The Request Transformer plugin for Kong allows simple transformation of requests before they reach the upstream server. These transformations can be simple substitutions or complex ones matching portions of incoming requests using regular expressions, saving those matched strings into variables, and substituting those strings into transformed requests using flexible templates.
Configuration Reference
This plugin is not compatible with DB-less mode.
Example plugin configuration
Enable on a service
Enable on a route
Enable on a consumer
Enable globally
The following examples provide some typical configurations for enabling
the request-transformer
plugin on a
service.
Admin API
Kubernetes
Declarative (YAML)
Kong Manager
Make the following request:
curl -X POST http://{HOST}:8001/services/{SERVICE}/plugins \
--data "name=request-transformer" \
--data "config.remove.headers=x-toremove" \
--data "config.remove.headers=x-another-one" \
--data "config.remove.querystring=qs-old-name:qs-new-name" \
--data "config.remove.querystring=qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name" \
--data "config.remove.body=formparam-toremove" \
--data "config.remove.body=formparam-another-one" \
--data "config.replace.body=body-param1:new-value-1" \
--data "config.replace.body=body-param2:new-value-2" \
--data "config.rename.headers=header-old-name:header-new-name" \
--data "config.rename.headers=another-old-name:another-new-name" \
--data "config.rename.querystring=qs-old-name:qs-new-name" \
--data "config.rename.querystring=qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name" \
--data "config.rename.body=param-old:param-new" \
--data "config.rename.body=param2-old:param2-new" \
--data "config.add.headers=x-new-header:value" \
--data "config.add.headers=x-another-header:something" \
--data "config.add.querystring=new-param:some_value" \
--data "config.add.querystring=another-param:some_value" \
--data "config.add.body=new-form-param:some_value" \
--data "config.add.body=another-form-param:some_value"
SERVICE
is the id
or name
of the service that this plugin
configuration will target.
First, create a KongPlugin
resource:
apiVersion: configuration.konghq.com/v1
kind: KongPlugin
metadata:
name: <request-transformer-example>
config:
remove:
headers:
- x-toremove
- x-another-one
remove:
querystring:
- qs-old-name:qs-new-name
- qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name
remove:
body:
- formparam-toremove
- formparam-another-one
replace:
body:
- body-param1:new-value-1
- body-param2:new-value-2
rename:
headers:
- header-old-name:header-new-name
- another-old-name:another-new-name
rename:
querystring:
- qs-old-name:qs-new-name
- qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name
rename:
body:
- param-old:param-new
- param2-old:param2-new
add:
headers:
- x-new-header:value
- x-another-header:something
add:
querystring:
- new-param:some_value
- another-param:some_value
add:
body:
- new-form-param:some_value
- another-form-param:some_value
plugin: request-transformer
Next, apply the KongPlugin resource to a
Service by annotating the
Service as follows:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: {SERVICE}
labels:
app: {SERVICE}
annotations:
konghq.com/plugins: <request-transformer-example>
spec:
ports:
- port: 80
targetPort: 80
protocol: TCP
name: {SERVICE}
selector:
app: {SERVICE}
{SERVICE}
is the id
or name
of the service that this plugin
configuration will target.
Note: The KongPlugin resource only needs to be defined once
and can be applied to any service, consumer, or route in the namespace. If you
want the plugin to be available cluster-wide, create the resource as a
KongClusterPlugin
instead of KongPlugin
.
Add this section to your declarative configuration file:
plugins:
- name: request-transformer
service: {SERVICE}
config:
remove:
headers:
- x-toremove
- x-another-one
remove:
querystring:
- qs-old-name:qs-new-name
- qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name
remove:
body:
- formparam-toremove
- formparam-another-one
replace:
body:
- body-param1:new-value-1
- body-param2:new-value-2
rename:
headers:
- header-old-name:header-new-name
- another-old-name:another-new-name
rename:
querystring:
- qs-old-name:qs-new-name
- qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name
rename:
body:
- param-old:param-new
- param2-old:param2-new
add:
headers:
- x-new-header:value
- x-another-header:something
add:
querystring:
- new-param:some_value
- another-param:some_value
add:
body:
- new-form-param:some_value
- another-form-param:some_value
SERVICE
is the id
or name
of the service that this plugin
configuration will target.
- In Kong Manager, select the workspace.
- From the Dashboard, scroll down to Services and click View for the
service row.
- Scroll down to plugins and click Add Plugin.
-
Find and select the Request Transformer plugin.
