Provided by: varnish_7.1.1-1.1ubuntu1_amd64 bug

NAME

       varnish-cli - Varnish Command Line Interface

DESCRIPTION

       Varnish  has  a  command  line  interface  (CLI)  which  can  control  and change most of the operational
       parameters and the configuration of Varnish, without interrupting the running service.

       The CLI can be used for the following tasks:

       configuration
              You can upload, change and delete VCL files from the CLI.

       parameters
              You can inspect and change the various parameters Varnish  has  available  through  the  CLI.  The
              individual parameters are documented in the varnishd(1) man page.

       bans   Bans are filters that are applied to keep Varnish from serving stale content. When you issue a ban
              Varnish will not serve any banned object from cache, but  rather  re-fetch  it  from  its  backend
              servers.

       process management
              You  can stop and start the cache (child) process though the CLI. You can also retrieve the latest
              stack trace if the child process has crashed.

       If you invoke varnishd(1) with -T, -M or -d the CLI will be available. In debug mode (-d) the CLI will be
       in  the  foreground,  with  -T  you can connect to it with varnishadm or telnet and with -M varnishd will
       connect back to a listening service pushing the CLI to that service. Please see varnishd(1) for details.

   Syntax
       The Varnish CLI is similar to another command line interface, the  Bourne  Shell.  Commands  are  usually
       terminated  with  a  newline,  and  they  may take arguments. The command and its arguments are tokenized
       before parsing, and as such arguments containing spaces must be enclosed in double quotes.

       It means that command parsing of

          help banner

       is equivalent to

          "help" banner

       because the double quotes only indicate the boundaries of the help token.

       Within double quotes you can escape characters with \ (backslash). The \n, \r, and \t get  translated  to
       newlines, carriage returns, an tabs.  Double quotes and backslashes themselves can be escaped with \" and
       \\ respectively.

       To enter characters in octals use the \nnn syntax. Hexadecimals can be entered with the \xnn syntax.

       Commands may not end with a newline when a shell-style here document (here-document or heredoc) is  used.
       The format of a here document is:

          << word
               here document
          word

       word  can  be any continuous string chosen to make sure it doesn't appear naturally in the following here
       document. Traditionally EOF or END is used.

   Quoting pitfalls
       Integrating with the Varnish CLI can be sometimes surprising when quoting is involved.  For  instance  in
       Bourne  Shell  the  delimiter  used with here documents may or may not be separated by spaces from the <<
       token:

          cat <<EOF
          hello
          world
          EOF
          hello
          world

       With the Varnish CLI, the << and EOF tokens must be separated by at least one blank:

          vcl.inline boot <<EOF
          106 258
          Message from VCC-compiler:
          VCL version declaration missing
          Update your VCL to Version 4 syntax, and add
                  vcl 4.0;
          on the first line of the VCL files.
          ('<vcl.inline>' Line 1 Pos 1)
          <<EOF
          ##---

          Running VCC-compiler failed, exited with 2
          VCL compilation failed

       With the missing space, the here document can be added and the actual VCL can be loaded:

          vcl.inline test << EOF
          vcl 4.0;

          backend be {
                  .host = "localhost";
          }
          EOF
          200 14
          VCL compiled.

       A big difference with a shell here document is the handling of the << token. Just like command names  can
       be quoted, the here document token keeps its meaning, even quoted:

          vcl.inline test "<<" EOF
          vcl 4.0;

          backend be {
                  .host = "localhost";
          }
          EOF
          200 14
          VCL compiled.

       When  using  a  front-end  to  the  Varnish-CLI  like  varnishadm,  one must take into account the double
       expansion happening.  First in the shell launching the varnishadm command and then  in  the  Varnish  CLI
       itself.   When a command's parameter require spaces, you need to ensure that the Varnish CLI will see the
       double quotes:

          varnishadm param.set cc_command '"my alternate cc command"'

          Change will take effect when VCL script is reloaded

       Otherwise if you don't quote the quotes, you may get a seemingly unrelated error message:

          varnishadm param.set cc_command "my alternate cc command"
          Unknown request.
          Type 'help' for more info.
          Too many parameters

          Command failed with error code 105

       If you are quoting with a here document, you must wrap it inside a shell multi-line argument:

          varnishadm vcl.inline test '<< EOF
          vcl 4.0;

          backend be {
                  .host = "localhost";
          }
          EOF'
          VCL compiled.

       Another difference with a shell here document is that only one here document can  be  used  on  a  single
       command line. For example, it is possible to do this in a shell script:

          #!/bin/sh

          cat << EOF1 ; cat << EOF2
          hello
          EOF1
          world
          EOF2

       The expected output is:

          hello
          world

       With the Varnish CLI, only the last parameter may use the here document form, which greatly restricts the
       number of commands that can effectively use them.  Trying to use multiple here documents only  takes  the
       last one into account.

