Proxy Cache Purge

Description

This plugin does not install nor configure a cache proxy. It acts as an interface with such services.

One common method of caching content for websites is via the use of reverse proxy caching. Common examples of this are Varnish and NGINX. These systems allow a website to update content and have the visitor’s experience cached without the need for complex plugins storing the files locally and using up a user’s disk space.

A reverse proxy cache is installed in front of a server and reviews requests. If the page being requested is already cached, it delivers the cached content. Otherwise it generates the page and the cache on demand.

The Proxy Cache Purge plugin sends a request to delete (aka flush) the cached data of a page or post every time it’s modified.

How It Works

When content on a site is updated by WordPress, the plugin reaches out to the proxy cache service with the URL of the page, requesting the cache be deleted.

Not all pages are deleted from the cache on every change. For example, when a post, page, or custom post type is edited, or a new comment is added, only the following pages will purge:

  • The front page
  • The post/page edited
  • Any categories, tags, and/or custom taxonomies associated with the page
  • Related feeds
  • Associated JSON API pages

In addition, your entire cache will be deleted on the following actions:

  • Changing themes
  • Pressing the Empty Cache button on the toolbar

Plugins can hook into the purge actions as well, to filter their own events to trigger a purge.

On a multisite network using subfolders, only network admins can purge the main site.

Development Mode

If you’re working on a site and need to turn off caching in one of two ways:

  1. Add define( 'VHP_DEVMODE', true ); to your wp-config.php file
  2. Go to Proxy Cache -> Settings and enable Debug Mode for 24 hours at a time

That will break cache on page loads. It is not recommended for production!

Cache Tags (BETA)

As of version 5.4.0, Proxy Cache Purge includes an optional Cache Tags / Surrogate Keys purge mode. This feature is marked as BETA and is disabled by default.

When enabled, the plugin:

  • Adds cache-tag headers to WordPress responses (for example, tagging pages by post ID, post type, taxonomy terms, author, and archives).
  • Uses tag-based purges instead of individual URL purges when content is updated, which can reduce purge traffic and improve consistency on complex sites.

Requirements:

  • A proxy cache that supports Cache Tags / Surrogate Keys and advertises this via standard Surrogate-Capability headers (for example, Surrogate-Capability: vhp="Surrogate/1.0 tags/1").

How to enable:

  • Go to Proxy Cache Settings Purge Method and check “Use Cache Tags (Surrogate Keys)”. The checkbox is only enabled when your cache tells WordPress it supports tags (or when you explicitly enable it via a define).
  • Alternatively, you can force-enable or force-disable detection via wp-config.php:

    define( ‘VHP_VARNISH_TAGS’, true ); // Force treat cache as tag-capable
    define( ‘VHP_VARNISH_TAGS’, false ); // Force treat cache as not tag-capable

Because this feature depends on your cache configuration, it is recommended that you test it carefully in staging before enabling it on production.

Background Purging with WP-Cron

On busy sites, sending many PURGE requests directly from admin requests can slow things down. When you define DISABLE_WP_CRON as true in wp-config.php (because you are running a real system cron that calls wp-cron.php), Proxy Cache Purge automatically switches to an asynchronous mode:

  • Purge requests (both URL-based and tag-based, when Cache Tags are enabled) are collected into a small per-site queue.
  • The queue is processed by WP-Cron in the background, keeping your admin and content-editing actions responsive even when many URLs or tags must be invalidated.

Object-cache purges (the “Purge Database Cache” option) remain synchronous and are not affected by this behaviour. The Proxy Cache settings page and Site Health integration expose basic queue status so you can verify that background purging is healthy; if the queue appears large or very old, check that your system cron is correctly invoking WordPress cron.

Important: Cron Frequency and Cache Freshness

When using background purging, the frequency of your system cron determines how quickly cache invalidations are processed. The longer the interval between cron runs, the longer visitors may see stale content after updates.

For minimal stale content, run your system cron every minute:

* * * * * /usr/bin/php /var/www/html/wp-cron.php

If you can tolerate slightly longer delays, every 2-5 minutes is also acceptable. However, running cron less frequently (e.g., every 15 minutes) means cache purges may be delayed by that amount after content changes.

