The configuration for inspecting IP addresses in an HTTP header that you
specify, instead of using the IP address that's reported by the web request
origin. Commonly, this is the X-Forwarded-For (XFF) header, but you can
specify any header name.
This configuration is used for GeoMatchStatement and
RateBasedStatement. For IPSetReferenceStatement, use
IPSetForwardedIPConfig instead.
The configuration for inspecting IP addresses in an HTTP header that you
specify, instead of using the IP address that's reported by the web request
origin. Commonly, this is the X-Forwarded-For (XFF) header, but you can
specify any header name.
This configuration is used only for IPSetReferenceStatement. For
GeoMatchStatement and RateBasedStatement, use
ForwardedIPConfig instead.
The override action to apply to the rules in a rule group. Used only for
rule statements that reference a rule group, like
RuleGroupReferenceStatement and
ManagedRuleGroupStatement.
AWS WAF assigns an ARN to each RegexPatternSet that you create.
To use a set in a rule, you provide the ARN to the Rule statement
RegexPatternSetReferenceStatement.
If you configure AWS WAF to inspect the request body, AWS WAF inspects only
the first 8192 bytes (8 KB). If the request body for your web requests never
exceeds 8192 bytes, you can create a size constraint condition and block
requests that have a request body greater than 8192 bytes.
You can tag the AWS resources that you manage through AWS WAF: web ACLs,
rule groups, IP sets, and regex pattern sets. You can't manage or view tags
through the AWS WAF console.
You can tag the AWS resources that you manage through AWS WAF: web ACLs,
rule groups, IP sets, and regex pattern sets. You can't manage or view tags
through the AWS WAF console.