Sometimes you want Varnish to serve content that is somewhat stale instead of waiting for a fresh object from the backend. For example, if you run a news site, serving a main page that is a few seconds old is not a problem if this gives your site faster load times.
In Varnish this is achieved by using grace mode
. A related idea is keep
, which is also explained here.
When several clients are requesting the same page Varnish will send one request to the backend and place the others on hold while fetching one copy from the backend. In some products this is called request coalescing and Varnish does this automatically.
If you are serving thousands of hits per second the queue of waiting requests can get huge. There are two potential problems - one is a thundering herd problem - suddenly releasing a thousand threads to serve content might send the load sky high. Secondly - nobody likes to wait.
Setting an object’s grace
to a positive value tells Varnish that it should serve the object to clients for some time after the TTL has expired, while Varnish fetches a new version of the object. The default value is controlled by the runtime parameter default_grace
.
Setting an object’s keep
tells Varnish that it should keep an object in the cache for some additional time. The reasons to set keep
is to use the object to construct a conditional GET backend request (with If-Modified-Since: and/or Ìf-None-Match: headers), allowing the backend to reply with a 304 Not Modified response, which may be more efficient on the backend and saves re-transmitting the unchanged body.
The values are additive, so if grace is 10 seconds and keep is 1 minute, then objects will survive in cache for 70 seconds after the TTL has expired.
We can use VCL to make Varnish keep all objects for 10 minutes beyond their TTL with a grace period of 2 minutes:
sub vcl_backend_response { set beresp.grace = 2m; set beresp.keep = 8m; }
For most users setting the default grace and/or a suitable grace for each object is enough. The default VCL will do the right thing and behave as described above. However, if you want to customize how Varnish behaves, then you should know some of the details on how this works.
When sub vcl_recv
ends with return (lookup)
(which is the default behavior), Varnish will look for a matching object in its cache. Then, if it only found an object whose TTL has run out, Varnish will consider the following:
grace period
?Then, Varnish reacts using the following rules:
grace period
has run out and there is no ongoing backend request, then sub vcl_miss
is called immediately, and the object will be used as a 304 candidate.grace period
has run out and there is an ongoing backend request, then the request will wait until the backend request finishes.sub vcl_hit
is called immediately.Note that the backend fetch happens asynchronously, and the moment the new object is in it will replace the one we’ve already got.
If you do not define your own sub vcl_hit
, then the default one is used. It looks like this:
sub vcl_hit { return (deliver); }
Note that the condition obj.ttl + obj.grace > 0s
will (in sub
vcl_hit
) always evaluate to true. In earlier versions (6.0.0 and earlier), this was not the case, and a test in the builtin VCL was necessary to make sure that “keep objects” (objects in the cache where both TTL and grace had run out) would not be delivered to the clients.
In the current version, when there are only “keep objects” available, sub vcl_miss
will be called, and a fetch for a new object will be initiated.
A key feature of Varnish is its ability to shield you from misbehaving web- and application servers.
If you have enabled Health checks you can check if the backend is sick and modify the behavior when it comes to grace. This can done in the following way:
sub vcl_backend_response { set beresp.grace = 24h; // no keep - the grace should be enough for 304 candidates } sub vcl_recv { if (std.healthy(req.backend_hint)) { // change the behavior for healthy backends: Cap grace to 10s set req.grace = 10s; } }
In the example above, the special variable req.grace
is set. The effect is that, when the backend is healthy, objects with grace above 10 seconds will have an effective
grace of 10 seconds. When the backend is sick, the default VCL kicks in, and the long grace is used.
Additionally, you might want to stop cache insertion when a backend fetch returns an 5xx
error:
sub vcl_backend_response { if (beresp.status >= 500 && bereq.is_bgfetch) { return (abandon); } }
Grace mode allows Varnish to deliver slightly stale content to clients while getting a fresh version from the backend. The result is faster load times at lower cost.
It is possible to limit the grace during lookup by setting req.grace
and then change the behavior when it comes to grace. Often this is done to change the effective
grace depending on the health of the backend.
Copyright © 2006 Verdens Gang AS
Copyright © 2006–2020 Varnish Software AS
Licensed under the BSD-2-Clause License.
https://varnish-cache.org/docs/6.5/users-guide/vcl-grace.html