       For example:

          command argument << EOF1 << EOF2
          heredoc1
          EOF1
          heredoc2
          EOF2

       This conceptually results in the following command line:

       • "command""argument""<<""EOF1""heredoc1\nEOF1\nheredoc2\n"

       Other  pitfalls  include  variable  expansion  of  the shell invoking varnishadm but this is not directly
       related to the Varnish CLI. If you get the quoting right you should be fine even with complex commands.

   JSON
       A number of commands with informational responses support a -j parameter for JSON  output,  as  specified
       below. The top-level structure of the JSON response is an array with these first three elements:

       • A version number for the JSON format (integer)

       • An array of strings that comprise the CLI command just received

       • The  time  at  which  the  response  was  generated,  as  a Unix epoch time in seconds with millisecond
         precision (floating point)

       The remaining elements of the array form the data that  are  specific  to  the  CLI  command,  and  their
       structure and content depend on the command.

       For example, the response to status -j just contains a string in the top-level array indicating the state
       of the child process ("running", "stopped" and so forth):

          [ 2, ["status", "-j"], 1538031732.632, "running"
          ]

       The JSON responses to other commands may have longer lists of elements, which may have simple data  types
       or form structured objects.

       JSON  output  is  only  returned if command execution was successful. The output for an error response is
       always the same as it would have been for the command without the -j parameter.

   Commands
   auth <response>
          Authenticate.

   backend.list [-j] [-p] [<backend_pattern>]
          List backends.

          -p also shows probe status.

          -j specifies JSON output.

          Unless -j is specified for JSON  output,   the  output  format  is  five  columns  of  dynamic  width,
          separated by white space with the fields:

          • Backend name

          • Admin: How health state is determined:

            • healthy: Set healthy through backend.set_health.

            • sick: Set sick through backend.set_health.

            • probe: Health state determined by a probe or some other dynamic mechanism.

            • deleted: Backend has been deleted, but not yet cleaned up.

            Admin has precedence over Health

          • Probe X/Y: X out of Y checks have succeeded

            X and Y are backend specific and may represent probe checks, other backends or any other metric.

            If there is no probe or the director does not provide details on probe check results, 0/0 is output.

          • Health: Probe health state

            • healthysick

            If there is no probe, healthy is output.

          • Last change: Timestamp when the health state last changed.

          The  health  state  reported  here is generic. A backend's health may also depend on the context it is
          being used in (e.g. the object's hash), so the actual health state as visible  from  VCL  (e.g.  using
          std.healthy()) may differ.

          For  -j,  the  object  members  should  be  self  explanatory,  matching  the  fields described above.
          probe_message has the format [X, Y, "state"] as described above for Probe. JSON Probe details  (-j  -p
          arguments) are director specific.

   backend.set_health <backend_pattern> [auto|healthy|sick]
          Set health status of backend(s) matching <backend_pattern>.

          • With auto, the health status is determined by a probe or some other dynamic mechanism, if any

          • healthy sets the backend as usable

          • sick sets the backend as unsable

   ban <field> <operator> <arg> [&& <field> <oper> <arg> ...]
          Mark obsolete all objects where all the conditions match.

          See vcl(7)_ban for details

   ban.list [-j]
          List the active bans.

          Unless -j is specified for JSON output,  the output format is:

          • Time the ban was issued.

          • Objects referencing this ban.

          • C if ban is completed = no further testing against it.

          • if lurker debugging is enabled:

            • R for req.* tests

            • O for obj.* tests

            • Pointer to ban object

          • Ban specification

          Durations of ban specifications get normalized, for example "7d" gets changed into "1w".

   banner
          Print welcome banner.

   help [-j|<command>]
          Show command/protocol help.

          -j specifies JSON output.

   panic.clear [-z]
          Clear the last panic, if any, -z will clear related varnishstat counter(s)

   panic.show [-j]
          Return the last panic, if any.

          -j specifies JSON output -- the panic message is returned as an unstructured JSON string.

   param.reset <param>
          Reset parameter to default value.

   param.set [-j] <param> <value>
          Set parameter value.

          The  JSON  output  is  the same as param.show -j <param> and contains the updated value as it would be
          represented by a subsequent execution of param.show.

          This can be useful to later verify that a parameter value didn't change and to use the value from  the
          JSON output to reset the parameter to the desired value.

   param.show [-l|-j] [<param>|changed]
          Show parameters and their values.

          The  long  form with -l shows additional information, including documentation and minimum, maximum and
          default values, if defined for the  parameter.  JSON  output  is  specified  with  -j,  in  which  the
          information  for  the  long  form  is  included;  only one of -l or -j is permitted. If a parameter is
          specified with <param>, show only that parameter. If changed is specified, show only those  parameters
          whose values differ from their defaults.

   pid [-j]
          Show the pid of the master process, and the worker if it's running.

          -j specifies JSON output.

   ping [-j] [<timestamp>]
          Keep connection alive.

          The response is formatted as JSON if -j is specified.

   quit
          Close connection.

   start
          Start the Varnish cache process.

   status [-j]
          Check status of Varnish cache process.

