined with <code>addConnectorPort</code> to trigger authentication depending on the client and the connector that is used to access an application.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">usePeerAddress</code></td><td> <p>Use the connection peer address instead of the client IP address. They will differ, if a reverse proxy is used in front of Tomcat in combination with either the AJP protocol, or the HTTP protocol plus the <code>RemoteIp(Valve|Filter)</code>.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_CIDR_Valve/Example_localhost">Example 1</h4><div class="text"> <p>To allow access only for the clients connecting from localhost:</p> <div class="codeBox"><pre><code><Valve className="org.apache.catalina.valves.RemoteCIDRValve" allow="127.0.0.1, ::1"/></code></pre></div> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_CIDR_Valve/Example_localhost_port">Example 2</h4><div class="text"> <p>To allow unrestricted access for the clients connecting from the local network but for all clients in network 10. only to port 8443:</p> <div class="codeBox"><pre><code><Valve className="org.apache.catalina.valves.RemoteCIDRValve" addConnectorPort="true" allow="127.0.0.1;\d*|::1;\d*|10.0.0.0/8;8443"/></code></pre></div> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_CIDR_Valve/Example_port_auth">Example 3</h4><div class="text"> <p>To allow access to port 8009 from network 10., but trigger basic authentication if the application is accessed on another port:</p> <div class="codeBox"><pre><code><Context> ... <Valve className="org.apache.catalina.valves.RemoteCIDRValve" addConnectorPort="true" invalidAuthenticationWhenDeny="true" allow="10.0.0.0/8;8009"/> <Valve className="org.apache.catalina.authenticator.BasicAuthenticator" /> ... </Context></code></pre></div> </div></div> </div></div> </div><h3 id="Proxies_Support">Proxies Support</h3><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Load_Balancer_Draining_Valve">Load Balancer Draining Valve</h4><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Load_Balancer_Draining_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p> When using mod_jk or mod_proxy_ajp, the client's session id is used to determine which back-end server will be used to serve the request. If the target node is being "drained" (in mod_jk, this is the <i>DISABLED</i> state; in mod_proxy_ajp, this is the <i>Drain (N)</i> state), requests for expired sessions can actually cause the draining node to fail to drain. </p> <p> Unfortunately, AJP-based load-balancers cannot prove whether the client-provided session id is valid or not and therefore will send any requests for a session that appears to be targeted to that node to the disabled (or "draining") node, causing the "draining" process to take longer than necessary. </p> <p> This Valve detects requests for invalid sessions, strips the session information from the request, and redirects back to the same URL, where the load-balancer should choose a different (active) node to handle the request. This will accelerate the "draining" process for the disabled node(s). </p> <p> The activation state of the node is sent by the load-balancer in the request, so no state change on the node being disabled is necessary. Simply configure this Valve in your valve pipeline and it will take action when the activation state is set to "disabled". </p> <p> You should take care to register this Valve earlier in the Valve pipeline than any authentication Valves, because this Valve should be able to redirect a request before any authentication Valve saves a request to a protected resource. If this happens, a new session will be created and the draining process will stall because a new, valid session will be established. </p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Load_Balancer_Draining_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Load Balancer Draining Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.LoadBalancerDrainingValve</strong>. </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">redirectStatusCode</code></td><td> <p>Allows setting a custom redirect code to be used when the client is redirected to be re-balanced by the load-balancer. The default is 307 TEMPORARY_REDIRECT.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">ignoreCookieName</code></td><td> <p>When used with <code>ignoreCookieValue</code>, a client can present this cookie (and accompanying value) that will cause this Valve to do nothing. This will allow you to probe your <i>disabled</i> node before re-enabling it to make sure that it is working as expected.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">ignoreCookieValue</code></td><td> <p>When used with <code>ignoreCookieName</code>, a client can present a cookie (and accompanying value) that will cause this Valve to do nothing. This will allow you to probe your <i>disabled</i> node before re-enabling it to make sure that it is working as expected.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_IP_Valve">Remote IP Valve</h4><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_IP_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>Tomcat port of <a href="https://httpd.apache.org/docs/trunk/mod/mod_remoteip.html">mod_remoteip</a>, this valve replaces the apparent client remote IP address and hostname for the request with the IP address list presented by a proxy or a load balancer via a request headers (e.g. "X-Forwarded-For").</p> <p>Another feature of this valve is to replace the apparent scheme (http/https), server port and <code>request.secure</code> with the scheme presented by a proxy or a load balancer via a request header (e.g. "X-Forwarded-Proto").</p> <p>This Valve may be used at the <code>Engine</code>, <code>Host</code> or <code>Context</code> level as required. Normally, this Valve would be used at the <code>Engine</code> level.</p> <p>If used in conjunction with Remote Address/Host valves then this valve should be defined first to ensure that the correct client IP address is presented to the Remote Address/Host valves.</p> <p><strong>Note:</strong> By default this valve has no effect on the values that are written into access log. The original values are restored when request processing leaves the valve and that always happens earlier than access logging. To pass the remote address, remote host, server port and protocol values set by this valve to the access log, they are put into request attributes. Publishing these values here is enabled by default, but <code>AccessLogValve</code> should be explicitly configured to use them. See documentation for <code>requestAttributesEnabled</code> attribute of <code>AccessLogValve</code>.</p> <p>The names of request attributes that are set by this valve and can be used by access logging are the following:</p> <ul> <li><code>org.apache.catalina.AccessLog.RemoteAddr</code></li> <li><code>org.apache.catalina.AccessLog.RemoteHost</code></li> <li><code>org.apache.catalina.AccessLog.Protocol</code></li> <li><code>org.apache.catalina.AccessLog.ServerPort</code></li> <li><code>org.apache.tomcat.remoteAddr</code></li> </ul> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Remote_IP_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Remote IP Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.RemoteIpValve</strong>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">remoteIpHeader</code></td><td> <p>Name of the HTTP Header read by this valve that holds the list of traversed IP addresses starting from the requesting client. If not specified, the default of <code>x-forwarded-for</code> is used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">internalProxies</code></td><td> <p>Regular expression (using <code>java.util.regex</code>) that a proxy's IP address must match to be considered an internal proxy. Internal proxies that appear in the <strong>remoteIpHeader</strong> will be trusted and will not appear in the <strong>proxiesHeader</strong> value. If not specified the default value of <code> 10\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}|192\.168\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}|169\.254\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}|127\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}|100\.6[4-9]{1}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}|100\.