HAProxy

Free and open-source proxy software From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

HAProxy is a free and open source software that provides a high availability load balancer and proxy (forward proxy,[2] reverse proxy) for TCP and HTTP-based applications that spreads requests across multiple servers.[3] It is written in C[4] and has a reputation for being fast and efficient (in terms of processor and memory usage).[5]

Original authorWilly Tarreau
Initial releaseDecember 16, 2001; 24 years ago (2001-12-16)
Stable release
3.2.0[1] Edit this on Wikidata / 28 May 2025
Written inC
Quick facts Original author, Initial release ...
HAProxy
Original authorWilly Tarreau
Initial releaseDecember 16, 2001; 24 years ago (2001-12-16)
Stable release
3.2.0[1] Edit this on Wikidata / 28 May 2025
Written inC
Operating systemLinux, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Solaris (8/9/10), AIX (5.1–5.3), macOS, Cygwin
LicenseGNU General Public License Version 2
Websitewww.haproxy.org Edit this on Wikidata
Repository
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HAProxy is used by a number of high-profile websites including GoDaddy, GitHub, Bitbucket,[6] Stack Overflow,[7] Reddit, Slack,[8] Speedtest.net, Tumblr, Twitter[9][10] and Tuenti[11] and is used in the OpsWorks product from Amazon Web Services.[12]

History

HAProxy was written in 2000[13] by Willy Tarreau,[14] a core contributor to the Linux kernel,[15] who still maintains the project.

In 2013, the company HAProxy Technologies, LLC was created.[citation needed] The company provides a commercial offering, HAProxy Enterprise and appliance-based application-delivery controllers named ALOHA.

Features

HAProxy has the following features:

HAProxy Community vs HAProxy Enterprise

HAProxy Enterprise Edition is an enterprise-class version of HAProxy that includes enterprise suite of add-ons, expert support, and professional services. It has some features backported from the HAProxy development branch.[20]

ALOHA

HAProxy Technologies’ ALOHA is a plug-and-play load-balancing appliance that can be deployed in any environment. ALOHA provides a graphical interface and a templating system that can be used to deploy and configure the appliance.[21]

Versions

HAProxy has had the following version releases:[22]

More information Version, Release date ...
Version Release date End of life
Unsupported: 1.0 2001-12-16 2001-12-30
Unsupported: 1.1 2002-03-10 2006-01-29
Unsupported: 1.2 2003-11-09 2011-08-06
Unsupported: 1.3 2006-06-29 2016-03-14
Unsupported: 1.4 2010-02-26 2018-02-08
Unsupported: 1.5 2014-06-19 2020-01-10
Unsupported: 1.6 2015-10-13 2020-Q4
Unsupported: 1.7 2016-11-25 2021-Q4
Unsupported: 1.8 2017-11-26 2022-Q4
Unsupported: 1.9 2018-12-19 2020-Q2
Unsupported: 2.0 2019-06-16 2024-Q2
Unsupported: 2.1 2019-11-25 2021-Q1
Supported: 2.2 LTS 2020-07-07 2025-Q2 (critical fixes only)
Unsupported: 2.3 2020-11-05 2022-Q1
Supported: 2.4 LTS 2021-05-14 2026-Q2 (critical fixes only)
Unsupported: 2.5 2021-11-23 2023-Q1
Supported: 2.6 LTS 2022-05-31 2027-Q2
Unsupported: 2.7 2022-12-01 2024-Q1
Supported: 2.8 LTS 2023-05-31 2028-Q2
Unsupported: 2.9 2023-12-05 2025-Q1
Supported: 3.0 LTS 2024-05-29 2029-Q2
Supported: 3.1 2024-11-26 2026-Q1
Latest version: 3.2 LTS 2025-05-28 2030-Q2
Legend:
Unsupported
Supported
Latest version
Future version
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Performance

Servers equipped with 6 to 8 cores generally achieve between 200,000 and 500,000 requests per second, and have no trouble saturating a 25 Gbit/s connection under Linux.[23] 64-core ARM servers were shown to reach 2 million requests per second and 100 Gbit/s.[24]

Similar software

See also

References

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