Styx is a programmable reverse proxy for JVM (Java Virtual Machine). It can be used as a stand-alone application, or as a platform to build custom networking applications. It is non-blocking, fully asynchronous and event driven therefore very scalable.
Styx Proxies HTTP requests to a configurable set of Backend Services typically a cluster of web servers (multiple origins) or load balancers (e.g. AWS ELB).
Requests are subjected to an interceptor chain (conceptualy a HTTP filter chain), which can respond or modify and pass through the request to the backend services. The interceptor chain can be easily extended by Plugins written in Java.
Styx additional capabilities:
- Load balancing
- Origin health checking
- Retry mechanisms
- Connection pooling
- Admin dashboard (inspired and based on Hystix Dashboard)
- Performance and system metrics collection and reporting (Graphite compatible)
Most additional features can be extended via the Java Service Provider Interface (SPI) model.
The plugin and the SPI (Service Provider Interface) model enables developers to build custom HTTP applications easily on top of Styx, which takes care of common proxy server related functionality. Developers can then concentrate on the value-add business logic.
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Hotels.com - Built authentication, UI rendering, URL redirection and cookie cleaning plugins in front of backend services.
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Expedia - Built routing and bot detection capabilities on top of Styx. More info here.
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Homeaway - Built various plugins.
A quick-start guide can be found on our wiki.
User guide explains how to run and operate Styx as a standalone application.
Our Developer guide explains how to build applications on top of Styx. It also explains how to build and run Styx.
If you want to help to contribute to Styx project, please check Contributor guide to find out how to start.
Contact us via styx-user group.
- Styx Wiki
- Binary Downloads
- User guide
- Developer guide
- styx-user @ Google Groups
- Oracle JDK 8 - It can be built with 1.8.0_45. Earlier maintenance releases may, but are not guaranteed to work.
- Apache Maven v3
- Makefile (Optional)- There are fairly many ways of running Styx tests with different Maven profiles. Therefore, the shortcuts for most common usages are compiled into a separate (GNU) Makefile for developer's convenience. To take advantage of these shortcuts, a GNU Make build tool must be installed.
Not the Styx project that you were expecting to find?
Other open source projects called Styx on GitHub: Github Styx Projects
This project is licensed under the Apache License v2.0 - see the LICENSE.txt file for details.
Copyright 2013-2017 Expedia Inc.
Licencing terms for any derived work and dependant libraries are documented in NOTICE
files.