[7-9]{1}\d{1}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}|100\.1[0-1]{1}\d{1}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}|100\.12[0-7]{1}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}|172\.1[6-9]{1}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}|172\.2[0-9]{1}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}|172\.3[0-1]{1}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}|0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1 </code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">proxiesHeader</code></td><td> <p>Name of the HTTP header created by this valve to hold the list of proxies that have been processed in the incoming <strong>remoteIpHeader</strong>. If not specified, the default of <code>x-forwarded-by</code> is used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">requestAttributesEnabled</code></td><td> <p>Set to <code>true</code> to set the request attributes used by AccessLog implementations to override the values returned by the request for remote address, remote host, server port and protocol. Request attributes are also used to enable the forwarded remote address to be displayed on the status page of the Manager web application. If not set, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">trustedProxies</code></td><td> <p>Regular expression (using <code>java.util.regex</code>) that a proxy's IP address must match to be considered an trusted proxy. Trusted proxies that appear in the <strong>remoteIpHeader</strong> will be trusted and will appear in the <strong>proxiesHeader</strong> value. If not specified, no proxies will be trusted.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">protocolHeader</code></td><td> <p>Name of the HTTP Header read by this valve that holds the protocol used by the client to connect to the proxy. If not specified, the default of <code>X-Forwarded-Proto</code> is used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">hostHeader</code></td><td> <p>Name of the HTTP Header read by this valve that holds the host used by the client to connect to the proxy. If not specified, the default of <code>null</code> is used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">portHeader</code></td><td> <p>Name of the HTTP Header read by this valve that holds the port used by the client to connect to the proxy. If not specified, the default of <code>null</code> is used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">protocolHeaderHttpsValue</code></td><td> <p>Value of the <strong>protocolHeader</strong> to indicate that it is an HTTPS request. If not specified, the default of <code>https</code> is used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">httpServerPort</code></td><td> <p>Value returned by <code>ServletRequest.getServerPort()</code> when the <strong>protocolHeader</strong> indicates <code>http</code> protocol and no <strong>portHeader</strong> is present. If not specified, the default of <code>80</code> is used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">httpsServerPort</code></td><td> <p>Value returned by <code>ServletRequest.getServerPort()</code> when the <strong>protocolHeader</strong> indicates <code>https</code> protocol and no <strong>portHeader</strong> is present. If not specified, the default of <code>443</code> is used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">changeLocalName</code></td><td> <p>If <code>true</code>, the value returned by <code>ServletRequest.getLocalHost()</code> and <code>ServletRequest.getServerHost()</code> is modified by the this valve. If not specified, the default of <code>false</code> is used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">changeLocalPort</code></td><td> <p>If <code>true</code>, the value returned by <code>ServletRequest.getLocalPort()</code> and <code>ServletRequest.getServerPort()</code> is modified by the this valve. If not specified, the default of <code>false</code> is used.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="SSL_Valve">SSL Valve</h4><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="SSL_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>When using mod_proxy_http, the client SSL information is not included in the protocol (unlike mod_jk and mod_proxy_ajp). To make the client SSL information available to Tomcat, some additional configuration is required. In httpd, mod_headers is used to add the SSL information as HTTP headers. In Tomcat, this valve is used to read the information from the HTTP headers and insert it into the request.</p> <p>Note: Ensure that the headers are always set by httpd for all requests to prevent a client spoofing SSL information by sending fake headers.</p> <p>To configure httpd to set the necessary headers, add the following:</p> <div class="codeBox"><pre><code><IfModule ssl_module> RequestHeader set SSL_CLIENT_CERT "%{SSL_CLIENT_CERT}s" RequestHeader set SSL_CIPHER "%{SSL_CIPHER}s" RequestHeader set SSL_SESSION_ID "%{SSL_SESSION_ID}s" RequestHeader set SSL_CIPHER_USEKEYSIZE "%{SSL_CIPHER_USEKEYSIZE}s" </IfModule></code></pre></div> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="SSL_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>SSL Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attribute:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.SSLValve</strong>. </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">sslClientCertHeader</code></td><td> <p>Allows setting a custom name for the ssl_client_cert header. If not specified, the default of <code>ssl_client_cert</code> is used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">sslClientEscapedCertHeader</code></td><td> <p>Allows setting a custom name for the ssl_client_escaped_cert header. If not specified, the default of <code>ssl_client_escaped_cert</code> is used.</p> <p>This header is useful for Nginx proxying, and takes precedence over the ssl_client_cert header.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">sslCipherHeader</code></td><td> <p>Allows setting a custom name for the ssl_cipher header. If not specified, the default of <code>ssl_cipher</code> is used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">sslSessionIdHeader</code></td><td> <p>Allows setting a custom name for the ssl_session_id header. If not specified, the default of <code>ssl_session_id</code> is used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">sslCipherUserKeySizeHeader</code></td><td> <p>Allows setting a custom name for the ssl_cipher_usekeysize header. If not specified, the default of <code>ssl_cipher_usekeysize</code> is used.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> </div></div> </div><h3 id="Single_Sign_On_Valve">Single Sign On Valve</h3><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Single_Sign_On_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <em>Single Sign On Valve</em> is utilized when you wish to give users the ability to sign on to any one of the web applications associated with your virtual host, and then have their identity recognized by all other web applications on the same virtual host.</p> <p>See the <a href="host.html#Single_Sign_On">Single Sign On</a> special feature on the <strong>Host</strong> element for more information.</p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Single_Sign_On_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Single Sign On</strong> Valve supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.authenticator.SingleSignOn</strong>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">requireReauthentication</code></td><td> <p>Default false. Flag to determine whether each request needs to be reauthenticated to the security <strong>Realm</strong>. If "true", this Valve uses cached security credentials (username and password) to reauthenticate to the <strong>Realm</strong> each request associated with an SSO session. If "false", the Valve can itself authenticate requests based on the presence of a valid SSO cookie, without rechecking with the <strong>Realm</strong>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">cookieDomain</code></td><td> <p>Sets the host domain to be used for sso cookies.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">cookieName</code></td><td> <p>Sets the cookie name to be used for sso cookies. The default value is <code>JSESSIONIDSSO</code></p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> </div><h3 id="Authentication">Authentication</h3><div class="text"> <p>The valves in this section implement <strong>org.apache.catalina.Authenticator</strong> interface.