Free tier API with Apache APISIX

Author: Nicolas Frankel

Original post on Foojay: Read More

Lots of service providers offer a free tier of their service. The idea is to let you kick their service’s tires freely. If you need to go above the free tier at any point, you’ll likely stay on the service and pay.

In this day and age, most services are online and accessible via an API. Today, we will implement a free tier with Apache APISIX.

A naive approach

I implemented a free tier in my post Evolving your RESTful APIs, a step-by-step approach, albeit in a very naive way. I copy-pasted the limit-count plugin and added my required logic.

function _M.access(conf, ctx)
core.log.info(“ver: “, ctx.conf_version)

— no limit if the request is authenticated
local key = core.request.header(ctx, conf.header) #1
if key then
local consumer_conf = consumer_mod.plugin(“key-auth”) #2
if consumer_conf then
local consumers = lrucache(“consumers_key”, consumer_conf.conf_version, #3
create_consume_cache, consumer_conf)
local consumer = consumers[key] #4
if consumer then #5
return
end
end
end
— rest of the logic

Get the configured request header value
Get the consumer’s key-auth configuration
Get consumers
Get the consumer with the passed API key if they exist
If they exist, bypass the rate limiting logic

The downside of this approach is that the code is now my own. It has evolved since I copied it, and I’m stuck with the version I copied. We can do better, with the help of the vars parameter on routes.

APISIX route matching

APISIX delegates its matching rule to a router.
Standard matching parameters include:

The URI
The HTTP method. By default, all methods match.
The host
The remote address

Most users do match on the URI; a small minority use HTTP methods and the host. However, they are not the only matching parameters. Knowing the rest will bring you into the world of advanced users of APISIX.

Let’s take a simple example, header-based API versioning. You’d need actually to match a specific HTTP request header. I’ve already described how to do it previously. In essence, vars is an additional matching criterion that allows the evaluation of APISIX and nginx variables.

routes:
– uri: /*
upstream_id: 1
vars: [[ “http_accept”, “==”, “vnd.ch.frankel.myservice.v1+json” ]]

The above route will match if, and only if, the HTTP Accept header is equal to vnd.ch.frankel.myservice.v1+json. You can find the complete list of supported operators in the lua-resty-expr project.

APISIX matches routes in a non-specified order by default. If URIs are disjointed, that’s not an issue.

routes:
– uri: /*
upstream_id: 1
vars: [[ “http_accept”, “==”, “vnd.ch.frankel.myservice.v1+json” ]] – uri: /*
upstream_id: 2
vars: [[ “http_accept”, “==”, “vnd.ch.frankel.myservice.v2+json” ]]

Problems arise when URIs are somehow not disjointed. For example, imagine I want to set a default route for unversioned calls.

routes:
– uri: /*
upstream_id: 1
vars: [[ “http_accept”, “==”, “vnd.ch.frankel.myservice.v1+json” ]] – uri: /*
upstream_id: 2
vars: [[ “http_accept”, “==”, “vnd.ch.frankel.myservice.v2+json” ]] – uri: /*
upstream_id: 1

We need the third route to be evaluated last. If it’s evaluated first, it will match all requests, regardless of their HTTP headers. APISIX offers the priority parameter to order route evaluation. By default, a route’s priority is 0. Let’s use priority to implement the versioning correctly:

routes:
– uri: /*
upstream_id: 1
vars: [[ “http_accept”, “==”, “vnd.ch.frankel.myservice.v1+json” ]] priority: 10 #1
– uri: /*
upstream_id: 2
vars: [[ “http_accept”, “==”, “vnd.ch.frankel.myservice.v2+json” ]] priority: 10 #1
– uri: /*
upstream_id: 1

Evaluated first. The order is not relevant since the URIs are disjointed.

Implementing free tier with matching rules

We are now ready to implement our free tier with matching rules.

The first route to be evaluated should be the one with authentication and no rate limit:

routes:
– uri: /get
upstream_id: 1
vars: [[ “http_apikey”, “~~”, “.*”]] #1
plugins:
key-auth: ~ #2

Match if the request has an HTTP header named apikey
Authenticate the request
Evaluate first

The other route is evaluated afterward.

– uri: /get
upstream_id: 1
plugins:
limit-count: #1
count: 1
time_window: 60
rejected_code: 429

Rate limit this route

When you configure APISIX with the above snippets, and it receives a request to /get, it tries to match the first route only if it has an apikey request header:

If it has one:

The key-auth plugin kicks in
If it succeeds, APISIX forwars the request to the upstream
If it fails, APISIX returns a 403 HTTP status code

If it has no such request header, it matches the second route with a rate limit.

Conclusion

A free tier is a must for any API service provider worth its salt. In this post, I’ve explained how to configure such free tier with Apache APISIX.

The complete source code for this post can be found on GitHub.

To go further:

Consumer
limit-count plugin
router-radixtree
lua-resty-expr

Originally published at A Java Geek on July 28th, 2024

The post Free tier API with Apache APISIX appeared first on foojay.