![]() Conceptually, this meant frequently doing the following: I had frequent need to start and stop Varnish, and it had to be on port 80, because this is where Varnish would run in production, and "purge" commands are port-sensitive. Last week I was writing a custom Drupal module that integrates with Varnish, purging specific cache entries when a page changes (similar to the purge module but with some custom logic). I finally found this answer in the official documentation, so that might be a good place to look if you're struggling. So, off the bat, let me give you the main answer you probably came here looking for. Try googling the phrase "stop varnish mac" and see how little information is available. ![]() I'll admit, I feel like this should be easier to do. ![]() You can learn how to install varnish on a Mac in this post if you haven't already. I'll also offer a few bash scripts that you can use to save a little time when doing so. In this post we'll cover: how to start, stop, and restart the Varnish Cache http accelerator easily on a mac.
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