1VARNISH-CLI(7) VARNISH-CLI(7)
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6 varnish-cli - Varnish Command Line Interface
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9 Varnish has a command line interface (CLI) which can control and change
10 most of the operational parameters and the configuration of Varnish,
11 without interrupting the running service.
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13 The CLI can be used for the following tasks:
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15 configuration
16 You can upload, change and delete VCL files from the CLI.
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18 parameters
19 You can inspect and change the various parameters Varnish has
20 available through the CLI. The individual parameters are docu‐
21 mented in the varnishd(1) man page.
22
23 bans Bans are filters that are applied to keep Varnish from serving
24 stale content. When you issue a ban Varnish will not serve any
25 banned object from cache, but rather re-fetch it from its back‐
26 end servers.
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28 process management
29 You can stop and start the cache (child) process though the CLI.
30 You can also retrieve the latest stack trace if the child
31 process has crashed.
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33 If you invoke varnishd(1) with -T, -M or -d the CLI will be available.
34 In debug mode (-d) the CLI will be in the foreground, with -T you can
35 connect to it with varnishadm or telnet and with -M varnishd will con‐
36 nect back to a listening service pushing the CLI to that service.
37 Please see varnishd(1) for details.
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39 Syntax
40 The Varnish CLI is similar to another command line interface, the
41 Bourne Shell. Commands are usually terminated with a newline, and they
42 may take arguments. The command and its arguments are tokenized before
43 parsing, and as such arguments containing spaces must be enclosed in
44 double quotes.
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46 It means that command parsing of
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48 help banner
49
50 is equivalent to
51
52 "help" banner
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54 because the double quotes only indicate the boundaries of the help
55 token.
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57 Within double quotes you can escape characters with \ (backslash). The
58 \n, \r, and \t get translated to newlines, carriage returns, an tabs.
59 Double quotes and backslashes themselves can be escaped with \" and \\
60 respectively.
61
62 To enter characters in octals use the \nnn syntax. Hexadecimals can be
63 entered with the \xnn syntax.
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65 Commands may not end with a newline when a shell-style here document
66 (here-document or heredoc) is used. The format of a here document is:
67
68 << word
69 here document
70 word
71
72 word can be any continuous string chosen to make sure it doesn't appear
73 naturally in the following here document. Traditionally EOF or END is
74 used.
75
76 Quoting pitfalls
77 Integrating with the Varnish CLI can be sometimes surprising when quot‐
78 ing is involved. For instance in Bourne Shell the delimiter used with
79 here documents may or may not be separated by spaces from the << token:
80
81 cat <<EOF
82 hello
83 world
84 EOF
85 hello
86 world
87
88 With the Varnish CLI, the << and EOF tokens must be separated by at
89 least one blank:
90
91 vcl.inline boot <<EOF
92 106 258
93 Message from VCC-compiler:
94 VCL version declaration missing
95 Update your VCL to Version 4 syntax, and add
96 vcl 4.0;
97 on the first line of the VCL files.
98 ('<vcl.inline>' Line 1 Pos 1)
99 <<EOF
100 ##---
101
102 Running VCC-compiler failed, exited with 2
103 VCL compilation failed
104
105 With the missing space, the here document can be added and the actual
106 VCL can be loaded:
107
108 vcl.inline test << EOF
109 vcl 4.0;
110
111 backend be {
112 .host = "localhost";
113 }
114 EOF
115 200 14
116 VCL compiled.
117
118 When using a front-end to the Varnish-CLI like varnishadm, one must
119 take into account the double expansion happening. First in the shell
120 launching the varnishadm command and then in the Varnish CLI itself.
121 When a command's parameter require spaces, you need to ensure that the
122 Varnish CLI will see the double quotes:
123
124 varnishadm param.set cc_command '"my alternate cc command"'
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126 Change will take effect when VCL script is reloaded
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128 Otherwise if you don't quote the quotes, you may get a seemingly unre‐
129 lated error message:
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131 varnishadm param.set cc_command "my alternate cc command"
132 Unknown request.
133 Type 'help' for more info.
134 Too many parameters
135
136 Command failed with error code 105
137
138 If you are quoting with a here document, you must wrap it inside a
139 shell multi-line argument:
140
141 varnishadm vcl.inline test '<< EOF
142 vcl 4.0;
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144 backend be {
145 .host = "localhost";
146 }
147 EOF'
148 VCL compiled.
149
150 Other pitfalls include variable expansion of the shell invoking var‐
151 nishadm but this is not directly related to the Varnish CLI. If you get
152 the quoting right you should be fine even with complex commands.
