Provided by: varnish_4.1.1-1ubuntu0.2_amd64 bug

NAME

       VCL - Varnish Configuration Language

DESCRIPTION

       The  VCL  language  is  a  small  domain-specific language designed to be used to describe
       request handling and document caching policies for Varnish Cache.

       When a new configuration is loaded, the varnishd management  process  translates  the  VCL
       code to C and compiles it to a shared object which is then loaded into the server process.

       This  document focuses on the syntax of the VCL language. For a full description of syntax
       and  semantics,  with  ample  examples,   please   see   the   online   documentation   at
       https://www.varnish-cache.org/docs/ .

       Starting  with  Varnish  4.0,  each  VCL  file  must start by declaring its version with a
       special "vcl 4.0;" marker at the top of the file.

   Operators
       The following operators are available in VCL:

          =      Assignment operator.

          ==     Comparison.

          ~      Match. Can either be used with regular expressions or ACLs.

          !      Negation.

          &&     Logical and.

          ||     Logical or.

   Conditionals
       VCL has if and else statements. Nested logic can be implemented with the elseif  statement
       (elsif/elif/else if are equivalent).

       Note that there are no loops or iterators of any kind in VCL.

   Strings, booleans, time, duration and integers
       These are the data types in Varnish. You can set or unset these.

       Example:

       set req.http.User-Agent = "unknown";
       unset req.http.Range;

   Strings
       Basic  strings are enclosed in double quotes (" ... "), and may not contain newlines. Long
       strings are enclosed in {" ... "}. They may contain any character including single  double
       quotes ("), newline and other control characters except for the NUL (0x00) character.

   Booleans
       Booleans can be either true or false.

   Time
       VCL  has  time. The function now returns a time. A duration can be added to a time to make
       another time. In string context they return a formatted string.

   Durations
       Durations are defined by a number and a designation. The number can be a real so  1.5w  is
       allowed.

          ms     milliseconds

          s      seconds

          m      minutes

          h      hours

          d      days

          w      weeks

          y      years

   Integers
       Certain fields are integers, used as expected. In string context they return a string.

   Real numbers
       VCL  understands  real  numbers. As with integers, when used in a string context they will
       return a string.

   Regular Expressions
       Varnish uses Perl-compatible regular expressions (PCRE). For a complete description please
       see the pcre(3) man page.

       To  send  flags  to the PCRE engine, such as to do case insensitive matching, add the flag
       within parens following a question mark, like this:

       # If host is NOT example dot com..
       if (req.http.host !~ "(?i)example.com$") {
           ...
       }

   Include statement
       To include a VCL file in another file use the include keyword:

       include "foo.vcl";

   Import statement
       The import statement is used to load Varnish Modules (VMODs.)

       Example:

       import std;
       sub vcl_recv {
           std.log("foo");
       }

   Comments
       Single lines of VCL can be commented out using // or #. Multi-line blocks can be commented
       out with /* block /*.

       Example:

       sub vcl_recv {
           // Single line of out-commented VCL.
           # Another way of commenting out a single line.
           /*
               Multi-line block of commented-out VCL.
           */
       }

   Backend definition
       A  backend declaration creates and initialises a named backend object. A declaration start
       with the keyword backend followed by the name of the backend. The actual declaration is in
       curly brackets, in a key/value fashion.:

       backend name {
           .attribute = "value";
       }

       The  only mandatory attribute is host. The attributes will inherit their defaults from the
       global parameters. The following attributes are available:

          host (mandatory)
                 The host to be used. IP address or a hostname  that  resolves  to  a  single  IP
                 address.

          port   The port on the backend that Varnish should connect to.

          host_header
                 A host header to add.

          connect_timeout
                 Timeout for connections.

          first_byte_timeout
                 Timeout for first byte.

          between_bytes_timeout
                 Timeout between bytes.

          probe  Attach a probe to the backend. See Probes

          max_connections
                 Maximum  number of open connections towards this backend. If Varnish reaches the
                 maximum Varnish it will start failing connections.

