Apache HTTP Server Version 2.5
Description: | Set timeout and minimum data rate for receiving requests |
---|---|
Status: | Extension |
Module Identifier: | reqtimeout_module |
Source File: | mod_reqtimeout.c |
This module provides a convenient way to set timeouts and minimum data rates for receiving requests. Should a timeout occur or a data rate be to low, the corresponding connection will be closed by the server.
This is logged at LogLevel
info
.
If needed, the LogLevel
directive
can be tweaked to explicitly log it:
LogLevel reqtimeout:info
RequestReadTimeout handshake=5 header=10 body=30
LimitRequestBody
):
RequestReadTimeout body=10,MinRate=1000
RequestReadTimeout header=10-30,MinRate=500
RequestReadTimeout header=20-40,MinRate=500 body=20,MinRate=500
Description: | Set timeout values for completing the TLS handshake, receiving the request headers and/or body from client. |
---|---|
Syntax: | RequestReadTimeout
[handshake=timeout[-maxtimeout][,MinRate=rate]
[header=timeout[-maxtimeout][,MinRate=rate]
[body=timeout[-maxtimeout][,MinRate=rate]
|
Default: | RequestReadTimeout handshake=0 header=20-40,MinRate=500 body=20,MinRate=500 |
Context: | server config, virtual host |
Status: | Extension |
Module: | mod_reqtimeout |
Compatibility: | Defaulted to disabled in version 2.3.14 and earlier. The
handshake stage is available since version 2.4.39.
|
This directive can set various timeouts for completing the TLS handshake,
receiving the request headers and/or the request body from the client.
If the client fails to complete each of these stages within the configured
time, a 408 REQUEST TIME OUT
error is sent.
For SSL virtual hosts, the handshake
timeout values is the time
needed to do the initial SSL handshake. If the user's browser is configured to
query certificate revocation lists and the CRL server is not reachable, the
initial SSL handshake may take a significant time until the browser gives up
waiting for the CRL. Therefore the handshake
timeout should take
this possible overhead into consideration for SSL virtual hosts (if necessary).
The body timeout values include the time needed for SSL renegotiation
(if necessary).
When an AcceptFilter
is in use
(usually the case on Linux and FreeBSD), the socket is not sent to the
server process before at least one byte (or the whole request for
httpready
) is received. The handshake and header timeouts
configured with RequestReadTimeout
are only effective
after the server process has received the socket.
When waiting for a subsequent request on a kept-alive
connection, the timeout configured by KeepAliveTimeout
applies regardless of
whether RequestReadTimeout
is also
used.
For each of the three timeout stages (handshake, header or body), there are three ways to specify the timeout:
stage=timeout
The time in seconds allowed for completing the whole stage (handshaking, reading all of the request headers or body). A value of 0 means no limit.
handshake=0 header=0 body=0
This disables mod_reqtimeout
completely (note that
handshake=0
is the default already and could be omitted).
stage=timeout,MinRate=data_rate
Same as above, but whenever data is received, the timeout value is increased according to the specified minimum data rate (in bytes per second).
stage=timeout-maxtimeout,MinRate=data_rate
Same as above, but the timeout will not be increased above the second value of the specified timeout range.