Note: Scheduled posts are handled specially. When a scheduled post is published via WP-Cron, the cache is purged synchronously within the same cron run, ensuring immediate cache invalidation without waiting for the next cron execution.

For detailed instructions on setting up a proper Linux-based WordPress cron, see: WordPress Cron Optimization.

WP CLI

Purge

Purge commands let you empty the cache.

  • wp varnish purge – Flush the cache for your front page
  • wp varnish purge [<url>] – Flush the cache for one URL

You can use the parameter --wildcard to empty everything from that URL down. So if you wanted to empty cache for all themes, you would do this:

  • wp varnish purge https://example.com/wp-content/themes --wildcard

Debug

Debugging can help you figure out why your cache isn’t working as well as it could. The default is for your home page, but you can pass any URL on your domain.

  • wp varnish debug [<url>]

Available parameters:

  • [--include-headers] — Include headers in debug check output
  • [--include-grep] — Grep active theme and plugin directories for common issues

DevMode

Development mode allows you to disable the cache, temporarily.

  • wp varnish devmode [<activate|deactivate|toggle>] – Change development mode state

Async purge queue (cron-mode)

When you define DISABLE_WP_CRON as true and run a real system cron for WordPress, Proxy Cache Purge can move heavy purge work into a small background queue that is processed by WP‑Cron.

You can inspect and manage that queue via WP‑CLI:

  • wp varnish queue status – show whether cron-mode is active, if a full purge is queued, counts of queued URLs/tags, and the last queue run time.
  • wp varnish queue process – process any items currently in the queue (useful to run after deploys or cache‑sensitive operations).
  • wp varnish queue clear – clear the queue without sending any PURGE requests.

These commands do not replace your normal WordPress cron (you still need a cron entry that calls wp cron event run --due-now or hits wp-cron.php), but they give you a simple operational handle when using cron‑mode.

Screenshots

  • Purge button on Right Now (Dashboard Admin)
  • Toolbar menu (with cache enabled)
  • Toolbar menu (with cache disabled)
  • Scanner results
  • Change Proxy IP address
  • Activate Dev Mode
  • Dev Mode Warning (24 hour notice)

Installation

No special instructions apply.

If you have a 3rd party proxy service (such as Sucuri or Cloudflare) you will need to add an IP address on the Proxy Cache -> Settings page. Alternatively you can add a define to your wp-config.php file: define('VHP_VARNISH_IP','123.45.67.89');

When using NGINX based proxies, your IP will likely be localhost.

Requirements

  • Pretty Permalinks enabled
  • A server based proxy cache service (such as Varnish or NGINX)

FAQ

Please report all issues in the support forums

If you have code patches, pull requests are welcome.

Don’t you work at DreamHost? Is this Official or DreamHost only?

This plugin was originally adopted and updated for DreamHost’s DreamPress server, however it is not (and never has been) for DreamHost only.

I worked at DreamHost from 2012 to 2022, and have maintained the plugin since around 2014 or so.

As of October 2023, this plugin is NO LONGER installed by default on DreamPress.

Today, the plugin is maintained by GetPageSpeed, with a focus on advanced NGINX and proxy caching deployments and strong compatibility with the NGINX cache-purge module from the NGINX Extras collection.

Is this plugin caching my data?

No. This plugin tells your cache system when content is updated, and to delete the cached data at that time.

Why doesn’t the plugin automatically delete the whole cache?

Speed and stability. Emptying too much of a cache on every change can slow a server down. This plugin does its best to determine what needs to be deleted and when, while providing hooks for developers to use as necessary.

How many cached files are deleted when a post is updated?

It depends on the post, but in general the tool will delete cached content for:

  1. The post name
  2. The front page of the site
  3. All first pages of related tags/categories
  4. The JSON API pages
  5. All related RSS feeds

Is there a limit to how many pages I can purge at once?

Not really, but in order to prevent your site from crashing by running the same checks over and over, if you try to purge more than 50 URLs at once, the plugin will do a full purge. Normally this never happens, but there are some plugins that hook into the options to add more pages to purge on an update.

You can change this value in your settings, or via the define VHP_VARNISH_MAXPOSTS in your wp-config.php file.

