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Rules match conditions

In Azure Front Door Rule sets, a rule consists of none or some match conditions and an action. This article provides detailed descriptions of match conditions you can use in Azure Front Door rule sets.

Important

Azure Front Door (classic) will be retired on March 31, 2027. To avoid any service disruption, it is important that you migrate your Azure Front Door (classic) profiles to Azure Front Door Standard or Premium tier by March 2027. For more information, see Azure Front Door (classic) retirement.

In Azure Front Door (classic) Rules engines, a rule consists of none or some match conditions and an action. This article provides detailed descriptions of match conditions you can use in Azure Front Door (classic) Rules engines.

The first part of a rule is a match condition or set of match conditions. A rule can consist of up to 10 match conditions. A match condition identifies specific types of requests for which defined actions are done. If you use multiple match conditions, the match conditions are grouped together by using AND logic. For all match conditions that support multiple values, OR logic is used.

You can use a match condition to:

  • Filter requests based on a specific IP address, port, or country/region.
  • Filter requests by header information.
  • Filter requests from mobile devices or desktop devices.
  • Filter requests from request file name and file extension.
  • Filter requests by hostname, SSL protocol, request URL, protocol, path, query string, post args, and other values.
  • Filter requests based on a specific IP address, or country/region.
  • Filter requests by header information.
  • Filter requests from mobile devices or desktop devices.
  • Filter requests from request file name and file extension.
  • Filter requests by request URL, protocol, path, query string, post arguments, and other values.

Device type

Use the device type match condition to identify requests that is from a mobile device or desktop device.

Properties

Property Supported values
Operator
  • In the Azure portal: Equal, Not Equal
  • In ARM templates: Equal; use the negateCondition property to specify Not Equal
Value Mobile, Desktop

Example

In this example, we match all requests that were detected as coming from a mobile device.

Portal screenshot showing device type match condition.

HTTP version

Use the HTTP version match condition to identify requests that are made by using a specific version of the HTTP protocol.

Note

The HTTP version match condition is only available on Azure Front Door Standard/Premium.

Properties

Property Supported values
Operator
  • In the Azure portal: Equal, Not Equal
  • In ARM templates: Equal; use the negateCondition property to specify Not Equal
Value 2.0, 1.1, 1.0, 0.9

Example

In this example, we match all requests that were sent by using the HTTP 2.0 protocol.

Portal screenshot showing HTTP version match condition.

Request cookies

Use the request cookies match condition to identify requests that includes a specific cookie.

Note

The request cookies match condition is only available on Azure Front Door Standard/Premium.

Properties

Property Supported values
Cookie name A string value representing the name of the cookie.
Operator Any operator from the standard operator list.
Value One or more string or integer values representing the value of the request header to match. If multiple values are specified, they're evaluated using OR logic.
Case transform Any transform from the standard string transforms list.

Example

In this example, we match all requests that have a cookie named deploymentStampId with a value of 1.

Portal screenshot showing request cookies match condition.

Post args

Use the post args match condition to identify requests based on the arguments provided within a POST request's body. A single match condition matches a single argument from the POST request's body. You can specify multiple values to match, which can be combined using OR logic.

Note

The post args match condition works with the application/x-www-form-urlencoded content type.

Properties

Property Supported values
Post args A string value representing the name of the POST argument.
Operator Any operator from the standard operator list.
Value One or more string or integer values representing the value of the POST argument to match. If multiple values are specified, they're evaluated using OR logic.
Case transform Any transform from the standard string transforms list.

Example

In this example, we match all POST requests where a customerName argument is provided in the request body, and where the value of customerName begins with the letter J or K. We use a case transform to convert the input values to uppercase so that values beginning with J, j, K, and k are all matched.

Portal screenshot showing post args match condition.

Query string

Use the query string match condition to identify requests that contain a specific query string. You can specify multiple values to match, which can be combined using OR logic.

Note

The entire query string is matched as a single string, without the leading ?.

Properties

Property Supported values
Operator All operators from the standard operator list are supported. However, the Any match condition matches every request, and the Not Any match condition doesn't match any request, when used with the query string match condition.
Query string One or more string or integer values representing the value of the query string to match. Don't include the ? at the start of the query string. If multiple values are specified, they're evaluated using OR logic.
Case transform Any transform from the standard string transforms list.