       Backends can be used with directors. Please see the vmod_directors(3) man  page  for  more
       information.

   Probes
       Probes  will  query the backend for status on a regular basis and mark the backend as down
       it they fail. A probe is defined as this:

       probe name {
           .attribute = "value";
       }

       There are no mandatory options. These are the options you can set:

          url    The URL to query. Defaults to "/".

          request
                 Specify a full HTTP request using multiple  strings.  .request  will  have  \r\n
                 automatically  inserted  after  every  string.  If specified, .request will take
                 precedence over .url.

          expected_response
                 The expected HTTP response code. Defaults to 200.

          timeout
                 The timeout for the probe. Default is 2s.

          interval
                 How often the probe is run. Default is 5s.

          initial
                 How many of the polls in  .window  are  considered  good  when  Varnish  starts.
                 Defaults to the value of threshold - 1. In this case, the backend starts as sick
                 and requires one single poll to be considered healthy.

          window How many of the latest polls we examine to determine backend  health.   Defaults
                 to 8.

          threshold
                 How  many  of  the  polls  in .window must have succeeded for us to consider the
                 backend healthy. Defaults to 3.

   Access Control List (ACL)
       An Access Control List (ACL) declaration creates and initialises a  named  access  control
       list which can later be used to match client addresses:

       acl localnetwork {
           "localhost";    # myself
           "192.0.2.0"/24; # and everyone on the local network
           ! "192.0.2.23"; # except for the dial-in router
       }

       If  an  ACL  entry specifies a host name which Varnish is unable to resolve, it will match
       any address it is compared to. Consequently, if it is preceded by a negation mark, it will
       reject  any address it is compared to, which may not be what you intended. If the entry is
       enclosed in parentheses, however, it will simply be ignored.

       To match an IP address against an ACL, simply use the match operator:

       if (client.ip ~ localnetwork) {
           return (pipe);
       }

   VCL objects
       A VCL object can be instantiated with the new keyword:

       sub vcl_init {
           new b = directors.round_robin()
           b.add_backend(node1);
       }

       This is only available in vcl_init.

   Subroutines
       A subroutine is used to group code for legibility or reusability:

       sub pipe_if_local {
           if (client.ip ~ localnetwork) {
               return (pipe);
           }
       }

       Subroutines in VCL do not take  arguments,  nor  do  they  return  values.  The  built  in
       subroutines all have names beginning with vcl_, which is reserved.

       To call a subroutine, use the call keyword followed by the subroutine's name:

       sub vcl_recv {
           call pipe_if_local;
       }

   Return statements
       The ongoing vcl_* subroutine execution ends when a return(action) statement is made.

       The  action  specifies how execution should proceed. The context defines which actions are
       available.

   Multiple subroutines
       If multiple subroutines with the name of one of the built-in ones are  defined,  they  are
       concatenated in the order in which they appear in the source.

       The  built-in VCL distributed with Varnish will be implicitly concatenated when the VCL is
       compiled.

   Variables
       In VCL you have access to certain variable objects. These contain requests  and  responses
       currently being worked on. What variables are available depends on context.

   bereq
       bereq
          Type: HTTP

          Readable from: backend

          The entire backend request HTTP data structure

       bereq.backend
          Type: BACKEND

          Readable from: vcl_pipe, backend

          Writable from: vcl_pipe, backend

          This is the backend or director we attempt to fetch from.

       bereq.between_bytes_timeout
          Type: DURATION

          Readable from: backend

          Writable from: backend

          The time in seconds to wait between each received byte from the backend.  Not available
          in pipe mode.

       bereq.connect_timeout
          Type: DURATION

          Readable from: vcl_pipe, backend

          Writable from: vcl_pipe, backend

          The time in seconds to wait for a backend connection.

