I am running Varnish (2.0.4 from the Ubuntu unstable apt repository, though I have also used the standard repository) in a test environment (Virtual Machines) on Ubuntu 9.10, soon to be 10.04.
When I have a working configuration and the server starts successfully it seems like everything is fine, however if, for whatever reason, I stop and then restart the varnish daemon it doesn't always startup properly, and there are no errors going into syslog or messages to indicate what might be wrong.
If I run varnish in debug mode (-d) and issue start when prompted then 7 times out of time it will run, but occasionally it will just shut down 'silently'.
My startup command is (the $1 allows for me to pass -d to the script this lives in):
varnishd -a :80 $1 \
-T 127.0.0.1:6082 \
-s malloc,1GB \
-f /home/deploy/mysite.vcl \
-u deploy \
-g deploy \
-p obj_workspace=4096 \
-p sess_workspace=262144 \
-p listen_depth=2048 \
-p overflow_max=2000 \
-p ping_interval=2 \
-p log_hashstring=off \
-h classic,5000009 \
-p thread_pool_max=1000 \
-p lru_interval=60 \
-p esi_syntax=0x00000003 \
-p sess_timeout=10 \
-p thread_pools=1 \
-p thread_pool_min=100 \
-p shm_workspace=32768 \
-p thread_pool_add_delay=1
and the VCL looks like this:
# nginx/passenger server, HTTP:81
backend default {
.host = "127.0.0.1";
.port = "81";
}
sub vcl_recv {
# Don't cache the /useradmin or /admin path
if (req.url ~ "^/(useradmin|admin|session|sessions|login|members|logout|forgot_password)") {
pipe;
}
# If cache is 'regenerating' then allow for old cache to be served
set req.grace = 2m;
# Forward to cache lookup
lookup;
}
# This should be obvious
sub vcl_hit {
deliver;
}
sub vcl_fetch {
# See link #16, allow for old cache serving
set obj.grace = 2m;
if (req.url ~ "\.(png|gif|jpg|swf|css|js)$") {
deliver;
}
remove obj.http.Set-Cookie;
remove obj.http.Etag;
set obj.http.Cache-Control = "no-cache";
set obj.ttl = 7d;
deliver;
}
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated, this is driving me absolutely crazy, especially because its such an inconsistent behaviour.