Varnish speeds up your WordPress site significantly. It acts as a reverse proxy and will cache all of your pages as HTML and serve them up quickly, bypassing the slow PHP backend (Apache or nginx). Traditionally plugins like W3 Total Cache and Varnish HTTP Purge empty single pages or the entire cache which leaves your website very slow while new users visit your web site and Varnish repopulates its cache. With this WordPress Varnish cache method you will always be serving up fast Varnish cached versions of your WordPress pages by warming up the Varnish cache.

As a bonus, Varnish has a clever feature: using hash_always_miss lets Varnish continue to serve its cached version and only replaces it with an updated cached version when we send a hash_always_miss no-cache request using some bash scripts. This means you can slowly refill the Varnish cache instead of purging it all at once and being stuck with slow pages as new users request the uncached versions from Apache or nginx. I will assume you have access to your WordPress web server (like with Digital Ocean) to install packages and edit files. You also should have XML sitemaps enabled, Yoast SEO does this and is what I use. It works on Varnish 3 and 4 for caching WordPress posts, pages and categories. I use Debian and Ubuntu but this method works on all Linux operating systems, you may have to change a few small things though if you are using CentOS, Fedora or other distros.

Note: If you use CloudFlare then you need to use another similar method, the guide will be published so wait for that, there will be separate guides for Varnish 3 (now live) and Varnish 4 (now live).

I have a WordPress plugin which automates this, use the contact form to help test it and get a free copy

Varnish gives you the fastest load times that a regular WordPress PHP backend alone has difficulty competing with a VPS like Digital Ocean ($5 a month). Bear in mind this site would take over 3 seconds to load because I have way too many plugins (40+).

Warm up and Refresh WordPress Varnish Cache

I will assume you already have Varnish installed and configured to work with WordPress. These scripts have dual functionality, they warm up the cache and refresh old versions making it perfect for always serving fast cached versions. The WordPress Varnish cache scripts I include warm up the Varnish cache for your posts, single pages and categories.

Just to summarize the benefits of this approach:

Never purge Varnish cache but always serve new content

Scripts will warm up a single post, a list of posts or all of your posts to fill the Varnish cache

Always serve Varnish cached pages for your posts, pages and categories

Largely avoid slow PHP backend for your visitors

Replace cached versions of your posts, pages and categories while still serving the slightly older Varnish cached version

Script to automatically refresh your Varnish cache for your entire site (includes posts, pages, categories)

Script to manually refresh your Varnish cache with a selection of posts, categories or pages

Script to manually refresh your Varnish cache for a specific post, page or category

This is how the script works with the req hash_always_miss feature of Varnish to warm up the cache and refresh (replacing old cached version) with a new cached version that it grabs from the Web server (Apache or nginx)

You will need curl installed for the scripts

sudo apt-get install curl -y

Configuring Varnish for Smart Purging

Open your Varnish vcl file, usually default.vcl

sudo nano /etc/varnish/default.vcl

Add an access control list (acl) for editors, this is for security so that other machines cannot force refreshes on your page. Add it after the backend section but before the sub vcl_recv section. Change IP.of.Server to the IP of the server that will run the script to refresh pages, I am just using the same VPS that runs the web server and Varnish. This section is important as it adds a layer of security so that only you control when these hash_always_miss requests are sent.

acl editors { "127.0.0.1"; " IP.of.Server "; }

Adjust your VCL file to include hash_always_miss in your sub vcl_recv section, you only need to add the red section. It looks for the header Cache-Control with no-cache (which we will send later using curl) and whether the sender is a member of the editors acl.

sub vcl_recv { if (req.http.Cache-Control ~ "no-cache" && client.ip ~ editors) { set req.hash_always_miss = true; } }

I have also set my Varnish time to live (ttl) – how long Varnish should keep cached version of the page – to 1 year in the sub vcl_fetch function. Since I will be refreshing the Varnish cache daily this shouldn't be a problem.

set beresp.ttl = 52w;

Test your adjusted Varnish default.vcl works

varnishd -C -f /etc/varnish/default.vcl

If you didn't get any errors reload your Varnish configuration

sudo service varnish reload

Manual Varnish Smart Purge for Single URL

Make sure you have curl installed

sudo apt-get install curl -y

Create a new script that will send the always miss request for a URL you paste into the script when prompted

nano smartvarnishrefreshsingle.sh

Paste this code which sends a curl request with a no-cache header for a specific URL

#!/usr/bin/env bash # WordPress Varnish Cache Refresh from HTPCGuides.com echo Enter full URL to purge read url echo Refreshing $url curl -s $url -H "Cache-Control: no-cache" -o /dev/null echo Refreshed $url

Ctrl+X, Y and Enter to save the script

Make the script executable

sudo chmod +x smartvarnishrefreshsingle.sh

Run the manual single Varnish purge script like this

bash smartvarnishrefreshsingle.sh

You will see this output, just paste your URL and press Enter

Enter full URL to purge

Now that WordPress post or page has been intelligently refreshed using Varnish.