Note: If the plugin is greyed out, then it is not available
for your product tier. See
Kong Gateway tiers.
- If the option is available, select Scoped.
- Add the service name and ID to the Service field if it
is not already prefilled.
- Click Create.
The following examples provide some typical configurations for enabling
the request-transformer
plugin on a
route.
Admin API
Kubernetes
Declarative (YAML)
Kong Manager
Make the following request:
$ curl -X POST http://{HOST}:8001/routes/{ROUTE}/plugins \
--data "name=request-transformer" \
--data "config.remove.headers=x-toremove" \
--data "config.remove.headers=x-another-one" \
--data "config.remove.querystring=qs-old-name:qs-new-name" \
--data "config.remove.querystring=qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name" \
--data "config.remove.body=formparam-toremove" \
--data "config.remove.body=formparam-another-one" \
--data "config.replace.body=body-param1:new-value-1" \
--data "config.replace.body=body-param2:new-value-2" \
--data "config.rename.headers=header-old-name:header-new-name" \
--data "config.rename.headers=another-old-name:another-new-name" \
--data "config.rename.querystring=qs-old-name:qs-new-name" \
--data "config.rename.querystring=qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name" \
--data "config.rename.body=param-old:param-new" \
--data "config.rename.body=param2-old:param2-new" \
--data "config.add.headers=x-new-header:value" \
--data "config.add.headers=x-another-header:something" \
--data "config.add.querystring=new-param:some_value" \
--data "config.add.querystring=another-param:some_value" \
--data "config.add.body=new-form-param:some_value" \
--data "config.add.body=another-form-param:some_value"
ROUTE
is the id
or name
of the route that this plugin configuration
will target.
First, create a KongPlugin
resource:
apiVersion: configuration.konghq.com/v1
kind: KongPlugin
metadata:
name: <request-transformer-example>
config:
remove:
headers:
- x-toremove
- x-another-one
remove:
querystring:
- qs-old-name:qs-new-name
- qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name
remove:
body:
- formparam-toremove
- formparam-another-one
replace:
body:
- body-param1:new-value-1
- body-param2:new-value-2
rename:
headers:
- header-old-name:header-new-name
- another-old-name:another-new-name
rename:
querystring:
- qs-old-name:qs-new-name
- qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name
rename:
body:
- param-old:param-new
- param2-old:param2-new
add:
headers:
- x-new-header:value
- x-another-header:something
add:
querystring:
- new-param:some_value
- another-param:some_value
add:
body:
- new-form-param:some_value
- another-form-param:some_value
plugin: request-transformer
Then, apply it to an ingress (Route or Routes)
by annotating the ingress as follows:
apiVersion: networking/v1beta1
kind: Ingress
metadata:
name: {ROUTE}
annotations:
kubernetes.io/ingress.class: kong
konghq.com/plugins: <request-transformer-example>
spec:
rules:
- host: examplehostname.com
http:
paths:
- path: /bar
backend:
serviceName: echo
servicePort: 80
ROUTE
is the id
or name
of the route that this plugin configuration
will target.
Note: The KongPlugin resource only needs to be defined once
and can be applied to any service, consumer, or route in the namespace. If you
want the plugin to be available cluster-wide, create the resource as a
KongClusterPlugin
instead of KongPlugin
.
Add this section to your declarative configuration file:
plugins:
- name: request-transformer
route: <route>
config:
remove:
headers:
- x-toremove
- x-another-one
remove:
querystring:
- qs-old-name:qs-new-name
- qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name
remove:
body:
- formparam-toremove
- formparam-another-one
replace:
body:
- body-param1:new-value-1
- body-param2:new-value-2
rename:
headers:
- header-old-name:header-new-name
- another-old-name:another-new-name
rename:
querystring:
- qs-old-name:qs-new-name
- qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name
rename:
body:
- param-old:param-new
- param2-old:param2-new
add:
headers:
- x-new-header:value
- x-another-header:something
add:
querystring:
- new-param:some_value
- another-param:some_value
add:
body:
- new-form-param:some_value
- another-form-param:some_value
ROUTE
is the id
or name
of the route that this plugin configuration
will target.
- In Kong Manager, select the workspace.
- From the Dashboard, select Routes in the left navigation.
- Click View for the route row.
- Scroll down to plugins and click Add Plugin.
-
Find and select the Request Transformer plugin.
Note: If the plugin is greyed out, then it is not available
for your product tier. See
Kong Gateway tiers.
- If the option is available, select Scoped.
- Add the Route ID if it is not already prefilled.