</p> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Basic_Authenticator_Valve">Basic Authenticator Valve</h4><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Basic_Authenticator_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Basic Authenticator Valve</strong> is automatically added to any <a href="context.html">Context</a> that is configured to use BASIC authentication.</p> <p>If any non-default settings are required, the valve may be configured within <a href="context.html">Context</a> element with the required values.</p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Basic_Authenticator_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Basic Authenticator Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">allowCorsPreflight</code></td><td> <p>Are requests that appear to be CORS preflight requests allowed to bypass the authenticator as required by the CORS specification. The allowed values are <code>never</code>, <code>filter</code> and <code>always</code>. <code>never</code> means that a request will never bypass authentication even if it appears to be a CORS preflight request. <code>filter</code> means that a request will bypass authentication if it appears to be a CORS preflight request; it is mapped to a web application that has the <a href="filter.html#CORS_Filter">CORS Filter</a> enabled; and the CORS Filter is mapped to <code>/*</code>. <code>always</code> means that all requests that appear to be CORS preflight requests will bypass authentication. If not set, the default value is <code>never</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">alwaysUseSession</code></td><td> <p>Should a session always be used once a user is authenticated? This may offer some performance benefits since the session can then be used to cache the authenticated Principal, hence removing the need to authenticate the user via the Realm on every request. This may be of help for combinations such as BASIC authentication used with the JNDIRealm or DataSourceRealms. However there will also be the performance cost of creating and GC'ing the session. If not set, the default value of <code>false</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">cache</code></td><td> <p>Should we cache authenticated Principals if the request is part of an HTTP session? If not specified, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">changeSessionIdOnAuthentication</code></td><td> <p>Controls if the session ID is changed if a session exists at the point where users are authenticated. This is to prevent session fixation attacks. If not set, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">charset</code></td><td> <p>Controls if the <code>WWW-Authenticate</code> HTTP header includes a <code>charset</code> authentication parameter as per RFC 7617. The only permitted options are <code>null</code>, the empty string and <code>UTF-8</code>. If <code>UTF-8</code> is specified then the <code>charset</code> authentication parameter will be sent with that value and the provided user name and optional password will be converted from bytes to characters using UTF-8. Otherwise, no <code>charset</code> authentication parameter will be sent and the provided user name and optional password will be converted from bytes to characters using ISO-8859-1. The default value is <code>null</code></p> </td></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.authenticator.BasicAuthenticator</strong>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">disableProxyCaching</code></td><td> <p>Controls the caching of pages that are protected by security constraints. Setting this to <code>false</code> may help work around caching issues in some browsers but will also cause secured pages to be cached by proxies which will almost certainly be a security issue. <code>securePagesWithPragma</code> offers an alternative, secure, workaround for browser caching issues. If not set, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">jaspicCallbackHandlerClass</code></td><td> <p>Name of the Java class of the <code>javax.security.auth.callback.CallbackHandler</code> implementation which should be used by JASPIC. If none is specified the default <code>org.apache.catalina.authenticator.jaspic.CallbackHandlerImpl</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">securePagesWithPragma</code></td><td> <p>Controls the caching of pages that are protected by security constraints. Setting this to <code>false</code> may help work around caching issues in some browsers by using <code>Cache-Control: private</code> rather than the default of <code>Pragma: No-cache</code> and <code>Cache-control: No-cache</code>. If not set, the default value of <code>false</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">secureRandomAlgorithm</code></td><td> <p>Name of the algorithm to use to create the <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code> instances that generate session IDs. If an invalid algorithm and/or provider is specified, the platform default provider and the default algorithm will be used. If not specified, the default algorithm of SHA1PRNG will be used. If the default algorithm is not supported, the platform default will be used. To specify that the platform default should be used, do not set the secureRandomProvider attribute and set this attribute to the empty string.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">secureRandomClass</code></td><td> <p>Name of the Java class that extends <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code> to use to generate SSO session IDs. If not specified, the default value is <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">secureRandomProvider</code></td><td> <p>Name of the provider to use to create the <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code> instances that generate SSO session IDs. If an invalid algorithm and/or provider is specified, the platform default provider and the default algorithm will be used. If not specified, the platform default provider will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">sendAuthInfoResponseHeaders</code></td><td> <p>Controls whether the auth information (remote user and auth type) shall be returned as response headers for a forwarded/proxied request. When the <code>RemoteIpValve</code> or <code>RemoteIpFilter</code> mark a forwarded request with the <code>Globals.REQUEST_FORWARDED_ATTRIBUTE</code> this authenticator can return the values of <code>HttpServletRequest.getRemoteUser()</code> and <code>HttpServletRequest.getAuthType()</code> as response headers <code>remote-user</code> and <code>auth-type</code> to a reverse proxy. This is useful, e.g., for access log consistency or other decisions to make. If not specified, the default value is <code>false</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">trimCredentials</code></td><td> <p>Controls whether leading and/or trailing whitespace is removed from the parsed credentials. If not specified, the default value is <code>true</code>.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Digest_Authenticator_Valve">Digest Authenticator Valve</h4><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Digest_Authenticator_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Digest Authenticator Valve</strong> is automatically added to any <a href="context.html">Context</a> that is configured to use DIGEST authentication.</p> <p>If any non-default settings are required, the valve may be configured within <a href="context.html">Context</a> element with the required values.