Links Top Level Elements Executors Connectors Containers Nested Components Cluster Elements Other  | Container Provided Filters| Introduction |  
  Tomcat provides a number of Filters which may be
  configured for use with all web applications using
  $CATALINA_BASE/conf/web.xml or may be configured for individual
  web applications by configuring them in the application's
  WEB-INF/web.xml. Each filter is described below. 
    
    This description uses the variable name $CATALINA_BASE to refer the
    base directory against which most relative paths are resolved. If you have
    not configured Tomcat for multiple instances by setting a CATALINA_BASE
    directory, then $CATALINA_BASE will be set to the value of $CATALINA_HOME,
    the directory into which you have installed Tomcat. 
     
  |  
 | Add Default Character Set Filter |  
  | Introduction |  
    The HTTP specification is clear that if no character set is specified for
    media sub-types of the "text" media type, the ISO-8859-1 character set must
    be used. However, browsers may attempt to auto-detect the character set.
    This may be exploited by an attacker to perform an XSS attack. Internet
    Explorer has this behaviour by default. Other browsers have an option to
    enable it. 
    This filter prevents the attack by explicitly setting a character set.
    Unless the provided character set is explicitly overridden by the user the
    browser will adhere to the explicitly set character set, thus preventing the
    XSS attack. 
    |   
  | Filter Class Name |  
    The filter class name for the Add Default Character Set Filter is
    org.apache.catalina.filters.AddDefaultCharsetFilter
    . 
    |   
  | Initialisation parameters |  
    The Add Default Character Set Filter supports the following initialization
    parameters: 
    | Attribute | Description | 
|---|
 encoding | 
         Name of the character set which should be set, if no other character set
        was set explicitly by a Servlet. This parameter has two special values
        default and system. A value of system
        uses the JVM wide default character set, which is usually set by locale.
        A value of default will use ISO-8859-1. 
       |   
    |   
  |  
 | CSRF Prevention Filter |  
  | Introduction |  
    This filter provides basic CSRF protection for a web application. The
    filter assumes that it is mapped to /* and that all URLs
    returned to the client are encoded via a call to
    HttpServletResponse#encodeRedirectURL(String) or
    HttpServletResponse#encodeURL(String). 
    This filter prevents CSRF by generating a nonce and storing it in the
    session. URLs are also encoded with the same nonce. When the next request is
    received the nonce in the request is compared to the nonce in the session
    and only if they are the same is the request allowed to continue. 
    |   
  | Filter Class Name |  
    The filter class name for the CSRF Prevention Filter is
    org.apache.catalina.filters.CsrfPreventionFilter
    . 
    |   
  | Initialisation parameters |  
    The CSRF Prevention Filter supports the following initialisation
    parameters: 
    | Attribute | Description | 
|---|
 entryPoints | 
         A comma separated list of URLs that will not be tested for the
        presence of a valid nonce. They are used to provide a way to navigate
        back to a protected application after having navigated away from it.
        Entry points will be limited to HTTP GET requests and should not trigger
        any security sensitive actions. 
       |  nonceCacheSize | 
         The number of previously issued nonces that will be cached on a LRU
        basis to support parallel requests, limited use of the refresh and back
        in the browser and similar behaviors that may result in the submission
        of a previous nonce rather than the current one. If not set, the default
        value of 5 will be used. 
       |  randomClass | 
         The name of the class to use to generate nonces. The class must be an
        instance of java.util.Random. If not set, the default value
        of java.security.SecureRandom will be used. 
       |   
    |   
  |  
 | Expires Filter |  
  | Introduction |  
    
    ExpiresFilter is a Java Servlet API port of Apache
    mod_expires.
    This filter controls the setting of the Expires HTTP header and the
    max-age directive of the Cache-Control HTTP header in
    server responses. The expiration date can set to be relative to either the
    time the source file was last modified, or to the time of the client access.
     
    
    These HTTP headers are an instruction to the client about the document's
    validity and persistence. If cached, the document may be fetched from the
    cache rather than from the source until this time has passed. After that, the
    cache copy is considered "expired" and invalid, and a new copy must
    be obtained from the source.
     
