Origin steering policies
2 min read
Origin steering customizes how each pool distributes requests to its associated origins.
These distributions are a combination of two properties:
Policies
When you create a pool, you have to choose an option for Origin Steering. Weights
The weight assigned to a server controls the percentage of pool traffic sent to that server. By default, all origins within a pool have a weight of 1.
If you leave each origin with the default setting and choose a Random origin steering policy, each pool will receive the same percentage of traffic. If you use a Hash policy, that percentage will vary based on the IP distribution of your requests.
Customize weights
To customize weights when you create or edit a pool, set the Weight to a number between 0 and 1 (expressed in increments of .01). Cloudflare will then send traffic to that pool based on a combination of your origin steering policy and the following formula.
% of traffic to origin = origin weight ÷ sum of all weights in the pool
Origin weight example
Here’s an example applying weights to three origin servers with a Random origin steering policy:
- Weights: Origin Server A = 0.25; Origin Server B = 0.25; Origin Server C = 0.50
- When all origins are healthy, each origin will receive the following proportion of total traffic: A = 25%; B = 25%; C = 50%.
- When one origin is unhealthy (such as origin C), each healthy origin will receive the following proportion of total traffic: A = 50%; B=50%.
A significant amount of traffic is required for the distribution to converge on the expected values.
An origin with a weight of 0 should not receive any traffic sent to that pool (though the origin will still receive health monitor requests).
You can also see this value in the Percent field when creating or editing a pool in the dashboard.
Limitations
If you choose Hash for your Origin Steering or enable session affinity, these options can affect traffic distribution.
Additionally, session affinity takes precedence over any selected weight or origin steering policy.
When using DNS-only load balancing, DNS resolvers may cache resolved IPs for clients and affect traffic distribution.