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Values

When an HTTP request reaches the Cloudflare global network, Cloudflare creates a table of field–value pairs against which to match expressions. This table exists for as long as the current request is being processed.

The values that populate the lookup tables of the Rules language are drawn from a variety of sources:

  • Primitive properties are obtained directly from the request (http.request.uri.path, for example).
  • Derived values are the product of a transformation, composition, or basic operation. For example, the transformation lower(http.request.uri.path) converts the value of http.request.uri.path to lowercase.
  • Computed values are the product of a lookup, computation, or other intelligence. For example, Cloudflare uses a machine learning process to dynamically calculate attack scores, represented by the cf.waf.score field.

Besides these values, expressions may also contain literal values. These are static, known values that you incorporate into expressions to compare them with values from request/response fields with or without any transformations.

When working with values in rule expressions, keep in mind the information in the following sections.

​​ String values and regular expressions

Strings are sequences of bytes enclosed by specific delimiters.

Cloudflare rules support two formats for specifying literal strings: quoted literal strings and raw strings. These formats have different delimiters and escaping mechanisms.

While you can use either of the two string formats to specify regular expressions in an expression, Cloudflare recommends that you use the raw string syntax, since the quoted string syntax has complex escaping rules and can lead to unexpected behaviors if not thoroughly tested.

Regular expression matching is performed using the Rust regular expression engine.

​​ Quoted string syntax

When using the quoted string syntax, a string literal is delimited by " (double quote) characters. This format requires that you escape special characters " and \ using \" and \\, respectively.

The quoted string syntax has the following additional escaping requirements:

  • When used to specify a regular expression on the right-hand side of the regex operator (matches or ~), the string is parsed using regex escaping rules.
  • When used on the right hand-side of expressions with other operators, or in function parameters, the string is parsed using basic escaping rules.
Examples
# Test if URI path contains 'a"b'
http.request.uri.path matches "a\"b"
# Test if URI path contains 'a"#b'
http.request.uri.path matches "a\"#b"
# Replace 'a' with '\' (backslash)
regex_replace(http.host, "a", "\\")

​​ Raw string syntax

To specify a string (or regular expression) using the raw string syntax you use special delimiters:

  • The initial delimiter is composed of an r character, optionally followed by one or more # characters (up to 255), followed by a " (double quote) character.
  • The ending delimiter is a " (double quote) character followed by the same number of # characters as in the initial delimiter (from 0 to 255).

In a raw string there are no special characters, so all characters up to the ending delimiter are interpreted as is (there are no escape sequences).

Unlike the quoted string syntax, the raw string syntax is always the same, regardless of the context where it is being used (for example, as a regular expression with a regex operator or as a parameter of a function call).

Examples
# Test if URI path contains 'a"b'
http.request.uri.path matches r#"a"b"#
# Test if URI path contains 'a"#b'
http.request.uri.path matches r##"a"#b"##
# Replace '\' (backslash) with 'a'
# You must still escape the '\' character in the following raw string because it has a special meaning in regular expressions
regex_replace(http.host, r"\\", "a")
# Test if URI path ends with '/api/login.aspx'
# You must still escape the '.' character in the following raw string because it has a special meaning in regular expressions ("any character")
http.request.uri.path matches r"/api/login\.aspx$"

​​ Case sensitivity and regular expressions in values

Since the evaluation of string literal values in expressions is case-sensitive, consider writing more than one simple expression to capture variants.

Cloudflare Business and Enterprise customer plans have access to the matches comparison operator which supports regular expressions, so that you can capture multiple variants of a value with a single expression.

​​ Boolean values

Simple expressions using boolean fields do not require operator notations or values. You only need to insert the field on its own, as shown in the ssl example below.

ssl

This simple expression matches requests where the value of the ssl field is true.

To match requests where ssl is false, use the boolean not operator :

not ssl

​​ Arrays

The Cloudflare Rules language includes fields of Array type and functions with Array arguments and return values.

You can access individual array elements using an index (a non-negative value) between square brackets ([]). Array indexes start at 0 (zero).

Use the special notation [*] when specifying an expression that will be evaluated for each array element (like the map high-order function). This special index notation will unpack the array, call the enclosing function for all its elements individually, and return a new array containing all the individual return values.

​​ Examples

Consider the http.request.headers.names field with type Array<String> in the following examples:

  • Obtain the first element in the array:
    http.request.headers.names[0]

  • Check if the first array element is equal to Content-Type (case sensitive):
    http.request.headers.names[0] == "Content-Type"

  • Check if any array element is equal to Content-Type (case sensitive):
    any(http.request.headers.names[*] == "Content-Type")

  • Check if any array element is equal to Content-Type, ignoring the case:
    any(lower(http.request.headers.names[*])[*] == "content-type")

In the last example, the lower() function includes the [*] notation so that the function is evaluated for each array element. This function, used along [*], returns a new array where each element of the input array is converted to lowercase. Then, the string comparison uses [*] to transform the array resulting from applying lower() to each header name into an array of boolean values. Finally, any() evaluates to true if at least one of these array elements is true.

​​ Notes

It is not possible to define your own arrays. You can only use arrays returned by fields, either directly or modified by functions.