       bereq.first_byte_timeout
          Type: DURATION

          Readable from: backend

          Writable from: backend

          The time in seconds to wait for the first byte from the backend.  Not available in pipe
          mode.

       bereq.http.
          Type: HEADER

          Readable from: vcl_pipe, backend

          Writable from: vcl_pipe, backend

          The corresponding HTTP header.

       bereq.method
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: vcl_pipe, backend

          Writable from: vcl_pipe, backend

          The request type (e.g. "GET", "HEAD").

       bereq.proto
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: vcl_pipe, backend

          Writable from: vcl_pipe, backend

          The HTTP protocol version used to talk to the server.

       bereq.retries
          Type: INT

          Readable from: backend

          A count of how many times this request has been retried.

       bereq.uncacheable
          Type: BOOL

          Readable from: backend

          Indicates whether this request is uncacheable due to a pass in the client side or a hit
          on an existing uncacheable object (aka hit-for-pass).

       bereq.url
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: vcl_pipe, backend

          Writable from: vcl_pipe, backend

          The requested URL.

       bereq.xid
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: backend

          Unique ID of this request.

   beresp
       beresp
          Type: HTTP

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          The entire backend response HTTP data structure

       beresp.age
          Type: DURATION

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          The age of the object.

       beresp.backend
          Type: BACKEND

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          This is the backend we fetched from.  If bereq.backend was set to a director, this will
          be the backend selected by the director.

       beresp.backend.ip
          Type: IP

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          IP of the backend this response was fetched from.

       beresp.backend.name
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Name of the backend this response was fetched from.

       beresp.do_esi
          Type: BOOL

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Writable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Boolean.  ESI-process  the object after fetching it.  Defaults to false. Set it to true
          to parse the object for ESI directives. Will only be honored if req.esi is true.

       beresp.do_gunzip
          Type: BOOL

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Writable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Boolean. Unzip the object before storing it in the cache.  Defaults to false.

       beresp.do_gzip
          Type: BOOL

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Writable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Boolean. Gzip the object before storing it. Defaults to false.  When  http_gzip_support
          is  on  Varnish  will  request  already compressed content from the backend and as such
          compression in Varnish is not needed.

       beresp.do_stream
          Type: BOOL

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Writable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Deliver the object to the client  directly  without  fetching  the  whole  object  into
          varnish. If this request is pass'ed it will not be stored in memory.

       beresp.grace
          Type: DURATION

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Writable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Set to a period to enable grace.

       beresp.http.
          Type: HEADER

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Writable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          The corresponding HTTP header.

       beresp.keep
          Type: DURATION

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Writable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Set to a period to enable conditional backend requests.

          The keep time is cache lifetime in addition to the ttl.

          Objects  with  ttl  expired  but  with  keep time left may be used to issue conditional
          (If-Modified-Since / If-None-Match) requests to the backend to refresh them.

       beresp.proto
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Writable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          The HTTP protocol version used the backend replied with.

       beresp.reason
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Writable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          The HTTP status message returned by the server.

       beresp.status
          Type: INT

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Writable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          The HTTP status code returned by the server.

       beresp.storage_hint
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Writable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Hint to Varnish that you want to save this object to a particular storage backend.

       beresp.ttl
          Type: DURATION

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Writable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          The object's remaining time to live, in seconds.

       beresp.uncacheable
          Type: BOOL

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Writable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Inherited from bereq.uncacheable, see there.

          Setting this variable  makes  the  object  uncacheable,  which  may  get  stored  as  a
          hit-for-pass object in the cache.