Example

In this example, we match all requests where the query string contains the string language=en-US. We want the match condition to be case-sensitive, so we don't transform the case.

Portal screenshot showing query string match condition.

Remote address

The remote address match condition identifies requests based on the requester's location or IP address. You can specify multiple values to match, which can be combined using OR logic.

  • Use CIDR notation when specifying IP address blocks. The syntax for an IP address block is the base IP address followed by a forward slash and the prefix size. For example:
    • IPv4 example: 5.5.5.64/26 matches any requests that arrive from addresses 5.5.5.64 through 5.5.5.127.
    • IPv6 example: 1:2:3:/48 matches any requests that arrive from addresses 1:2:3:0:0:0:0:0 through 1:2:3: ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff.
  • When you specify multiple IP addresses and IP address blocks, 'OR' logic is applied.
    • IPv4 example: if you add two IP addresses 1.2.3.4 and 10.20.30.40, the condition is matched for any requests that arrive from either address 1.2.3.4 or 10.20.30.40.
    • IPv6 example: if you add two IP addresses 1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8 and 10:20:30:40:50:60:70:80, the condition is matched for any requests that arrive from either address 1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8 or 10:20:30:40:50:60:70:80.
  • The remote address represents the original client IP that is either from the network connection or typically the X-Forwarded-For request header if the user is behind a proxy. Use the socket address match condition (available in Standard/Premium), if you need to match based on the TCP request's IP address.

Properties

Property Supported values
Operator
  • In the Azure portal: Geo Match, Geo Not Match, IP Match, or IP Not Match
  • In ARM templates: GeoMatch, IPMatch; use the negateCondition property to specify Geo Not Match or IP Not Match
Value
  • For the IP Match or IP Not Match operators: specify one or more IP address ranges. If multiple IP address ranges are specified, they're evaluated using OR logic.
  • For the Geo Match or Geo Not Match operators: specify one or more locations using their country code.

Example

In this example, we match all requests where the request didn't originate from the United States.

Portal screenshot showing remote address match condition.

Request body

The request body match condition identifies requests based on specific text that appears in the body of the request. You can specify multiple values to match, which can be combined using OR logic.

Note

If a request body exceeds 64KB in size, only the first 64KB will be considered for the request body match condition.

Properties

Property Supported values
Operator All operators from the standard operator list are supported. However, the Any match condition matches every request, and the Not Any match condition doesn't match any request, when used with the request body match condition.
Value One or more string or integer values representing the value of the request body text to match. If multiple values are specified, they're evaluated using OR logic.
Case transform Any transform from the standard string transforms list.

Example

In this example, we match all requests where the request body contains the string ERROR. We transform the request body to uppercase before evaluating the match, so error and other case variations also triggers this match condition.

Portal screenshot showing request body match condition.

Request file name

The request file name match condition identifies requests that include the specified file name in the request URL. You can specify multiple values to match, which can be combined using OR logic.

Properties

Property Supported values
Operator All operators from the standard operator list are supported. However, the Any match condition matches every request, and the Not Any match condition doesn't match any request, when used with the request file name match condition.
Value One or more string or integer values representing the value of the request file name to match. If multiple values are specified, they're evaluated using OR logic.
Case transform Any transform from the standard string transforms list.

Example

In this example, we match all requests where the request file name is media.mp4. We transform the file name to lowercase before evaluating the match, so MEDIA.MP4 and other case variations also triggers this match condition.

Portal screenshot showing request file name match condition.

Request file extension

The request file extension match condition identifies requests that include the specified file extension in the file name in the request URL. You can specify multiple values to match, which can be combined using OR logic.

Note

Don't include a leading period. For example, use html instead of .html.

Properties

Property Supported values
Operator All operators from the standard operator list are supported. However, the Any match condition matches every request, and the Not Any match condition doesn't match any request, when used with the request file extension match condition.
Value One or more string or integer values representing the value of the request file extension to match. Don't include a leading period. If multiple values are specified, they're evaluated using OR logic.
Case transform Any transform from the standard string transforms list.

Example

In this example, we match all requests where the request file extension is pdf or docx. We transform the request file extension to lowercase before evaluating the match, so PDF, DocX, and other case variations also trigger this match condition.

Portal screenshot showing request file extension match condition.

