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51Degrees Device Detection Varnish  4.2Newer Version 4.4

A device detection module for Varnish

51Degrees Device Detection VMOD

51Degrees Device Detection in C Varnish module

Developer documentation

Introduction

The project contains source code for the Varnish integration of 51Degrees' on-premise Device Detection engine.

Pre-requisites

  • gcc
  • autoconf
  • automake
  • libvarnishapi-dev
  • Varnish source

For Ubuntu based distributions gcc can be found on apt, use

$ sudo apt-get install gcc autoconf automake libvarnishapi-dev varnish

Install

Linux

For an existing Varnish deployment

Enhanced Device Data

By default the module will be built with the Lite Hash data file.

Amend src/Makefile.am to use the name of your Premium or Enterprise data file.

Static Module

To install the module into an existing Varnish deployment,

first clone 51Degrees/device-detection-varnish repository with

$ git clone --recursive https://github.com/51Degrees/device-detection-varnish.git

This will also clone the dependent sub-module device-detection-cxx and any of its' recursive sub-modules.

Move to the Varnish directory with

$ cd device-detection-varnish

and install the module with (NOTE: if Varnish source was installed using the package manager, its' files will be located under /usr/include/varnish directory rather than /usr/local/include/varnish. The environment variable VARNISHSRC will need to be set to point to this location for the installation to succeed).

$ .autogen.sh
$ ./configure --with-config=release|test
$ make
$ sudo make install

Where --with-config [optional] sets the version that will be built. release and test versions are identical, except that the test version expose some additional functions to support the testing process. Only release version is recommended for production. By default release version is built.

When varnish is installed in a non standard directory, please set the value of environment variable VARNISHSRC to point to where the varnish source resides before running the configure (e.g. export VARNISHSRC=/usr/include/varnish).

The location of where the module will be installed can also be customised by setting the environment variable VMOD_DIR before running the configure.

Then run the included tests with the following command. A test version is required for this to succeed:

$ make check

This will all pass if the local installation was successful.

Configure

Before start matching user agents, you may wish to configure the solution to use a different database for example.

Settings

General Settings

These settings should be set before calling fiftyonedegrees.start.

  • set_performance_profile (defaults to DEFAULT). Set the performance profile.
  • set_drift (defaults to 0). Set the drift value.
  • set_difference (defaults to 0). Set the difference value.
  • set_max_concurrency (defaults is determined by the performance profile). Set the expected concurrent detection requests.
  • set_allow_unmatched (defaults is NO). Set whether unmatched node should be allowed.
  • set_use_performance_graph (defaults is determined by the performance profile). Set whether the performance optimized graph should be used.
  • set_use_predictive_graph (defaults is determined by the performance profile). Set whether the predictive optimized graph should be used.
  • set_delimiter (defaults to ','). Sets the delimiter to separate values with.
  • set_properties (defaults to all properties). Sets the properties to initialise.

Usage

The easiest way to view full usage information is to run the command:

man vmod_fiftyonedegrees

to display all the functions with examples.

The VCL File

An example configuration file is included in this repository. It shows how to add device information to HTTP headers.

Initialising the Resource Manager

In the init block is where you should set any settings and initialise the resource manager.

import fiftyonedegrees;
sub vcl_init {
# Initialise the resource manager with the data file.
fiftyonedegrees.start("/home/51Degrees/data/51Degrees.dat");
}

Matching

Matching can be done is two ways.

User-Agent match

To get properties using the device's User-Agent use:

sub vcl_deliver {
# This sets resp.http.X-IsMobile to "True"/"False".
set resp.http.X-IsMobile = fiftyonedegrees.match_single(req.http.user-agent, "IsMobile");
}
Multiple HTTP header matches

To get properties from all the relevant HTTP headers from the device use:

sub vcl_deliver {
# This sets resp.http.X-IsMobile to "True"/"False".
set resp.http.X-IsMobile = fiftyonedegrees.match_all("IsMobile");
}
Output Format

The value of the header is set to a comma separated list of values (comma delimited is the default behaviour, but the delimiter can be set explicitly with set_delimiter), these are in the same order the properties are listed in the config file. So setting a header with the line:

set resp.http.X-Device = fiftyonedegrees.match_all("HardwareName,BrowserName,PlatformName");

will give a header named X-Device with a value like Desktop,Firefox,Ubuntu. Alternatively, headers can be set individually like:

set resp.http.X-HardwareName = fiftyonedegrees.match_all("HardwareName");
set resp.http.X-BrowserName = fiftyonedegrees.match_all("BrowserName");
set resp.http.X-PlatformName = fiftyonedegrees.match_all("PlatformName");

giving three separate headers.

Example

Start Varnish using the example VCLs within the device-detection-varnish/examples/hash directory with (NOTE: The data file path used by the start API in the vcl_init block will need to be updated before proceed):

$ varnishd -f /path/to/examples/hash/gettingStarted.vcl -a localhost:8080 -d

Then, type start to launch the worker process.

In a Linux environment, the headers can be viewed with the command:

$ curl localhost:8080 -I -A "Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 11_2 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/604.4.7 (KHTML, like Gecko) Mobile/15C114"

which will give the following response:

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
...
X-IsMobile: True
...