</p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Digest_Authenticator_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Digest Authenticator Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">algorithms</code></td><td> <p>A comma-separated list of digest algorithms to be used for the authentication process. Algorithms may be specified using the Java Standard names or the names used by RFC 7616. If not specified, the default value of <code>SHA-256,MD5</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">allowCorsPreflight</code></td><td> <p>Are requests that appear to be CORS preflight requests allowed to bypass the authenticator as required by the CORS specification. The allowed values are <code>never</code>, <code>filter</code> and <code>always</code>. <code>never</code> means that a request will never bypass authentication even if it appears to be a CORS preflight request. <code>filter</code> means that a request will bypass authentication if it appears to be a CORS preflight request; it is mapped to a web application that has the <a href="filter.html#CORS_Filter">CORS Filter</a> enabled; and the CORS Filter is mapped to <code>/*</code>. <code>always</code> means that all requests that appear to be CORS preflight requests will bypass authentication. If not set, the default value is <code>never</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">alwaysUseSession</code></td><td> <p>Should a session always be used once a user is authenticated? This may offer some performance benefits since the session can then be used to cache the authenticated Principal, hence removing the need to authenticate the user via the Realm on every request. This may be of help for combinations such as BASIC authentication used with the JNDIRealm or DataSourceRealms. However there will also be the performance cost of creating and GC'ing the session. If not set, the default value of <code>false</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">cache</code></td><td> <p>Should we cache authenticated Principals if the request is part of an HTTP session? If not specified, the default value of <code>false</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">changeSessionIdOnAuthentication</code></td><td> <p>Controls if the session ID is changed if a session exists at the point where users are authenticated. This is to prevent session fixation attacks. If not set, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.authenticator.DigestAuthenticator</strong>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">disableProxyCaching</code></td><td> <p>Controls the caching of pages that are protected by security constraints. Setting this to <code>false</code> may help work around caching issues in some browsers but will also cause secured pages to be cached by proxies which will almost certainly be a security issue. <code>securePagesWithPragma</code> offers an alternative, secure, workaround for browser caching issues. If not set, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">jaspicCallbackHandlerClass</code></td><td> <p>Name of the Java class of the <code>javax.security.auth.callback.CallbackHandler</code> implementation which should be used by JASPIC. If none is specified the default <code>org.apache.catalina.authenticator.jaspic.CallbackHandlerImpl</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">key</code></td><td> <p>The secret key used by digest authentication. If not set, a secure random value is generated. This should normally only be set when it is necessary to keep key values constant either across server restarts and/or across a cluster.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">nonceCacheSize</code></td><td> <p>To protect against replay attacks, the DIGEST authenticator tracks server nonce and nonce count values. This attribute controls the size of that cache. If not specified, the default value of 1000 is used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">nonceCountWindowSize</code></td><td> <p>Client requests may be processed out of order which in turn means that the nonce count values may be processed out of order. To prevent authentication failures when nonce counts are presented out of order the authenticator tracks a window of nonce count values. This attribute controls how big that window is. If not specified, the default value of 100 is used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">nonceValidity</code></td><td> <p>The time, in milliseconds, that a server generated nonce will be considered valid for use in authentication. If not specified, the default value of 300000 (5 minutes) will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">opaque</code></td><td> <p>The opaque server string used by digest authentication. If not set, a random value is generated. This should normally only be set when it is necessary to keep opaque values constant either across server restarts and/or across a cluster.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">securePagesWithPragma</code></td><td> <p>Controls the caching of pages that are protected by security constraints. Setting this to <code>false</code> may help work around caching issues in some browsers by using <code>Cache-Control: private</code> rather than the default of <code>Pragma: No-cache</code> and <code>Cache-control: No-cache</code>. If not set, the default value of <code>false</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">secureRandomAlgorithm</code></td><td> <p>Name of the algorithm to use to create the <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code> instances that generate session IDs. If an invalid algorithm and/or provider is specified, the platform default provider and the default algorithm will be used. If not specified, the default algorithm of SHA1PRNG will be used. If the default algorithm is not supported, the platform default will be used. To specify that the platform default should be used, do not set the secureRandomProvider attribute and set this attribute to the empty string.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">secureRandomClass</code></td><td> <p>Name of the Java class that extends <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code> to use to generate SSO session IDs. If not specified, the default value is <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">secureRandomProvider</code></td><td> <p>Name of the provider to use to create the <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code> instances that generate SSO session IDs. If an invalid algorithm and/or provider is specified, the platform default provider and the default algorithm will be used. If not specified, the platform default provider will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">sendAuthInfoResponseHeaders</code></td><td> <p>Controls whether the auth information (remote user and auth type) shall be returned as response headers for a forwarded/proxied request. When the <code>RemoteIpValve</code> or <code>RemoteIpFilter</code> mark a forwarded request with the <code>Globals.REQUEST_FORWARDED_ATTRIBUTE</code> this authenticator can return the values of <code>HttpServletRequest.getRemoteUser()</code> and <code>HttpServletRequest.getAuthType()</code> as response headers <code>remote-user</code> and <code>auth-type</code> to a reverse proxy. This is useful, e.g., for access log consistency or other decisions to make. If not specified, the default value is <code>false</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">validateUri</code></td><td> <p>Should the URI be validated as required by RFC2617? If not specified, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used. This should normally only be set when Tomcat is located behind a reverse proxy and the proxy is modifying the URI passed to Tomcat such that DIGEST authentication always fails.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Form_Authenticator_Valve">Form Authenticator Valve</h4><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Form_Authenticator_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Form Authenticator Valve</strong> is automatically added to any <a href="context.html">Context</a> that is configured to use FORM authentication.</p> <p>If any non-default settings are required, the valve may be configured within <a href="context.html">Context</a> element with the required values.