.. Copyright (c) 2013-2021 Varnish Software AS SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause See LICENSE file for full text of license .. _run_cli: CLI - bossing Varnish around ============================ Once ``varnishd`` is started, you can control it using the ``varnishadm`` program and the command line interface:: varnishadm help If you want to run ``varnishadm`` from a remote system, we recommend you use ``ssh`` into the system where ``varnishd`` runs. (But see also: :ref:`Local and remote CLI connections `) You can SSH into the ``varnishd`` computer and run ``varnishadm``:: ssh $hostname varnishadm help If you give no command arguments, ``varnishadm`` runs in interactive mode with command-completion, command-history and other comforts: .. code-block:: text critter phk> ./varnishadm 200 ----------------------------- Varnish Cache CLI 1.0 ----------------------------- FreeBSD,13.0-CURRENT,amd64,-jnone,-sdefault,-sdefault,-hcritbit varnish-trunk revision 2bd5d2adfc407216ebaa653fae882d3c8d47f5e1 Type 'help' for command list. Type 'quit' to close CLI session. Type 'start' to launch worker process. varnish> The CLI always returns a three digit status code to tell how things went. 200 and 201 means *OK*, anything else means that some kind of trouble prevented the execution of the command. (If you get 201, it means that the output was truncated, See the :ref:`ref_param_cli_limit` parameter.) When commands are given as arguments to ``varnishadm``, a status different than 200 or 201 will cause it to exit with status 1 and print the status code on standard error. What can you do with the CLI ---------------------------- From the CLI you can: * load/use/discard VCL programs * ban (invalidate) cache content * change parameters * start/stop worker process We will discuss each of these briefly below. Load, use and discard VCL programs ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ All caching and policy decisions are made by VCL programs. You can have multiple VCL programs loaded, but one of them is designated the "active" VCL program, and this is where all new requests start out. To load new VCL program:: varnish> vcl.load some_name some_filename Loading will read the VCL program from the file, and compile it. If the compilation fails, you will get an error messages: .. code-block:: text .../mask is not numeric. ('input' Line 4 Pos 17) "192.168.2.0/24x", ----------------#################- Running VCC-compiler failed, exit 1 VCL compilation failed If compilation succeeds, the VCL program is loaded, and you can now make it the active VCL, whenever you feel like it:: varnish> vcl.use some_name If you find out that was a really bad idea, you can switch back to the previous VCL program again:: varnish> vcl.use old_name The switch is instantaneous, all new requests will start using the VCL you activated right away. The requests currently being processed complete using whatever VCL they started with. We highly recommend you design an emergency-VCL, and always keep it loaded, so it can be activated with :: vcl.use emergency Ban cache content ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Varnish offers "purges" to remove things from cache, but that requires you to know exactly what they are. Sometimes it is useful to be able to throw things out of cache without having an exact list of what to throw out. Imagine for instance that the company logo changed and now you need Varnish to stop serving the old logo out of the cache: .. code-block:: text varnish> ban req.url ~ "logo.*[.]png" should do that, and yes, that is a regular expression. We call this "banning" because the objects are still in the cache, but they are now banned from delivery, while all the rest of the cache is unaffected. Even when you want to throw out *all* the cached content, banning is both faster and less disruptive that a restart:: varnish> ban obj.http.date ~ .* .. In addition to handling such special occasions, banning can be used .. in many creative ways to keep the cache up to date, more about .. that in: (TODO: xref) Change parameters ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Parameters can be set on the command line with the '-p' argument, but almost all parameters can be examined and changed on the fly from the CLI: .. code-block:: text varnish> param.show prefer_ipv6 200 prefer_ipv6 off [bool] Default is off Prefer IPv6 address when connecting to backends which have both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. varnish> param.set prefer_ipv6 true 200 In general it is not a good idea to modify parameters unless you have a good reason, such as performance tuning or security configuration. .. XXX: Natural delay of some duration sounds vague. benc Most parameters will take effect instantly, or with a short delay, but a few of them requires you to restart the child process before they take effect. This is always mentioned in the description of the parameter. Starting and stopping the worker process ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ In general you should just leave the worker process running, but if you need to stop and/or start it, the obvious commands work:: varnish> stop and:: varnish> start If you start ``varnishd`` with the '-d' (debugging) argument, you will always need to start the child process explicitly. Should the child process die, the master process will automatically restart it, but you can disable that with the :ref:`ref_param_auto_restart` parameter.