    
    To modify Cache-Control directives other than max-age (see
    RFC
    2616 section 14.9), you can use other servlet filters or Apache Httpd
    mod_headers module.
     
    |   
  
  
  | Expiration headers generation eligibility |  
    
    A response is eligible to be enriched by ExpiresFilter if :
     
    - no expiration header is defined (
Expires header or the
    max-age directive of the Cache-Control header), 
    - the response status code is not excluded by the directive
    
ExpiresExcludedResponseStatusCodes, 
    - the 
Content-Type of the response matches one of the types
    defined the in ExpiresByType directives or the
    ExpiresDefault directive is defined. 
     
    
    
    Note : If Cache-Control header contains other directives than
    max-age, they are concatenated with the max-age directive
    that is added by the ExpiresFilter.
     
    |   
  | Expiration configuration selection |  
    
    The expiration configuration if elected according to the following algorithm:
     
    ExpiresByType matching the exact content-type returned by
    HttpServletResponse.getContentType() possibly including the charset
    (e.g. 'text/xml;charset=UTF-8'), 
    ExpiresByType matching the content-type without the charset if
    HttpServletResponse.getContentType() contains a charset (e.g. '
    text/xml;charset=UTF-8' -> 'text/xml'), 
    ExpiresByType matching the major type (e.g. substring before
    '/') of HttpServletResponse.getContentType()
    (e.g. 'text/xml;charset=UTF-8' -> 'text
    '), 
    ExpiresDefault 
     
    
    |   
  | Filter Class Name |  
    The filter class name for the Expires Filter is
    org.apache.catalina.filters.ExpiresFilter
    . 
    |   
  | Initialisation parameters |  
    The Expires Filter supports the following
    initialisation parameters: 
    | Attribute | Description | 
|---|
 ExpiresExcludedResponseStatusCodes | 
          
         This directive defines the http response status codes for which the
         ExpiresFilter will not generate expiration headers. By default, the
         304 status code ("Not modified") is skipped. The
         value is a comma separated list of http status codes.
          
         
         This directive is useful to ease usage of ExpiresDefault directive.
         Indeed, the behavior of 304 Not modified (which does specify a
         Content-Type header) combined with Expires and
         Cache-Control:max-age= headers can be unnecessarily tricky to
         understand.
          
         See sample below the table 
       |  ExpiresByType <content-type> | 
          
         This directive defines the value of the Expires header and the
         max-age directive of the Cache-Control header generated for
         documents of the specified type (e.g., text/html). The second
         argument sets the number of seconds that will be added to a base time to
         construct the expiration date. The Cache-Control: max-age is
         calculated by subtracting the request time from the expiration date and
         expressing the result in seconds.
          
         
         The base time is either the last modification time of the file, or the time
         of the client's access to the document. Which should be used is
         specified by the <code> field; M means that the
         file's last modification time should be used as the base time, and
         A means the client's access time should be used. The duration
         is expressed in seconds. A2592000 stands for
         access plus 30 days in alternate syntax.
          
         
         The difference in effect is subtle. If M (modification in
         alternate syntax) is used, all current copies of the document in all caches
         will expire at the same time, which can be good for something like a weekly
         notice that's always found at the same URL. If A (
         access or now in alternate syntax) is used, the date of
         expiration is different for each client; this can be good for image files
         that don't change very often, particularly for a set of related
         documents that all refer to the same images (i.e., the images will be
         accessed repeatedly within a relatively short timespan).
          
         
         Note: When the content type includes a charset (e.g.
         'ExpiresByType text/xml;charset=utf-8'), Tomcat removes blank chars
         between the ';' and the 'charset' keyword. Due to this,
         configuration of an expiration with a charset must not include
         such a space character.
          
         See sample below the table 
         
         It overrides, for the specified MIME type only, any
         expiration date set by the ExpiresDefault directive.
          
         
         You can also specify the expiration time calculation using an alternate
         syntax, described earlier in this document.
          
       |  ExpiresDefault | 
          
         This directive sets the default algorithm for calculating the
         expiration time for all documents in the affected realm. It can be
         overridden on a type-by-type basis by the ExpiresByType directive. See the
         description of that directive for details about the syntax of the
         argument, and the "alternate syntax"
         description as well.
          
       |   
    Sample : exclude response status codes 302, 500 and 503 
  |   |   |    | 
<init-param>
 <param-name>ExpiresExcludedResponseStatusCodes</param-name>
 <param-value>302, 500, 503</param-value>
</init-param>
  |   |    |   |   |  
  
    Sample for ExpiresByType initialization parameter 
           |   |   |    | 
<init-param>
   <param-name>ExpiresByType text/html</param-name>
   <param-value>access plus 1 month 15   days 2 hours</param-value>
</init-param>
<init-param>
   <!-- 2592000 seconds = 30 days -->
   <param-name>ExpiresByType image/gif</param-name>
   <param-value>A2592000</param-value>
</init-param>
          |   |    |   |   |  
  
    |   
  | Troubleshooting |  
    
    To troubleshoot, enable logging on the
    org.apache.catalina.filters.ExpiresFilter.
     
