varnishncsa

Display Varnish logs in Apache / NCSA combined log format

Manual section:

1

SYNOPSIS

varnishncsa [-a] [-b] [-c] [-C] [-d] [-D] [-E] [-F <format>] [-f <formatfile>] [-g <request|vxid>] [-h] [-j] [-k <num>] [-L <limit>] [-n <dir>] [-P <file>] [-Q <file>] [-q <query>] [-r <filename>] [-R <limit[/duration]>] [-t <seconds|off>] [-V] [-w <filename>]

DESCRIPTION

The varnishncsa utility reads varnishd(1) shared memory logs and presents them in the Apache / NCSA “combined” log format.

Each log line produced is based on a single Request type transaction gathered from the shared memory log. The Request transaction is then scanned for the relevant parts in order to output one log line. To filter the log lines produced, use the query language to select the applicable transactions. Non-request transactions are ignored.

The following options are available:

-a

When writing output to a file, append to it rather than overwrite it. This option has no effect without the -w option.

-b

Log backend requests. If -c is not specified, then only backend requests will trigger log lines.

-c

Log client requests. This is the default. If -b is specified, then -c is needed to also log client requests

-C

Do all regular expression and string matching caseless.

-d

Process log records at the head of the log and exit.

-D

Daemonize.

-E

Show ESI requests, implies client mode.

-F <format>

Set the output log format string.

-f <formatfile>

Read output format from a file. Will read a single line from the specified file, and use that line as the format.

-g <request|vxid>

The grouping of the log records. The default is to group by vxid.

-h

Print program usage and exit

-j

Make format-specifier replacements JSON-compatible. When escaping characters, use JSON-style \uXXXX escape sequences instead of C-style \xXX sequences. Empty strings will be replaced with “” instead of “-”, and empty integers will be replaced with null. Use -F or -f in combination with -j to write JSON logs.

-k <num>

Process this number of matching log transactions before exiting.

-L <limit>

Sets the upper limit of incomplete transactions kept before the oldest transaction is force completed. A warning record is synthesized when this happens. This setting keeps an upper bound on the memory usage of running queries. Defaults to 1000 transactions.

-n <dir>

Specify the varnishd working directory (also known as instance name) to get logs from. If -n is not specified, the host name is used.

-P <file>

Write the process’ PID to the specified file.

-Q <file>

Specifies the file containing the VSL query to use. When multiple -Q or -q options are specified, all queries are considered as if the ‘or’ operator was used to combine them.

-q <query>

Specifies the VSL query to use. When multiple -q or -Q options are specified, all queries are considered as if the ‘or’ operator was used to combine them.

-r <filename>

Read log in binary file format from this file. The file can be created with varnishlog -w filename. If the filename is -, logs are read from the standard input. and cannot work as a daemon.

-R <limit[/duration]>

Restrict the output to the specified limit. Transactions exceeding the limit will be suppressed. The limit is specified as the maximum number of transactions (with respect to the chosen grouping method) and an optional time period. If no duration is specified, a default of s is used. The duration field can be formatted as in VCL (e.g. -R 10/2m) or as a simple time period without the prefix (e.g. -R 5/m). When in -g raw grouping mode, this setting can not be used alongside -i, -I, -x or -X, and we advise using -q instead.

-t <seconds|off>

Timeout before returning error on initial VSM connection. If set the VSM connection is retried every 0.5 seconds for this many seconds. If zero the connection is attempted only once and will fail immediately if unsuccessful. If set to “off”, the connection will not fail, allowing the utility to start and wait indefinetely for the Varnish instance to appear. Defaults to 5 seconds.

-V

Print version information and exit.

-w <filename>

Redirect output to file. The file will be overwritten unless the -a option was specified. If the application receives a SIGHUP in daemon mode the file will be reopened allowing the old one to be rotated away. This option is required when running in daemon mode. If the filename is -, varnishncsa writes to the standard output and cannot work as a daemon.

--optstring

Print the optstring parameter to getopt(3) to help writing wrapper scripts.

MODES

The default mode of varnishncsa is “client mode”. In this mode, the log will be similar to what a web server would produce in the absence of varnish. Client mode can be explicitly selected by using -c.

If the -b switch is specified, varnishncsa will operate in “backend mode”. In this mode, requests generated by varnish to the backends will be logged. Unless -c is also specified, client requests received by varnish will be ignored.

When running varnishncsa in both backend and client mode, it is strongly advised to include the format specifier %{Varnish:side}x to distinguish between backend and client requests.

Client requests that results in a pipe (ie. return(pipe) in vcl), will not generate logging in backend mode. This is because varnish is not generating requests, but blindly passes on bytes in both directions. However, a varnishncsa instance running in normal mode can see this case by using the formatter %{Varnish:handling}x, which will be ‘pipe’.

In backend mode, some of the fields in the format string get different meanings. Most notably, the byte counting formatters (%b, %I, %O) considers varnish to be the client.

It is possible to keep two varnishncsa instances running, one in backend mode, and one in client mode, logging to different files.

FORMAT

Specify the log format to use. If no format is specified the default log format is used:

%h %l %u %t "%r" %s %b "%{Referer}i" "%{User-agent}i"

Escape sequences \n and \t are supported.