</p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Form_Authenticator_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Form Authenticator Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">allowCorsPreflight</code></td><td> <p>Are requests that appear to be CORS preflight requests allowed to bypass the authenticator as required by the CORS specification. The allowed values are <code>never</code>, <code>filter</code> and <code>always</code>. <code>never</code> means that a request will never bypass authentication even if it appears to be a CORS preflight request. <code>filter</code> means that a request will bypass authentication if it appears to be a CORS preflight request; it is mapped to a web application that has the <a href="filter.html#CORS_Filter">CORS Filter</a> enabled; and the CORS Filter is mapped to <code>/*</code>. <code>always</code> means that all requests that appear to be CORS preflight requests will bypass authentication. If not set, the default value is <code>never</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">authenticationSessionTimeout</code></td><td> <p>If the authentication process creates a session, this is the maximum session timeout (in seconds) during the authentication process. Once authentication is complete, the default session timeout will apply. Sessions that exist before the authentication process starts will retain their original session timeout throughout. If not set, the default value of <code>120</code> seconds will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">changeSessionIdOnAuthentication</code></td><td> <p>Controls if the session ID is changed if a session exists at the point where users are authenticated. This is to prevent session fixation attacks. If not set, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">characterEncoding</code></td><td> <p>Character encoding to use to read the username and password parameters from the request. If not set, the encoding of the request body will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.authenticator.FormAuthenticator</strong>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">disableProxyCaching</code></td><td> <p>Controls the caching of pages that are protected by security constraints. Setting this to <code>false</code> may help work around caching issues in some browsers but will also cause secured pages to be cached by proxies which will almost certainly be a security issue. <code>securePagesWithPragma</code> offers an alternative, secure, workaround for browser caching issues. If not set, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">jaspicCallbackHandlerClass</code></td><td> <p>Name of the Java class of the <code>javax.security.auth.callback.CallbackHandler</code> implementation which should be used by JASPIC. If none is specified the default <code>org.apache.catalina.authenticator.jaspic.CallbackHandlerImpl</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">landingPage</code></td><td> <p>Controls the behavior of the FORM authentication process if the process is misused, for example by directly requesting the login page or delaying logging in for so long that the session expires. If this attribute is set, rather than returning an error response code, Tomcat will redirect the user to the specified landing page if the login form is submitted with valid credentials. For the login to be processed, the landing page must be a protected resource (i.e. one that requires authentication). If the landing page does not require authentication then the user will not be logged in and will be prompted for their credentials again when they access a protected page.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">securePagesWithPragma</code></td><td> <p>Controls the caching of pages that are protected by security constraints. Setting this to <code>false</code> may help work around caching issues in some browsers by using <code>Cache-Control: private</code> rather than the default of <code>Pragma: No-cache</code> and <code>Cache-control: No-cache</code>. If not set, the default value of <code>false</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">secureRandomAlgorithm</code></td><td> <p>Name of the algorithm to use to create the <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code> instances that generate session IDs. If an invalid algorithm and/or provider is specified, the platform default provider and the default algorithm will be used. If not specified, the default algorithm of SHA1PRNG will be used. If the default algorithm is not supported, the platform default will be used. To specify that the platform default should be used, do not set the secureRandomProvider attribute and set this attribute to the empty string.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">secureRandomClass</code></td><td> <p>Name of the Java class that extends <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code> to use to generate SSO session IDs. If not specified, the default value is <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">secureRandomProvider</code></td><td> <p>Name of the provider to use to create the <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code> instances that generate SSO session IDs. If an invalid algorithm and/or provider is specified, the platform default provider and the default algorithm will be used. If not specified, the platform default provider will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">sendAuthInfoResponseHeaders</code></td><td> <p>Controls whether the auth information (remote user and auth type) shall be returned as response headers for a forwarded/proxied request. When the <code>RemoteIpValve</code> or <code>RemoteIpFilter</code> mark a forwarded request with the <code>Globals.REQUEST_FORWARDED_ATTRIBUTE</code> this authenticator can return the values of <code>HttpServletRequest.getRemoteUser()</code> and <code>HttpServletRequest.getAuthType()</code> as response headers <code>remote-user</code> and <code>auth-type</code> to a reverse proxy. This is useful, e.g., for access log consistency or other decisions to make. If not specified, the default value is <code>false</code>.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="SSL_Authenticator_Valve">SSL Authenticator Valve</h4><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="SSL_Authenticator_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>SSL Authenticator Valve</strong> is automatically added to any <a href="context.html">Context</a> that is configured to use SSL authentication.</p> <p>If any non-default settings are required, the valve may be configured within <a href="context.html">Context</a> element with the required values.</p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="SSL_Authenticator_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>SSL Authenticator Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">allowCorsPreflight</code></td><td> <p>Are requests that appear to be CORS preflight requests allowed to bypass the authenticator as required by the CORS specification. The allowed values are <code>never</code>, <code>filter</code> and <code>always</code>. <code>never</code> means that a request will never bypass authentication even if it appears to be a CORS preflight request. <code>filter</code> means that a request will bypass authentication if it appears to be a CORS preflight request; it is mapped to a web application that has the <a href="filter.html#CORS_Filter">CORS Filter</a> enabled; and the CORS Filter is mapped to <code>/*</code>. <code>always</code> means that all requests that appear to be CORS preflight requests will bypass authentication. If not set, the default value is <code>never</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">cache</code></td><td> <p>Should we cache authenticated Principals if the request is part of an HTTP session? If not specified, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.authenticator.SSLAuthenticator</strong>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">changeSessionIdOnAuthentication</code></td><td> <p>Controls if the session ID is changed if a session exists at the point where users are authenticated. This is to prevent session fixation attacks. If not set, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">disableProxyCaching</code></td><td> <p>Controls the caching of pages that are protected by security constraints. Setting this to <code>false</code> may help work around caching issues in some browsers but will also cause secured pages to be cached by proxies which will almost certainly be a security issue. <code>securePagesWithPragma</code> offers an alternative, secure, workaround for browser caching issues. If not set, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">jaspicCallbackHandlerClass</code></td><td> <p>Name of the Java class of the <code>javax.security.auth.callback.CallbackHandler</code> implementation which should be used by JASPIC. If none is specified the default <code>org.apache.catalina.authenticator.jaspic.CallbackHandlerImpl</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">securePagesWithPragma</code></td><td> <p>Controls the caching of pages that are protected by security constraints. Setting this to <code>false</code> may help work around caching issues in some browsers by using <code>Cache-Control: private</code> rather than the default of <code>Pragma: No-cache</code> and <code>Cache-control: No-cache</code>. If not set, the default value of <code>false</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">secureRandomAlgorithm</code></td><td> <p>Name of the algorithm to use to create the <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code> instances that generate session IDs. If an invalid algorithm and/or provider is specified, the platform default provider and the default algorithm will be used. If not specified, the default algorithm of SHA1PRNG will be used. If the default algorithm is not supported, the platform default will be used. To specify that the platform default should be used, do not set the secureRandomProvider attribute and set this attribute to the empty string.