Date: | 2015-03-03 |
---|---|
Version: | 1.0 |
Manual section: | 3 |
import example;
Example Varnish vmod demonstrating how to write an out-of-tree Varnish vmod.
Implements the traditional Hello World as a vmod.
- Prototype
hello(STRING S)
- Return value
- STRING
- Description
- Returns "Hello, " prepended to S
- Example
set resp.http.hello = example.hello("World");
The source tree is based on autotools to configure the building, and
does also have the necessary bits in place to do functional unit tests
using the varnishtest
tool.
Building requires the Varnish header files and uses pkg-config to find the necessary paths.
Pre-requisites:
sudo apt-get install -y autotools-dev make automake libtool pkg-config libvarnishapi1 libvarnishapi-dev
Usage:
./autogen.sh ./configure
If you have installed Varnish to a non-standard directory, call
autogen.sh
and configure
with PKG_CONFIG_PATH
pointing to
the appropriate path. For example, when varnishd configure was called
with --prefix=$PREFIX
, use
PKG_CONFIG_PATH=${PREFIX}/lib/pkgconfig export PKG_CONFIG_PATH
Make targets:
- make - builds the vmod.
- make install - installs your vmod.
- make check - runs the unit tests in
src/tests/*.vtc
- make distcheck - run check and prepare a tarball of the vmod.
By default, the vmod configure
script installs the built vmod in
the same directory as Varnish, determined via pkg-config(1)
. The
vmod installation directory can be overridden by passing the
VMOD_DIR
variable to configure
.
Other files like man-pages and documentation are installed in the
locations determined by configure
, which inherits its default
--prefix
setting from Varnish.
In your VCL you could then use this vmod along the following lines:
import example; sub vcl_deliver { # This sets resp.http.hello to "Hello, World" set resp.http.hello = example.hello("World"); }
configure: error: Need varnish.m4 -- see README.rst
Check if
PKG_CONFIG_PATH
has been set correctly before callingautogen.sh
andconfigure
Incompatibilities with different Varnish Cache versions
Make sure you build this vmod against its correspondent Varnish Cache version. For example, to build against Varnish Cache 4.0, this vmod must be built from branch 4.0.