Request header

The request header match condition identifies requests that include a specific header in the request. You can use this match condition to check if a header exists or to check if the header matches a specified value. You can specify multiple values to match, which can be combined using OR logic.

Properties

Property Supported values
Header name A string value representing the name of the POST argument.
Operator Any operator from the standard operator list.
Value One or more string or integer values representing the value of the request header to match. If multiple values are specified, they're evaluated using OR logic.
Case transform Any transform from the standard string transforms list.

Example

In this example, we match all requests where the request contains a header named MyCustomHeader, regardless of its value.

Portal screenshot showing request header match condition.

Request method

The request method match condition identifies requests that use the specified HTTP request method. You can specify multiple values to match, which can be combined using OR logic.

Properties

Property Supported values
Operator
  • In the Azure portal: Equal, Not Equal
  • In ARM templates: Equal; use the negateCondition property to specify Not Equal
Request method One or more HTTP methods from: GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, HEAD, OPTIONS, TRACE. If multiple values are specified, they're evaluated using OR logic.

Example

In this example, we match all requests where the request uses the DELETE method.

Portal screenshot showing request method match condition.

Request path

The request path match condition identifies requests that include the specified path in the request URL. You can specify multiple values to match, which can be combined using OR logic.

Note

The path is the part of the URL after the hostname and a slash. For example, in the URL https://www.contoso.com/files/secure/file1.pdf, the path is files/secure/file1.pdf.

Properties

Property Supported values
Operator
  • All operators from the standard operator list are supported. However, the Any match condition matches every request, and the Not Any match condition doesn't match any request, when used with the request path match condition.
  • Wildcard: Matches when the request path matches a wildcard expression. A wildcard expression can include the * character to match zero or more characters within the path. For example, the wildcard expression files/customer*/file.pdf matches the paths files/customer1/file.pdf, files/customer109/file.pdf, and files/customer/file.pdf, but doesn't match files/customer2/anotherfile.pdf.
    • In the Azure portal: Wildcards, Not Wildcards
    • In ARM templates: Wildcard; use the negateCondition property to specify Not Wildcards
Value One or more string or integer values representing the value of the request path to match. If you specify a leading slash, it gets ignored. If multiple values are specified, they're evaluated using OR logic.
Case transform Any transform from the standard string transforms list.
Property Supported values
Operator All operators from the standard operator list are supported. However, the Any match condition matches every request, and the Not Any match condition doesn't match any request, when used with the request path match condition.
Value One or more string or integer values representing the value of the request path to match. If you specify a leading slash, it gets ignored. If multiple values are specified, they're evaluated using OR logic.
Case transform Any transform from the standard string transforms list.

Example

In this example, we match all requests where the request file path begins with files/secure/. We transform the request file extension to lowercase before evaluating the match, so requests to files/SECURE/ and other case variations also triggers this match condition.

Portal screenshot showing request path match condition.

Request protocol

The request protocol match condition identifies requests that use the specified protocol (HTTP or HTTPS).

Note

Protocol is sometimes also called scheme.

Properties

Property Supported values
Operator
  • In the Azure portal: Equal, Not Equal
  • In ARM templates: Equal; use the negateCondition property to specify Not Equal
Request method HTTP, HTTPS

Example

In this example, we match all requests where the request uses the HTTP protocol.

Portal screenshot showing request protocol match condition.

Request URL

Identifies requests that match the specified URL. The entire URL is evaluated, including the protocol and query string, but not the fragment. You can specify multiple values to match, which can be combined using OR logic.

Tip

When you use this rule condition, be sure to include the protocol and a trailing forward slash /. For example, use https://www.contoso.com/ instead of just www.contoso.com.

Properties

Property Supported values
Operator All operators from the standard operator list are supported. However, the Any match condition matches every request, and the Not Any match condition doesn't match any request, when used with the request URL match condition.
Value One or more string or integer values representing the value of the request URL to match. If multiple values are specified, they're evaluated using OR logic.
Case transform Any transform from the standard string transforms list.

Example

In this example, we match all requests where the request URL begins with https://api.contoso.com/customers/123. We transform the request file extension to lowercase before evaluating the match, so requests to https://api.contoso.com/Customers/123 and other case variations will also trigger this match condition.

Portal screenshot showing request URL match condition.