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">secureRandomClass</code></td><td> <p>Name of the Java class that extends <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code> to use to generate SSO session IDs. If not specified, the default value is <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">secureRandomProvider</code></td><td> <p>Name of the provider to use to create the <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code> instances that generate SSO session IDs. If an invalid algorithm and/or provider is specified, the platform default provider and the default algorithm will be used. If not specified, the platform default provider will be used.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="SPNEGO_Valve">SPNEGO Valve</h4><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="SPNEGO_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>SPNEGO Authenticator Valve</strong> is automatically added to any <a href="context.html">Context</a> that is configured to use SPNEGO authentication.</p> <p>If any non-default settings are required, the valve may be configured within <a href="context.html">Context</a> element with the required values.</p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="SPNEGO_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>SPNEGO Authenticator Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">allowCorsPreflight</code></td><td> <p>Are requests that appear to be CORS preflight requests allowed to bypass the authenticator as required by the CORS specification. The allowed values are <code>never</code>, <code>filter</code> and <code>always</code>. <code>never</code> means that a request will never bypass authentication even if it appears to be a CORS preflight request. <code>filter</code> means that a request will bypass authentication if it appears to be a CORS preflight request and the web application the request maps to has the <a href="filter.html#CORS_Filter">CORS Filter</a> enabled and mapped to <code>/*</code>. <code>always</code> means that all requests that appear to be CORS preflight requests will bypass authentication. If not set, the default value is <code>never</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">alwaysUseSession</code></td><td> <p>Should a session always be used once a user is authenticated? This may offer some performance benefits since the session can then be used to cache the authenticated Principal, hence removing the need to authenticate the user on every request. This will also help with clients that assume that the server will cache the authenticated user. However there will also be the performance cost of creating and GC'ing the session. For an alternative solution see <code>noKeepAliveUserAgents</code>. If not set, the default value of <code>false</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">applyJava8u40Fix</code></td><td> <p>A fix introduced in Java 8 update 40 ( <a href="https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8048194">JDK-8048194</a>) onwards broke SPNEGO authentication for IE with Tomcat running on Windows 2008 R2 servers. This option enables a work-around that allows SPNEGO authentication to continue working. The work-around should not impact other configurations so it is enabled by default. If necessary, the workaround can be disabled by setting this attribute to <code>false</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">cache</code></td><td> <p>Should we cache authenticated Principals if the request is part of an HTTP session? If not specified, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.authenticator.SpnegoAuthenticator</strong>. </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">changeSessionIdOnAuthentication</code></td><td> <p>Controls if the session ID is changed if a session exists at the point where users are authenticated. This is to prevent session fixation attacks. If not set, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">disableProxyCaching</code></td><td> <p>Controls the caching of pages that are protected by security constraints. Setting this to <code>false</code> may help work around caching issues in some browsers but will also cause secured pages to be cached by proxies which will almost certainly be a security issue. <code>securePagesWithPragma</code> offers an alternative, secure, workaround for browser caching issues. If not set, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">jaspicCallbackHandlerClass</code></td><td> <p>Name of the Java class of the <code>javax.security.auth.callback.CallbackHandler</code> implementation which should be used by JASPIC. If none is specified the default <code>org.apache.catalina.authenticator.jaspic.CallbackHandlerImpl</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">loginConfigName</code></td><td> <p>The name of the JAAS login configuration to be used to login as the service. If not specified, the default of <code>com.sun.security.jgss.krb5.accept</code> is used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">noKeepAliveUserAgents</code></td><td> <p>Some clients (not most browsers) expect the server to cache the authenticated user information for a connection and do not resend the credentials with every request. Tomcat will not do this unless an HTTP session is available. A session will be available if either the application creates one or if <code>alwaysUseSession</code> is enabled for this Authenticator.</p> <p>As an alternative to creating a session, this attribute may be used to define the user agents for which HTTP keep-alive is disabled. This means that a connection will only used for a single request and hence there is no ability to cache authenticated user information per connection. There will be a performance cost in disabling HTTP keep-alive.</p> <p>The attribute should be a regular expression that matches the entire user-agent string, e.g. <code>.*Chrome.*</code>. If not specified, no regular expression will be defined and no user agents will have HTTP keep-alive disabled.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">securePagesWithPragma</code></td><td> <p>Controls the caching of pages that are protected by security constraints. Setting this to <code>false</code> may help work around caching issues in some browsers by using <code>Cache-Control: private</code> rather than the default of <code>Pragma: No-cache</code> and <code>Cache-control: No-cache</code>. If not set, the default value of <code>false</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">secureRandomAlgorithm</code></td><td> <p>Name of the algorithm to use to create the <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code> instances that generate session IDs. If an invalid algorithm and/or provider is specified, the platform default provider and the default algorithm will be used. If not specified, the default algorithm of SHA1PRNG will be used. If the default algorithm is not supported, the platform default will be used. To specify that the platform default should be used, do not set the secureRandomProvider attribute and set this attribute to the empty string.