Conditions reference

This page applies to Apigee and Apigee hybrid.

View Apigee Edge documentation.

Conditions enable API proxies to behave dynamically at runtime. Conditions define operations on variables, which are evaluated by the Apigee processing pipeline. Conditional statements are boolean and always evaluate to true or false.

Conditions overview

This section describes how and where to use conditional statements with Apigee. In addition, the following sections describe the syntax:

Structure of conditional statements

The basic structure of a conditional statement is:

<Condition>variable.name operator "value"</Condition>

For example:

<Condition>request.verb = "GET"</Condition>

You can combine conditions with AND to enforce more than one at a time. For example, the following conditions evaluate to true only if the URI of the request matches /statuses and the HTTP verb of the request is GET:

<Condition>(proxy.pathsuffix MatchesPath "/statuses") and (request.verb = "GET")</Condition>

Where you can use conditional statements

You can use conditions to control behavior in the following:

Policy execution

Using conditional statements, you can control the enforcement of policies. A common use case is conditional transformation of response messages, based on HTTP header or message content.

The following example conditionally transforms XML to JSON based on the Accept header:

<Step>
  <Condition>request.header.accept = "application/json"</Condition>
  <Name>XMLToJSON</Name>
</Step>

Flow execution

Using conditional statements, you can control the execution of named flows in ProxyEndpoints and TargetEndpoints. Note that only named flows can be executed conditionally. Preflows and postflows (both request and response) on ProxyEndpoints and TargetEndpoints execute for every transaction, and thus provide unconditional failsafe capabilities.

For example, to execute a conditional request flow based on the HTTP verb of the request message, and conditional response flow based on a (potential) HTTP status code representing an error:

<Flow name="GetRequests">
  <Condition>request.verb = "GET"</Condition>
  <Request>
    <Step>
      <Condition>request.path MatchesPath "/statuses/**"</Condition>
      <Name>StatusesRequestPolicy</Name>
    </Step>
  </Request>
  <Response>
    <Step>
      <Condition>(response.status.code = 503) or (response.status.code = 400)</Condition>
      <Name>MaintenancePolicy</Name>
    </Step>
  </Response>
</Flow>

Target endpoint route selection

Using conditional statements, you can control the target endpoint invoked by proxy endpoint configuration. A route rule forwards a request to a particular target endpoint. When more than one target endpoint is available, the route rule is evaluated for its condition and, if true, the request is forwarded to the named target endpoint.

For example, to conditionally route messages to designated target endpoints based on Content-Type:

<RouteRule name="default">
 <!--this routing executes if the header indicates that this is an XML call. If true, the call is routed to the endpoint XMLTargetEndpoint-->
  <Condition>request.header.Content-Type = "text/xml"</Condition>
  <TargetEndpoint>XmlTargetEndpoint</TargetEndpoint>
</RouteRule>

See Flow variables and conditions for more information.

Path expressions

Path expressions are used for matching URI paths, using * to represent a single path element and ** to represent multiple URI levels.

For example:

Pattern Sample URI paths matched
/*/a/ /x/a/ or /y/a/
/*/a/* /x/a/b or /y/a/foo
/*/a/** /x/a/b/c/d
/*/a/*/feed/ /x/a/b/feed/ or /y/a/foo/feed/
/a/**/feed/** /a/b/feed/rss/1234

% is treated as an escape character. The pattern %{user%} matches {user} but not user.

Variables

You can use both built-in flow variables and custom variables in conditional statements. For more information, see:

Operators

When using operators, observe the following restrictions:

  • Operators cannot be used as variable names.
  • A space character is required before and after an operator.
  • To include an operator in a variable, a variable name must be enclosed in single quotes. For example, 'request.header.help!me'.
  • Arithmetic operators (+ * - / %) are not supported.
  • Java precedence is used for operators.
  • Apigee relies on regular expressions as implemented in java.util.regex.

The following table lists the supported operators. You can use the symbol or the word in your expressions:

Symbol Word Description
! Not, not Unary operator (takes a single input)
= Equals, Is Equals to (case sensitive)
!= NotEquals, IsNot Not equals (case sensitive)
:= EqualsCaseInsensitive Equals but is case insensitive
> or &gt; GreaterThan Greater than. If you use > when defining the condition in the Apigee UI, it is converted to &gt;.
>= or &gt;= GreaterThanOrEquals Greater than or equal to. If you use >= when defining the condition in the Apigee UI, it is converted to &gt;=.
&lt; LesserThan Lesser than. The Apigee UI does not support the literal <.
&lt;= LesserThanOrEquals Lesser than or equal to. The Apigee UI does not support the literal <=.
&& And, and And
|| Or The Or operator is not case sensitive. For example, OR, Or, and or are all valid.
() Groups an expression. The ( opens the expression and ) closes it.
~~ JavaRegex

Matches a javax.util.regex compliant regular expression. The match is case-sensitive. For examples, see Pattern matching.

~ Matches, Like Matches a glob-style pattern using the * wildcard character. The match is case-sensitive. For examples, see Pattern matching.
~/ MatchesPath, LikePath Matches a path expression. The match is case-sensitive. For examples, see Pattern matching.
=| StartsWith Matches the first characters of a string. The match is case-sensitive.

Operands

Apigee adapts operands to a common data type before comparing them. For example, if the response status code is 404, the expression response.status.code = "400" and the response.status.code = 400 are equivalent.

For numeric operands, the data type is interpreted as integer unless the value is terminated as follows:

  • f or F (float, for example, 3.142f, 91.1F)
  • d or D (double, for example, 3.142d, 100.123D)
  • l or L (long, for example, 12321421312L)

In these cases, the system performs adaptations shown in the following table (where RHS refers to the right side of the equation and LHS is the left side):

RHS LHS Boolean Integer Long Float Double String Comparable Object
Boolean Boolean Integer Long Float Double String -
Integer Integer Integer Long Float Double String Comparable -
Long Long Long Long Float Double String Comparable -
Float Float Float Float Float Double String Comparable -
Double Double Double Double Double Double String Comparable -
String String String String String String String Comparable -
Comparable Comparable Comparable Comparable Comparable Comparable Comparable Comparable -
Object - - - - - - - -

Null operands

The following table shows whether conditions evaluate to true or false when values are null on the left-hand side (LHS) and/or right-hand side (RHS) of the operand shown:

Operator LHS null RHS null LHS and RHS null
=, ==, := false false true
=| false false false
!= true true false
> or &gt; true false false
>= or &gt;= false true true
&lt; true false false
&lt;= true false true
~ false N/A false
~~ false N/A false
!~ true false false
~/ false N/A false

Literals

In addition to string and numeric literals, you can use the following literals in conditional statements:

  • null
  • true
  • false

For example:

  • request.header.host is null
  • flow.cachehit is true

Examples

<RouteRule name="default">
     <Condition>request.header.content-type = "text/xml"</Condition>
     <TargetEndpoint>XmlTargetEndpoint</TargetEndpoint>
</RouteRule>
<Step>
    <Condition>response.status.code = 503</Condition>
    <Name>MaintenancePolicy</Name>
</Step>
<Flow name="GetRequests">
    <Condition>response.verb="GET"</Condition>
    <Request>
        <Step>
            <Condition>request.path ~ "/statuses/**"</Condition>
            <Name>StatusesRequestPolicy</Name>
        </Step>
    </Request>
    <Response>
        <Step>
            <Condition>(response.status.code = 503) or (response.status.code = 400)</Condition>
            <Name>MaintenancePolicy</Name>
        </Step>
    </Response>
</Flow>