153
154 JSON
155 A number of commands with informational responses support a -j parame‐
156 ter for JSON output, as specified below. The top-level structure of the
157 JSON response is an array with these first three elements:
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159 · A version number for the JSON format (integer)
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161 · An array of strings that comprise the CLI command just received
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163 · The time at which the response was generated, as a Unix epoch time in
164 seconds with millisecond precision (floating point)
165
166 The remaining elements of the array form the data that are specific to
167 the CLI command, and their structure and content depend on the command.
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169 For example, the response to status -j just contains a string in the
170 top-level array indicating the state of the child process ("running",
171 "stopped" and so forth):
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173 [ 2, ["status", "-j"], 1538031732.632, "running"
174 ]
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176 The JSON responses to other commands may have longer lists of elements,
177 which may have simple data types or form structured objects.
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179 JSON output is only returned if command execution was successful. The
180 output for an error response is always the same as it would have been
181 for the command without the -j parameter.
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183 Commands
184 auth <response>
185 Authenticate.
186
187 backend.list [-j] [-p] [<backend_pattern>]
188 List backends.
189
190 -p also shows probe status.
191
192 -j specifies JSON output.
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194 Unless -j is specified for JSON output, the output format is five
195 columns of dynamic width, separated by white space with the fields:
196
197 · Backend name
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199 · Admin: How health state is determined:
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201 · healthy: Set healthy through backend.set_health.
202
203 · sick: Set sick through backend.set_health.
204
205 · probe: Health state determined by a probe or some other dynamic
206 mechanism.
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208 · deleted: Backend has been deleted, but not yet cleaned up.
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210 Admin has precedence over Health
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212 · Probe X/Y: X out of Y checks have succeeded
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214 X and Y are backend specific and may represent probe checks, other
215 backends or any other metric.
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217 If there is no probe or the director does not provide details on
218 probe check results, 0/0 is output.
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220 · Health: Probe health state
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222 · healthy
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224 · sick
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226 If there is no probe, healthy is output.
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228 · Last change: Timestamp when the health state last changed.
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230 The health state reported here is generic. A backend's health may
231 also depend on the context it is being used in (e.g. the object's
232 hash), so the actual health state as visible from VCL (e.g. using
233 std.healthy()) may differ.
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235 For -j, the object members should be self explanatory, matching the
236 fields described above. probe_message has the format [X, Y, "state"]
237 as described above for Probe. JSON Probe details (-j -p arguments)
238 are director specific.
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240 backend.set_health <backend_pattern> [auto|healthy|sick]
241 Set health status on the backends.
242
243 ban <field> <operator> <arg> [&& <field> <oper> <arg> ...]
244 Mark obsolete all objects where all the conditions match.
245
246 See vcl(7)_ban for details
247
248 ban.list [-j]
249 List the active bans.
250
251 Unless -j is specified for JSON output, the output format is:
252
253 · Time the ban was issued.
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255 · Objects referencing this ban.
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257 · C if ban is completed = no further testing against it.
258
259 · if lurker debugging is enabled:
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261 · R for req.* tests
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263 · O for obj.* tests
264
265 · Pointer to ban object
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267 · Ban specification
268
269 Durations of ban specifications get normalized, for example "7d"
270 gets changed into "1w".
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272 banner
273 Print welcome banner.
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275 help [-j] [<command>]
276 Show command/protocol help.
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278 -j specifies JSON output.
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280 panic.clear [-z]
281 Clear the last panic, if any, -z will clear related varnishstat
282 counter(s)
283
284 panic.show [-j]
285 Return the last panic, if any.
286
287 -j specifies JSON output -- the panic message is returned as an
288 unstructured JSON string.
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290 param.reset <param>
291 Reset parameter to default value.
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293 param.set <param> <value>
294 Set parameter value.
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296 param.show [-l|-j] [<param>|changed]
297 Show parameters and their values.
298
299 The long form with -l shows additional information, including docu‐
300 mentation and minimum, maximum and default values, if defined for
301 the parameter. JSON output is specified with -j, in which the infor‐
302 mation for the long form is included; only one of -l or -j is per‐
303 mitted. If a parameter is specified with <param>, show only that
304 parameter. If changed is specified, show only those parameters whose
305 values differ from their defaults.