          -j specifies JSON output.

   stop
          Stop the Varnish cache process.

   storage.list [-j]
          List storage devices.

          -j specifies JSON output.

   vcl.deps [-j]
          List all loaded configuration and their dependencies.

          Unless  -j  is  specified  for  JSON  output,  the output format is up to two columns of dynamic width
          separated by white space with the fields:

          • VCL: a VCL program

          • Dependency: another VCL program it depends on

          Only direct dependencies are listed, and VCLs with multiple dependencies are listed multiple times.

   vcl.discard <name_pattern>...
          Unload the named configurations (when possible).

          Unload the named  configurations  and  labels  matching  at  least  one  name  pattern.  All  matching
          configurations  and  labels are discarded in the correct order with respect to potential dependencies.
          If one configuration or label could not be discarded because one of  its  dependencies  would  remain,
          nothing  is  discarded.  Each  individual  name pattern must match at least one named configuration or
          label.

   vcl.inline <configname> <quoted_VCLstring> [auto|cold|warm]
          Compile and load the VCL data under the name provided.

          Multi-line VCL can be input using the here document ref_syntax.

   vcl.label <label> <configname>
          Apply label to configuration.

          A VCL label is like a UNIX symbolic link,  a name without substance, which points to another VCL.

          Labels are mandatory whenever one VCL references another.

   vcl.list [-j]
          List all loaded configuration.

          Unless -j is specified for JSON output,  the output format is five or seven columns of dynamic  width,
          separated by white space with the fields:

          • status: active, available or discarded

          • state: label, cold, warm, or auto

          • temperature: init, cold, warm, busy or cooling

          • busy: number of references to this vcl (integer)

          • name: the name given to this vcl or label

          • [ <- | -> ] and label info last two fields)

            • -> <vcl> : label "points to" the named <vcl>

            • <- (<n> label[s]): the vcl has <n> label(s)

   vcl.load <configname> <filename> [auto|cold|warm]
          Compile and load the VCL file under the name provided.

   vcl.show [-v] [<configname>]
          Display the source code for the specified configuration.

   vcl.state <configname> [auto|cold|warm]
          Force the state of the named configuration.

   vcl.symtab
          Dump the VCL symbol-tables.

   vcl.use <configname|label>
          Switch to the named configuration immediately.

   Backend Pattern
       A  backend pattern can be a backend name or a combination of a VCL name and backend name in "VCL.backend"
       format.  If the VCL name is omitted, the active VCL is assumed.  Partial matching on the backend and  VCL
       names is supported using shell-style wildcards, e.g. asterisk (*).

       Examples:

          backend.list def*
          backend.list b*.def*
          backend.set_health default sick
          backend.set_health def* healthy
          backend.set_health * auto

   Ban Expressions
       A  ban  expression consists of one or more conditions.  A condition consists of a field, an operator, and
       an argument.  Conditions can be ANDed together with "&&".

       A field can be any of the variables from VCL, for instance req.url, req.http.host or obj.http.set-cookie.

       Operators are "==" for direct comparison, "~" for a regular expression match, and ">"  or  "<"  for  size
       comparisons.  Prepending an operator with "!" negates the expression.

       The  argument  could  be a quoted string, a regexp, or an integer.  Integers can have "KB", "MB", "GB" or
       "TB" appended for size related fields.

   VCL Temperature
       A VCL program goes through several states related to the different commands: it can be loaded, used,  and
       later  discarded.  You can load several VCL programs and switch at any time from one to another. There is
       only one active VCL, but the previous active VCL will be maintained active until all its transactions are
       over.

       Over time, if you often refresh your VCL and keep the previous versions around, resource consumption will
       increase, you can't escape that. However, most of the time you want to pay the price only for the  active
       VCL and keep older VCLs in case you'd need to rollback to a previous version.

       The  VCL  temperature  allows  you  to  minimize the footprint of inactive VCLs. Once a VCL becomes cold,
       Varnish will release all the resources that can  be  be  later  reacquired.  You  can  manually  set  the
       temperature of a VCL or let varnish automatically handle it.

EXAMPLES

       Load a multi-line VCL using shell-style here document:

          vcl.inline example << EOF
          vcl 4.0;

          backend www {
              .host = "127.0.0.1";
              .port = "8080";
          }
          EOF

       Ban all requests where req.url exactly matches the string /news:

          ban req.url == "/news"

       Ban  all documents where the serving host is "example.com" or "www.example.com", and where the Set-Cookie
       header received from the backend contains "USERID=1663":

          ban req.http.host ~ "^(?i)(www\\.)?example\\.com$" && obj.http.set-cookie ~ "USERID=1663"

AUTHORS

       This manual page was originally written by Per Buer and later modified by  Federico  G.  Schwindt,  Dridi
       Boukelmoune, Lasse Karstensen and Poul-Henning Kamp.

SEE ALSO

varnishadm(1)varnishd(1)vcl(7)

       • For API use of the CLI: The Reference Manual.

                                                                                                  VARNISH-CLI(7)