I came across a need to allow web developers to purge Varnish cache. The problem is the developers aren’t allowed access to the production machine and our web application firewall blocks purge requests. I needed for there to be a way for them to simply access a page hosted on the webserver and cause it to purge its own varnish cache.
I was able to accomplish this by placing a PHP file in the webserver’s directory and controlling access to it via .htaccess. Thanks to this site for the php script and this one for the .htaccess guidance.
Place this PHP file where the web devs can access it, making sure to modify the $hostname variable to suit your needs and to rename the file to have a .php extension.
<?php
#Simple script to purge varnish cache
#Adapted from the script from http://felipeferreira.net/index.php/2013/08/script-purge-varnish-cache/
#This script runs locally on the webserver and will purge all cached pages for the site specified in $hostname
#Modify the $hostname parameter below to match the hostname of your site
$hostname = $_SERVER['SERVER_NAME'];
header( 'Cache-Control: max-age=0' );
$port = 80;
$debug = false;
$URL = "/*";
purgeURL( $hostname, $port, $URL, $debug );
function purgeURL( $hostname, $port, $purgeURL, $debug )
{
$finalURL = sprintf(
"http://%s:%d%s", $hostname, $port, $purgeURL
);
print( "<br> Purging ${finalURL} <br><br>" );
$curlOptionList = array(
CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER => true,
CURLOPT_CUSTOMREQUEST => 'PURGE',
CURLOPT_HEADER => true ,
CURLOPT_NOBODY => true,
CURLOPT_URL => $finalURL,
CURLOPT_CONNECTTIMEOUT_MS => 2000
);
$fd = true;
if( $debug == true ) {
print "<br>---- Curl debug -----<br>";
$fd = fopen("php://output", 'w+');
$curlOptionList[CURLOPT_VERBOSE] = true;
$curlOptionList[CURLOPT_STDERR] = $fd;
}
$curlHandler = curl_init();
curl_setopt_array( $curlHandler, $curlOptionList );
$return = curl_exec($curlHandler);
if(curl_error($curlHandler)) {
print "<br><hr><br>CRITICAL - Error to connect to $hostname port $port - Error: curl_error($curl) <br>";
exit(2);
}
curl_close( $curlHandler );
if( $fd !== false ) {
fclose( $fd );
}
if( $debug == true ) {
print "<br> Output: <br><br> $return <br><br><hr>";
}
}
?>
<title>Purge cache</title>
Press submit to purge the cache
<form method="post" action="<?php echo $PHP_SELF;?>">
<input type="submit" value="submit" name="submit">
</form>
Place (or append) the following .htaccess code in the same directory you placed the php file:
#Only allow internal IPs to access cache purge page
<Files "purge.php">
Order deny,allow
Deny from all
SetEnvIf X-Forwarded-For ^10\. env_allow_1
Allow from env=env_allow_1
Satisfy Any
</Files>
The above code only allows access to the purge.php page from IP addresses beginning with “10.” (internal IPs)
This PHP / .htaccess combo allowed the web devs to purge cache without any system access or firewall rule changes. Hooray!