Files
reverse-proxy/docs/architecture/operations.md
glm-5.1 9a2352e61c Resolve 5 open questions, add 7 ADRs for previously undocumented decisions
Resolve open questions:
- OQ-01: Restrict cipher suites to match nginx scope (4 ECDHE-AES-GCM
  suites for TLS 1.2 + all TLS 1.3 suites) — ADR-012
- OQ-03: Health check on separate local port (default 9900, localhost
  only) — ADR-013
- OQ-04: Add Unix domain socket admin API for config reload alongside
  SIGHUP, with structured success/failure responses — ADR-014
- OQ-06: Per-site upstream timeouts with defaults (5s connect, 60s
  request), overridable in SiteConfig — ADR-015

Document previously undocumented decisions flagged by architecture review:
- ADR-016: Explicit bind address requirement (reject 0.0.0.0)
- ADR-017: Upstream connection defaults (HTTP/1.1, no redirects, pooling)
- ADR-018: 100 MB body size limit (matches nginx, Gitea compatibility)

OQ-07 (per-site TLS overrides) remains open for future consideration.

Spec updates:
- config.md: add health_check_port, admin_socket_path, per-site timeout
  fields, update TOML example and validation rules
- proxy.md: reference ADR-015/017/018 for timeouts, connection defaults,
  and body limit decisions
- tls.md: replace OQ-01 cipher suite section with ADR-012 decision
- operations.md: add local health check port section, admin socket reload
- overview.md: update Phase 1 scope with new features, add ADR references
- open-questions.md: resolve OQ-01/03/04/06, keep OQ-07 open
2026-06-11 09:07:36 +00:00

8.4 KiB

status, last_updated
status last_updated
draft 2026-06-11

Operations

What It Is

The operations component covers everything related to running the proxy in production: rate limiting, logging (fail2ban integration), health checks, systemd integration, and graceful shutdown.

Why It Exists

A reverse proxy that can't be monitored, rate-limited, or gracefully restarted is not production-ready. These concerns are cross-cutting — they affect the proxy handler, the TLS layer, and the config system.

Rate Limiting

Requirements

  • Limit requests per IP address (replacing nginx's limit_req_zone)
  • Default: 10 requests/second with burst of 20 (matching current nginx config)
  • Configurable via DynamicConfig (no restart needed)
  • Must produce logs that fail2ban can consume

Design

The rate limiter runs as axum middleware before the proxy handler. It uses a token bucket algorithm per client IP, matching nginx's limit_req burst semantics.

Rate limits are global per-IP in Phase 1 (not per-site). A request from IP address X counts against the same bucket regardless of which site it targets. Per-site rate limits may be added in Phase 2.

When a request exceeds the rate limit, the middleware returns 429 Too Many Requests and logs the event with structured fields.

State Eviction

The per-IP token bucket state grows over time as new IPs are seen. A background task runs every 60 seconds (configurable) and removes entries whose last access timestamp is older than a configurable eviction age (default: 300 seconds / 5 minutes). This prevents unbounded memory growth while preserving recent entries that may still receive traffic.

Fail2ban Integration

Rate limit events are logged in a structured format that a custom fail2ban filter can parse. See ADR-007 for the format decision.

The log format uses key=value pairs with a RATE_LIMIT prefix:

RATE_LIMIT client_ip=203.0.113.50 host=Y.Z path=/W status=429

A corresponding fail2ban filter and jail configuration are provided as part of the deployment documentation.

Logging

Structure

All logs use tracing with structured fields. The proxy outputs two types of log entries:

  1. Access logs: Every proxied request is logged at info level with structured fields.
REQUEST client_ip=203.0.113.50 host=git.alk.dev method=GET path=/user/repo status=200 upstream=127.0.0.1:3000 duration_ms=45
  1. Event logs: Rate limits, TLS errors, upstream failures, config reloads, etc.

    RATE_LIMIT client_ip=203.0.113.50 host=git.alk.dev path=/login status=429
    UPSTREAM_ERROR host=git.alk.dev upstream=127.0.0.1:3000 error="connection refused"
    CONFIG_RELOAD status=success sites=1
    

Output

Logs are written to:

  • stdout/stderr: For systemd/journald integration
  • File (optional): For fail2ban consumption at /var/log/reverse-proxy/access.log

The tracing-subscriber layer configuration supports both simultaneously via Layer composition.