          Clearing the variable has no effect and will log the warning "Ignoring attempt to reset
          beresp.uncacheable".

       beresp.was_304
          Type: BOOL

          Readable from: vcl_backend_response, vcl_backend_error

          Boolean. If this is  a  successful  304  response  to  a  backend  conditional  request
          refreshing an existing cache object.

   client
       client.identity
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: client

          Writable from: client

          Identification of the client, used to load balance in the client director.

       client.ip
          Type: IP

          Readable from: client

          The client's IP address.

   local
       local.ip
          Type: IP

          Readable from: client

          The IP address of the local end of the TCP connection.

   now
       now
          Type: TIME

          Readable from: all

          The  current time, in seconds since the epoch. When used in string context it returns a
          formatted string.

   obj
       obj.age
          Type: DURATION

          Readable from: vcl_hit

          The age of the object.

       obj.grace
          Type: DURATION

          Readable from: vcl_hit

          The object's remaining grace period in seconds.

       obj.hits
          Type: INT

          Readable from: vcl_hit, vcl_deliver

          The count of cache-hits on this object. A value of 0 indicates a cache miss.

       obj.http.
          Type: HEADER

          Readable from: vcl_hit

          The corresponding HTTP header.

       obj.keep
          Type: DURATION

          Readable from: vcl_hit

          The object's remaining keep period in seconds.

       obj.proto
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: vcl_hit

          The HTTP protocol version used when the object was retrieved.

       obj.reason
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: vcl_hit

          The HTTP status message returned by the server.

       obj.status
          Type: INT

          Readable from: vcl_hit

          The HTTP status code returned by the server.

       obj.ttl
          Type: DURATION

          Readable from: vcl_hit

          The object's remaining time to live, in seconds.

       obj.uncacheable
          Type: BOOL

          Readable from: vcl_deliver

          Whether the object is uncacheable (pass or hit-for-pass).

   remote
       remote.ip
          Type: IP

          Readable from: client

          The IP address of the other end of the TCP connection.  This can either be the  clients
          IP, or the outgoing IP of a proxy server.

   req
       req
          Type: HTTP

          Readable from: client

          The entire request HTTP data structure

       req.backend_hint
          Type: BACKEND

          Readable from: client

          Writable from: client

          Set bereq.backend to this if we attempt to fetch.

       req.can_gzip
          Type: BOOL

          Readable from: client

          Does the client accept the gzip transfer encoding.

       req.esi
          Type: BOOL

          Readable from: client

          Writable from: client

          Boolean.   Set  to  false  to  disable  ESI  processing  regardless  of  any  value  in
          beresp.do_esi. Defaults to true. This variable is subject to change in future versions,
          you should avoid using it.

       req.esi_level
          Type: INT

          Readable from: client

          A count of how many levels of ESI requests we're currently at.

       req.hash_always_miss
          Type: BOOL

          Readable from: vcl_recv

          Writable from: vcl_recv

          Force a cache miss for this request. If set to true Varnish will disregard any existing
          objects and always (re)fetch from the backend.

       req.hash_ignore_busy
          Type: BOOL

          Readable from: vcl_recv

          Writable from: vcl_recv

          Ignore any busy object during cache lookup. You would want to do this if you  have  two
          server looking up content from each other to avoid potential deadlocks.

       req.http.
          Type: HEADER

          Readable from: client

          Writable from: client

          The corresponding HTTP header.

       req.method
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: client

          Writable from: client

          The request type (e.g. "GET", "HEAD").

       req.proto
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: client

          Writable from: client

          The HTTP protocol version used by the client.

       req.restarts
          Type: INT

          Readable from: client

          A count of how many times this request has been restarted.

       req.ttl
          Type: DURATION

          Readable from: client

          Writable from: client

       req.url
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: client

          Writable from: client

          The requested URL.

       req.xid
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: client

          Unique ID of this request.

   req_top
       req_top.http.
          Type: HEADER

          Readable from: client

          HTTP  headers  of  the  top-level  request  in  a  tree  of ESI requests.  Identical to
          req.http. in non-ESI requests.

       req_top.method
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: client

          The request method of the top-level request in a tree of  ESI  requests.  (e.g.  "GET",
          "HEAD").  Identical to req.method in non-ESI requests.