Keep in mind, the count of 50 does not include category/tags, API, or RSS pages. It’s just the sheer number of individual posts/pages you’re trying to purge at once.

Can I prevent purges for drafts or other post statuses?

Yes. If your environment doesn’t cache logged-in users and you want to avoid purge noise from autosaves/drafts, you can exclude specific statuses network‑wide via wp-config.php (multisite‑friendly).

Add a define to exclude drafts:

define( 'VHP_EXCLUDED_POST_STATUSES', 'draft' );

Exclude multiple statuses (comma‑separated):

define( 'VHP_EXCLUDED_POST_STATUSES', 'draft,pending' );

Or pass an array:

define( 'VHP_EXCLUDED_POST_STATUSES', array( 'draft', 'pending' ) );

Developers can also use a filter to adjust the valid statuses programmatically:

add_filter( 'varnish_http_purge_valid_post_statuses', function( $statuses, $post_id ) {
    return array_diff( $statuses, array( 'draft' ) );
}, 10, 2 );

By default, the plugin considers these statuses for purge URL generation: publish, private, trash, pending, draft.

Can I delete the entire cache?

Yes. Click the ‘Empty Cache’ button on the “Right Now” Dashboard (see the screenshot if you can’t find it). There’s also an “Empty Cache” button on the admin toolbar.

If you don’t see a button, then your account doesn’t have the appropriate permissions. Only administrators can empty the entire cache. In the case of a subfolder multisite network, only the network admins can empty the cache for the primary site.

Will the plugin delete my cache when I edit files on the server?

No. WordPress can’t detect those file changes so it can’t tell your cache what to do. You will need to use the Empty Cache buttons when you’re done editing your code.

Does every WordPress plugin and theme work with a proxy cache?

No. Some of them have behaviours that cause them not to cache, either by accident or design. It’s incredibly hard to debug those, since many of the related issues are contextual (like if you save a page with a special setting). I’ve done my best to flag everything as possible issues with the debugger.

I’m a developer, can I tell your cache to empty in my plugin/theme?

Yes. Full documentation can be found on Custom Filters in the wiki.

Can I turn off caching?

Not permanently, and remember that this plugin is not actually caching your content.

You can use development mode to have WordPress attempt to tell your proxy service not to serve cached content, but the content will still be cached by the service.

There are three ways to do this:

  1. Choose ‘Pause Cache (24hrs)’ from the Cache dropdown menu in your toolbar
  2. Go to Proxy Cache -> Settings and enable development mode
  3. Add define( 'VHP_DEVMODE', true ); to your wp-config.php file.

The first two options will enable development mode for 24 hours. If you’re working on long term development, you should use the define.

It is not recommended you use development mode on production sites for extended periods of time, as it will slow your site down and lose all the benefits of caching in the first place.

Why is the restart cache button missing?

If you’ve disabled caching via the define, then you cannot restart cache via the plugin. You would need to change define( 'VHP_DEVMODE', true ); to define( 'VHP_DEVMODE', false ); in your wp-config.php file.

Why don’t I have access to development mode?

Due to the damage this can cause a site, access is limited to admins only. In the case of a multisite network, only Network Admins can disable caching and they must do so via wp-config.php for security.

Why do I still see cached content in development mode?

While development mode is on, your server will continue to cache content but the plugin will tell WordPress not to use the cached content. That means files that exist outside of WordPress (like CSS or images) may serve cached content.

The plugin does its best to add a No Cache parameter to javascript and CSS, however if a theme or plugin doesn’t use proper WordPress enqueues, then their cached content will be shown.

Why can I still flush cache while in development mode?

Because the server is still caching content.

The plugin provides a way to flush the cache for those pages, as well as anything not included in WordPress, for your convenience.

How can I tell if everything’s caching?

From your WordPress Dashboard, go to Proxy Cache > Check Caching. There, a page will auto-scan your front page and report back any issues found. This includes any known problematic plugins. You can use it to scan any URL on your domain.

Why is nothing caching when I use PageSpeed?

