I have a website (with ESI) that uses Symfony2 reverse proxy for caching. Average response is around 100ms. I tried to install Varnish on server to try it out. I followed guide from Symfony cookbook step by step, deleted everything in cache folder, but http_cache folder was still created when I tried it out. So I figured I could try to comment out $kernel = new AppCache($kernel); from app.php. That worked pretty well. http_cache wasn't created anymore and by varnishstat, Varnish seemed to be working:

12951         0.00         0.08 cache_hitpass - Cache hits for pass
 1153         0.00         0.01 cache_miss - Cache misses

That was out of around 14000 requests, so I thought everything would be alright. But after echoping I found out responses raised to ~2 seconds.

Apache runs on port 9000 and Varnish on 8080. So I echoping using echoping -n 10 -h http://servername/ X.X.X.X:8080.

I have no idea what could be wrong. Are there any additional settings needed to use Varnish with Symfony2? Or am I simply doing something wrong?


Per requests, here's my default.vcl with modifications I've done so far.

I found 2 issues with Varnish's default config:

  • it doesn't cache requests with cookies (and everyone in my app has session assigned)
  • it ignores Cache-Control: no-cache header

So I added conditions for these cases to my config and it performs fairly well now (~175 req/s up from ~160 with S2 reverse proxy - but honestly, I expected bit more). I just have no idea how to check if it's all set ok, so any inputs are welcome.

Most of pages have cache varied by cookie, with s-maxage 1200. Common ESI includes aren't varied by cookie, with s-maxage quite low (articles, article lists). User profile pages aren't cached at all (no-cache) and I'm not really sure if ESI includes on these are even being cached by Varnish. Only ESI that's varied by cookies is header with user specific information (that's on 100% of pages).

Everything in this post is Varnish 3.X specific (I'm personally using 3.0.2).

Also, after few weeks of digging into this, I have really no idea what I'm doing anymore, so if you find something odd in configs, just let me know.

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5 cents based on my recent experience. It is all very dependent on Vasnish configuration and especially whether you have enough memory available for it. Could you please show your sub vcl_recv, sub vcl_fetch and backend? – Anton Babenko Jan 20 at 11:32
Updated original post with configs. One other thing that comes into my mind are user cookies (and maybe tracking ones). Every request on our page has them. But I don't get why varnishstat says it's caching 90% of requests then. We never had problems with them when we used Symfony2 reverse proxy. – Ondrej Slinták Jan 20 at 17:15
I have similar vcl_recv on my setup, though I also have these lines there: set req.http.X-Forwarded-Port = "80"; set req.http.X-Forwarded-Proto = "http"; – Anton Babenko Jan 20 at 18:25
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1 Answer

If that's your entire configuration, the vcl_recv is configured twice.

In the pages you want to cache, can you send the caching headers? This would make the most sense, since images probably already have your apache caching headers and the app logic decide the pages that can be actually cached, but you can force this in varnish also.

You could use a vcl_recv like this:

# Called after a document has been successfully retrieved from the backend.
sub vcl_fetch {

    # set minimum timeouts to auto-discard stored objects
    # set beresp.prefetch = -30s;
    set beresp.grace = 120s;

    if (beresp.ttl < 48h) {
      set beresp.ttl = 48h;}

    if (!beresp.cacheable) 
        {pass;}

    if (beresp.http.Set-Cookie) 
        {pass;}

    # if (beresp.http.Cache-Control ~ "(private|no-cache|no-store)") 
    # {pass;}

    if (req.http.Authorization && !beresp.http.Cache-Control ~ "public") 
        {pass;}

}

This one caches, in varnish, only the requests that are set cacheable. Also, be aware that your configuration doesn't cache requests with cookies.

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Yes, I think the whole problem was with cookies. I'll update the question later today with some more info and developments. – Ondrej Slinták Feb 3 at 11:45
Ah crap, didn't notice I posted 2 times recv instead of recv and fetch >< – Ondrej Slinták Feb 3 at 13:49
Edited OP with bit more info under the line. – Ondrej Slinták Feb 3 at 16:32
If you want to cache requests that contain cookies, you could try to add something like this in your vcl_recv: unset req.http.cookie; – Rafael Sanches Feb 3 at 18:35
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