- Click Create.
The following examples provide some typical configurations for enabling
the request-transformer
plugin on a
consumer.
Admin API
Kubernetes
Declarative (YAML)
Kong Manager
Make the following request:
$ curl -X POST http://{HOST}:8001/consumers/{CONSUMER}/plugins \
--data "name=request-transformer" \
--data "config.remove.headers=x-toremove" \
--data "config.remove.headers=x-another-one" \
--data "config.remove.querystring=qs-old-name:qs-new-name" \
--data "config.remove.querystring=qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name" \
--data "config.remove.body=formparam-toremove" \
--data "config.remove.body=formparam-another-one" \
--data "config.replace.body=body-param1:new-value-1" \
--data "config.replace.body=body-param2:new-value-2" \
--data "config.rename.headers=header-old-name:header-new-name" \
--data "config.rename.headers=another-old-name:another-new-name" \
--data "config.rename.querystring=qs-old-name:qs-new-name" \
--data "config.rename.querystring=qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name" \
--data "config.rename.body=param-old:param-new" \
--data "config.rename.body=param2-old:param2-new" \
--data "config.add.headers=x-new-header:value" \
--data "config.add.headers=x-another-header:something" \
--data "config.add.querystring=new-param:some_value" \
--data "config.add.querystring=another-param:some_value" \
--data "config.add.body=new-form-param:some_value" \
--data "config.add.body=another-form-param:some_value"
CONSUMER
is the id
or username
of the consumer that this plugin
configuration will target.
You can combine consumer.id
, service.id
, or route.id
in the same request, to further narrow the scope of the plugin.
First, create a KongPlugin
resource:
apiVersion: configuration.konghq.com/v1
kind: KongPlugin
metadata:
name: <request-transformer-example>
config:
remove:
headers:
- x-toremove
- x-another-one
remove:
querystring:
- qs-old-name:qs-new-name
- qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name
remove:
body:
- formparam-toremove
- formparam-another-one
replace:
body:
- body-param1:new-value-1
- body-param2:new-value-2
rename:
headers:
- header-old-name:header-new-name
- another-old-name:another-new-name
rename:
querystring:
- qs-old-name:qs-new-name
- qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name
rename:
body:
- param-old:param-new
- param2-old:param2-new
add:
headers:
- x-new-header:value
- x-another-header:something
add:
querystring:
- new-param:some_value
- another-param:some_value
add:
body:
- new-form-param:some_value
- another-form-param:some_value
plugin: request-transformer
Then, apply it to a consumer by
annotating the KongConsumer resource as follows:
apiVersion: configuration.konghq.com/v1
kind: KongConsumer
metadata:
name: {CONSUMER}
annotations:
konghq.com/plugins: <request-transformer-example>
kubernetes.io/ingress.class: kong
CONSUMER
is the id
or username
of the consumer that this plugin
configuration will target.
Note: The KongPlugin resource only needs to be defined once
and can be applied to any Service, Consumer, or Route in the namespace. If you
want the plugin to be available cluster-wide, create the resource as a
KongClusterPlugin
instead of KongPlugin
.
Add this section to your declarative configuration file:
plugins:
- name: request-transformer
consumer: {CONSUMER}
config:
remove:
headers:
- x-toremove
- x-another-one
remove:
querystring:
- qs-old-name:qs-new-name
- qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name
remove:
body:
- formparam-toremove
- formparam-another-one
replace:
body:
- body-param1:new-value-1
- body-param2:new-value-2
rename:
headers:
- header-old-name:header-new-name
- another-old-name:another-new-name
rename:
querystring:
- qs-old-name:qs-new-name
- qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name
rename:
body:
- param-old:param-new
- param2-old:param2-new
add:
headers:
- x-new-header:value
- x-another-header:something
add:
querystring:
- new-param:some_value
- another-param:some_value
add:
body:
- new-form-param:some_value
- another-form-param:some_value
CONSUMER
is the id
or username
of the consumer that this plugin
configuration will target.
- In Kong Manager, select the workspace.
- From the Dashboard, scroll down to Consumers and click View for the consumer row.
- Select the Plugins tab.
- Click Add Plugin.
-
Find and select the Request Transformer plugin.
Note: If the plugin is greyed out, then it is not available
for your product tier. See
Kong Gateway tiers.
- If the option is available, select Global.
- Click Create.
A plugin which is not associated to any service, route, or consumer is
considered global, and will be run on every request. Read the
Plugin Reference and the Plugin Precedence
sections for more information.