PageSpeed likes to put in Caching headers to say not to cache. To fix this, you need to put this in your .htaccess section for PageSpeed: ModPagespeedModifyCachingHeaders off

If you’re using nginx, it’s pagespeed ModifyCachingHeaders off;

Why aren’t my changes showing when I use CloudFlare or another proxy?

When you use CloudFlare or any other similar service, you’ve put a proxy in front of the server’s proxy. In general this isn’t a bad thing, though it can introduce some network latency (that means your site may run slower because it has to go through multiple layers to get to the content). The problem arises when WordPress tries to send the purge request to your domain name and, with a proxy, that means the proxy service and not your website.

On single-site, you can edit this via the Proxy Cache > Check Caching page. On Multisite, you’ll need to add the following to your wp-config.php file: define('VHP_VARNISH_IP','123.45.67.89');

Replace 123.45.67.89 with the IP of your Proxy Cache Server (not CloudFlare). DO NOT put http in this define. If you’re on nginx, you’ll want to use localhost instead of an IP address.

If you want to use WP-CLI, you can set an option in the database. This will not take precedence over the define, and exists for people who want to use automation tools: wp option update vhp_varnish_ip 123.45.67.89

Why are my posts timing out/not showing when I’m using CloudFlare?

This is usually related to CloudFlare’s APO setup.

I have an open ticket with CloudFlare trying to debug this, but basically whatever they’re doing with APO doesn’t ‘like’ the flush command and times out (or crashes).

Why do I get a 503 or 504 error on every post update?

Your IP address is incorrect. Check the IP of your server and then the setting for your proxy cache IP. If they’re not the same, that’s likely why.

How do I find the right IP address?

Your proxy IP must be one of the IPs that the service is listening on. If you use multiple IPs, or if you’ve customized your ACLs, you’ll need to pick one that doesn’t conflict with your other settings.

For example, if you have a Varnish based cache and it’s listening on a public and private IP, you’ll want to pick the private. On the other hand, if you told Varnish to listen on 0.0.0.0 (i.e. “listen on every interface you can”) you would need to check what IP you set your purge ACL to allow (commonly 127.0.0.1 aka localhost), and use that (i.e. 127.0.0.1).

If your web host set up your service, check their documentation.

What if I have multiple proxy cache IPs?

You may enter them, separated by a comma, on the settings page.

What version of Varnish is supported?

So far this plugin has been reported to successfully function on Varnish v2 through v6.5.

Does this work with NGINX caching?

It can, if you’ve configured NGINX caching to respect the curl PURGE request.

If this doesn’t work, try setting your Varnish IP to localhost as NGINX requires a service control installed for the IP address to work.

What should my cache rules be?

This is a question beyond the support of this plugin. I do not have the resources available to offer any configuration help. Here are some basic gotchas to be aware of:

  • To empty any cached data, the service will need to respect the PURGE command
  • Not all cache services set up PURGE by default
  • When flushing the whole cache, the plugin sends a PURGE command of /.* and sets the X-Purge-Method header to regex
  • NGINX expects the IP address to be ‘localhost’

How do I pass a Varnish control key or auth header?

Some providers require a control key, token, or Authorization header to accept PURGE requests. You can set a header name and value via the settings page or via the following constant:

define( 'VHP_VARNISH_EXTRA_PURGE_HEADER', 'X-Control-Key: YOUR_CONTROL_KEY_HERE' );

Alternatively, you can inject any required header via a filter.

  1. Set where PURGE requests should be sent (host:port, no scheme):

    define( ‘VHP_VARNISH_IP’, ‘varnish.example.com:6081’ );

  2. Add your control key/auth header via a small MU plugin so it loads on every request. Create wp-content/mu-plugins/varnish-purge-auth.php with:

    <?php
    add_filter( ‘varnish_http_purge_headers’, function( $headers ) {
    // Example: provider expects a custom key header
    $headers[‘X-Control-Key’] = ‘YOUR_CONTROL_KEY_HERE’;

    // Or use Authorization headers:
    // $headers['Authorization'] = 'Basic ' . base64_encode( 'username:password' );
    // $headers['Authorization'] = 'Bearer ' . 'YOUR_TOKEN_HERE';
    
    return $headers;
    

    } );

If your provider requires HTTPS for the purge endpoint, force the schema:

add_filter( 'varnish_http_purge_schema', function() { return 'https://'; } );

Important: This plugin sends HTTP PURGE requests to your cache service. It does not use the Varnish management interface (varnishadm/secret on port 6082).

