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

NAME
varnishd - HTTP accelerator daemon
SYNOPSIS
varnishd [-a address[:port][,PROTO]] [-b host[:port]] [-C] [-d] [-F] [-f config] [-h type[,options]] [-i
identity] [-j jail[,jailoptions]] [-l vsl[,vsm]] [-M address:port] [-n name] [-P file] [-p param=value]
[-r param[,param...]] [-S secret-file] [-s [name=]kind[,options]] [-T address[:port]] [-t TTL] [-V] [-W
waiter]
DESCRIPTION
The varnishd daemon accepts HTTP requests from clients, passes them on to a backend server and caches the
returned documents to better satisfy future requests for the same document.
OPTIONS
-a <address[:port][,PROTO]>
Listen for client requests on the specified address and port. The address can be a host name
("localhost"), an IPv4 dotted-quad ("127.0.0.1"), or an IPv6 address enclosed in square brackets
("[::1]"). If address is not specified, varnishd will listen on all available IPv4 and IPv6
interfaces. If port is not specified, port 80 (http) is used. An additional protocol type can be
set for the listening socket with PROTO. Valid protocol types are: HTTP/1 (default), and PROXY.
Multiple listening addresses can be specified by using multiple -a arguments.
-b <host[:port]>
Use the specified host as backend server. If port is not specified, the default is 8080.
-C Print VCL code compiled to C language and exit. Specify the VCL file to compile with the -f
option.
-d Enables debugging mode: The parent process runs in the foreground with a CLI connection on
stdin/stdout, and the child process must be started explicitly with a CLI command. Terminating the
parent process will also terminate the child.
-F Do not fork, run in the foreground.
-f config
Use the specified VCL configuration file instead of the builtin default. See vcl(7) for details
on VCL syntax.
When neither a -f nor a -b argument are given, varnishd will not start the worker process but
process cli commands.
-h <type[,options]>
Specifies the hash algorithm. See Hash Algorithm Options for a list of supported algorithms.
-i identity
Specify the identity of the Varnish server. This can be accessed using server.identity from VCL.
-j <jail[,jailoptions]>
Specify the jailing technology to use.
-l <vsl[,vsm]>
Specifies size of shmlog file. vsl is the space for the VSL records [80M] and vsm is the space for
stats counters [1M]. Scaling suffixes like 'K' and 'M' can be used up to (G)igabytes. Default is
81 Megabytes.
-M <address:port>
Connect to this port and offer the command line interface. Think of it as a reverse shell. When
running with -M and there is no backend defined the child process (the cache) will not start
initially.
-n name
Specify the name for this instance. Amongst other things, this name is used to construct the name
of the directory in which varnishd keeps temporary files and persistent state. If the specified
name begins with a forward slash, it is interpreted as the absolute path to the directory which
should be used for this purpose.
-P file
Write the PID of the process to the specified file.
-p <param=value>
Set the parameter specified by param to the specified value, see List of Parameters for details.
This option can be used multiple times to specify multiple parameters.
-r <param[,param...]>
Make the listed parameters read only. This gives the system administrator a way to limit what the
Varnish CLI can do. Consider making parameters such as cc_command, vcc_allow_inline_c and
vmod_dir read only as these can potentially be used to escalate privileges from the CLI.
-S file
Path to a file containing a secret used for authorizing access to the management port. If not
provided a new secret will be drawn from the system PRNG.
-s <[name=]type[,options]>
Use the specified storage backend, see Storage Backend Options.
This option can be used multiple times to specify multiple storage files. Names are referenced in
logs, VCL, statistics, etc.
-T <address[:port]>
Offer a management interface on the specified address and port. See Management Interface for a
list of management commands.
-t TTL Specifies the default time to live (TTL) for cached objects. This is a shortcut for specifying the
default_ttl run-time parameter.
-V Display the version number and exit.
-W waiter
Specifies the waiter type to use.
Hash Algorithm Options
The following hash algorithms are available:
-h critbit
self-scaling tree structure. The default hash algorithm in Varnish Cache 2.1 and onwards. In
comparison to a more traditional B tree the critbit tree is almost completely lockless. Do not
change this unless you are certain what you're doing.
-h simple_list
A simple doubly-linked list. Not recommended for production use.
