Hey there,

 

I thought I’d send a note that I have finally gotten Varnish to work with 
Joomla. I wanted to say thanks to everyone on this list that has helped me 
throughout the last little while until I finally got it working.

 

I ended up modifying the joomla code to send an additional HTTP header to 
identify if the session was logged in or not, as well , I heeded the advice 
here and stripped all cookies except for the login page, among a few other 
things.

 

I detailed my experiences in my blog , if anyone is interested. I tried to be 
as detailed as possible :

 

http://blog.stardothosting.com/2011/08/08/varnish-caching-with-joomla/

 

Thanks!

 

 

From: Mitch Pirtle [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, August 08, 2011 3:29 AM
To: Kevin
Cc: <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: neverending saga of varnish + joomla

 

On 07/ago/2011, at 22:42, "Kevin" <[email protected]> wrote:

 

The problem is varnish is having a very very difficult time knowing when to 
pipe or pass the traffic to the backend webserver if a logged in session 
happens. It seems that unless you patch joomla to do its own internal checks 
and determine if a user is anonymous or not, and send a custom http header that 
varnish can read, there is no other real way to make varnish work with joomla.

Hi Kevin!

 

You can accomplish this by writing a Joomla plugin that does these things.

There are example plugins in the Joomla wiki (I'm loitering outside and don't 
have access right now, sorry!) and I believe there is a simple plugin example 
provided in the 1.5 distribution.

 

Essentially think of Joomla plugins as database triggers and stored procedures. 
When a specific event fires in the execution stack, any plugins for that event 
are fired as well.

 

Hope this helps,

 

-- Mitch

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