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Unexpected VCL subroutine flow #4163
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slightly relevant blog post: https://info.varnish-software.com/blog/using-obj-hits it is a hit though: the object is found in the cache, albeit in a currently incomplete form. One could argue that |
side note: the bereq (for example via |
Test case (written by @AlveElde , modified it slithly myself): varnishtest "Cache HIT on shortlived error object with waitinglist"
server s1 {
rxreq
delay 10
} -start
varnish v1 -vcl+backend {
sub vcl_backend_fetch {
set bereq.first_byte_timeout = 1s;
}
sub vcl_deliver {
set resp.http.hits = obj.hits;
set resp.http.uncacheable = obj.uncacheable;
set resp.http.x-cache = req.http.x-cache;
}
sub vcl_hit {
set req.http.x-cache = "HIT";
}
sub vcl_miss {
set req.http.x-cache = "MISS";
}
} -start
client c1 {
txreq
rxresp
expect resp.status == 503
expect resp.http.hits == 0
expect resp.http.uncacheable == false
expect resp.http.x-cache == "MISS"
} -start
delay 0.5
client c2 {
txreq
rxresp
expect resp.status == 503
expect resp.http.hits == 1
expect resp.http.uncacheable == false
expect resp.http.x-cache == "HIT"
} -start
client c1 -wait
client c2 -wait
varnish v1 -expect MAIN.cache_hitmiss == 0
varnish v1 -expect MAIN.cache_miss == 1
varnish v1 -expect MAIN.cache_hit == 1
varnish v1 -expect MAIN.cache_hit_grace == 0
varnish v1 -expect MAIN.busy_sleep == 1 |
Bugwash: Things seem to work as they should, but we may be calling something a hit (VSC) which is not what users would think of as "hit" since delivery isn't immediate. Return to this after thinking/looking at the statistics. |
I would suggest the following:
but regarding the OPs main point, I think that a coalescing (aka waitinglist) hit will need to continue ending up in vcl_hit, because it is that, even if it has to wait. |
I would need to dig up my 242-slides presentation from a couple VDDs ago but I'm pretty sure something like that was part of the plan laid out. |
I couldn't find such a flag in my presentation.
If we rename a busy counter, we should rename all of them to reflect their relation to the waiting list so I would prefer something like Regarding |
I am also ok with @dridi's suggestion to consistently rename to |
I think I'm actually against If we touch one of the Regarding the original problem of long hit transactions, the same can happen without involving a waiting list. A hit on an object in the BOS_STREAM state (ongoing fetch) can also appear to take a long time in Now regarding
I'm aware that a DURATION called "something_time" can be confusing, I'm just not making an effort to find a name for the concept. |
Expected Behavior
Waitinglist requests should not be considered as cached.
Current Behavior
After purge request to URL, next request is getting MISS and backend fetch as expected, but next requests are getting HIT VCL_call although they are in waitinglist.
Possible Solution
No response
Steps to Reproduce (for bugs)
No response
Context
We are trying to troubleshoot scenario, when varnishlog is showing that object was served from cache but in reality fetch time was quite long due to waitinglist.
We are setting special response header called X-Cache-Status:
Varnishlog output showing cache purge -> miss on first call -> hit on second call while request is in waitinglist so in reality it's not HIT, so my question is why VCL_HIT is called here.
Cache purge request
Fresh call to /napoje - this is MISS as expected
Second call to /napoje (in the meantime previous request is still fetching page from backend ~6 seconds)
Varnish Cache version
7.5.0
Operating system
Debian 12
Source of binary packages used (if any)
No response
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