-h <classic[,buckets]>
A standard hash table. The hash key is the CRC32 of the object's URL modulo the size of the hash
table. Each table entry points to a list of elements which share the same hash key. The buckets
parameter specifies the number of entries in the hash table. The default is 16383.
Storage Backend Options
The following storage types are available:
-s <malloc[,size]>
malloc is a memory based backend.
-s <file,path[,size[,granularity]]>
The file backend stores data in a file on disk. The file will be accessed using mmap.
The path is mandatory. If path points to a directory, a temporary file will be created in that
directory and immediately unlinked. If path points to a non-existing file, the file will be
created.
If size is omitted, and path points to an existing file with a size greater than zero, the size of
that file will be used. If not, an error is reported.
Granularity sets the allocation block size. Defaults to the system page size or the filesystem
block size, whichever is larger.
-s <persistent,path,size>
Persistent storage. Varnish will store objects in a file in a manner that will secure the survival
of most of the objects in the event of a planned or unplanned shutdown of Varnish. The persistent
storage backend has multiple issues with it and will likely be removed from a future version of
Varnish.
Jail Options
Varnish jails are a generalization over various platform specific methods to reduce the privileges of
varnish processes. They may have specific options. Available jails are:
-j solaris
Reduce privileges(5) for varnishd and sub-process to the minimally required set. Only available on
platforms which have the setppriv(2) call.
-j <unix[,user=`user`][,ccgroup=`group`]>
Default on all other platforms if varnishd is either started with an effective uid of 0 ("as
root") or as user varnish.
With the unix jail technology activated, varnish will switch to an alternative user for
subprocesses and change the effective uid of the master process whenever possible.
The optional user argument specifies which alternative user to use. It defaults to varnish
The optional ccgroup argument specifies a group to add to varnish subprocesses requiring access to
a c-compiler. There is no default.
-j none
last resort jail choice: With jail technology none, varnish will run all processes with the
privileges it was started with.
Management Interface
If the -T option was specified, varnishd will offer a command-line management interface on the specified
address and port. The recommended way of connecting to the command-line management interface is through
varnishadm(1).
The commands available are documented in varnish(7).
RUN TIME PARAMETERS
Run Time Parameter Flags
Runtime parameters are marked with shorthand flags to avoid repeating the same text over and over in the
table below. The meaning of the flags are:
• experimental
We have no solid information about good/bad/optimal values for this parameter. Feedback with experience
and observations are most welcome.
• delayed
This parameter can be changed on the fly, but will not take effect immediately.
• restart
The worker process must be stopped and restarted, before this parameter takes effect.
• reload
The VCL programs must be reloaded for this parameter to take effect.
• experimental
We're not really sure about this parameter, tell us what you find.
• wizard
Do not touch unless you really know what you're doing.
• only_root
Only works if varnishd is running as root.
Default Value Exceptions on 32 bit Systems
Be aware that on 32 bit systems, certain default values are reduced relative to the values listed below,
in order to conserve VM space:
• workspace_client: 16k
• thread_pool_workspace: 16k
• http_resp_size: 8k
• http_req_size: 12k
• gzip_stack_buffer: 4k
• thread_pool_stack: 64k
List of Parameters
This text is produced from the same text you will find in the CLI if you use the param.show command:
accept_filter
• Units: bool
• Default: off
• Flags: must_restart
Enable kernel accept-filters (if available in the kernel).
acceptor_sleep_decay
• Default: 0.9
• Minimum: 0
• Maximum: 1
• Flags: experimental
If we run out of resources, such as file descriptors or worker threads, the acceptor will sleep between
accepts. This parameter (multiplicatively) reduce the sleep duration for each successful accept. (ie:
0.9 = reduce by 10%)
acceptor_sleep_incr
• Units: seconds
• Default: 0.000
• Minimum: 0.000
• Maximum: 1.000
• Flags: experimental
If we run out of resources, such as file descriptors or worker threads, the acceptor will sleep between
accepts. This parameter control how much longer we sleep, each time we fail to accept a new connection.
acceptor_sleep_max
• Units: seconds
• Default: 0.050
• Minimum: 0.000
• Maximum: 10.000
• Flags: experimental
If we run out of resources, such as file descriptors or worker threads, the acceptor will sleep between
accepts. This parameter limits how long it can sleep between attempts to accept new connections.
