URL maps overview

Google Cloud Application Load Balancers and Traffic Director use a Google Cloud configuration resource called a URL map to route HTTP(S) requests to backend services or backend buckets.

For example, with an external Application Load Balancer, you can use a single URL map to route requests to different destinations based on the rules configured in the URL map:

  • Requests for https://example.com/video go to one backend service.
  • Requests for https://example.com/audio go to a different backend service.
  • Requests for https://example.com/images go to a Cloud Storage backend bucket.
  • Requests for any other host and path combination go to a default backend service.

URL maps are used with the following Google Cloud products:

There are two types of URL map resources available: global and regional. The type of resource that you use depends on the product's load balancing scheme.

Product Load-balancing scheme URL map resource type Supported destinations
Global external Application Load Balancer EXTERNAL_MANAGED Global, external Backend services, backend buckets
Classic Application Load Balancer EXTERNAL Global, external Backend services, backend buckets
Regional external Application Load Balancer EXTERNAL_MANAGED Regional, external Backend services
Cross-region internal Application Load Balancer INTERNAL_MANAGED Global, internal Backend services
Regional internal Application Load Balancer INTERNAL_MANAGED Regional, internal Backend services
Traffic Director INTERNAL_SELF_MANAGED Global, internal Backend services

Not all URL map features are available for all products. URL maps used with global external Application Load Balancers, regional external Application Load Balancers, internal Application Load Balancers and Traffic Director also support several advanced traffic management features. For more information about these differences, see Load balancer feature comparison: Routing and traffic management. In addition, regional URL maps can be a resource that's designated as a service in App Hub, which is in preview.

How URL maps work

When a request arrives at the load balancer, the load balancer routes the request to a particular backend service or a backend bucket based on the rules defined in the URL map.

A backend service represents a collection of backends, which are instances of an application or microservice. A backend bucket is a Cloud Storage bucket, which is commonly used to host static content, such as images.

For regional external Application Load Balancers, internal Application Load Balancers, and Traffic Director, possible destinations are the following:

Additionally, global external Application Load Balancers support the following:

For example, assume that you have the following setup:

  • One IP address:
    • All requests to your organization go to the same IP address and the same load balancer.
    • Traffic is directed to different backend services based on the request URL.
  • Two domains:
    • example.net hosts training videos.
    • example.org hosts your organization website.
  • Four sets of servers:
    • One hosts your organization website (backend service: org-site).
    • One hosts the overall training video website (backend service: video-site).
    • One hosts high definition (HD) training videos (backend service: video-hd).
    • One hosts standard definition (SD) training videos (backend service: video-sd).

You want the following to happen:

  • Requests to example.org (or any domain other than example.net) to go to the org-site backend service.
  • Requests to example.net that don't match more specific paths to go to the video-site backend service.
  • Requests to example.net/video/hd/* to go to the video-hd backend service.
  • Requests to example.net/video/sd/* to go to the video-sd backend service.

A --path-rule for /video/* matches URIs such as /video/test1 and /video/test2. However, this path rule doesn't match the path /video.

If the load balancer receives a request with /../ in the URL, the load balancer transforms the URL by removing the path segment before the .., and responds with the transformed URL. For example, when a request is sent for http://example.net/video/../abc, the load balancer responds with a 302 redirect to http://example.net/abc. Most clients then react by issuing a request to the URL returned by the load balancer (in this case, http://example.net/abc). This 302 redirection isn't logged in Cloud Logging.

The URL map lets you set up this type of host and path-based routing.

Example backend service setup.
Example backend service setup (click to enlarge).

Naming

Each URL map has a name. When you create an HTTP(S)-based load balancer by using the Google Cloud console, the URL map is assigned a name. This name is the same as the name of the load balancer in the Google Cloud console. If you use the Google Cloud CLI or the API, you can define a custom name for the URL map.

URL map components

A URL map is a set of Google Cloud configuration resources that direct requests for URLs to backend services or backend buckets. The URL map does so by using the hostname and path portions for each URL it processes:

  • A hostname is the domain name portion of a URL; for example, the hostname portion of the URL http://example.net/video/hd is example.net.
  • A path is the portion of a URL following the hostname and optional port number; for example, the path portion of the URL http://example.net/video/hd is /video/hd.
Load balancer configuration with basic URL map.
Load balancer configuration with basic URL map (click to enlarge).

This diagram shows the structure of the load balancing configuration objects in relation to each other.

