TCP Proxy

Last updated: 4 minutes read.

Using Tyk as a TCP Proxy

Tyk can be used as a reverse proxy for your TCP services. It means that you can put Tyk not only on top of your APIs but on top of any network application, like databases, services using custom protocols etc.

Set via your API

To enable TCP proxying, set the protocol field either to tcp or tls. In the case of TLS, you can also specify a certificate field with a certificate ID or path to it.

Similar to the above, the proxy target scheme should be set to tcp:// or tls://, depending if your upstream is secured by TLS or not.

The simplest TCP API definition looks like this:

{
  "listen_port": 30001,
  "protocol": "tls",
  "certificate": ["<cert-id>"],
  "proxy": {
    "target_url": "tls://upstream:9191"
  }
}

Set via your Dashboard

From the API Designer > Core Settings tab, select the appropriate protocol from the Protocol field drop-down list.

Enter the network port number in the Port field.

If using TLS you can also add a PEM formatted SSL certificate in the Upstream Certificates section from the Advanced Options tab.

Protocol

Tyk supports multiplexing based on certificate SNI information, which means that you can have multiple TCP services on the same port, served on different domains. Additionally, all services on the same port should share the same protocol: either tcp, tls, http or https.

If Tyk sits behind another proxy, which has the PROXY protocol enabled, you can set enable_proxy_protocol to true.

As for features such as load balancing, service discovery, Mutual TLS (both authorisation and communication with upstream), certificate pinning, etc. All work exactly the same way as for your HTTP APIs.

Allowing specific ports

By default, you will not be able to run a service on a custom port, until you allow the required ports. Since TCP services can be configured via the Dashboard, you should be careful who can create such services, and which ports they can use. Below is an example of allowing ports in tyk.conf:

{
  ...
  "ports_whitelist": {
    "https": {
      "ranges": [
        {
          "from": 8000,
          "to": 9000
        }
      ]
    },
    "tls": {
      "ports": [
        6000,
        6015
      ]
    }
  }
  ...
}

As you can see, you can use either ranges or ports directives (or combine them).

You can also disable this behaviour and allow any TCP port by setting disable_ports_whitelist to true.

Health checks

TCP health checks are configured the same way as HTTP ones. The main difference is that instead of specifying HTTP requests, you should specify a list of commands, which send data or expect some data in response.

A simple health check which verifies only connectivity (e.g. if a port is open), can be:

{
...
	"uptime_tests": {
	  "check_list": [
	    { "url": "127.0.0.1:6379" },
        "commands": []
	  ]
	}
...
}

Complex example

Here is quite a complex example of using health checks, which shows a Redis Sentinel setup. In this configuration, we put a TCP proxy, e.g. Tyk, on top of two or more Redis nodes, and the role of the proxy will always direct the user to Redis master. To do that we will need to perform health checks against each Redis node, to detect if it is a master or not. In other words, Redis clients who communicate with Redis through the proxy will be always directed to the master, even in case of failover.

{
   "name": "Redis Sentinel",
   "listen_port": 6379,
   "protocol": "tcp",
   "enable_load_balancing": true,
   "proxy": {
	   "target_list": ["192.168.10.1:6379", "192.168.10.2:6379"]
	},
   "check_host_against_uptime_tests": true,
   "uptime_tests": {
       "check_list": [
          {
			"url": "192.168.10.1:6379",
            "commands": [
              { "name": "send", "message": "PING\r\n" },
              { "name": "expect", "message": "+PONG" },
              { "name": "send", "message": "info  replication\r\n" },
              { "name": "expect", "message": "role:master" },
              { "name": "send", "message": "QUIT\r\n" }, 
              { "name": "send", "message": "+OK" }
            ]
          },
          {
			"url": "192.168.10.2:6379",
            "commands": [
              { "name": "send", "message": "PING\r\n" },
              { "name": "expect", "message": "+PONG" },
              { "name": "send", "message": "info  replication\r\n" },
              { "name": "expect", "message": "role:master" },
              { "name": "send", "message": "QUIT\r\n" }, 
              { "name": "send", "message": "+OK" }
            ]
          }
       ]
   }
}

At the moment Tyk supports only 2 commands:

  • send send string to server
  • expect expect string from the server