auto_restart
• Units: bool
• Default: on
Automatically restart the child/worker process if it dies.
backend_idle_timeout
• Units: seconds
• Default: 60.000
• Minimum: 1.000
Timeout before we close unused backend connections.
ban_dups
• Units: bool
• Default: on
Eliminate older identical bans when a new ban is added. This saves CPU cycles by not comparing objects
to identical bans. This is a waste of time if you have many bans which are never identical.
ban_lurker_age
• Units: seconds
• Default: 60.000
• Minimum: 0.000
The ban lurker will ignore bans until they are this old. When a ban is added, the active traffic will be
tested against it as part of object lookup. This parameter holds the ban-lurker off, until the rush is
over.
ban_lurker_batch
• Default: 1000
• Minimum: 1
The ban lurker sleeps ${ban_lurker_sleep} after examining this many objects. Use this to pace the
ban-lurker if it eats too many resources.
ban_lurker_sleep
• Units: seconds
• Default: 0.010
• Minimum: 0.000
How long the ban lurker sleeps after examining ${ban_lurker_batch} objects. Use this to pace the
ban-lurker if it eats too many resources. A value of zero will disable the ban lurker entirely.
between_bytes_timeout
• Units: seconds
• Default: 60.000
• Minimum: 0.000
We only wait for this many seconds between bytes received from the backend before giving up the fetch. A
value of zero means never give up. VCL values, per backend or per backend request take precedence. This
parameter does not apply to pipe'ed requests.
cc_command
• Default: "exec gcc -std=gnu99 -g -O2 -fstack-protector-strong -Wformat -Werror=format-security -Wall
-Werror -Wno-error=unused-result -pthread -fpic -shared -Wl,-x -o %o %s"
• Flags: must_reload
Command used for compiling the C source code to a dlopen(3) loadable object. Any occurrence of %s in the
string will be replaced with the source file name, and %o will be replaced with the output file name.
cli_buffer
• Units: bytes
• Default: 8k
• Minimum: 4k
Size of buffer for CLI command input. You may need to increase this if you have big VCL files and use
the vcl.inline CLI command. NB: Must be specified with -p to have effect.
cli_limit
• Units: bytes
• Default: 48k
• Minimum: 128b
• Maximum: 99999999b
Maximum size of CLI response. If the response exceeds this limit, the response code will be 201 instead
of 200 and the last line will indicate the truncation.
cli_timeout
• Units: seconds
• Default: 60.000
• Minimum: 0.000
Timeout for the childs replies to CLI requests from the mgt_param.
clock_skew
• Units: seconds
• Default: 10
• Minimum: 0
How much clockskew we are willing to accept between the backend and our own clock.
connect_timeout
• Units: seconds
• Default: 3.500
• Minimum: 0.000
Default connection timeout for backend connections. We only try to connect to the backend for this many
seconds before giving up. VCL can override this default value for each backend and backend request.
critbit_cooloff
• Units: seconds
• Default: 180.000
• Minimum: 60.000
• Maximum: 254.000
• Flags: wizard
How long the critbit hasher keeps deleted objheads on the cooloff list.
debug
• Default: none
Enable/Disable various kinds of debugging.
none Disable all debugging
Use +/- prefix to set/reset individual bits:
req_state
VSL Request state engine
workspace
VSL Workspace operations
waiter VSL Waiter internals
waitinglist
VSL Waitinglist events
syncvsl
Make VSL synchronous
hashedge
Edge cases in Hash
vclrel Rapid VCL release
lurker VSL Ban lurker
esi_chop
Chop ESI fetch to bits
flush_head
Flush after http1 head
vtc_mode
Varnishtest Mode
witness
Emit WITNESS lock records
vsm_keep
Keep the VSM file on restart
default_grace
• Units: seconds
• Default: 10.000
• Minimum: 0.000
• Flags: obj_sticky
Default grace period. We will deliver an object this long after it has expired, provided another thread
is attempting to get a new copy.
default_keep
• Units: seconds
• Default: 0.000
• Minimum: 0.000
• Flags: obj_sticky
Default keep period. We will keep a useless object around this long, making it available for conditional
backend fetches. That means that the object will be removed from the cache at the end of ttl+grace+keep.
default_ttl
• Units: seconds
• Default: 120.000
• Minimum: 0.000
• Flags: obj_sticky
The TTL assigned to objects if neither the backend nor the VCL code assigns one.
feature
• Default: none
Enable/Disable various minor features.
none Disable all features.
