Route
Routes are JSON-encoded configuration files that you add to IG to manage requests. You can add routes in the following ways:
-
Manually into the filesystem.
-
Through Common REST commands. For information, refer to Create and edit routes through Common REST.
-
Through Studio. For information, refer to the Studio guide.
Every route must call a Handler to process requests and produce responses to requests.
When a route has a condition, it can handle only requests that meet the condition. When a route has no condition, it can handle any request.
Routes inherit settings from their parent configuration. This means that you
can configure global objects in the config.json
heap, for example,
and then reference the objects by name in any other IG configuration.
For examples of route configurations see Routers and routes.
Usage
{
"handler": Handler reference,
"heap": [ object, ... ],
"condition": runtime expression<boolean>,
"name": string,
"secrets": {
"stores": [ SecretStore reference, ... ]
}, //deprecated
"session": AsyncSessionManager reference,
"auditService": AuditService reference,
"globalDecorators": map,
"decorator name": Decorator object
}
(*)Deprecated
Properties
"handler"
: Handler reference, required-
The Handler to which IG dispaches requests.
Provide the name of a Handler object defined in the heap or an inline Handler configuration object.
"heap"
: array of objects, optional-
Heap object configuration for objects local to this route.
Objects referenced but not defined here are inherited from the parent.
You can omit an empty array. If you only have one object in the heap, you can inline it as the handler value.
See also Heap Objects.
"condition"
: runtime expression<boolean>, optional-
A condition based on the request, context, or IG runtime environment, such as system properties or environment variables.
-
true
: The request is dispatched to the route. -
false
: The condition for the next route in the configuration is evaluated. -
No condition: the request is dispatched unconditionally to the route.
For debugging, log the routes for which IG evaluates a condition, and the route that matches a condition. Add the following line to a custom
$HOME/.openig/config/logback.xml
, and restart IG:<logger name="org.forgerock.openig.handler.router.RouterHandler" level="trace" />
For information, refer to Managing logs.
For example conditions and requests that match them, refer to Example conditions and requests.
An external request can never match a condition that uses the reserved administrative route. Therefore, routes that use these conditions are effectively ignored. For example, if
/openig
is the administrative route, a route with the following condition is ignored:${find(request.uri.path, '^/openig/my/path')}
.Default:
${true}
-
"name"
: string, optional-
Route name.
The Router uses the
name
property to order the routes in the configuration. If the route does not have aname
property, the Router uses the route ID.The route ID is managed as follows:
-
When you add a route manually to the routes folder, the route ID is the value of the
_id
field. If there is no_id
field, the route ID is the filename of the added route. -
When you add a route through the Common REST endpoint, the route ID is the value of the mandatory
_id
field. -
When you add a route through Studio, you can edit the default route ID.
CAUTION: The filename of a route cannot be
default.json
. The routename
property or route ID cannot bedefault
.
Default: route ID
-
"secrets"
: SecretStore reference, optional-
This property is deprecated; use SecretsProvider instead. For more information, refer to the Deprecated section of the Release Notes. One or more secret stores, as defined in Secrets object and secret stores.
"session"
: AsyncSessionManager reference. reference, optional-
Stateless session implementation for this route. Define an AuthenticatedEncryptedJwtSessionManager object inline or in the heap.
When a request enters the route, IG builds a new session object for the route. The session content is available to the route’s downstream handlers and filters. Session content available in the ascending configuration (a parent route or
config.json
) is not available in the new session.When the response exits the route, the session content is serialized as a secure JWT that is encrypted and signed, and the resulting JWT string is placed in a cookie. Session information set inside the route is no longer available. The
session
references the previous session object.Default: Do not change the session storage implementation.
For more information, refer to AsyncSessionManager, and Sessions.
"auditService"
: AuditService reference, optional-
An audit service for the route. Provide either the name of an AuditService object defined in the heap or an inline AuditService configuration object.
Default: No auditing of a configuration. The NoOpAuditService provides an empty audit service to the top-level heap and its child routes.
"globalDecorators"
: map, optional-
A map of one or more data pairs with the format
Map<String, JsonValue>
, where:-
The key is a decorator name
-
The value is a decorator configuration, passed as is to the decorator
The following format is required:
{ "globalDecorators": { "decorator name": "decoration configuration", ... } }
All compatible objects in a route are decorated with the mapped decorator value. For more information, refer to Decorators.
In the following example, the property decorates all compatible objects in the route with a capture and timer decorator:
"globalDecorators": { "capture": "all", "timer": true }
Default: Empty
-
"decorator name"
: Decorator object, optional-
Decorate the main handler of this route with a decorator referred to by the decorator name, and provide the configuration as described in Decorators.
Default: No decoration.
Route metrics at the Prometheus Scrape Endpoint
Route metrics at the Prometheus Scrape Endpoint have the following labels:
-
name
: Route name, for example,My Route
.If the router was declared with a default handler, then its metrics are published through the route named
default
. -
route
: Route identifier, for example,my-route
. -
router
: Fully qualified name of the router, for example,gateway.main-router
.
The following table summarizes the recorded metrics:
Name(1) | Monitoring type | Description |
---|---|---|
|
Gauge |
Number of requests being processed. |
|
Counter |
Number of requests processed by the router or route since it was deployed. |
|
Counter |
Number of responses that threw an exception. |
|
Counter |
Number of responses that were not handled by IG. |
|
Counter |
Number of responses by HTTP status code family. The
|
|
Summary |
A summary of response time observations. |
(1)Metric names are deprecated and expected to be replaced with names ending in _total. The information provided by the metric is not deprecated. Other Prometheus metrics are not affected.
For more information about the the Prometheus Scrape Endpoint, see Prometheus Scrape Endpoint.
Route Metrics at the Common REST Monitoring Endpoint
Route metrics at the Common REST Monitoring Endpoint are published with an _id
in the
following pattern:
-
heap.router-name.route.route-name.metric
The following table summarizes the recorded metrics:
Name | Monitoring type | Description |
---|---|---|
|
Counter |
Number of requests processed by the router or route since it was deployed. |
|
Gauge |
Number of requests being processed by the router or route at this moment. |
|
Counter |
Number of responses that threw an exception. |
|
Counter |
Number of responses that were not handled by IG. |
|
Counter |
Number of responses with an HTTP status code |
|
Counter |
Number of responses with an HTTP status code |
|
Counter |
Number of responses with an HTTP status code |
|
Counter |
Number of responses with an HTTP status code |
|
Counter |
Number of responses with an HTTP status code |
|
Counter |
Number of responses with an HTTP status code |
|
Timer |
Time-series summary statistics. |
For more information about the the Common REST Monitoring Endpoint, see Common REST Monitoring Endpoint.