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Monitor Layer 7
- Jul 15, 2022
Please try a Send-string of (and make sure to replace the hostname of abc with the hostname you were actually using in your cURL request):
GET /swagger/index.html HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: abc:8010\r\nUser-Agent: curl/7.79.1\r\nAccept: */*\r\n\r\n
... and a Receive-string of (accepting status codes of 200 or 301 or 301). This string is handled as a non case-sensitive regular expression:
^HTTP/1\.[01]\s+(200|301|302)
It will look for a response using HTTP/1.0 or HTTP/1.1 followed by at least one whitespace character (\s+) followed by one of the acceptable status code.
If you are absolutely sure there will be a HTTP/1.1 200 OK in the response, you can put it in as well. The dot (.) in "HTTP/1.1" is handled as a wildcard (it is still treated as a regexp), but this shouldn´t matter.
Keep in mind, that some webservers don´t reply with a reason phrase (here it is the OK; might be MOVED PERMANENTLY, FOUND etc.). That´s why it is now best practice not to include it in your receive string.
As Dario_Garrido wrote, adding the http protocol and the host header does the trick.
Without adding the protocol your server will very likely respond with a bad request (status code 400), because it assumes you are trying to use HTTP/0.9.
Please see this article for details: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Basics_of_HTTP/Evolution_of_HTTP
Even the BIG-IP automatically adds a double carriage return / line feed sequence by default, it is best practice to add it yourself in the send-string:
GET /<filename/path> HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: <hostname>\r\n\r\n
Hi StephanManthey and Dario_Garrido
I have used test monitor follow https://support.f5.com/csp/article/K81239024 . After I tried GET it working
GET /<filename/path>
Recevie string: abc
If i used recevie code it fail.
Thanks
Hoang Hung
- Jul 15, 2022
Please try a Send-string of (and make sure to replace the hostname of abc with the hostname you were actually using in your cURL request):
GET /swagger/index.html HTTP/1.1\r\nHost: abc:8010\r\nUser-Agent: curl/7.79.1\r\nAccept: */*\r\n\r\n
... and a Receive-string of (accepting status codes of 200 or 301 or 301). This string is handled as a non case-sensitive regular expression:
^HTTP/1\.[01]\s+(200|301|302)
It will look for a response using HTTP/1.0 or HTTP/1.1 followed by at least one whitespace character (\s+) followed by one of the acceptable status code.
If you are absolutely sure there will be a HTTP/1.1 200 OK in the response, you can put it in as well. The dot (.) in "HTTP/1.1" is handled as a wildcard (it is still treated as a regexp), but this shouldn´t matter.
Keep in mind, that some webservers don´t reply with a reason phrase (here it is the OK; might be MOVED PERMANENTLY, FOUND etc.). That´s why it is now best practice not to include it in your receive string.
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