</sect3>
+<!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
+<sect3 renderas="sect4" id="client-body-tagger">
+<title>client-body-tagger</title>
+
+<variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>Typical use:</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Block requests based on the content of the body data.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>Effect:</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Client request bodies to which this action applies are filtered on-the-fly through
+ the specified regular expression based substitutions, the result is used as tag.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>Type:</term>
+ <!-- boolean, parameterized, Multi-value -->
+ <listitem>
+ <para>Multi-value.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>Parameter:</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name of a client-body tagger, as defined in one of the
+ <link linkend="filter-file">filter files</link>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>Notes:</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Please refer to the <link linkend="filter-file">filter file chapter</link>
+ to learn how to create your own client-body tagger.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Client-body taggers are applied to each request body on its own,
+ and as the body isn't modified, each tagger "sees" the original.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Chunk-encoded request bodies currently can't be tagged.
+ Request bodies larger than the buffer-limit can't be tagged either.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term>Example usage (section):</term>
+ <listitem>
+ <screen>
+# Apply blafasel tagger.
+{+client-body-tagger{blafasel}}
+/
+
+# Block request based on the tag created by the blafasel tagger.
+{+block{Request body contains blafasel}}
+TAG:^content contains blafasel$
+</screen>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+</variablelist>
+</sect3>
+
+
<!-- ~~~~~ New section ~~~~~ -->
<sect3 renderas="sect4" id="client-header-tagger">
<title>client-header-tagger</title>
</para>
<para>
- &my-app; also supports two tagger actions:
- <literal><link linkend="client-header-tagger">client-header-tagger</link></literal>
+ &my-app; also supports three tagger actions:
+ <literal><link linkend="client-header-tagger">client-header-tagger</link></literal>,
+ <literal><link linkend="client-body-tagger">client-body-tagger</link></literal>
and
<literal><link linkend="server-header-tagger">server-header-tagger</link></literal>.
Taggers and filters use the same syntax in the filter files, the difference