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How an HTTP callout works
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Use Case: ESI support for fetching and updating content dynamically
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Advanced policy expressions: Working with dates, times, and numbers
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Advanced policy expressions: Parsing HTTP, TCP, and UDP data
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Advanced policy expressions: IP and MAC Addresses, Throughput, VLAN IDs
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How an HTTP callout works
When the NetScaler appliance receives a client request, the appliance evaluates the request against the policies bound to various bind points. During this evaluation, if the appliance encounters the HTTP callout expression, SYS.HTTP_CALLOUT(<name>)
, it stalls policy evaluation briefly and sends a request to the HTTP callout agent by using the parameters configured for the specified HTTP callout. Upon receiving the response, the appliance inspects the specified portion of the response, and then either performs an action or evaluates the next policy, depending on whether the evaluation of the response from the HTTP callout agent evaluates to TRUE or FALSE, respectively. For example, if the HTTP callout is included in a responder policy, if the evaluation of the response evaluates to TRUE, the appliance performs the action associated with the responder policy.
If the HTTP callout configuration is incorrect or incomplete, or if the callout invokes itself recursively, the appliance raises an UNDEF condition, and updates the undefined hits counter.
The following figure illustrates the working of an HTTP callout that is invoked from a globally bound responder policy. The HTTP callout is configured to include the IP address of the client that is associated with an incoming request. When the NetScaler appliance receives a request from a client, the appliance generates the callout request and sends it to the callout server, which hosts a database of blacklisted IP addresses and an HTTP callout agent that checks whether the client’s IP address is listed in the database. The HTTP callout agent receives the callout request, checks whether the client’s IP address is listed, and sends a response that the NetScaler appliance evaluates. If the response indicates that the client’s IP address is not blacklisted, the appliance forwards the response to the configured service. If the client’s IP address is blacklisted, the appliance resets the client connection
Figure 1. HTTP Callout Entity Model
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