    
    Extract of logging.properties
     
      |   |   |    | 
org.apache.catalina.filters.ExpiresFilter.level = FINE
     |   |    |   |   |  
  
    
    Sample of initialization log message:
     
      |   |   |    | 
Mar 26, 2010 2:01:41 PM org.apache.catalina.filters.ExpiresFilter init
FINE: Filter initialized with configuration ExpiresFilter[
 excludedResponseStatusCode=[304],
 default=null,
 byType={
    image=ExpiresConfiguration[startingPoint=ACCESS_TIME, duration=[10 MINUTE]],
    text/css=ExpiresConfiguration[startingPoint=ACCESS_TIME, duration=[10 MINUTE]],
    text/javascript=ExpiresConfiguration[startingPoint=ACCESS_TIME, duration=[10 MINUTE]]}]
     |   |    |   |   |  
  
    
    Sample of per-request log message where ExpiresFilter adds an
    expiration date is below. The message is on one line and is wrapped here
    for better readability.
     
      |   |   |    | 
Mar 26, 2010 2:09:47 PM org.apache.catalina.filters.ExpiresFilter onBeforeWriteResponseBody
FINE: Request "/tomcat.gif" with response status "200"
 content-type "image/gif", set expiration date 3/26/10 2:19 PM
     |   |    |   |   |  
  
    
    Sample of per-request log message where ExpiresFilter does not add
    an expiration date:
     
      |   |   |    | 
Mar 26, 2010 2:10:27 PM org.apache.catalina.filters.ExpiresFilter onBeforeWriteResponseBody
FINE: Request "/docs/config/manager.html" with response status "200"
 content-type "text/html", no expiration configured
     |   |    |   |   |  
  
    |   
  |  
 | Remote Address Filter |  
  | Introduction |  
    The Remote Address Filter allows you to compare the
    IP address of the client that submitted this request against one or more
    regular expressions, and either allow the request to continue
    or refuse to process the request from this client.  
    The syntax for regular expressions is different than that for
    'standard' wildcard matching. Tomcat uses the java.util.regex
    package. Please consult the Java documentation for details of the
    expressions supported. 
    Note: There is a caveat when using this filter with
    IPv6 addresses. Format of the IP address that this valve is processing
    depends on the API that was used to obtain it. If the address was obtained
    from Java socket using Inet6Address class, its format will be
    x:x:x:x:x:x:x:x. That is, the IP address for localhost
    will be 0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1 instead of the more widely used
    ::1. Consult your access logs for the actual value. 
    See also: Remote Host Filter. 
    |   
  | Filter Class Name |  
    The filter class name for the Remote Address Filter is
    org.apache.catalina.filters.RemoteAddrFilter
    . 
    |   
  | Initialisation parameters |  
    The Remote Address Filter supports the following
    initialisation parameters: 
    | Attribute | Description | 
|---|
 allow | 
         A regular expression (using java.util.regex) that the
        remote client's IP address is compared to.  If this attribute
        is specified, the remote address MUST match for this request to be
        accepted.  If this attribute is not specified, all requests will be
        accepted UNLESS the remote address matches a deny
        pattern. 
       |  deny | 
         A regular expression (using java.util.regex) that the
        remote client's IP address is compared to.  If this attribute
        is specified, the remote address MUST NOT match for this request to be
        accepted.  If this attribute is not specified, request acceptance is
        governed solely by the accept attribute. 
       |  denyStatus | 
         HTTP response status code that is used when rejecting denied
        request. The default value is 403. For example,
        it can be set to the value 404. 
       |   
    |   
  