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">secureRandomClass</code></td><td> <p>Name of the Java class that extends <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code> to use to generate SSO session IDs. If not specified, the default value is <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">secureRandomProvider</code></td><td> <p>Name of the provider to use to create the <code>java.security.SecureRandom</code> instances that generate SSO session IDs. If an invalid algorithm and/or provider is specified, the platform default provider and the default algorithm will be used. If not specified, the platform default provider will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">sendAuthInfoResponseHeaders</code></td><td> <p>Controls whether the auth information (remote user and auth type) shall be returned as response headers for a forwarded/proxied request. When the <code>RemoteIpValve</code> or <code>RemoteIpFilter</code> mark a forwarded request with the <code>Globals.REQUEST_FORWARDED_ATTRIBUTE</code> this authenticator can return the values of <code>HttpServletRequest.getRemoteUser()</code> and <code>HttpServletRequest.getAuthType()</code> as response headers <code>remote-user</code> and <code>auth-type</code> to a reverse proxy. This is useful, e.g., for access log consistency or other decisions to make. If not specified, the default value is <code>false</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">storeDelegatedCredential</code></td><td> <p>Controls if the user' delegated credential will be stored in the user Principal. If available, the delegated credential will be available to applications (e.g. for onward authentication to external services) via the <code>org.apache.catalina.realm.GSS_CREDENTIAL</code> request attribute. If not set, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> </div></div> </div><h3 id="Error_Report_Valve">Error Report Valve</h3><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Error_Report_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Error Report Valve</strong> is a simple error handler for HTTP status codes that will generate and return HTML error pages. It can also be configured to return pre-defined static HTML pages for specific status codes and/or exception types.</p> <p><strong>NOTE:</strong> Disabling both showServerInfo and showReport will only return the HTTP status code.</p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Error_Report_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Error Report Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.ErrorReportValve</strong> to use the default error report valve.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">errorCode.nnn</code></td><td> <p>The location of the UTF-8 encoded HTML file to return for the HTTP error code represented by <code>nnn</code>. For example, <code>errorCode.404</code> specifies the file to return for an HTTP 404 error. The location may be relative or absolute. If relative, it must be relative to <code>$CATALINA_BASE</code>. The special value of <code>errorCode.0</code> may be used to define a default error page to be used if no error page is defined for a status code. If no matching error page is found, the default <strong>Error Report Valve</strong> response will be returned.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">exceptionType.fullyQualifiedClassName</code></td><td> <p>The location of the UTF-8 encoded HTML file to return if an error has occurred and the <code>javax.servlet.error.exception</code> request attribute has been set to an instance of <code>fullyQualifiedClassName</code> or a sub-class of it. For example, <code>errorCode.java.io.IOException</code> specifies the file to return for an <code>IOException</code>. The location may be relative or absolute. If relative, it must be relative to <code>$CATALINA_BASE</code>. If no matching error page is found, the default <strong>Error Report Valve</strong> response will be returned.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">showReport</code></td><td> <p>Flag to determine if the error report (custom error message and/or stack trace) is presented when an error occurs. If set to <code>false</code>, then the error report is not returned in the HTML response. Default value: <code>true</code> </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">showServerInfo</code></td><td> <p>Flag to determine if server information is presented when an error occurs. If set to <code>false</code>, then the server version is not returned in the HTML response. Default value: <code>true</code> </p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> </div><h3 id="Json_Error_Report_Valve">Json Error Report Valve</h3><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Json_Error_Report_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Json Error Report Valve</strong> is a simple error handler for HTTP status codes that will return Json error messages.</p> <p>By specifying this class in <code>errorReportValveClass</code> attribute in <code>Host</code>, it will be used instead of <code>ErrorReportValve</code> and will return JSON response instead of HTML. </p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Json_Error_Report_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Json Error Report Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.JsonErrorReportValve</strong>.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> </div><h3 id="Proxy_Error_Report_Valve">Proxy Error Report Valve</h3><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Proxy_Error_Report_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Proxy Error Report Valve</strong> is a simple error handler for HTTP status codes that will redirect or proxy to another location responsible for the generation of the error report.</p> <p>By specifying this class in <code>errorReportValveClass</code> attribute in <code>Host</code>, it will be used instead of <code>ErrorReportValve</code> with the default attribute values. To configure the attributes, the valve can be defined nested in the <code>Host</code> element.</p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Proxy_Error_Report_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Proxy Error Report Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.ProxyErrorReportValve</strong>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">usePropertiesFile</code></td><td> <p>If <code>true</code>, the valve will use the properties file described below to associate the URLs with the status code. If <code>false</code>, the configuration mechanism of the default <code>ErrorReportValve</code> will be used instead. The default value is <code>false</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">useRedirect</code></td><td> <p>If <code>true</code>, the valve will send a redirect to the URL. If <code>false</code>, the valve will instead proxy the content from the specified URL. The default value is <code>true</code>.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Configuration">Configuration</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Proxy Error Report Valve</strong> can use a resource file <strong>ProxyErrorReportValve.properties</strong> from the class path, where each entry is a statusCode=baseUrl. baseUrl should not include any url parameters, statusCode, statusDescription, requestUri, and throwable which will be automatically appended. A special key named <code>0</code> should be used to match any other unmapped code to a redirect or proxy URL.</p> </div></div> </div><h3 id="Crawler_Session_Manager_Valve">Crawler Session Manager Valve</h3><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Crawler_Session_Manager_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>Web crawlers can trigger the creation of many thousands of sessions as they crawl a site which may result in significant memory consumption. This Valve ensures that crawlers are associated with a single session - just like normal users - regardless of whether or not they provide a session token with their requests.</p> <p>This Valve may be used at the <code>Engine</code>, <code>Host</code> or <code>Context</code> level as required. Normally, this Valve would be used at the <code>Engine</code> level.