Supported formatters are:

%b

In client mode, size of response in bytes, excluding HTTP headers. In backend mode, the number of bytes received from the backend, excluding HTTP headers. In CLF format, i.e. a ‘-’ rather than a 0 when no bytes are sent.

%D

In client mode, time taken to serve the request, in microseconds. In backend mode, time from the request was sent to the entire body had been received. This is equivalent to %{us}T.

%H

The request protocol. Defaults to HTTP/1.0 if not known.

%h

Remote host. Defaults to ‘-’ if not known. In backend mode this is the IP of the backend server.

%I

In client mode, total bytes received from client. In backend mode, total bytes sent to the backend.

%{X}i

The contents of request header X. If the header appears multiple times in a single transaction, the last occurrence is used.

%l

Remote logname. Always ‘-‘.

%m

Request method. Defaults to ‘-’ if not known.

%{X}o

The contents of response header X. If the header appears multiple times in a single transaction, the last occurrence is used.

%O

In client mode, total bytes sent to client. In backend mode, total bytes received from the backend.

%q

The query string. Defaults to an empty string if not present.

%r

The first line of the request. Synthesized from other fields, so it may not be the request verbatim. See the NOTES section.

%s

Status sent to the client. In backend mode, status received from the backend.

%t

In client mode, time when the request was received, in HTTP date/time format. In backend mode, time when the request was sent.

%{X}t

In client mode, time when the request was received, in the format specified by X. In backend mode, time when the request was sent. The time specification format is the same as for strftime(3) with these extensions:

  • %{sec}: number of seconds since the Epoch

  • %{msec}: number of milliseconds since the Epoch

  • %{usec}: number of milliseconds since the Epoch

  • %{msec_frac}: millisecond fraction

  • %{usec_frac}: microsecond fraction

The extensions can not be combined with each other or strftime(3) in the same specification. Use multiple %{X}t specifications instead.

%T

In client mode, time taken to serve the request, in seconds. In backend mode, time from the request was sent to the entire body had been received. This is equivalent to %{s}T.

%{X}T

In client mode, time taken to serve the request, in the format specified by X. In backend mode, time from the request was sent to the entire body had been received. The time specification format can be one of the following: s (same as %T), ms or us (same as %D).

%U

The request URL without the query string. Defaults to ‘-’ if not known.

%u

Remote user from auth.

%{X}x

Extended variables. Supported variables are:

Varnish:default_format

The log format used when neither -f nor -F options are specified. Useful for appending/prepending with other formatters.

Varnish:time_firstbyte

Time from when the request processing starts until the first byte is sent to the client, in seconds. For backend mode: Time from the request was sent to the backend to the entire header had been received.

Varnish:hitmiss

In client mode, one of the ‘hit’ or ‘miss’ strings, depending on whether the request was a cache hit or miss. Pipe, pass and synth are considered misses. In backend mode, this field is blank.

Varnish:handling

In client mode, one of the ‘hit’, ‘miss’, ‘pass’, ‘pipe’ or ‘synth’ strings indicating how the request was handled. In backend mode, this field is blank.

Varnish:side

Backend or client side. One of two values, ‘b’ or ‘c’, depending on where the request was made. In pure backend or client mode, this field will be constant.

Varnish:vxid

The VXID of the varnish transaction.

VCL_Log:key

The value set by std.log(“key:value”) in VCL.

VSL:tag:record-prefix[field]

The value of the VSL entry for the given tag-record prefix-field combination. Tag is mandatory, the other components are optional.

The record prefix will limit the matches to those records that have this prefix as the first part of the record content followed by a colon.

The field will, if present, treat the log record as a white space separated list of fields, and only the nth part of the record will be matched against. Fields start counting at 1 and run up to 255.

Defaults to ‘-’ when the tag is not seen, the record prefix does not match or the field is out of bounds. If a tag appears multiple times in a single transaction, the first occurrence is used.

SIGNALS

  • SIGHUP

    Rotate the log file (see -w option) in daemon mode, abort the loop and die gracefully when running in the foreground.

  • SIGUSR1

    Flush any outstanding transactions.

NOTES

The %r formatter is equivalent to “%m http://%{Host}i%U%q %H”. This differs from apache’s %r behavior, equivalent to “%m %U%q %H”. Furthermore, when using the %r formatter, if the Host header appears multiple times in a single transaction, the first occurrence is used.

EXAMPLE

Log the second field of the Begin record, corresponding to the VXID of the parent transaction:

varnishncsa -F "%{VSL:Begin[2]}x"

Log the entire Timestamp record associated with the processing length:

varnishncsa -F "%{VSL:Timestamp:Process}x"

Log in JSON, using the -j flag to ensure that the output is valid JSON for all inputs:

varnishncsa -j -F '{"size": %b, "time": "%t", "ua": "%{User-Agent}i"}'

SEE ALSO

varnishd varnishlog varnishstat vsl-query VSL

HISTORY

The varnishncsa utility was developed by Poul-Henning Kamp in cooperation with Verdens Gang AS and Varnish Software AS. This manual page was initially written by Dag-Erling Smørgrav <des@des.no>, and later updated by Martin Blix Grydeland and Pål Hermunn Johansen.