Use +/- prefix to enable/disable individual feature:
short_panic
Short panic message.
wait_silo
Wait for persistent silo.
no_coredump
No coredumps.
esi_ignore_https
Treat HTTPS as HTTP in ESI:includes
esi_disable_xml_check
Don't check of body looks like XML
esi_ignore_other_elements
Ignore non-esi XML-elements
esi_remove_bom
Remove UTF-8 BOM
fetch_chunksize
• Units: bytes
• Default: 16k
• Minimum: 4k
• Flags: experimental
The default chunksize used by fetcher. This should be bigger than the majority of objects with short
TTLs. Internal limits in the storage_file module makes increases above 128kb a dubious idea.
fetch_maxchunksize
• Units: bytes
• Default: 0.25G
• Minimum: 64k
• Flags: experimental
The maximum chunksize we attempt to allocate from storage. Making this too large may cause delays and
storage fragmentation.
first_byte_timeout
• Units: seconds
• Default: 60.000
• Minimum: 0.000
Default timeout for receiving first byte from backend. We only wait for this many seconds for the first
byte before giving up. A value of 0 means it will never time out. VCL can override this default value for
each backend and backend request. This parameter does not apply to pipe.
gzip_buffer
• Units: bytes
• Default: 32k
• Minimum: 2k
• Flags: experimental
Size of malloc buffer used for gzip processing. These buffers are used for in-transit data, for instance
gunzip'ed data being sent to a client.Making this space to small results in more overhead, writes to
sockets etc, making it too big is probably just a waste of memory.
gzip_level
• Default: 6
• Minimum: 0
• Maximum: 9
Gzip compression level: 0=debug, 1=fast, 9=best
gzip_memlevel
• Default: 8
• Minimum: 1
• Maximum: 9
Gzip memory level 1=slow/least, 9=fast/most compression. Memory impact is 1=1k, 2=2k, ... 9=256k.
http_gzip_support
• Units: bool
• Default: on
Enable gzip support. When enabled Varnish request compressed objects from the backend and store them
compressed. If a client does not support gzip encoding Varnish will uncompress compressed objects on
demand. Varnish will also rewrite the Accept-Encoding header of clients indicating support for gzip to:
Accept-Encoding: gzip
Clients that do not support gzip will have their Accept-Encoding header removed. For more information on
how gzip is implemented please see the chapter on gzip in the Varnish reference.
http_max_hdr
• Units: header lines
• Default: 64
• Minimum: 32
• Maximum: 65535
Maximum number of HTTP header lines we allow in {req|resp|bereq|beresp}.http (obj.http is autosized to
the exact number of headers). Cheap, ~20 bytes, in terms of workspace memory. Note that the first line
occupies five header lines.
http_range_support
• Units: bool
• Default: on
Enable support for HTTP Range headers.
http_req_hdr_len
• Units: bytes
• Default: 8k
• Minimum: 40b
Maximum length of any HTTP client request header we will allow. The limit is inclusive its continuation
lines.
http_req_size
• Units: bytes
• Default: 32k
• Minimum: 0.25k
Maximum number of bytes of HTTP client request we will deal with. This is a limit on all bytes up to the
double blank line which ends the HTTP request. The memory for the request is allocated from the client
workspace (param: workspace_client) and this parameter limits how much of that the request is allowed to
take up.
http_resp_hdr_len
• Units: bytes
• Default: 8k
• Minimum: 40b
Maximum length of any HTTP backend response header we will allow. The limit is inclusive its
continuation lines.
http_resp_size
• Units: bytes
• Default: 32k
• Minimum: 0.25k
Maximum number of bytes of HTTP backend response we will deal with. This is a limit on all bytes up to
the double blank line which ends the HTTP request. The memory for the request is allocated from the
backend workspace (param: workspace_backend) and this parameter limits how much of that the request is
allowed to take up.
idle_send_timeout
• Units: seconds
• Default: 60.000
• Minimum: 0.000
• Flags: delayed
Time to wait with no data sent. If no data has been transmitted in this many seconds the session is
closed. See setsockopt(2) under SO_SNDTIMEO for more information.