You control which backend services or backend buckets receive incoming requests by using the following URL map configuration parameters:

  • Default backend service or default backend bucket. When you create a URL map, you must specify either a default backend service or a default backend bucket, but not both. This default represents the backend service or backend bucket to which Google Cloud directs requests for URLs with any hostname, unless there is an applicable host rule.

  • Host rule (hostRules). A host rule directs requests sent to one or more associated hostnames to a single path matcher (pathMatchers). The hostname portion of a URL is exactly matched against the set of the host rule's configured hostnames. In a URL map host and path rule, if you omit the host, the rule matches any requested host. To direct requests for http://example.net/video/hd to a path matcher, you need a single host rule that at least includes the hostname example.net. That same host rule could also handle requests for other hostnames, but it would direct them to the same path matcher.

    If you need to direct requests to different path matchers, you must use different host rules. Two host rules in a URL map can't include the same hostname.

    It is possible to match all hostnames by specifying the wildcard character * in the host rule. For example, for the URLs http://example.org, http://example.net/video/hd, and http://example.com/audio, all three hostnames example.org, example.net, and example.com can be matched by specifying * in the host rule. It is also possible to match a partial hostname by specifying the wildcard character *. For example, a host rule *.example.net is matched against both hostnames news.example.net and finance.example.net.

    • Port number. Different Application Load Balancers handle port numbers differently. In the case of the internal Application Load Balancer, you can use the Host rule parameter to specify a port number. For example, to direct example.net requests for port 8080, set the host rule to example.net:8080. In the case of the classic Application Load Balancer, only the hostname in the URL is considered when matching a host rule. For example, example.net requests for port 8080 and port 80 match the host rule example.net.
  • Path matcher (pathMatchers). A path matcher is the configuration parameter referenced by a host rule. It defines the relationship between the path portion of a URL and the backend service or backend bucket that should serve the request. A path matcher consists of two elements:

    • Path matcher default backend service or path matcher default backend bucket. For each path matcher, you must at least specify a default backend service or default backend bucket, but not both. This default represents the backend service or backend bucket to which Google Cloud directs requests for URLs whose hostnames match a host rule associated with the path matcher, and whose URL paths don't match any path rule in the path matcher.

    • Path rules. For each path matcher, you can specify one or more path rules, which are key-value pairs mapping a URL path to a single backend service or backend bucket. The next section contains more information about how path rules work.

Order of operations

For a given hostname and path in a requested URL, Google Cloud uses the following procedure to direct the request to the correct backend service or backend bucket, as configured in your URL map:

  • If the URL map does not contain a host rule for the URL's hostname, Google Cloud directs requests to the URL map's default backend service or default backend bucket, depending on which one you defined.

  • If the URL map contains a host rule that includes the URL's hostname, the path matcher referenced by that host rule is consulted:

    • If the path matcher contains a path rule that exactly matches the URL's path, Google Cloud directs requests to the backend service or backend bucket for that path rule.

    • If the path matcher does not contain a path rule that exactly matches the URL's path, but does contain a path rule ending in /* whose prefix matches the longest section of the URL's path, then Google Cloud directs requests to the backend service or backend bucket for that path rule. For example, for the URL map containing two path matcher rules /video/hd/movie1 and /video/hd/*, if the URL contains the exact path /video/hd/movie1, it is matched against that path rule.

    • If neither of the previous conditions is true, Google Cloud directs requests to the path matcher's default backend service or default backend bucket, depending on which one you defined.

Path matcher constraints

Hostnames, path matchers, and path rules have constraints.

Wildcards, regular expressions, and dynamic URLs in path rules

  • A path rule can only include a wildcard character (*) after a forward slash character (/). For example, /videos/* and /videos/hd/* are valid for path rules, but /videos* and /videos/hd* are not.

  • Path rules don't use regular expressions or substring matching. PathTemplateMatch can use simplified path matching operators. For example, path rules for either /videos/hd or /videos/hd/* don't apply to a URL with the path /video/hd-abcd. However, a path rule for /video/* does apply to that path.

  • Path matchers (and URL maps in general) don't offer features that function like Apache LocationMatch directives. If you have an application that generates dynamic URL paths that have a common prefix, such as /videos/hd-abcd and /videos/hd-pqrs, and you need to send requests made to those paths to different backend services, you might not be able to do that with a URL map. For cases containing only a few possible dynamic URLs, you might be able to create a path matcher with a limited set of path rules. For more complex cases, you need to do path-based regular expression matching on your backends.