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307 ping [-j] [<timestamp>]
308 Keep connection alive.
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310 The response is formatted as JSON if -j is specified.
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312 quit
313 Close connection.
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315 start
316 Start the Varnish cache process.
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318 status [-j]
319 Check status of Varnish cache process.
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321 -j specifies JSON output.
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323 stop
324 Stop the Varnish cache process.
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326 storage.list [-j]
327 List storage devices.
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329 -j specifies JSON output.
330
331 vcl.discard <configname|label>
332 Unload the named configuration (when possible).
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334 vcl.inline <configname> <quoted_VCLstring> [auto|cold|warm]
335 Compile and load the VCL data under the name provided.
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337 Multi-line VCL can be input using the here document ref_syntax.
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339 vcl.label <label> <configname>
340 Apply label to configuration.
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342 A VCL label is like a UNIX symbolic link, a name without substance,
343 which points to another VCL.
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345 Labels are mandatory whenever one VCL references another.
346
347 vcl.list [-j]
348 List all loaded configuration.
349
350 Unless -j is specified for JSON output, the output format is five
351 or seven columns of dynamic width, separated by white space with
352 the fields:
353
354 · status: active, available or discarded
355
356 · state: label, cold, warm, or auto
357
358 · temperature: init, cold, warm, busy or cooling
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360 · busy: number of references to this vcl (integer)
361
362 · name: the name given to this vcl or label
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364 · [ <- | -> ] and label info last two fields)
365
366 · -> <vcl> : label "points to" the named <vcl>
367
368 · <- (<n> label[s]): the vcl has <n> label(s)
369
370 vcl.load <configname> <filename> [auto|cold|warm]
371 Compile and load the VCL file under the name provided.
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373 vcl.show [-v] <configname>
374 Display the source code for the specified configuration.
375
376 vcl.state <configname> [auto|cold|warm]
377 Force the state of the named configuration.
378
379 vcl.symtab
380 Dump the VCL symbol-tables.
381
382 vcl.use <configname|label>
383 Switch to the named configuration immediately.
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385 Backend Pattern
386 A backend pattern can be a backend name or a combination of a VCL name
387 and backend name in "VCL.backend" format. If the VCL name is omitted,
388 the active VCL is assumed. Partial matching on the backend and VCL
389 names is supported using shell-style wilcards, e.g. asterisk (*).
390
391 Examples:
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393 backend.list def*
394 backend.list b*.def*
395 backend.set_health default sick
396 backend.set_health def* healthy
397 backend.set_health * auto
398
399 Ban Expressions
400 A ban expression consists of one or more conditions. A condition con‐
401 sists of a field, an operator, and an argument. Conditions can be
402 ANDed together with "&&".
403
404 A field can be any of the variables from VCL, for instance req.url,
405 req.http.host or obj.http.set-cookie.
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407 Operators are "==" for direct comparison, "~" for a regular expression
408 match, and ">" or "<" for size comparisons. Prepending an operator
409 with "!" negates the expression.
410
411 The argument could be a quoted string, a regexp, or an integer. Inte‐
412 gers can have "KB", "MB", "GB" or "TB" appended for size related
413 fields.
414
415 VCL Temperature
416 A VCL program goes through several states related to the different com‐
417 mands: it can be loaded, used, and later discarded. You can load sev‐
418 eral VCL programs and switch at any time from one to another. There is
419 only one active VCL, but the previous active VCL will be maintained
420 active until all its transactions are over.
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422 Over time, if you often refresh your VCL and keep the previous versions
423 around, resource consumption will increase, you can't escape that. How‐
424 ever, most of the time you want only one to pay the price only for the
425 active VCL and keep older VCLs in case you'd need to rollback to a pre‐
426 vious version.
427
428 The VCL temperature allows you to minimize the footprint of inactive
429 VCLs. Once a VCL becomes cold, Varnish will release all the resources
430 that can be be later reacquired. You can manually set the temperature
431 of a VCL or let varnish automatically handle it.
432
433 Scripting
434 If you are going to write a script that talks CLI to varnishd, the
435 include/cli.h contains the relevant magic numbers.
436
437 One particular magic number to know, is that the line with the status
438 code and length field always is exactly 13 characters long, including
439 the NL character.
440
441 The varnishapi library contains functions to implement the basics of
442 the CLI protocol, see the vcli.h include file.