The following examples provide some typical configurations for enabling
the request-transformer
plugin globally.
Admin API
Kubernetes
Declarative (YAML)
Kong Manager
Make the following request:
$ curl -X POST http://{HOST}:8001/plugins/ \
--data "name=request-transformer" \
--data "config.remove.headers=x-toremove" \
--data "config.remove.headers=x-another-one" \
--data "config.remove.querystring=qs-old-name:qs-new-name" \
--data "config.remove.querystring=qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name" \
--data "config.remove.body=formparam-toremove" \
--data "config.remove.body=formparam-another-one" \
--data "config.replace.body=body-param1:new-value-1" \
--data "config.replace.body=body-param2:new-value-2" \
--data "config.rename.headers=header-old-name:header-new-name" \
--data "config.rename.headers=another-old-name:another-new-name" \
--data "config.rename.querystring=qs-old-name:qs-new-name" \
--data "config.rename.querystring=qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name" \
--data "config.rename.body=param-old:param-new" \
--data "config.rename.body=param2-old:param2-new" \
--data "config.add.headers=x-new-header:value" \
--data "config.add.headers=x-another-header:something" \
--data "config.add.querystring=new-param:some_value" \
--data "config.add.querystring=another-param:some_value" \
--data "config.add.body=new-form-param:some_value" \
--data "config.add.body=another-form-param:some_value"
Create a KongClusterPlugin
resource and label it as global:
apiVersion: configuration.konghq.com/v1
kind: KongClusterPlugin
metadata:
name: <global-request-transformer>
annotations:
kubernetes.io/ingress.class: kong
labels:
global: \"true\"
config:
remove:
headers:
- x-toremove
- x-another-one
remove:
querystring:
- qs-old-name:qs-new-name
- qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name
remove:
body:
- formparam-toremove
- formparam-another-one
replace:
body:
- body-param1:new-value-1
- body-param2:new-value-2
rename:
headers:
- header-old-name:header-new-name
- another-old-name:another-new-name
rename:
querystring:
- qs-old-name:qs-new-name
- qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name
rename:
body:
- param-old:param-new
- param2-old:param2-new
add:
headers:
- x-new-header:value
- x-another-header:something
add:
querystring:
- new-param:some_value
- another-param:some_value
add:
body:
- new-form-param:some_value
- another-form-param:some_value
plugin: request-transformer
Add a plugins
entry in the declarative
configuration file:
plugins:
- name: request-transformer
config:
remove:
headers:
- x-toremove
- x-another-one
remove:
querystring:
- qs-old-name:qs-new-name
- qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name
remove:
body:
- formparam-toremove
- formparam-another-one
replace:
body:
- body-param1:new-value-1
- body-param2:new-value-2
rename:
headers:
- header-old-name:header-new-name
- another-old-name:another-new-name
rename:
querystring:
- qs-old-name:qs-new-name
- qs2-old-name:qs2-new-name
rename:
body:
- param-old:param-new
- param2-old:param2-new
add:
headers:
- x-new-header:value
- x-another-header:something
add:
querystring:
- new-param:some_value
- another-param:some_value
add:
body:
- new-form-param:some_value
- another-form-param:some_value
- In Kong Manager, select the workspace.
- From the Dashboard, select Plugins in the left navigation.
- Click New Plugin.
-
Find and select the Request Transformer plugin.
Note: If the plugin is greyed out, then it is not available
for your product tier. See
Kong Gateway tiers.
- If the option is available, set the plugin scope to Global.
- Click Create.
Parameters
Here's a list of all the parameters which can be used in this plugin's configuration:
Form Parameter |
Description |
name
required
Type: string |
The name of the plugin, in this case request-transformer . |
service.id
Type: string |
The ID of the Service the plugin targets. |
route.id
Type: string |
The ID of the Route the plugin targets. |
consumer.id
Type: string |
The ID of the Consumer the plugin targets. |
enabled
required
Type: boolean
Default value: true |
Whether this plugin will be applied. |
config.http_method
optional
|
Changes the HTTP method for the upstream request.
|
config.remove.headers
optional
|
List of header names. Unset the header(s) with the given name.
|
config.remove.querystring
optional
|
List of querystring names. Remove the querystring if it is present.
|
config.remove.body
optional
|
List of parameter names. Remove the parameter if and only if content-type is one the following [application/json , multipart/form-data , application/x-www-form-urlencoded ] and parameter is present.
|
config.replace.uri
optional
|
Updates the upstream request URI with a given value. This value can be used to update only the path part of the URI, not the scheme or the hostname.