Wildcards and pattern matching operators in path templates for route rules

Flexible pattern matching operators let you match multiple parts of a URL path, including partial URLs and suffixes (file extensions), by using wildcard syntax. These operators can be helpful when you need to route traffic and execute rewrites based on complex URL paths. You can also associate one or more path components with named variables and then refer to those variables when rewriting the URL. With named variables, you can reorder and remove URL components before the request is sent to your origin.

The following example routes traffic for an eCommerce application that has separate services for cart information and user information. You can configure routeRules with flexible pattern matching operators and named variables to send the user's unique ID to a user account details page and the user's cart information to a cart processing service after rewriting the URL.

  pathMatchers:
    - name: cart-matcher
      routeRules:
        - description: CartService
          matchRules:
            - pathTemplateMatch: '/xyzwebservices/v2/xyz/users/{username=*}/carts/{cartid=**}'
          service: cart-backend
          priority: 1
          routeAction:
            urlRewrite:
              pathTemplateRewrite: '/{username}-{cartid}/'
    - name: user-matcher
      routeRules:
        - description: UserService
          matchRules:
            - pathTemplateMatch: '/xyzwebservices/v2/xyz/users/*/accountinfo/*'
          service: user-backend
          priority: 1

Here's what happens when a client requests /xyzwebservices/v2/xyz/users/abc@xyz.com/carts/FL0001090004/entries/SJFI38u3401nms?fields=FULL&client_type=WEB, which has both user information and cart information:

  1. The request path matches the pathTemplateMatch within the cart-matcher pathMatcher. The {username=*} variable matches abc@xyz.com and the {cartid=**} variable matches FL0001090004/entries/SJFI38u3401nms.
  2. The query parameters are split off from the path, the path is rewritten based on pathTemplateRewrite, and the query parameters are appended to the rewritten path. We must only use the same variables that we used to define the pathTemplateMatch in our pathTemplateRewrite.
  3. The rewritten request is sent to cart-backend with the rewritten URL path: /abc@xyz.com-FL0001090004/entries/SJFI38u3401nms?fields=FULL&client_type=WEB.

The following happens when a client requests /xyzwebservices/v2/xyz/users/abc%40xyz.com/accountinfo/abc-1234 instead, which has only user and account information:

  1. The request path matches the pathTemplateMatch within the user-matcher pathMatcher. The first * matches abc%40xyz.com and the second * matches abc-1234.
  2. The request is sent to user-backend.

The following table outlines the syntax for path template patterns.

Operator Matches
* A single path segment, not including the surrounding path separator / characters.
** Matches zero or more characters, including any path separator / characters between multiple path segments. If other operators are included, the ** operator must be the last operator.
{name} or {name=*} A named variable matching one path segment. Matches a single path segment, not including the surrounding path separator / characters.
{name=news/*} A named variable explicitly matching two path segments: news and a * wildcard segment.
{name=*/news/*} A named variable matching three path segments.
{name=**} A named variable matching zero or more characters. If present, must be the last operator.

When you use these operators for flexible pattern matching, keep these considerations in mind:

  • Multiple operators can be combined in a single pattern.
  • Query parameters are split off from the path, the path is rewritten based on pathTemplateRewrite, and the query parameters are appended to the rewritten path.
  • Requests are not percent-encoding normalized. For example, a URL with a percent-encoded slash character (%2F) is not decoded into the unencoded form.
  • Each variable name, such as {segment} or {region}, can appear only once in the same pattern. Multiple variables of the same name are invalid and are rejected.
  • Variable names are case-sensitive and must be valid identifiers. To check if a variable name is valid, ensure that it matches the regular expression ^[a-zA-Z][a-zA-Z0-9_]*$.
    • {API}, {api}, and {api_v1} are all valid identifiers. They identify three distinct variables.
    • {1}, {_api}, and {10alpha} are not valid identifiers.
  • There's a limit of five operators per template pattern.

To execute an optional URL rewrite before the request is sent to the origin, you can use the same variables that you defined to capture a path. For example, you can reference, reorder, or omit variables in the pathTemplateRewrite field when defining urlRewrite.

When you use variables and operators for flexible pattern matching for URL rewrites, keep these considerations in mind:

  • When rewriting a URL, you can omit variables if they're not required as part of the rewritten URL.
  • Prior to any rewrites, you can identify the URL sent by the client at your origin by inspecting response headers. The original client URL is populated with the x-client-request-url header and the x-envoy-original-path header.