Host name

The host name match condition identifies requests based on the specified hostname in the request from the client. The match condition uses the Host header value to evaluate the hostname. You can specify multiple values to match, which can be combined using OR logic.

Properties

Property Supported values
Operator All operators from the standard operator list are supported. However, the Any match condition matches every request, and the Not Any match condition doesn't match any request, when used with the host name match condition.
Value One or more string values representing the value of request hostname to match. If multiple values are specified, they're evaluated using OR logic.
Case transform Any case transform from the standard string transforms list.

Example

In this example, we match all requests with a Host header that ends with contoso.com.

Portal screenshot showing host name match condition.

SSL protocol

The SSL protocol match condition identifies requests based on the SSL protocol of an established TLS connection. You can specify multiple values to match, which can be combined using OR logic.

Properties

Property Supported values
Operator
  • In the Azure portal: Equal, Not Equal
  • In ARM templates: Equal; use the negateCondition property to specify Not Equal
SSL protocol
  • In the Azure portal: 1.0, 1.1, 1.2
  • In ARM templates: TLSv1, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2

Example

In this example, we match all requests that use the TLS 1.2 protocol.

Portal screenshot showing SSL protocol match condition.

Socket address

The socket address match condition identifies requests based on the IP address of the direct connection to Azure Front Door edge. You can specify multiple values to match, which can be combined using OR logic.

Note

If the client used an HTTP proxy or a load balancer to send the request, the socket address is the IP address of the proxy or load balancer.

Use the remote address match condition if you need to match based on the client's original IP address.

  • Use CIDR notation when specifying IP address blocks. This means that the syntax for an IP address block is the base IP address followed by a forward slash and the prefix size. For example:
    • IPv4 example: 5.5.5.64/26 matches any requests that arrive from addresses 5.5.5.64 through 5.5.5.127.
    • IPv6 example: 1:2:3:/48 matches any requests that arrive from addresses 1:2:3:0:0:0:0:0 through 1:2:3: ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff.
  • When you specify multiple IP addresses and IP address blocks, 'OR' logic is applied.
    • IPv4 example: if you add two IP addresses 1.2.3.4 and 10.20.30.40, the condition is matched for any requests that arrive from either address 1.2.3.4 or 10.20.30.40.
    • IPv6 example: if you add two IP addresses 1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8 and 10:20:30:40:50:60:70:80, the condition is matched for any requests that arrive from either address 1:2:3:4:5:6:7:8 or 10:20:30:40:50:60:70:80.

Properties

Property Supported values
Operator
  • In the Azure portal: IP Match, Not IP Match
  • In ARM templates: IPMatch; use the negateCondition property to specify Not IP Match
Value Specify one or more IP address ranges. If multiple IP address ranges are specified, they're evaluated using OR logic.

Example

In this example, we match all requests from IP addresses in the range 5.5.5.64/26.

Portal screenshot showing socket address match condition.

Client port

The client port match condition identifies requests based on the TCP port of the client that made the request. You can specify multiple values to match, which can be combined using OR logic.

Properties

Property Supported values
Operator All operators from the standard operator list are supported. However, the Any match condition matches every request, and the Not Any match condition doesn't match any request, when used with the client port match condition.
Value One or more port numbers, expressed as integers. If multiple values are specified, they're evaluated using OR logic.

Example

In this example, we match all requests with a client port of 1234.

Portal screenshot showing client port match condition.

Server port

The server port match condition identifies requests based on the TCP port of the Azure Front Door server that accepted the request. The port must be 80 or 443. You can specify multiple values to match, which can be combined using OR logic.

Properties

Property Supported values
Operator All operators from the standard operator list are supported. However, the Any match condition matches every request, and the Not Any match condition doesn't match any request, when used with the server port match condition.
Value A port number, which must be either 80 or 443. If multiple values are specified, they're evaluated using OR logic.

Example

In this example, we match all requests with a server port of 443.

Portal screenshot showing server port match condition.

