nginx uri和request_uri区别
Embedded Variables
The ngx_http_core_module module supports embedded variables with names matching the Apache Server variables. First of all, these are variables representing client request header fields, such as $http_user_agent, $http_cookie, and so on. Also there are other variables:
$arg_name- argument
namein the request line $args- arguments in the request line
$binary_remote_addr- client address in a binary form, value’s length is always 4 bytes for IPv4 addresses or 16 bytes for IPv6 addresses
$body_bytes_sent- number of bytes sent to a client, not counting the response header; this variable is compatible with the “
%B” parameter of themod_log_configApache module $bytes_sent- number of bytes sent to a client (1.3.8, 1.2.5)
$connection- connection serial number (1.3.8, 1.2.5)
$connection_requests- current number of requests made through a connection (1.3.8, 1.2.5)
$content_length- “Content-Length” request header field
$content_type- “Content-Type” request header field
- the
namecookie $document_root- root or alias directive’s value for the current request
$document_uri- same as
$uri $host- in this order of precedence: host name from the request line, or host name from the “Host” request header field, or the server name matching a request
$hostname- host name
$http_name- arbitrary request header field; the last part of a variable name is the field name converted to lower case with dashes replaced by underscores
$https- “
on” if connection operates in SSL mode, or an empty string otherwise $is_args- “
?” if a request line has arguments, or an empty string otherwise $limit_rate- setting this variable enables response rate limiting; see limit_rate
$msec- current time in seconds with the milliseconds resolution (1.3.9, 1.2.6)
$nginx_version- nginx version
$pid- PID of the worker process
$pipe- “
p” if request was pipelined, “.” otherwise (1.3.12, 1.2.7) $proxy_protocol_addr- client address from the PROXY protocol header, or an empty string otherwise (1.5.12)
The PROXY protocol must be previously enabled by setting the
proxy_protocolparameter in the listen directive. $proxy_protocol_port- client port from the PROXY protocol header, or an empty string otherwise (1.11.0)
The PROXY protocol must be previously enabled by setting the
proxy_protocolparameter in the listen directive. $query_string- same as
$args $realpath_root- an absolute pathname corresponding to the root or alias directive’s value for the current request, with all symbolic links resolved to real paths
$remote_addr- client address
$remote_port- client port
$remote_user- user name supplied with the Basic authentication
$request- full original request line
$request_body- request body
The variable’s value is made available in locations processed by the proxy_pass, fastcgi_pass,uwsgi_pass, and scgi_pass directives when the request body was read to a memory buffer.
$request_body_file- name of a temporary file with the request body
At the end of processing, the file needs to be removed. To always write the request body to a file,client_body_in_file_only needs to be enabled. When the name of a temporary file is passed in a proxied request or in a request to a FastCGI/uwsgi/SCGI server, passing the request body should be disabled by the proxy_pass_request_body off, fastcgi_pass_request_body off,uwsgi_pass_request_body off, or scgi_pass_request_body off directives, respectively.
$request_completion- “
OK” if a request has completed, or an empty string otherwise $request_filename- file path for the current request, based on the root or alias directives, and the request URI
$request_id- unique request identifier generated from 16 random bytes, in hexadecimal (1.11.0)
$request_length- request length (including request line, header, and request body) (1.3.12, 1.2.7)
$request_method- request method, usually “
GET” or “POST” $request_time- request processing time in seconds with a milliseconds resolution (1.3.9, 1.2.6); time elapsed since the first bytes were read from the client
$request_uri- full original request URI (with arguments)
$scheme- request scheme, “
http” or “https” $sent_http_name- arbitrary response header field; the last part of a variable name is the field name converted to lower case with dashes replaced by underscores
$sent_trailer_name- arbitrary field sent at the end of the response (1.13.2); the last part of a variable name is the field name converted to lower case with dashes replaced by underscores
$server_addr- an address of the server which accepted a request
Computing a value of this variable usually requires one system call. To avoid a system call, the listendirectives must specify addresses and use the
bindparameter. $server_name- name of the server which accepted a request
$server_port- port of the server which accepted a request
$server_protocol- request protocol, usually “
HTTP/1.0”, “HTTP/1.1”, or “HTTP/2.0” $status- response status (1.3.2, 1.2.2)
$tcpinfo_rtt,$tcpinfo_rttvar,$tcpinfo_snd_cwnd,$tcpinfo_rcv_space- information about the client TCP connection; available on systems that support the
TCP_INFOsocket option $time_iso8601- local time in the ISO 8601 standard format (1.3.12, 1.2.7)
$time_local- local time in the Common Log Format (1.3.12, 1.2.7)
$uri- current URI in request, normalized
The value of
$urimay change during request processing, e.g. when doing internal redirects, or when using index files.
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