listen_depth
• Units: connections
• Default: 1024
• Minimum: 0
• Flags: must_restart
Listen queue depth.
lru_interval
• Units: seconds
• Default: 2.000
• Minimum: 0.000
• Flags: experimental
Grace period before object moves on LRU list. Objects are only moved to the front of the LRU list if
they have not been moved there already inside this timeout period. This reduces the amount of lock
operations necessary for LRU list access.
max_esi_depth
• Units: levels
• Default: 5
• Minimum: 0
Maximum depth of esi:include processing.
max_restarts
• Units: restarts
• Default: 4
• Minimum: 0
Upper limit on how many times a request can restart. Be aware that restarts are likely to cause a hit
against the backend, so don't increase thoughtlessly.
max_retries
• Units: retries
• Default: 4
• Minimum: 0
Upper limit on how many times a backend fetch can retry.
nuke_limit
• Units: allocations
• Default: 50
• Minimum: 0
• Flags: experimental
Maximum number of objects we attempt to nuke in order to make space for a object body.
pcre_match_limit
• Default: 10000
• Minimum: 1
The limit for the number of calls to the internal match() function in pcre_exec().
(See: PCRE_EXTRA_MATCH_LIMIT in pcre docs.)
This parameter limits how much CPU time regular expression matching can soak up.
pcre_match_limit_recursion
• Default: 20
• Minimum: 1
The recursion depth-limit for the internal match() function in a pcre_exec().
(See: PCRE_EXTRA_MATCH_LIMIT_RECURSION in pcre docs.)
This puts an upper limit on the amount of stack used by PCRE for certain classes of regular expressions.
We have set the default value low in order to prevent crashes, at the cost of possible regexp matching
failures.
Matching failures will show up in the log as VCL_Error messages with regexp errors -27 or -21.
Testcase r01576 can be useful when tuning this parameter.
ping_interval
• Units: seconds
• Default: 3
• Minimum: 0
• Flags: must_restart
Interval between pings from parent to child. Zero will disable pinging entirely, which makes it possible
to attach a debugger to the child.
pipe_timeout
• Units: seconds
• Default: 60.000
• Minimum: 0.000
Idle timeout for PIPE sessions. If nothing have been received in either direction for this many seconds,
the session is closed.
pool_req
• Default: 10,100,10
Parameters for per worker pool request memory pool. The three numbers are:
min_pool
minimum size of free pool.
max_pool
maximum size of free pool.
max_age
max age of free element.
pool_sess
• Default: 10,100,10
Parameters for per worker pool session memory pool. The three numbers are:
min_pool
minimum size of free pool.
max_pool
maximum size of free pool.
max_age
max age of free element.
pool_vbo
• Default: 10,100,10
Parameters for backend object fetch memory pool. The three numbers are:
min_pool
minimum size of free pool.
max_pool
maximum size of free pool.
max_age
max age of free element.
prefer_ipv6
• Units: bool
• Default: off
Prefer IPv6 address when connecting to backends which have both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
rush_exponent
• Units: requests per request
• Default: 3
• Minimum: 2
• Flags: experimental
How many parked request we start for each completed request on the object. NB: Even with the implict
delay of delivery, this parameter controls an exponential increase in number of worker threads.
send_timeout
• Units: seconds
• Default: 600.000
• Minimum: 0.000
• Flags: delayed
Send timeout for client connections. If the HTTP response hasn't been transmitted in this many seconds
the session is closed. See setsockopt(2) under SO_SNDTIMEO for more information.
session_max
• Units: sessions
• Default: 100000
• Minimum: 1000
Maximum number of sessions we will allocate from one pool before just dropping connections. This is
mostly an anti-DoS measure, and setting it plenty high should not hurt, as long as you have the memory
for it.
shm_reclen
• Units: bytes
• Default: 255b
• Minimum: 16b
• Maximum: 4084
Old name for vsl_reclen, use that instead.
shortlived
• Units: seconds
• Default: 10.000
• Minimum: 0.000
Objects created with (ttl+grace+keep) shorter than this are always put in transient storage.
sigsegv_handler
• Units: bool
• Default: on
• Flags: must_restart
Install a signal handler which tries to dump debug information on segmentation faults, bus errors and
abort signals.
syslog_cli_traffic
• Units: bool
• Default: on
Log all CLI traffic to syslog(LOG_INFO).