</p> <p>If used in conjunction with Remote IP valve then the Remote IP valve should be defined before this valve to ensure that the correct client IP address is presented to this valve.</p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Crawler_Session_Manager_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Crawler Session Manager Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.CrawlerSessionManagerValve</strong>. </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">contextAware</code></td><td> <p>Flag to use the context name together with the client IP to identify the session to re-use. Can be combined with <code>hostAware</code>. Default value: <code>true</code> </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">crawlerIps</code></td><td> <p>Regular expression (using <code>java.util.regex</code>) that client IP is matched against to determine if a request is from a web crawler. By default such regular expression is not set.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">crawlerUserAgents</code></td><td> <p>Regular expression (using <code>java.util.regex</code>) that the user agent HTTP request header is matched against to determine if a request is from a web crawler. If not set, the default of <code>.*[bB]ot.*|.*Yahoo! Slurp.*|.*Feedfetcher-Google.*</code> is used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">hostAware</code></td><td> <p>Flag to use the configured host together with the client IP to identify the session to re-use. Can be combined with <code>contextAware</code>. Default value: <code>true</code> </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">sessionInactiveInterval</code></td><td> <p>The minimum time in seconds that the Crawler Session Manager Valve should keep the mapping of client IP to session ID in memory without any activity from the client. The client IP / session cache will be periodically purged of mappings that have been inactive for longer than this interval. If not specified the default value of <code>60</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> </div><h3 id="Stuck_Thread_Detection_Valve">Stuck Thread Detection Valve</h3><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Stuck_Thread_Detection_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>This valve allows to detect requests that take a long time to process, which might indicate that the thread that is processing it is stuck. Additionally it can optionally interrupt such threads to try and unblock them.</p> <p>When such a request is detected, the current stack trace of its thread is written to Tomcat log with a WARN level.</p> <p>The IDs and names of the stuck threads are available through JMX in the <code>stuckThreadIds</code> and <code>stuckThreadNames</code> attributes. The IDs can be used with the standard Threading JVM MBean (<code>java.lang:type=Threading</code>) to retrieve other information about each stuck thread.</p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Stuck_Thread_Detection_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Stuck Thread Detection Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.StuckThreadDetectionValve</strong>. </p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">threshold</code></td><td> <p>Minimum duration in seconds after which a thread is considered stuck. Default is 600 seconds. If set to 0, the detection is disabled.</p> <p>Note: since the detection (and optional interruption) is done in the background thread of the Container (Engine, Host or Context) declaring this Valve, the threshold should be higher than the <code>backgroundProcessorDelay</code> of this Container.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">interruptThreadThreshold</code></td><td> <p>Minimum duration in seconds after which a stuck thread should be interrupted to attempt to "free" it.</p> <p>Note that there's no guarantee that the thread will get unstuck. This usually works well for threads stuck on I/O or locks, but is probably useless in case of infinite loops.</p> <p>Default is -1 which disables the feature. To enable it, the value must be greater or equal to <code>threshold</code>.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> </div><h3 id="Semaphore_Valve">Semaphore Valve</h3><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Semaphore_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Semaphore Valve</strong> is able to limit the number of concurrent request processing threads.</p> <p><strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.SemaphoreValve</strong> provides methods which may be overridden by a subclass to customize behavior:</p> <ul> <li><b><code>controlConcurrency</code></b> may be overridden to add conditions;</li> <li><b><code>permitDenied</code></b> may be overridden to add error handling when a permit isn't granted.</li> </ul> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Semaphore_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>Semaphore Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">block</code></td><td> <p>Flag to determine if a thread is blocked until a permit is available. The default value is <strong>true</strong>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.SemaphoreValve</strong>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">concurrency</code></td><td> <p>Concurrency level of the semaphore. The default value is <strong>10</strong>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">fairness</code></td><td> <p>Fairness of the semaphore. The default value is <strong>false</strong>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">interruptible</code></td><td> <p>Flag to determine if a thread may be interrupted until a permit is available. The default value is <strong>false</strong>.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> </div><h3 id="Persistent_Valve">Persistent Valve</h3><div class="text"> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Persistent_Valve/Introduction">Introduction</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>PersistentValve</strong> that implements per-request session persistence. It is intended to be used with non-sticky load-balancers.</p> </div></div> <div class="subsection"><h4 id="Persistent_Valve/Attributes">Attributes</h4><div class="text"> <p>The <strong>PersistentValve Valve</strong> supports the following configuration attributes:</p> <table class="defaultTable"><tr><th style="width: 15%;"> Attribute </th><th style="width: 85%;"> Description </th></tr><tr><td><strong><code class="attributeName">className</code></strong></td><td> <p>Java class name of the implementation to use. This MUST be set to <strong>org.apache.catalina.valves.PersistentValve</strong>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">filter</code></td><td> <p>For known file extensions or urls, you can use this filter pattern to notify the valve that no session required during this request. If the request matches this filter pattern, the valve assumes there has been no need to restore session. An example filter would look like <code> filter=".*\.gif|.*\.js|.*\.jpeg|.*\.jpg|.*\.png|.*\.htm|.*\.html|.*\.css|.*\.txt"</code>. The filter is a regular expression using <code>java.util.regex</code>.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">semaphoreAcquireUninterruptibly</code></td><td> <p>Flag to determine if a thread that blocks waiting for the per session Semaphore should do so uninterruptibly. Has no effect if <strong>semaphoreBlockOnAcquire</strong> is <code>false</code>. If not specified, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">semaphoreBlockOnAcquire</code></td><td> <p>Flag to determine if a thread that wishes to acquire the per session Semaphore when it is held by another thread should block until it can acquire the Semaphore or if the waiting request be rejected. If not specified, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr><tr><td><code class="attributeName">semaphoreFairness</code></td><td> <p>Flag to determine if the per session Semaphore will grant requests for the Semaphore in the same order they were received. Has no effect if <strong>semaphoreBlockOnAcquire</strong> is <code>false</code>. If not specified, the default value of <code>true</code> will be used.</p> </td></tr></table> </div></div> </div></div></div></div></div><footer><div id="footer"> Copyright © 1999-2023, The Apache Software Foundation </div></footer></div></body></html>