|
config.replace.body
optional
|
List of paramname:value pairs. If and only if content-type is one the following [application/json , multipart/form-data , application/x-www-form-urlencoded ] and the parameter is already present, replace its old value with the new one. Ignored if the parameter is not already present.
|
config.replace.headers
optional
|
List of headername:value pairs. If and only if the header is already set, replace its old value with the new one. Ignored if the header is not already set.
|
config.replace.querystring
optional
|
List of queryname:value pairs. If and only if the field name is already set, replace its old value with the new one. Ignored if the field name is not already set.
|
config.rename.headers
optional
|
List of headername:value pairs. If and only if the header is already set, rename the header. The value is unchanged. Ignored if the header is not already set.
|
config.rename.querystring
optional
|
List of queryname:value pairs. If and only if the field name is already set, rename the field name. The value is unchanged. Ignored if the field name is not already set.
|
config.rename.body
optional
|
List of parameter name:value pairs. Rename the parameter name if and only if content-type is one the following [application/json , multipart/form-data , application/x-www-form-urlencoded ] and parameter is present.
|
config.replace.body
optional
|
List of paramname:value pairs. If and only if content-type is one the following [application/json , multipart/form-data , application/x-www-form-urlencoded ] and the parameter is already present, replace its old value with the new one. Ignored if the parameter is not already present.
|
config.add.headers
optional
|
List of headername:value pairs. If and only if the header is not already set, set a new header with the given value. Ignored if the header is already set.
|
config.add.querystring
optional
|
List of queryname:value pairs. If and only if the querystring is not already set, set a new querystring with the given value. Ignored if the header is already set.
|
config.add.body
optional
|
List of pramname:value pairs. If and only if content-type is one the following [application/json , multipart/form-data , application/x-www-form-urlencoded ] and the parameter is not present, add a new parameter with the given value to form-encoded body. Ignored if the parameter is already present.
|
config.append.headers
optional
|
List of headername:value pairs. If the header is not set, set it with the given value. If it is already set, an additional new header with the same name and the new value will be appended.
|
config.append.querystring
optional
|
List of queryname:value pairs. If the querystring is not set, set it with the given value. If it is already set, a new querystring with the same name and the new value will be set.
|
config.append.body
optional
|
List of paramname:value pairs. If the content-type is one the following [application/json , application/x-www-form-urlencoded ], add a new parameter with the given value if the parameter is not present, otherwise if it is already present, the two values (old and new) will be aggregated in an array.
|
Notes:
- If the value contains a
,
then the comma-separated format for lists cannot be used. The array notation must be used instead.
- The
X-Forwarded-*
fields are non-standard header fields written by Nginx to inform the upstream about client details and can’t be overwritten by this plugin. If you need to overwrite these header fields, see the post-function plugin in Serverless Functions.
Template as Value
You can use any of the current request headers, query params, and captured URI groups as a template to populate the above supported configuration fields.
Request Param |
Template |
header |
$(headers.<header_name>) , $(headers["<Header-Name>"]) or $(headers["<header-name>"]) ) |
querystring |
$(query_params.<query-param-name>) or $(query_params["<query-param-name>"]) ) |
captured URIs |
$(uri_captures.<group-name>) or $(uri_captures["<group-name>"]) ) |
To escape a template, wrap it inside quotes and pass it inside another template.
$('$(some_escaped_template)')
Note: The plugin creates a non-mutable table of request headers, querystrings, and captured URIs before transformation. Therefore, any update or removal of params used in template does not affect the rendered value of a template.
Advanced templates
The content of the placeholder $(...)
is evaluated as a Lua expression, so
logical operators may be used. For example:
Header-Name:$(uri_captures["user-id"] or query_params["user"] or "unknown")
This will first look for the path parameter (uri_captures
). If not found, it will
return the query parameter. If that also doesn’t exist, it returns the default
value ‘“unknown”’.
Constant parts can be specified as part of the template outside the dynamic
placeholders. For example, creating a basic-auth header from a query parameter
called auth
that only contains the base64-encoded part:
Authorization:Basic $(query_params["auth"])
Lambdas are also supported if wrapped as an expression like this:
$((function() ... implementation here ... end)())
A complete Lambda example for prefixing a header value with “Basic” if not
already there:
Authorization:$((function()
local value = headers.Authorization
if not value then
return
end
if value:sub(1, 6) == "Basic " then
return value -- was already properly formed
end
return "Basic " .. value -- added proper prefix
end)())
NOTE: Especially in multi-line templates like the example above, make sure not
to add any trailing white-space or new-lines. Because these would be outside the
placeholders, they would be considered part of the template, and hence would be
appended to the generated value.