tcp_keepalive_intvl
• Units: seconds
• Default: 75.000
• Minimum: 1.000
• Maximum: 100.000
• Flags: experimental
The number of seconds between TCP keep-alive probes.
tcp_keepalive_probes
• Units: probes
• Default: 9
• Minimum: 1
• Maximum: 100
• Flags: experimental
The maximum number of TCP keep-alive probes to send before giving up and killing the connection if no
response is obtained from the other end.
tcp_keepalive_time
• Units: seconds
• Default: 7200.000
• Minimum: 1.000
• Maximum: 7200.000
• Flags: experimental
The number of seconds a connection needs to be idle before TCP begins sending out keep-alive probes.
thread_pool_add_delay
• Units: seconds
• Default: 0.000
• Minimum: 0.000
• Flags: experimental
Wait at least this long after creating a thread.
Some (buggy) systems may need a short (sub-second) delay between creating threads. Set this to a few
milliseconds if you see the 'threads_failed' counter grow too much.
Setting this too high results in insuffient worker threads.
thread_pool_destroy_delay
• Units: seconds
• Default: 1.000
• Minimum: 0.010
• Flags: delayed, experimental
Wait this long after destroying a thread.
This controls the decay of thread pools when idle(-ish).
thread_pool_fail_delay
• Units: seconds
• Default: 0.200
• Minimum: 0.010
• Flags: experimental
Wait at least this long after a failed thread creation before trying to create another thread.
Failure to create a worker thread is often a sign that the end is near, because the process is running
out of some resource. This delay tries to not rush the end on needlessly.
If thread creation failures are a problem, check that thread_pool_max is not too high.
It may also help to increase thread_pool_timeout and thread_pool_min, to reduce the rate at which treads
are destroyed and later recreated.
thread_pool_max
• Units: threads
• Default: 5000
• Minimum: 100
• Flags: delayed
The maximum number of worker threads in each pool.
Do not set this higher than you have to, since excess worker threads soak up RAM and CPU and generally
just get in the way of getting work done.
thread_pool_min
• Units: threads
• Default: 100
• Maximum: 5000
• Flags: delayed
The minimum number of worker threads in each pool.
Increasing this may help ramp up faster from low load situations or when threads have expired.
Minimum is 10 threads.
thread_pool_stack
• Units: bytes
• Default: 48k
• Minimum: 16k
• Flags: experimental
Worker thread stack size. This will likely be rounded up to a multiple of 4k (or whatever the page_size
might be) by the kernel.
thread_pool_timeout
• Units: seconds
• Default: 300.000
• Minimum: 10.000
• Flags: delayed, experimental
Thread idle threshold.
Threads in excess of thread_pool_min, which have been idle for at least this long, will be destroyed.
thread_pools
• Units: pools
• Default: 2
• Minimum: 1
• Flags: delayed, experimental
Number of worker thread pools.
Increasing number of worker pools decreases lock contention.
Too many pools waste CPU and RAM resources, and more than one pool for each CPU is probably detrimal to
performance.
Can be increased on the fly, but decreases require a restart to take effect.
thread_queue_limit
• Default: 20
• Minimum: 0
• Flags: experimental
Permitted queue length per thread-pool.
This sets the number of requests we will queue, waiting for an available thread. Above this limit
sessions will be dropped instead of queued.
thread_stats_rate
• Units: requests
• Default: 10
• Minimum: 0
• Flags: experimental
Worker threads accumulate statistics, and dump these into the global stats counters if the lock is free
when they finish a job (request/fetch etc.) This parameters defines the maximum number of jobs a worker
thread may handle, before it is forced to dump its accumulated stats into the global counters.
timeout_idle
• Units: seconds
• Default: 5.000
• Minimum: 0.000
Idle timeout for client connections. A connection is considered idle, until we have received the full
request headers.
timeout_linger
• Units: seconds
• Default: 0.050
• Minimum: 0.000
• Flags: experimental
How long the worker thread lingers on an idle session before handing it over to the waiter. When
sessions are reused, as much as half of all reuses happen within the first 100 msec of the previous
request completing. Setting this too high results in worker threads not doing anything for their keep,
setting it too low just means that more sessions take a detour around the waiter.
vcc_allow_inline_c
• Units: bool
• Default: off
Allow inline C code in VCL.