       req_top.proto
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: client

          HTTP protocol version of the top-level request in a tree of ESI requests.  Identical to
          req.proto in non-ESI requests.

       req_top.url
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: client

          The requested URL of the top-level request in a tree of  ESI  requests.   Identical  to
          req.url in non-ESI requests.

   resp
       resp
          Type: HTTP

          Readable from: vcl_deliver, vcl_synth

          The entire response HTTP data structure.

       resp.http.
          Type: HEADER

          Readable from: vcl_deliver, vcl_synth

          Writable from: vcl_deliver, vcl_synth

          The corresponding HTTP header.

       resp.is_streaming
          Type: BOOL

          Readable from: vcl_deliver, vcl_synth

          Returns true when the response will be streamed from the backend.

       resp.proto
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: vcl_deliver, vcl_synth

          Writable from: vcl_deliver, vcl_synth

          The HTTP protocol version to use for the response.

       resp.reason
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: vcl_deliver, vcl_synth

          Writable from: vcl_deliver, vcl_synth

          The HTTP status message that will be returned.

       resp.status
          Type: INT

          Readable from: vcl_deliver, vcl_synth

          Writable from: vcl_deliver, vcl_synth

          The HTTP status code that will be returned.

          Assigning  a  HTTP  standardized  code  to resp.status will also set resp.reason to the
          corresponding status message.

   server
       server.hostname
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: all

          The host name of the server.

       server.identity
          Type: STRING

          Readable from: all

          The identity of the server, as set by the -i parameter.  If the  -i  parameter  is  not
          passed  to  varnishd,  server.identity  will  be  set  to  the name of the instance, as
          specified by the -n parameter.

       server.ip
          Type: IP

          Readable from: client

          The IP address of the socket on which the client connection was received.

   storage
       storage.<name>.free_space
          Type: BYTES

          Readable from: client, backend

          Free space available in the named stevedore. Only available for the malloc stevedore.

       storage.<name>.used_space
          Type: BYTES

          Readable from: client, backend

          Used space in the named stevedore. Only available for the malloc stevedore.

       storage.<name>.happy
          Type: BOOL

          Readable from: client, backend

          Health status for the named stevedore. Not available in any of the current stevedores.

   Functions
       The following built-in functions are available:

       ban(expression)
              Invalidates all objects in cache that match the expression with the ban mechanism.

       hash_data(input)
              Adds an input to the hash input. In the built-in VCL hash_data() is called  on  the
              host and URL of the request. Available in vcl_hash.

       rollback()
              Restore req HTTP headers to their original state. This function is deprecated.  Use
              std.rollback() instead.

       synthetic(STRING)
              Prepare a synthetic response body containing the STRING. Available in vcl_synth and
              vcl_backend_error.

       regsub(str, regex, sub)
              Returns  a  copy  of  str with the first occurrence of the regular expression regex
              replaced with sub. Within sub, \0 (which can also be spelled \&) is  replaced  with
              the  entire  matched  string, and \n is replaced with the contents of subgroup n in
              the matched string.

       regsuball(str, regex, sub)
              As regsub() but this replaces all occurrences.

       For converting or casting VCL values between data types use the functions available in the
       std VMOD.

EXAMPLES

       For examples, please see the online documentation.

SEE ALSO

varnishd(1)vmod_directors(3)vmod_std(3)

HISTORY

       VCL was developed by Poul-Henning Kamp in cooperation with Verdens Gang AS, Redpill Linpro
       and Varnish Software.  This manual page is written by Per Buer, Poul-Henning Kamp,  Martin
       Blix Grydeland, Kristian Lyngstøl, Lasse Karstensen and possibly others.

COPYRIGHT

       This  document  is  licensed  under  the  same  license as Varnish itself. See LICENSE for
       details.

       • Copyright (c) 2006 Verdens Gang AS

       • Copyright (c) 2006-2015 Varnish Software AS

                                                                                           VCL(7)