The environment is sandboxed, meaning that Lambdas will not have access to any
library functions, except for the string methods (like sub()
in the example
above).
Examples Using Template as Value
Add a Service named test
with uris
configured with a named capture group user_id
:
$ curl -X POST http://localhost:8001/services \
--data 'name=test' \
--data 'upstream_url=http://mockbin.com' \
--data-urlencode 'uris=/requests/user/(?<user_id>\w+)' \
--data "strip_uri=false"
Enable the request-transformer
plugin to add a new header x-consumer-id
whose value is being set with the value sent with header x-user-id
or
with the default value alice
is header
is missing.
$ curl -X POST http://localhost:8001/services/test/plugins \
--data "name=request-transformer" \
--data-urlencode "config.add.headers=x-consumer-id:\$(headers['x-user-id'] or 'alice')" \
--data "config.remove.headers=x-user-id"
Now send a request without setting header x-user-id
$ curl -i -X GET localhost:8000/requests/user/foo
Plugin will add a new header x-consumer-id
with value alice
before proxying
request upstream. Now try sending request with header x-user-id
set
$ curl -i -X GET localhost:8000/requests/user/foo \
-H "X-User-Id:bob"
This time the plugin will add a new header x-consumer-id
with the value sent along
with the header x-user-id
, i.e.bob
Order of execution
Plugin performs the response transformation in the following order:
- remove → rename → replace → add → append
Examples
Kubernetes users: version v1beta1
of the Ingress
specification does not allow the use of named regex capture groups in paths.
If you use the ingress controller, you should use unnamed groups, e.g.
(\w+)/
instead of (?<user_id>\w+)
. You can access
these based on their order in the URL path, e.g. $(uri_captures[1])
will obtain the value of the first capture group.
In these examples we have the plugin enabled on a Service. This would work
similarly for Routes.
- Add multiple headers by passing each header:value pair separately:
With a database
Without a database
$ curl -X POST http://localhost:8001/services/example-service/plugins \
--data "name=request-transformer" \
--data "config.add.headers[1]=h1:v1" \
--data "config.add.headers[2]=h2:v1"
plugins:
- name: request-transformer
config:
add:
headers: ["h1:v1", "h2:v1"]
incoming request headers |
upstream proxied headers: |
h1: v1 |
|
- Add multiple headers by passing comma separated header:value pair (only possible with a database):
$ curl -X POST http://localhost:8001/services/example-service/plugins \
--data "name=request-transformer" \
--data "config.add.headers=h1:v1,h2:v2"
incoming request headers |
upstream proxied headers: |
h1: v1 |
|
- Add multiple headers passing config as JSON body (only possible with a database):
$ curl -X POST http://localhost:8001/services/example-service/plugins \
--header 'content-type: application/json' \
--data '{"name": "request-transformer", "config": {"add": {"headers": ["h1:v2", "h2:v1"]}}}'
incoming request headers |
upstream proxied headers: |
h1: v1 |
|
- Add a querystring and a header:
With a database
Without a database
$ curl -X POST http://localhost:8001/services/example-service/plugins \
--data "name=request-transformer" \
--data "config.add.querystring=q1:v2,q2:v1" \
--data "config.add.headers=h1:v1"
plugins:
- name: request-transformer
config:
add:
headers: ["h1:v1"],
querystring: ["q1:v1", "q2:v2"]
incoming request headers |
upstream proxied headers: |
h1: v2 |
|
h3: v1 |
|
incoming request querystring |
upstream proxied querystring |
?q1=v1 |
?q1=v1&q2=v1 |
|
?q1=v2&q2=v1 |
- Append multiple headers and remove a body parameter:
With a database
Without a database
$ curl -X POST http://localhost:8001/services/example-service/plugins \
--header 'content-type: application/json' \
--data '{"name": "request-transformer", "config": {"append": {"headers": ["h1:v2", "h2:v1"]}, "remove": {"body": ["p1"]}}}'
plugins:
- name: request-transformer
config:
add:
headers: ["h1:v1", "h2:v1"]
remove:
body: [ "p1" ]
incoming request headers |
upstream proxied headers: |
h1: v1 |
|
incoming url encoded body |
upstream proxied url encoded body |
p1=v1&p2=v1 |
p2=v1 |
p2=v1 |
p2=v1 |