Operator list

For rules that accept values from the standard operator list, the following operators are valid:

Operator Description ARM template support
Any Matches when there's any value, regardless of what it is. operator: Any
Equal Matches when the value exactly matches the specified string. operator: Equal
Contains Matches when the value contains the specified string. operator: Contains
Less Than Matches when the length of the value is less than the specified integer. operator: LessThan
Greater Than Matches when the length of the value is greater than the specified integer. operator: GreaterThan
Less Than or Equal Matches when the length of the value is less than or equal to the specified integer. operator: LessThanOrEqual
Greater Than or Equal Matches when the length of the value is greater than or equal to the specified integer. operator: GreaterThanOrEqual
Begins With Matches when the value begins with the specified string. operator: BeginsWith
Ends With Matches when the value ends with the specified string. operator: EndsWith
Not Any Matches when there's no value. operator: Any and negateCondition : true
Not Equal Matches when the value doesn't match the specified string. operator: Equal and negateCondition : true
Not Contains Matches when the value doesn't contain the specified string. operator: Contains and negateCondition : true
Not Less Than Matches when the length of the value isn't less than the specified integer. operator: LessThan and negateCondition : true
Not Greater Than Matches when the length of the value isn't greater than the specified integer. operator: GreaterThan and negateCondition : true
Not Less Than or Equal Matches when the length of the value isn't less than or equal to the specified integer. operator: LessThanOrEqual and negateCondition : true
Not Greater Than or Equals Matches when the length of the value isn't greater than or equal to the specified integer. operator: GreaterThanOrEqual and negateCondition : true
Not Begins With Matches when the value doesn't begin with the specified string. operator: BeginsWith and negateCondition : true
Not Ends With Matches when the value doesn't end with the specified string. operator: EndsWith and negateCondition : true
Operator Description ARM template support
Any Matches when there's any value, regardless of what it is. operator: Any
Equal Matches when the value exactly matches the specified string. operator: Equal
Contains Matches when the value contains the specified string. operator: Contains
Less Than Matches when the length of the value is less than the specified integer. operator: LessThan
Greater Than Matches when the length of the value is greater than the specified integer. operator: GreaterThan
Less Than or Equal Matches when the length of the value is less than or equal to the specified integer. operator: LessThanOrEqual
Greater Than or Equal Matches when the length of the value is greater than or equal to the specified integer. operator: GreaterThanOrEqual
Begins With Matches when the value begins with the specified string. operator: BeginsWith
Ends With Matches when the value ends with the specified string. operator: EndsWith
RegEx Matches when the value matches the specified regular expression. See below for further details. operator: RegEx
Not Any Matches when there's no value. operator: Any and negateCondition : true
Not Equal Matches when the value doesn't match the specified string. operator: Equal and negateCondition : true
Not Contains Matches when the value doesn't contain the specified string. operator: Contains and negateCondition : true
Not Less Than Matches when the length of the value isn't less than the specified integer. operator: LessThan and negateCondition : true
Not Greater Than Matches when the length of the value isn't greater than the specified integer. operator: GreaterThan and negateCondition : true
Not Less Than or Equal Matches when the length of the value isn't less than or equal to the specified integer. operator: LessThanOrEqual and negateCondition : true
Not Greater Than or Equals Matches when the length of the value isn't greater than or equal to the specified integer. operator: GreaterThanOrEqual and negateCondition : true
Not Begins With Matches when the value doesn't begin with the specified string. operator: BeginsWith and negateCondition : true
Not Ends With Matches when the value doesn't end with the specified string. operator: EndsWith and negateCondition : true
Not RegEx Matches when the value doesn't match the specified regular expression. See below for further details. operator: RegEx and negateCondition : true

Tip

For numeric operators like Less than and Greater than or equals, the comparison used is based on length. The value in the match condition should be an integer that specifies the length you want to compare.

Regular expressions

Regular expressions don't support the following operations:

  • Backreferences and capturing subexpressions.
  • Arbitrary zero-width assertions.
  • Subroutine references and recursive patterns.
  • Conditional patterns.
  • Backtracking control verbs.
  • The \C single-byte directive.
  • The \R newline match directive.
  • The \K start of match reset directive.
  • Callouts and embedded code.
  • Atomic grouping and possessive quantifiers.

String transform list

For rules that can transform strings, the following transforms are valid:

Transform Description ARM template support
To lowercase Converts the string to the lowercase representation. Lowercase
To uppercase Converts the string to the uppercase representation. Uppercase
Trim Trims leading and trailing whitespace from the string. Trim
Remove nulls Removes null values from the string. RemoveNulls
URL encode URL-encodes the string. UrlEncode
URL decode URL-decodes the string. UrlDecode

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