  |  
 | Remote Host Filter |  
  | Introduction |  
    The Remote Host Filter allows you to compare the
    hostname of the client that submitted this request against one or more
    regular expressions, and either allow the request to continue
    or refuse to process the request from this client.  
    The syntax for regular expressions is different than that for
    'standard' wildcard matching. Tomcat uses the java.util.regex
    package. Please consult the Java documentation for details of the
    expressions supported. 
    See also: Remote Address Filter. 
    |   
  | Filter Class Name |  
    The filter class name for the Remote Address Filter is
    org.apache.catalina.filters.RemoteHostFilter
    . 
    |   
  | Initialisation parameters |  
    The Remote Host Filter supports the following
    initialisation parameters: 
    | Attribute | Description | 
|---|
 allow | 
         A regular expression (using java.util.regex) that the
        remote client's hostname is compared to.  If this attribute
        is specified, the remote hostname MUST match for this request to be
        accepted.  If this attribute is not specified, all requests will be
        accepted UNLESS the remote hostname matches a deny
        pattern. 
       |  deny | 
         A regular expression (using java.util.regex) that the
        remote client's hostname is compared to.  If this attribute
        is specified, the remote hostname MUST NOT match for this request to be
        accepted.  If this attribute is not specified, request acceptance is
        governed solely by the accept attribute. 
       |  denyStatus | 
         HTTP response status code that is used when rejecting denied
        request. The default value is 403. For example,
        it can be set to the value 404. 
       |   
    |   
  |  
 | Remote IP Filter |  
  | Introduction |  
    Tomcat port of
    mod_remoteip,
    this filter replaces the apparent client remote IP address and hostname for
    the request with the IP address list presented by a proxy or a load balancer
    via a request headers (e.g. "X-Forwarded-For"). 
    Another feature of this filter is to replace the apparent scheme
    (http/https), server port and request.secure with the scheme presented
    by a proxy or a load balancer via a request header
    (e.g. "X-Forwarded-Proto"). 
    If used in conjunction with Remote Address/Host filters then this filter
    should be defined first to ensure that the correct client IP address is
    presented to the Remote Address/Host filters. 
    Note: By default this filter has no effect on the
    values that are written into access log. The original values are restored
    when request processing leaves the filter and that always happens earlier
    than access logging. To pass the remote address, remote host, server port
    and protocol values set by this filter to the access log,
    they are put into request attributes. Publishing these values here
    is enabled by default, but AccessLogValve should be explicitly
    configured to use them. See documentation for
    requestAttributesEnabled attribute of
    AccessLogValve. 
    The names of request attributes that are set by this filter
    and can be used by access logging are the following: 
    
      org.apache.catalina.AccessLog.RemoteAddr 
      org.apache.catalina.AccessLog.RemoteHost 
      org.apache.catalina.AccessLog.Protocol 
      org.apache.catalina.AccessLog.ServerPort 
     
    |   
  | Filter Class Name |  
    The filter class name for the Remote IP Filter is
    org.apache.catalina.filters.RemoteIpFilter
    . 
    |   
  
  
  
  
  
  
  | Initialisation parameters |  
    The Remote IP Filter supports the
    following initialisation parameters: 
    | Attribute | Description | 
|---|
 remoteIpHeader | 
         Name of the HTTP Header read by this valve that holds the list of
        traversed IP addresses starting from the requesting client. If not
        specified, the default of x-forwarded-for is used. 
       |  internalProxies | 
         Regular expression (using java.util.regex) that a
        proxy's IP address must match to be considered an internal proxy.
        Internal proxies that appear in the remoteIpHeader will
        be trusted and will not appear in the proxiesHeader
        value. If not specified the default value of 
        10\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}|192\.168\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}|169\.254\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}|127\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}\.\d{1,3}
         will be used. 
       |  proxiesHeader | 
         Name of the HTTP header created by this valve to hold the list of
        proxies that have been processed in the incoming
        remoteIpHeader. If not specified, the default of
        x-forwarded-by is used. 
       |  requestAttributesEnabled | 
         Set to true to set the request attributes used by
        AccessLog implementations to override the values returned by the
        request for remote address, remote host, server port and protocol.
        If not set, the default value of true will be used. 
       |  trustedProxies | 
         Regular expression (using java.util.regex) that a
        proxy's IP address must match to be considered an trusted proxy.
        Trusted proxies that appear in the remoteIpHeader will
        be trusted and will appear in the proxiesHeader value.
        If not specified, no proxies will be trusted. 
       |  protocolHeader | 
         Name of the HTTP Header read by this valve that holds the protocol
        used by the client to connect to the proxy. If not specified, the
        default of null is used. 
       |  portHeader | 
         Name of the HTTP Header read by this valve that holds the port
        used by the client to connect to the proxy. If not specified, the
        default of null is used. 
       |  protocolHeaderHttpsValue | 
         Value of the protocolHeader to indicate that it is
        an HTTPS request. If not specified, the default of https is
        used. 
       |  httpServerPort | 
         Value returned by ServletRequest.getServerPort()
        when the protocolHeader indicates http
        protocol and no portHeader is present. If not
        specified, the default of 80 is used. 
       |  httpsServerPort | 
         Value returned by ServletRequest.getServerPort()
        when the protocolHeader indicates https
        protocol and no portHeader is present. If not
        specified, the default of 443 is used. 
       |  changeLocalPort | 
         If true, the value returned by
        ServletRequest.getLocalPort() and
        ServletRequest.getServerPort() is modified by the this
        filter. If not specified, the default of false is used. 
       |   
    |   
  |  
 | Request Dumper Filter |  
  | Introduction |  
    The Request Dumper Filter logs information from the request and response
    objects and is intended to be used for debugging purposes. When using this
    Filter, it is recommended that the
    org.apache.catalina.filter.RequestDumperFilter logger is
    directed to a dedicated file and that the
    org.apache.juli.VerbatimFormmater is used. 
    WARNING: Using this filter has side-effects.  The
    output from this filter includes any parameters included with the request.
    The parameters will be decoded using the default platform encoding. Any
    subsequent calls to request.setCharacterEncoding() within
    the web application will have no effect. 
    |   
  | Filter Class Name |  
    The filter class name for the Request Dumper Filter is
    org.apache.catalina.filters.RequestDumperFilter
    . 
    |   
  
