I'm developing a system that connects to an external backend service (purchased from another company) where the system will exceed the monthly request quota by a lot. I'm trying to create a proxy/cache that will cache the requests and use the cached response if it's present.
Use cases:
Case 1:
- User requests endpoint
- Proxy doesn't have it cached
- Proxy forwards request to external backend
- Proxy caches response
- Proxy returns response to user
Case 2:
- User requests endpoint
- Proxy has it cached
- Proxy returns cached response
Case 3:
- External backend sends webhook saying things were updated
- Proxy clears cache
Requirements:
- Proxy needs to be able to cache files (mostly images)
- Three different URL:s that needs to be reached: url1.external-backend.com, url2.external-backend.com and url3.external-backend.com
- Preferably only one proxy for all three URL:s
- The three URL:s might have different paths (url1.external-backend.com/this/is/a/path) and also maybe queries (url1.external-backend.com?query=something)
- Would be nice if the proxy could be cleared based on what is sent from the external backend, but it's not necessary
Thoughts so far:
I have looked at two different systems for this so far, Varnish (https://varnish-cache.org/) and Squid (http://www.squid-cache.org/). I tried with Squid but I did not understand at all how to set up the config to work like above. The sample config file was really messy and impossible to understand, and I could not find any guide online for it.
I looked into Varnish and as far as I can see it might be possible to use. But I have a problem here.
Problem:
In Varnish's /etc/varnish/default.vcl
there is the possibility to add backends, so I added the following:
backend page2 {
.host = "url2.external-backend.com";
.port = "443";
}
This gives something similar to this (I don't remember exactly and I can't see the error message right now):
Backend host "url2.external-backend.com": resolves to multiple IPv4 addresses.
Only one address is allowed.
Please specify which exact address you want to use, we found these:
xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx
I don't dare putting one of the IP:s instead of the hostname, and I'm not sure creating a director is the correct way. The reason for this is that I'm not in control over the hostname and they cannot guarantee that the IP-adresses will not change.
Questions:
- Is it possible to make this work somehow in Varnish?
- Can someone explain exactly how Squids config should look to work like the use cases and requirements above (if possible)?
- Is there any other caching proxy service out there that might work better than Varnish or Squid?