Accessing an out-of-bounds array index produces a “missing value”. A missing value has the following behavior:

  • Any comparison <expr> <op> <literal> where <expr> evaluates to a missing value will evaluate to false.
  • Function calls like function(<expr>), where <expr> evaluates to a missing value, will return a missing value in most cases, but the exact behavior can vary per function.

You can only use [*] multiple times in the same expression if applied to the same array. Also, you can only use [*] in the first argument of a function call.

The Rules language operators do not directly support arrays or the [*] operator — however, they support indexed array elements like array_value[0]. For example, you cannot use [*] with the == operator outside the context of an enclosing function call:

  • http.request.headers.names[*] == "Content-Type"Invalid expression
  • any(http.request.headers.names[*] == "Content-Type")Valid expression

​​ Maps

A map, also called associative array, is a data structure that stores a collection of key-value pairs, where the key must be a String and the value can be of any type (for example, a String or an array of values). All values in a map must have the same type.

The Cloudflare Rules language includes several fields of Map data type. The type notation for map fields, for example Map<Array<String>>, indicates the data type of the values associated with keys (an Array of String elements). This means that when you access the value of key "foo" you will get either an array of String elements or a missing value.

To access a value in a map, enter the key between square brackets ([]):

<MAP_FIELD>[<KEY>]

For maps where the values have an Array type, you cannot directly use operators with the obtained (array) value, since these operators do not support arrays directly. To use an operator on an item of the array, use the special notation [*] when specifying an expression. This special index notation will unpack the array, call the enclosing function for all its elements individually, and return a new array containing all the individual return values.

​​ Examples

The following example is based on the http.request.headers field with a data type of Map<Array<String>>, where array elements are of String data type.

If an incoming HTTP request included a single Accept: application/json HTTP header, the following expressions would evaluate to the indicated values:

http.request.headers["accept"] # ==> ["application/json"]
http.request.headers["accept"][0] # ==> "application/json"
any(http.request.headers["accept"][*] == "application/json") # ==> true
any(http.request.headers["accept"][*] == "text/plain") # ==> false

The following example is based on the http.request.uri.args field with a data type of Map<Array<String>>, where array elements are of String data type.

If an HTTP request included three filter URI arguments waf, botm, and cdn, the following expressions would evaluate to the indicated values:

# Example request URL:
# https://example.com/?filter=waf&filter=botm&filter=cdn
http.request.uri.args["filter"] # ==> ["waf", "botm", "cdn"]
len(http.request.uri.args["filter"][1]) # ==> 4
# Check if the length of all 'filter' values is always 3 or 4
all(len(http.request.uri.args["filter"][*])[*] in {3 4}) # ==> true
# Check if the length of 'filter' values (if any) is never 3 or 4
all(not len(http.request.uri.args["filter"][*])[*] in {3 4}) # ==> false
# Check if the http.request.uri.args map contains a "filter" key
len(http.request.uri.args["filter"]) >= 0 # ==> true
# Check if the http.request.uri.args map does not contain an "order" key
not len(http.request.uri.args["order"]) >= 0 # ==> true

For more information on any(), all(), len(), and other available functions, refer to Functions.

​​ Notes

It is not possible to define your own maps. You can only use maps returned by fields.

Accessing a non-existing key in a map produces a “missing value”. A missing value has the following behavior:

  • Any comparison <expr> <op> <literal> where <expr> evaluates to a missing value will evaluate to false.
  • Function calls like function(<expr>), where <expr> evaluates to a missing value, will return a missing value in most cases, but the exact behavior can vary per function.

​​ Lists

Lists allow you to create a group of items and refer to them collectively, by name, in your expressions. Each list type supports items of a specific data type. All items in a list must have the same data type. For details on the available list types, refer to Lists.

To refer to a list in a rule expression, use $<list_name> and specify the in operator. Only one value in the list has to match the left-hand side of the expression (before the in operator) for the simple expression to evaluate to true. If there is no match, the expression will evaluate to false.

The following example expression filters requests from IP addresses that are in an IP list named office_network:

(ip.src in $office_network)

List names can only include lowercase letters, numbers, and the underscore (_) character. For guidance on creating and managing lists, refer to Lists.

​​ Inline lists

Inline lists allow you to directly include a list of values in a simple expression that uses the in operator.

Elements in an inline list can be strings, integers, or IP addresses/ranges. All elements of an inline list must have the same data type and they must be literal values. To specify inline list elements, enter them individually, separating elements with a space. Inline lists can contain duplicate values.

Additionally, for some data types you can use ranges as elements:

  • For integer values, enter ranges in the form <start_value>..<end_value>. An inline list can contain both integer ranges and integer values.

  • For IP addresses, you can enter:

    • Explicit IP ranges in the form <start_address>..<end_address> (for example, 198.51.100.3..198.51.100.7).
    • CIDR ranges (for example, 192.0.2.0/24 or 2001:0db8::/32).

    An inline list can contain explicit IP ranges, CIDR ranges, and individual IP addresses.

Examples
http.host in {"example.com" "example.net"}
ip.src in {198.51.100.1 198.51.100.3..198.51.100.7 192.0.2.0/24 2001:0db8::/32}
tcp.dstport in {8000..8009 8080..8089}