I want to get Varnish to log requests. I found the command varnishlog -a -w /var/log/varnish.log
, but it does not log anything.
Then I found that Varnish does not write to log by default. However I am unable to find configuration options for logging.
In response to Ketola's answer, you can have varnishncsa log even Cache hit requests, by passing the
-c
flag. This will allow you to use HTTPD logs to analyse stats.Example :
varnishncsa -c -a -w ~/varnish.log
will write cache hit requests to the file in default NCSA formatSince i landed here and the suggested fixed did not help:
My varnishncsa.log was empty and the process was running.
It turned out, that i HAD TO specify the log format (any format).
As this insight in itself did not fix my init script, i fixed it using this strategy.
If you want to log HTTP requests in NCSA Common Log Format you need to use
varnishncsa
. On CentOS/RedHat, the Varnish RPM package includes a varnishncsa init script that you can use to start logging. By default it logs tologfile="/var/log/varnish/varnishncsa.log"
.Additionally if you wish to serve several different hosts through a single Varnish install, you'll want to include the host name in the log as well. This can be accomplished with the following setting in
/etc/sysconfig/varnishncsa
Please note that the method described in the link by Anshu only logs the requests that are passed through by Varnish to the backend servers. Cache hit requests will never be recorded (before Varnish 5.0 - see below). Therefore the HTTPD logs gathered this way cannot be used for statistical analysis.
Update: As @VikrantPogula mentioned, as of Varnish 5.0 all client requests are logged - including cache hits. This is the default behavior, and can be switched on explicitly using the
-c
switch.Metrics in Varnish are a common area that people struggle with.
It's relatively easy to get some one off request metrics but overall tracking over time generally involves using varnishncsa. Here is a guide on Varnish installation that includes metric setup