  
  |  
 | Set Character Encoding Filter |  
  | Introduction |  
    User agents don't always include character encoding information in
    requests. Depending on the how the request is processed, usually the
    default encoding of ISO-8859-1 is used. This is not always
    desirable. This filter provides options for setting that encoding or
    forcing it to a particular value. Essentially this filter calls
    ServletRequest.setCharacterEncoding() method. 
    Effectively the value set by this filter is used when parsing parameters
    in a POST request, if parameter parsing occurs later than this filter. Thus
    the order of filter mappings is important. Note that the encoding for GET
    requests is not set here, but on a Connector. See
    CharacterEncoding page in the FAQ for details. 
    |   
  | Filter Class Name |  
    The filter class name for the Set Character Encoding Filter is
    org.apache.catalina.filters.SetCharacterEncodingFilter
    . 
    |   
  | Initialisation parameters |  
    The Set Character Encoding Filter supports the following initialization
    parameters: 
    | Attribute | Description | 
|---|
 encoding | 
         Name of the character encoding which should be set. 
       |  ignore | 
         Determines if any character encoding specified by the user agent is
        ignored. If this attribute is true, any value provided by
        the user agent is ignored. If false, the encoding is only
        set if the user agent did not specify an encoding. The default value
        is false. 
       |   
    |   
  |  
 | WebDAV Fix Filter |  
  | Introduction |  
    Microsoft operating systems have two WebDAV clients. One is used with
    port 80, the other is used for all other ports. The implementation used with
    port 80 does not adhere to the WebDAV specification and fails when trying to
    communicate with the Tomcat WebDAV Servlet. This Filter provides a fix for
    this by forcing the use of the WebDAV implementation that works, even when
    connecting via port 80. 
    |   
  | Filter Class Name |  
    The filter class name for the WebDAV Fix Filter is
    org.apache.catalina.filters.WebdavFixFilter
    . 
    |   
  
  |  
 | Failed Request Filter |  
  | Introduction |  
    This filter triggers parameters parsing in a request and rejects the
    request if some parameters were skipped during parameter parsing because
    of parsing errors or request size limitations (such as
    maxParameterCount attribute in a
    Connector).
    This filter can be used to ensure that none parameter values submitted by
    client are lost. 
    Note that parameter parsing may consume the body of an HTTP request, so
    caution is needed if the servlet protected by this filter uses
    request.getInputStream() or request.getReader()
    calls. In general the risk of breaking a web application by adding this
    filter is not so high, because parameter parsing does check content type
    of the request before consuming the request body. 
    Note, that for the POST requests to be parsed correctly, a
    SetCharacterEncodingFilter filter must be configured above
    this one. See CharacterEncoding page in the FAQ for details. 
    The request is rejected with HTTP status code 400 (Bad Request). 
    |   
  | Filter Class Name |  
    The filter class name for the Failed Request Filter is
    org.apache.catalina.filters.FailedRequestFilter
    . 
    |   
  
  |  
  |