Log Levels

Level Use
error Unrecoverable failures (TLS handshake failure, config validation)
warn Rate limit exceeded, upstream unreachable, upstream timeout
info Access logs, config reloads, ACME events, startup/shutdown
debug Request/response headers, connection details
trace Detailed protocol-level information

Configurable via log_level in StaticConfig.

Health Check

Local Health Check Port

The primary health check endpoint is served on a separate local port (default: 9900), bound to 127.0.0.1 only. This ensures health checks work even when TLS is misconfigured. See ADR-013 for the rationale.

GET http://127.0.0.1:9900/health → 200 OK (empty body)

The port is configurable via health_check_port in StaticConfig. Setting it to 0 disables the separate health check listener.

HTTPS Health Check (Fallback)

When the local health check port is enabled, /health is also available on the main HTTPS listener for cases where TLS-level health verification is desired. External monitoring should prefer the local health check for liveness checks and can use the HTTPS endpoint for TLS verification.

What It Checks

  • Process is running and the tokio runtime is responsive
  • TLS listener is accepting connections (HTTPS endpoint only)
  • Config is loaded (StaticConfig and DynamicConfig are initialized)

It does not check upstream reachability. The health check answers "is the proxy process healthy?", not "is the upstream reachable?" — upstream health is a separate concern that would produce 502/504 responses in the proxy handler.

Future Extensions

  • /health/ready — readiness check that includes upstream reachability
  • Prometheus metrics at /metrics

Systemd Integration

Unit File

[Unit]
Description=Reverse Proxy
After=network.target
Wants=network-online.target

[Service]
Type=notify
NotifyAccess=all
ExecStart=/usr/local/bin/reverse-proxy --config /etc/reverse-proxy/config.toml
Restart=on-failure
RestartSec=5

# Security hardening
NoNewPrivileges=yes
ProtectSystem=strict
ProtectHome=yes
PrivateTmp=yes
ReadWritePaths=/var/lib/reverse-proxy /var/log/reverse-proxy

# ACME challenge cache directory
StateDirectory=reverse-proxy

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

The proxy signals readiness to systemd via sd_notify after binding listeners and completing the initial configuration load.

Graceful Shutdown

Signal Handling

The proxy handles three signals via signal-hook (see ADR-009):

  • SIGTERM / SIGINT: Graceful shutdown. Stop accepting new connections, wait for in-flight requests to complete (up to a configurable timeout), then exit.
  • SIGHUP: Config reload. Re-read the config file, validate, and swap DynamicConfig if valid. No feedback on success or failure.
  • Admin socket reload: Send reload command via the Unix domain socket (default: /run/reverse-proxy/admin.sock). Returns structured response indicating success or failure. See ADR-014 for details.

SIGHUP for Config Reload

SIGHUP triggers config reload (see config.md for details). The process does not exit on SIGHUP.

Admin Socket for Config Reload

The admin Unix domain socket provides programmatic config reload with feedback. This is useful for CI/CD pipelines and automation tools. See ADR-014 for the command protocol.

Timeout

In-flight requests have a configurable shutdown timeout (default: 30 seconds). After the timeout, remaining connections are forcefully closed and the process exits.

Deployment

Binary

Single static binary, no runtime dependencies:

cargo build --release
# Produces: target/release/reverse-proxy

The binary is self-contained — no system libraries beyond libc for DNS resolution. The aws_lc_rs crypto provider is statically linked.

Configuration

# Config file
/etc/reverse-proxy/config.toml

# ACME cache directory
/var/lib/reverse-proxy/acme-cache/

# Log directory (optional, for fail2ban)
/var/log/reverse-proxy/

CLI

reverse-proxy [OPTIONS]

Options:
  --config <PATH>      Path to config file [default: /etc/reverse-proxy/config.toml]
  --validate          Validate config and exit
  --help              Show help
  --version           Show version

Design Decisions

All design decisions are documented as ADRs in decisions/.

ADR Decision Summary
001 Rust with axum Memory safety; single binary deployment
006 Token bucket rate limiting In-memory per-IP token bucket matching nginx burst semantics
007 Custom structured log format key=value pairs with RATE_LIMIT prefix for fail2ban
009 Signal handling strategy signal-hook for SIGTERM/SIGINT/SIGHUP
013 Health check on separate local port Localhost-only HTTP health check, configurable port
014 Unix domain socket config reload API Programmatic reload with success/failure feedback

Open Questions

Open questions are tracked in open-questions.md. Key questions affecting this document:

  • OQ-03: Should the health check endpoint be on a separate port? (resolved — ADR-013: separate local port, default 9900, localhost only)