http purging multiple accept-encoding entries

Chris Hecker checker at d6.com
Sun Jul 11 07:48:07 CEST 2010


Hmm, okay, I switched to purge("req.url == " req.url) and it seems to be 
working, but I'm slightly confused as to why...

My two purges look like this:

mediawiki:
    15 RxRequest    c PURGE
    15 RxURL        c http://www.chrishecker.com/Homepage
    15 RxProtocol   c HTTP/1.0
    15 RxHeader     c Connection: Keep-Alive

wordpress + wp-varnish:
    15 RxRequest    c PURGE
    15 RxURL        c /2010/07/09/test-post/
    15 RxProtocol   c HTTP/1.0
    15 RxHeader     c Host: spyparty.com
    15 RxHeader     c Connection: Close

Am I correct in assuming req.url is the same as RxURL?  If so, how are 
both the full http://blah url and the /blah url matching the url in the 
cache exactly (which is what == means, I assume).  Or, is req.url 
expanded to the full url (meaning with the host added), not verbatim 
whatever comes in on the header?

My version of varnish (2.0.6) doesn't have the log statement, so I can't 
figure out how to put req.url into a header that will get printed to the 
log in the purge request so I can find out for myself.  req is not 
available in vcl_deliver either, and purge bypasses everything else, etc.

Thanks,
Chris



On 2010/07/10 16:39, Chris Hecker wrote:
>
> Ack, you're totally right. Brain was addled from 10 hours of server
> nonsense! I will do the ==. Somebody should update the page.
>
> Oh, wait, the reason I didn't do the == was because one backend sends a
> full HTTP/1.0 style url in the PURGE, and the other sends a Host: and
> just the relative path name. Hmm.
>
> Chris
>
>
> On 2010/07/10 07:22, Laurence Rowe wrote:
>> That example is only for handling wildcard purges. The one above uses
>> a direct comparison, which is what you want:
>>
>> purge("req.url == " req.url);
>>
>> Your regexp is not doing what you think it's doing either, purging "/"
>> will purge "/foo/" and "/foo/bar/" as well. You need to anchor it to
>> the beginning of the string too:
>>
>> purge("req.url ~ ^" req.url "$");
>>
>> This should allow wild card purges to work if you need them.
>>
>> Laurence
>>
>> On 10 July 2010 09:24, Chris Hecker<checker at d6.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> Awesome, this worked great, thanks!
>>>
>>> The one caveat that others might run into was that sometimes the backend
>>> would sent / as the url, and I was using the regexp ~ version from
>>> the link
>>> you sent, so it would clear the whole cache. I changed it to this:
>>>
>>> purge("req.url ~ " req.url "$"); # use regexp to handle all
>>> Accept-Encoding's
>>> error 200 "Purged in recv.";
>>>
>>> and now it works perfectly.
>>>
>>> Chris
>>>
>>>
>>> On 2010/07/09 04:56, Laurence Rowe wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On 9 July 2010 12:01, Chris Hecker<checker at d6.com> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> I'm trying to put varnish in front of mediawiki, but there are a
>>>>> couple
>>>>> things going wrong with the purging support built into mediawiki
>>>>> (which
>>>>> supposedly supports varnish and squid).
>>>>>
>>>>> 1. Mediawiki was sending back an HTTP/1.0 PURGE command, which had no
>>>>> Host:
>>>>> header, just the full url after the PURGE, so the hash function wasn't
>>>>> matching with the normal HTTP/1.1 requests. I patched mediawiki to fix
>>>>> this
>>>>> and send an HTTP/1.1 PURGE with a Host: header, not sure what a better
>>>>> way
>>>>> to do this would be.
>>>>>
>>>>> 2. The PURGE does not have an Accept-encoding: on it, so it doesn't
>>>>> match
>>>>> the cached object, which is almost always A-e: gzip. I hacked a gzip
>>>>> header
>>>>> onto the PURGE, but what I really want is to purge all the records
>>>>> associated with an URL. Is there a way to do this?
>>>>
>>>> See: http://varnish-cache.org/wiki/VCLExamplePurging
>>>>
>>>> Using purge("req.url == " req.url); should fix both problems.
>>>>
>>>> Laurence
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> varnish-misc mailing list
>>>> varnish-misc at varnish-cache.org
>>>> http://lists.varnish-cache.org/mailman/listinfo/varnish-misc
>>>>
>>>
>>



More information about the varnish-misc mailing list