443
444 Authentication with -S
445 If the -S secret-file is given as argument to varnishd, all network CLI
446 connections must authenticate, by proving they know the contents of
447 that file.
448
449 The file is read at the time the auth command is issued and the con‐
450 tents is not cached in varnishd, so it is possible to update the file
451 on the fly.
452
453 Use the unix file permissions to control access to the file.
454
455 An authenticated session looks like this:
456
457 critter phk> telnet localhost 1234
458 Trying ::1...
459 Trying 127.0.0.1...
460 Connected to localhost.
461 Escape character is '^]'.
462 107 59
463 ixslvvxrgkjptxmcgnnsdxsvdmvfympg
464
465 Authentication required.
466
467 auth 455ce847f0073c7ab3b1465f74507b75d3dc064c1e7de3b71e00de9092fdc89a
468 200 279
469 -----------------------------
470 Varnish Cache CLI 1.0
471 -----------------------------
472 Linux,4.4.0-1-amd64,x86_64,-jnone,-smalloc,-smalloc,-hcritbit
473 varnish-trunk revision dc360a4
474
475 Type 'help' for command list.
476 Type 'quit' to close CLI session.
477 Type 'start' to launch worker process.
478
479 The CLI status of 107 indicates that authentication is necessary. The
480 first 32 characters of the response text is the challenge "ixsl...mpg".
481 The challenge is randomly generated for each CLI connection, and
482 changes each time a 107 is emitted.
483
484 The most recently emitted challenge must be used for calculating the
485 authenticator "455c...c89a".
486
487 The authenticator is calculated by applying the SHA256 function to the
488 following byte sequence:
489
490 · Challenge string
491
492 · Newline (0x0a) character.
493
494 · Contents of the secret file
495
496 · Challenge string
497
498 · Newline (0x0a) character.
499
500 and dumping the resulting digest in lower-case hex.
501
502 In the above example, the secret file contained foon and thus:
503
504 critter phk> cat > _
505 ixslvvxrgkjptxmcgnnsdxsvdmvfympg
506 foo
507 ixslvvxrgkjptxmcgnnsdxsvdmvfympg
508 ^D
509 critter phk> hexdump -C _
510 00000000 69 78 73 6c 76 76 78 72 67 6b 6a 70 74 78 6d 63 |ixslvvxrgkjptxmc|
511 00000010 67 6e 6e 73 64 78 73 76 64 6d 76 66 79 6d 70 67 |gnnsdxsvdmvfympg|
512 00000020 0a 66 6f 6f 0a 69 78 73 6c 76 76 78 72 67 6b 6a |.foo.ixslvvxrgkj|
513 00000030 70 74 78 6d 63 67 6e 6e 73 64 78 73 76 64 6d 76 |ptxmcgnnsdxsvdmv|
514 00000040 66 79 6d 70 67 0a |fympg.|
515 00000046
516 critter phk> sha256 _
517 SHA256 (_) = 455ce847f0073c7ab3b1465f74507b75d3dc064c1e7de3b71e00de9092fdc89a
518 critter phk> openssl dgst -sha256 < _
519 455ce847f0073c7ab3b1465f74507b75d3dc064c1e7de3b71e00de9092fdc89a
520
521 The sourcefile lib/libvarnish/cli_auth.c contains a useful function
522 which calculates the response, given an open filedescriptor to the
523 secret file, and the challenge string.
524
526 Load a multi-line VCL using shell-style here document:
527
528 vcl.inline example << EOF
529 vcl 4.0;
530
531 backend www {
532 .host = "127.0.0.1";
533 .port = "8080";
534 }
535 EOF
536
537 Ban all requests where req.url exactly matches the string /news:
538
539 ban req.url == "/news"
540
541 Ban all documents where the serving host is "example.com" or "www.exam‐
542 ple.com", and where the Set-Cookie header received from the backend
543 contains "USERID=1663":
544
545 ban req.http.host ~ "^(?i)(www\\.)?example\\.com$" && obj.http.set-cookie ~ "USERID=1663"
546
548 This manual page was originally written by Per Buer and later modified
549 by Federico G. Schwindt, Dridi Boukelmoune, Lasse Karstensen and
550 Poul-Henning Kamp.
551
553 · varnishadm(1)
554
555 · varnishd(1)
556
557 · vcl(7)
558
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561
562 VARNISH-CLI(7)