Hostname and host rule relationship

  • A hostname can only reference a single host rule.

  • A single host rule can process multiple hostnames.

The relationship between hostnames and host rules.
The relationship between hostnames and host rules (click to enlarge).

Host rule and path matcher relationship

  • Multiple host rules can reference a single path matcher.

  • A host rule can only reference a single path matcher.

The following diagram illustrates these points.

The relationship between host rules and path matchers.
The relationship between host rules and path matchers (click to enlarge).

URL and backend relationship

  • Each unique URL is directed to only one backend service or backend bucket. Consequently:

    • Google Cloud uses the hostname portion of a URL to select a single host rule and its referenced path matcher.

    • When you use path rules in a path matcher, you cannot create more than one path rule for the same path. For example, requests for /videos/hd cannot be directed to more than one backend service or backend bucket. Backend services can have backend instance groups or backend network endpoint groups (NEGs) in different zones and regions, and you can create backend buckets that use Multi-Regional Storage classes.

    To direct traffic for a unique URL to multiple services, you can use route rules instead of path rules. If you configure the path matcher with route rules for header or parameter matches, a unique URL can be directed to more than one backend service or bucket, based on the contents of headers or query parameters on the URL.

    Similarly for regional external Application Load Balancers and Traffic Director, weighted backend services on route actions can direct the same URL to multiple backend services or buckets, depending on the weights set on the weighted backend service.

URL maps and protocols

You can use the same URL map, host rules, and path matchers to process both HTTP and HTTPS requests submitted by clients, as long as both a target HTTP proxy and a target HTTPS proxy reference the URL map.

Simplest URL map

The simplest URL map only has a default backend service or a default backend bucket. It contains no host rules and no path matchers. Either the default backend service or the default backend bucket (whichever one you defined) handles all requested URLs.

If you define a default backend service, Google Cloud directs requests to its backend instance groups or backend NEGs according to the backend service's configuration.

URL map with no rules except default.
URL map with no rules except default (click to enlarge).

Example URL map workflow with an external Application Load Balancer

The following example illustrates the order of operations for a URL map. This example configures only the URL map for an existing classic Application Load Balancer. For conceptual simplicity, it only uses backend services; however, you can substitute backend buckets instead. To learn how to create the load balancer's other components, see Create a classic Application Load Balancer.

For more information about creating and configuring URL maps with path matchers and host rules, see the gcloud compute url-maps create documentation.

  1. Create a URL map for the load balancer and specify a default backend service. This example creates a URL map named video-org-url-map that references an existing backend service named org-site.

    gcloud compute url-maps create video-org-url-map \
        --default-service=org-site
    
  2. Create a path matcher named video-matcher with the following characteristics:

    • The default backend service is video-site, an existing backend service.
    • Add path rules that direct requests for the exact URL path /video/hd or the URL path prefix /video/hd/* to an existing backend service named video-hd.
    • Add path rules that direct requests for the exact URL path /video/sd or the URL path prefix /video/sd/* to an existing backend service named video-sd.
    gcloud compute url-maps add-path-matcher video-org-url-map \
        --path-matcher-name=video-matcher \
        --default-service=video-site \
        --path-rules=/video/hd=video-hd,/video/hd/*=video-hd,/video/sd=video-sd,/video/sd/*=video-sd
    
  3. Create a host rule for the example.net hostname that references the video-matcher path matcher.

    gcloud compute url-maps add-host-rule video-org-url-map \
        --hosts=example.net \
        --path-matcher-name=video-matcher
    

The video-org-url-map URL map should look like this:

gcloud compute url-maps describe video-org-url-map
creationTimestamp: '2021-03-05T13:34:15.833-08:00'
defaultService: https://www.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/global/backendServices/org-site
fingerprint: mfyJIT7Zurs=
hostRules:
- hosts:
  - '*'
  pathMatcher: video-matcher
- hosts:
  - example.net
  pathMatcher: video-matcher
id: '8886405179645041976'
kind: compute#urlMap
name: video-org-url-map
pathMatchers:
- defaultService: https://www.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/global/backendServices/video-site
  name: video-matcher
  pathRules:
  - paths:
    - /video/hd
    - /video/hd/*
    service: https://www.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/global/backendServices/video-hd
  - paths:
    - /video/sd
    - /video/sd/*
    service: https://www.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/global/backendServices/video-sd
selfLink: https://www.googleapis.com/compute/v1/projects/PROJECT_ID/global/urlMaps/video-org-url-map

The video-org-url-map URL map directs requested URLs to backends in the following way.