vcc_err_unref
• Units: bool
• Default: on
Unreferenced VCL objects result in error.
vcc_unsafe_path
• Units: bool
• Default: on
Allow '/' in vmod & include paths. Allow 'import ... from ...'.
vcl_cooldown
• Units: seconds
• Default: 600.000
• Minimum: 0.000
How long a VCL is kept warm after being replaced as the active VCL (granularity approximately 30
seconds).
vcl_dir
• Default: /etc/varnish
Directory (or colon separated list of directories) from which relative VCL filenames (vcl.load and
include) are to be found.
vmod_dir
• Default: /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/varnish/vmods
Directory (or colon separated list of directories) where VMODs are to be found.
vsl_buffer
• Units: bytes
• Default: 4k
• Minimum: 267
Bytes of (req-/backend-)workspace dedicated to buffering VSL records. Setting this too high costs
memory, setting it too low will cause more VSL flushes and likely increase lock-contention on the VSL
mutex.
The minimum tracks the vsl_reclen parameter + 12 bytes.
vsl_mask
• Default: -VCL_trace,-WorkThread,-Hash,-VfpAcct
Mask individual VSL messages from being logged.
default
Set default value
Use +/- prefix in front of VSL tag name, to mask/unmask individual VSL messages.
vsl_reclen
• Units: bytes
• Default: 255b
• Minimum: 16b
• Maximum: 4084b
Maximum number of bytes in SHM log record.
The maximum tracks the vsl_buffer parameter - 12 bytes.
vsl_space
• Units: bytes
• Default: 80M
• Minimum: 1M
• Flags: must_restart
The amount of space to allocate for the VSL fifo buffer in the VSM memory segment. If you make this too
small, varnish{ncsa|log} etc will not be able to keep up. Making it too large just costs memory
resources.
vsm_space
• Units: bytes
• Default: 1M
• Minimum: 1M
• Flags: must_restart
The amount of space to allocate for stats counters in the VSM memory segment. If you make this too
small, some counters will be invisible. Making it too large just costs memory resources.
workspace_backend
• Units: bytes
• Default: 64k
• Minimum: 1k
• Flags: delayed
Bytes of HTTP protocol workspace for backend HTTP req/resp. If larger than 4k, use a multiple of 4k for
VM efficiency.
workspace_client
• Units: bytes
• Default: 64k
• Minimum: 9k
• Flags: delayed
Bytes of HTTP protocol workspace for clients HTTP req/resp. If larger than 4k, use a multiple of 4k for
VM efficiency.
workspace_session
• Units: bytes
• Default: 0.50k
• Minimum: 0.25k
• Flags: delayed
Allocation size for session structure and workspace. The workspace is primarily used for TCP
connection addresses. If larger than 4k, use a multiple of 4k for VM efficiency.
workspace_thread
• Units: bytes
• Default: 2k
• Minimum: 0.25k
• Maximum: 8k
• Flags: delayed
Bytes of auxiliary workspace per thread. This workspace is used for certain temporary data structures
during the operation of a worker thread. One use is for the io-vectors for writing requests and
responses to sockets, having too little space will result in more writev(2) system calls, having too much
just wastes the space.
EXIT CODES
Varnish and bundled tools will, in most cases, exit with one of the following codes
• 0 OK
• 1 Some error which could be system-dependent and/or transient
• 2 Serious configuration / parameter error - retrying with the same configuration / parameters is most
likely useless
The varnishd master process may also OR its exit code
• with 0x20 when the varnishd child process died,
• with 0x40 when the varnishd child process was terminated by a signal and
• with 0x80 when a core was dumped.
SEE ALSO
• varnishlog(1)
• varnishhist(1)
• varnishncsa(1)
• varnishstat(1)
• varnishtop(1)
• varnish-cli(7)
• vcl(7)
HISTORY
The varnishd daemon was developed by Poul-Henning Kamp in cooperation with Verdens Gang AS and Varnish
Software.
This manual page was written by Dag-Erling Smørgrav with updates by Stig Sandbeck Mathisen <‐
ssm@debian.org>, Nils Goroll and others.
COPYRIGHT
This document is licensed under the same licence as Varnish itself. See LICENCE for details.
• Copyright (c) 2007-2015 Varnish Software AS
VARNISHD(1)