Automated Smart Varnish Refresh Script for Full Site

The automated smart Varnish cache refresher script requires xml2 and curl so install them

sudo apt-get install xml2 curl -y

Create the smartvarnishrefresh script

nano smartvarnishrefresh.sh

Paste this, adjust site to your site's URL. If you do not want to include pages or categories you can remove those lines. This script does assume your sitemaps are in this format: http://www.yourwebsite.com/post-sitemap.xml which Yoast SEO does automatically, other sitemap plugins may have the same filenames but check just in case.

#!/usr/bin/env bash # WordPress Varnish Cache Refresh from HTPCGuides.com site= https://www.htpcguides.com #Download post sitemap wget -q $site/post-sitemap.xml -O postsitemap.xml #Parse the xml file and put it into posts.txt xml2 < postsitemap.xml | grep /url/loc= | sed 's/.*=//' > posts.txt # Loop through the posts.txt and use curl to send an always miss request while read post; do echo Refreshing $post curl -s $post -H "Cache-Control: no-cache" -o /dev/null echo Refreshed $post echo Waiting sleep 10 done < posts.txt #Download page sitemap wget -q $site/page-sitemap.xml -O pagesitemap.xml #Parse the xml file and put it into pages.txt xml2 < pagesitemap.xml | grep /url/loc= | sed 's/.*=//' > pages.txt # Loop through the pages.txt and use curl to send an always miss request while read page; do echo Refreshing $page curl -s $page -H "Cache-Control: no-cache" -o /dev/null echo Refreshed $page echo Waiting sleep 10 done < pages.txt #Download category sitemap wget -q $site/category-sitemap.xml -O categorysitemap.xml #Parse the xml file and put it into categories.txt xml2 < categorysitemap.xml | grep /url/loc= | sed 's/.*=//' > categories.txt # Loop through the categories.txt and use curl to send an always miss request while read category; do echo Refreshing $category curl -s $category -H "Cache-Control: no-cache" -o /dev/null echo Refreshed $category echo Waiting sleep 30 done < categories.txt # Warm up and refresh blogroll pages, change 30 to the number of pages back you show posts for i in {1..30} do echo Refreshing $site/page/$i curl -s $site/page/$i/ -H "Cache-Control: no-cache" -o /dev/null echo Refreshed $site/page/$i echo Waiting sleep 1 done

Ctrl+X, Y and Enter to save the script

Make the script executable

sudo chmod +x smartvarnishrefresh.sh

Run the Varnish cache refresh script to test it, warning this will take a while if you have a lot of content. When you see the Waiting prompt you can Ctrl+C to interrupt the script

bash smartvarnishrefresh.sh

You will see a lot of curl commands and Refreshed URL names, this will take a while depending on how many posts, pages and categories you have.

You can add a daily cronjob for refreshing the WordPress Varnish Cache which will run every day at midnight.

crontab -l | { cat; echo "@daily /path/to/smartvarnishrefresh.sh"; } | crontab -

Manual Smart Varnish Refresh Multiple URLs

Gather URLs to Refresh

This method is for users who only want to refresh a specific set of pages.

Go to your sitemaps, you can use as many or as few as you want

Posts – http://www.yourwebsite.com/post-sitemap.xml

Pages – http://www.yourwebsite.com/page-sitemap.xml

Categories – http://www.yourwebsite.com/post-category.xml

Highlight and copy the entire table to the clipboard

Go into Excel or any spreadsheet program and paste the data

Do a search or find and replace, make find your full URL http://www.yourwebsite.com and leave the replace blank

Highlight the whole column and copy it to the clipboard, you will paste it in the manual script below

Create the Manual Varnish Refresh Multiple URLs Script

You need curl

sudo apt-get install curl -y

Create the manual Varnish refresh script

sudo nano smartrefreshvarnishmultiple.sh

Change your site name and paste your WordPress URLs from the spreadsheet in the pages section to refresh them in the Varnish cache (adapted from here)

#!/usr/bin/env bash site=" https://www.htpcguides.com " #Paste sites in pages below pages=" / /100-amazon-gift-card-giveaway-july-2015/ /40-amazon-gift-card-giveaway/ " echo ----------------------------- echo Refresh old pages from cache echo ----------------------------- for page in $pages; do echo Refreshing $site$page curl -s $site$page -H "Cache-Control: no-cache" -o /dev/null echo $site$page refreshed sleep 10 done

Ctrl+X, Y and Enter to save the script

Make the script executable

sudo chmod +x smartvarnishrefreshmultiple.sh

Run the script like this

bash smartvarnishrefreshmultiple.sh

You now have three different scripts to refresh and warm up WordPress Varnish cache which will ensure you always serve super fast cached pages.

If a few pages or posts are regularly updated, use the manual Varnish script.

If you only update a single post, page or category that required some correcting, use the manual single refresh script.

If you have a recent posts or popular posts widget then use the automatic refresh script.