URL map with a path rule, path matchers, and a host rule.
URL map with a path rule, path matchers, and a host rule (click to enlarge).

The following table explains the request processing shown in the preceding diagram.

Hostname URL paths Selected backend service Reason for selection
Hostname:
example.org and all other hostnames different from
example.net
all paths org-site The hostname is not in any host rule of the URL map, so the request is directed to the URL map's default backend service.
Hostname:
example.net
/video
/video/examples
video-site The request goes to the default backend service because there is no path rule for /video/ or /video/*. The host rule for example.net references a path matcher, but that path matcher does not have any path rules that would apply to these paths.
Hostname:
example.net
/video/hd
/video/hd/movie1
/video/hd/movies/movie2
Other URLs that begin with /video/hd/*
video-hd A host rule for example.net references a path matcher whose path rules direct requests for URL paths that either exactly match /video/hd or that begin with /video/hd/* to the video-hd backend service.
Hostname:
example.net
/video/sd
/video/sd/show1
/video/sd/shows/show2
Other URLs that begin with /video/sd/*
video-sd A host rule for example.net references a path matcher whose path rules direct requests for URL paths that either exactly match /video/sd or that begin with /video/sd/* to the video-sd backend service.

URL redirects

A URL redirect redirects your domain's visitors from one URL to another.

A default URL redirect is not conditioned on matching any particular pattern in the incoming request. For example, you might want to use a default URL redirect to redirect any hostname to a hostname of your choice.

There are several ways to create a URL redirect, as outlined in the following table.

Method Configuration
URL map's default URL redirect Top-level defaultUrlRedirect
A path matcher's default URL redirect pathMatchers[].defaultUrlRedirect[]
A path matcher's path rule's URL redirect pathMatchers[].pathRules[].urlRedirect
A path matcher's route rule's URL redirect pathMatchers[].routeRules[].urlRedirect

Inside of a defaultUrlRedirect or urlRedirect, pathRedirect always works as follows:

  • The entire request path is replaced with the path you specify.

Inside of a defaultUrlRedirect or urlRedirect, how theprefixRedirect works depends on how you use it:

  • If you use a defaultUrlRedirect, prefixRedirect is effectively a prefix prepend because the matched path is always /.
  • If you use a urlRedirect within a path matcher's route rule or path rule, prefixRedirect is a prefix replacement based on how the requested path was matched as defined in the path rule or route rule.

Redirect examples

The following table provides some examples of redirect configurations. The right-hand column shows the API configuration for a default URL redirect.

You want Accomplished using a default URL redirect
HTTP-to-HTTPS redirect

Redirect
http://host.name/path
to
https://host.name/path
            kind: compute#urlMap
            name: web-map-http
            defaultUrlRedirect:
              httpsRedirect: True
           
HTTP-to-HTTPS + Host redirect

Redirect
http://any-host-name/path
to
https://www.example.com/path
            kind: compute#urlMap
            name: web-map-http
            defaultUrlRedirect:
              httpsRedirect: True
              hostRedirect: "www.example.com"
          
HTTP-to-HTTPS + Host redirect + Full path redirect

Redirect
http://any-host-name/path
to
https://www.example.com/newPath
            kind: compute#urlMap
            name: web-map-http
            defaultUrlRedirect:
              httpsRedirect: True
              hostRedirect: "www.example.com"
              pathRedirect: "/newPath"
           
HTTP-to-HTTPS + Host redirect + Prefix redirect

Redirect
http://any-host-name/originalPath
to
https://www.example.com/newPrefix/originalPath
            kind: compute#urlMap
            name: web-map-http
            defaultUrlRedirect:
              httpsRedirect: True
              hostRedirect: "www.example.com"
              prefixRedirect: "/newPrefix"
            

The following partial snippet annotates each API resource:

defaultUrlRedirect:
   redirectResponseCode: MOVED_PERMANENTLY_DEFAULT
   httpsRedirect: True # True if you want https://, false if you want http://
   hostRedirect: "new-host-name.com" # Omit to keep the requested host
   pathRedirect: "/new-path" # Omit to keep the requested path; mutually exclusive to prefixRedirect
   prefixRedirect: "/newPrefix" # Omit to keep the requested path; mutually exclusive to pathRedirect
   stripQuery: False # True to omit everything in the URL after ?
   ...

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