varnishlog

Display Varnish logs

Author:Dag-Erling Smørgrav
Author:Per Buer
Date:2010-05-31
Version:0.2
Manual section:1

SYNOPSIS

varnishlog [-a] [-b] [-C] [-c] [-D] [-d] [-I regex] [-i tag] [-k keep] [-n varnish_name] [-o] [-O] [-m tag:regex ...] [-P file] [-r file] [-s num] [-u] [-V] [-w file] [-X regex] [-x tag]

DESCRIPTION

The varnishlog utility reads and presents varnishd(1) shared memory logs.

The following options are available:

-a When writing to a file, append to it rather than overwrite it.
-b Include log entries which result from communication with a backend server. If neither -b nor -c is specified, varnishlog acts as if they both were.
-C Ignore case when matching regular expressions.
-c Include log entries which result from communication with a client. If neither -b nor -c is specified, varnishlog acts as if they both were.
-D Daemonize.
-d Process old log entries on startup. Normally, varnishlog will only process entries which are written to the log after it starts.
-I regex Include log entries which match the specified regular expression. If neither -I nor -i is specified, all log entries are included.
-i tag Include log entries with the specified tag. If neither -I nor -i is specified, all log entries are included.
-k num Only show the first num log records.
-m tag:regex only list transactions where tag matches regex. Multiple
-m options are AND-ed together. Can not be combined with -O
-n Specifies the name of the varnishd instance to get logs from. If -n is not specified, the host name is used.
-o Ignored for compatibility with earlier versions.
-O Do not group log entries by request ID. Can not be combined with -m.
-P file Write the process's PID to the specified file.
-r file Read log entries from file instead of shared memory.
-s num Skip the first num log records.
-u Unbuffered output.
-V Display the version number and exit.
-w file Write log entries to file instead of displaying them. The file will be overwritten unless the -a option was specified. If varnishlog receives a SIGHUP while writing to a file, it will reopen the file, allowing the old one to be rotated away.
-X regex Exclude log entries which match the specified regular expression.
-x tag Exclude log entries with the specified tag.

TAGS

The following log entry tags are currently defined:

  • Backend
  • BackendClose
  • BackendOpen
  • BackendReuse
  • BackendXID
  • CLI
  • ClientAddr
  • Debug
  • Error
  • ExpBan
  • ExpKill
  • ExpPick
  • Hit
  • HitPass
  • HttpError
  • HttpGarbage
  • Length
  • ObjHeader
  • ObjLostHeader
  • ObjProtocol
  • ObjRequest
  • ObjResponse
  • ObjStatus
  • ObjURL
  • ReqEnd
  • ReqStart
  • RxHeader
  • RxLostHeader
  • RxProtocol
  • RxRequest
  • RxResponse
  • RxStatus
  • RxURL
  • SessionClose
  • SessionOpen
  • StatAddr
  • StatSess
  • TTL
  • TxHeader
  • TxLostHeader
  • TxProtocol
  • TxRequest
  • TxResponse
  • TxStatus
  • TxURL
  • VCL_acl
  • VCL_call
  • VCL_return
  • VCL_trace
  • WorkThread

EXAMPLES

The following command line simply copies all log entries to a log file:

$ varnishlog -w /var/log/varnish.log

The following command line reads that same log file and displays requests for the front page:

$ varnishlog -r /var/log/varnish.log -c -m 'RxURL:^/$'

SEE ALSO

  • varnishd(1)
  • varnishhist(1)
  • varnishncsa(1)
  • varnishstat(1)
  • varnishtop(1)

HISTORY

The varnishlog utility was developed by Poul-Henning Kamp ⟨phk@phk.freebsd.dk⟩ in cooperation with Verdens Gang AS, Varnish Software AS and Varnish Software. This manual page was initially written by Dag-Erling Smørgrav.

Table Of Contents

Previous topic

varnishhist

Next topic

varnishncsa

This Page