Rails drop in for Varnish support.
This gem requires ruby 1.9+
gem install lacquer
rails generate lacquer:install
config/initializers/lacquer.rb
Lacquer.configure do |config|
# Globally enable/disable cache
config.enable_cache = true
# Unless overridden in a controller or action, the default will be used
config.default_ttl = 1.week
# Can be :none, :delayed_job, :resque, :sidekiq
config.job_backend = :none
# Array of Varnish servers to manage
config.varnish_servers << {
:host => "0.0.0.0", :port => 6082 # if you have authentication enabled, add :secret => "your secret"
}
# Number of retries
config.retries = 5
# config handler (optional, if you use Hoptoad or another error tracking service)
config.command_error_handler = lambda { |s| HoptoadNotifier.notify(s) }
### Varnish - 2.x / 3.x .. VCL-Changes
### https://www.varnish-cache.org/docs/trunk/installation/upgrade.html
# => Purge Command ( "url.purge" for Varnish 2.x .. "ban.url" for Varnish 3.x )
# => purges are now called bans in Varnish 3.x .. purge() and purge_url() are now respectively ban() and ban_url()
config.purge_command = "ban.url"
# => VCL_Fetch Pass Command ( "pass" for Varnish 2.x .. "hit_for_pass" for Varnish 3.x )
# => pass in vcl_fetch renamed to hit_for_pass in Varnish 3.x
config.pass_command = "pass"
end
app/controllers/application_controller.rb
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
include Lacquer::CacheUtils
end
config/varnishd.yml
development:
listen: localhost:3001
telnet: localhost:6082
sbin_path: /usr/local/sbin # path to varnishd
bin_path: /usr/local/bin # path to varnishadm
storage: "file,#{Rails.root}/log/varnishd.#{Rails.env}.cache,100MB"
test:
listen: localhost:3002
telnet: localhost:6083
sbin_path: /usr/local/sbin
bin_path: /usr/local/bin
storage: "file,#{Rails.root}/log/varnishd.#{Rails.env}.cache,100MB"
production:
listen: :80
telnet: localhost:6082
sbin_path: /usr/local/sbin
bin_path: /usr/local/bin
storage: "file,#{Rails.root}/log/varnishd.#{Rails.env}.cache,100MB"
params:
overflow_max: 2000 # for Varnish 2.x ... use "queue_max: 2000" for Varnish 3.x
thread_pool_add_delay: 2
thread_pools: 4 # <Number of cpu cores>
thread_pool_min: 200 # <800/number of cpu cores>
thread_pool_max: 4000
If only some urls of the application should be cached by varnish, Lacquer::CacheControl will be helpful.
config/initializers/caches.rb
require "lacquer/cache_control"
Lacquer.cache_control.configure do |config|
config.register :static, :url => "^/images",
:expires_in => "365d"
config.register :static, :url => "^/stylesheets",
:expires_in => "365d"
config.register :static, :url => "^/javascripts",
:expires_in => "365d"
config.register :class_section, :url => "^(/[a-z]{2})?/(info_screens|class_sections)/%s.*$",
:args => "[0-9]+",
:expires_in => "1m"
config.register :open_scoring, :url => "^(/[a-z]{2})?/class_sections/%s/open_scoring.*$",
:args => "[0-9]+",
:expires_in => "1m"
end
In the sweeper we can do something like this
class_section = ClassSection.find(1)
Lacquer.cache_control.purge(:open_scoring, class_section)
This will purge "^(/[a-z]{2})?/class_sections/1/open_scoring.*$" (/sv/class_sections/1/open_scoring.js, /sv/class_sections/1/open_scoring.html)
The varnish.vcl is preprocssed when starting varnishd with the rake tasks
rake lacquer:varnishd:start
config/varnish.vcl.erb
sub vcl_recv {
# Lookup requests that we know should be cached
if (<%= Lacquer.cache_control.to_vcl_conditions %>) {
# Clear cookie and authorization headers, set grace time, lookup in the cache
unset req.http.Cookie;
unset req.http.Authorization;
return(lookup);
}
# Generates
#
# if(req.url ~ "^/images" ||
# req.url ~ "^/stylesheets" ||
# req.url ~ "^/javascripts" ||
# req.url ~ "^(/[a-z]{2})?/(info_screens|class_sections)/[0-9]+.*$" ||
# req.url ~ "^(/[a-z]{2})?/class_sections/[0-9]+/open_scoring.*$") {
# unset req.http.Cookie;
# unset req.http.Authorization;
# return(lookup);
# }
}
sub vcl_fetch {
<%= Lacquer.cache_control.to_vcl_override_ttl_urls %>
# Generates
#
# if(req.url ~ "^/images" || req.url ~ "^/stylesheets" || req.url ~ "^/javascripts") {
# unset beresp.http.Set-Cookie;
# set beresp.ttl = 365d;
# return(deliver);
# }
#
# if(req.url ~ "^(/[a-z]{2})?/(info_screens|class_sections)/[0-9]+.*$" ||
# req.url ~ "^(/[a-z]{2})?/class_sections/[0-9]+/open_scoring.*$") {
# unset beresp.http.Set-Cookie;
# set beresp.ttl = 1m;
# return(deliver);
# }
}
This makes it much simpler to perform cacheing, it's only setuped in one place, purge it or just let it expire.
To set a custom ttl for a controller:
before_filter { |controller| controller.set_cache_ttl(15.minutes) }
Clearing the cache:
class Posts < ApplicationController
after_filter :clear_cache, :only => [ :create, :update, :destroy ]
private
def clear_cache
clear_cache_for(
root_path,
posts_path,
post_path(@post))
end
end
Control varnishd with the following rake tasks
rake lacquer:varnishd:start
rake lacquer:varnishd:stop
rake lacquer:varnishd:restart
rake lacquer:varnishd:reload
rake lacquer:varnishd:status
rake lacquer:varnishd:global_purge
Lacquer supports Capistrano 2.5+
For Capistrano 2.5 just add require 'lacquer/capistrano'
to your config/deploy.rb
file.
For Capistrano 3+ add require 'lacquer/capistrano'
to your Capfile
.
# Capfile
require 'capistrano/setup'
require 'capistrano/deploy'
require 'capistrano/rails/assets'
require 'capistrano/rails/migrations'
require 'lacquer/capistrano'
Adding this will give you the following cap tasks
cap lacquer:global_purge # global_purge varnish
cap lacquer:restart # restart varnish
cap lacquer:start # start varnish
cap lacquer:status # status varnish
cap lacquer:stop # stop varnish
The default TTL for most actions is set to 0, since for most cases you'll probably want to be fairly explicit about what pages do get cached by varnish. The default cache header is typically:
Cache-Control: max-age=0, no-cache, private
This is good for normal controller actions, since you won't want to cache them. If TTL for an action is set to 0, it won't mess with the default header.
The key gotcha here is that cached pages strip cookies, so if your application relies on sessions and uses authenticity tokens, the user will need a session cookie set before form actions will work. Setting default TTL to 0 here will make sure these session cookies won't break.
As a result, all you have to do to set a cacheable action is the before filter above.
- Fork the project.
- Make your feature addition or bug fix.
- Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Commit, do not mess with rakefile, version, or history. (if you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump version in a commit by itself I can ignore when I pull)
- Send me a pull request. Bonus points for topic branches.
Copyright (c) 2015 Russ Smith. See LICENSE for details.