How can I see what the plugin is sending to the cache service?

Yes IF the service has an interface. Sadly NGINX does not. Detailed directions can be found on the debugging section on GitHub. Bear in mind, these interfaces tend to be command-line only.

Caching is detected but cannot be confirmed. What does that mean?

It means that somewhere your server’s headers aren’t returning the data the plugin needs to see, in order to determine if the cache is working. The most common cause is that your server isn’t returning the X-Varnish header or the Age header.

I have renamed X-Varnish header for security reasons and Site Health Check says no cache service

You can use varnish_http_purge_x_varnish_header_name filter to customize this header name, like below to resolve this:

function change_varnish_header( $default_header ) {
    return 'My-Custom-Header'; // Replace with the desired header
}
add_filter( 'varnish_http_purge_x_varnish_header_name', 'change_varnish_header' );

Reviews

May 1, 2025
The plugin simply works even for all types of cache servers. Only one things bothers me about this plugin is its support for PHP 5.6+ where core itself doesn’t support upto php 7.1 while WordPress recommends using PHP 7.4+. So, this plugin should be compatible with PHP 7.4+. Using newer php code is good for security and performance while deprecated codes might produce venerability!
September 5, 2023 2 replies
Spent most of the day working on getting this working with a remote NGINX reverse proxy. The plug-in keeps complaining about no age header in the response. Google seems to suggest that etags and age headers no longer supported in dynamic content with NGINX. Plug-in help is of no help on what header the plug in is expecting to see in order to work. removed. Will have to keep deleting the cache the old manual way.
April 6, 2023
No complaints, it’s been working perfectly for years. Need it very, very seldom — but when I do need it it works. When I don’t need it? It’s out of the way and doesn’t advertise itself overmuch, like some of the other plugins I’ve used over time.
Read all 25 reviews

Contributors & Developers

“Proxy Cache Purge” is open source software. The following people have contributed to this plugin.

Contributors

“Proxy Cache Purge” has been translated into 6 locales. Thank you to the translators for their contributions.

Translate “Proxy Cache Purge” into your language.

Interested in development?

Browse the code, check out the SVN repository, or subscribe to the development log by RSS.

Changelog

5.5.0 (2025-12)

  • Fix: Scheduled posts now properly purge cache when auto-published via WP-Cron. Previously, purges were queued but not processed until the next cron run, leaving stale content.
  • New: Added transition_post_status hook to handle future publish transitions synchronously, ensuring immediate cache invalidation for scheduled posts.
  • New: Shortlink URLs (?p=XXX) are now purged when scheduled posts publish, clearing any cached 404 responses.
  • Doc: Added guidance on cron frequency for background purging mode – recommends every-minute cron for minimal stale content.
  • Dev: New pytest coverage for scheduled post publishing via WP-Cron.

5.4.0 (2025-12)

  • New (BETA): Optional Cache Tags / Surrogate Key purge mode, controlled via the “Use Cache Tags” setting.
  • New (BETA): Tag-mode enablement based on standard Surrogate-Capability headers from surrogates (Edge Architecture spec) or the VHP_VARNISH_TAGS wp-config define.
  • New: Admin UI improvements – properly associated labels for checkboxes and clearer explanatory copy.
  • Dev: Test VCL and pytest stack updated to cover tag-based purging behaviour.

5.3.0 (2025-09)

  • New: VHP_EXCLUDED_POST_STATUSES define to exclude statuses (e.g. drafts) from purge triggers.
  • New: varnish_http_purge_valid_post_statuses filter to customize statuses programmatically.
  • Fix: REST URL generation for tags and custom taxonomies; respect rest_base and use term IDs.
  • Fix: Avoid booleans in generated URL lists for REST entries.
  • Fix: Correct WP version check (pre-4.7 only) for deactivation logic.
  • Fix: Correct per-host IP loop in purge header filtering.
  • Fix: Properly strip query strings when deduplicating purge URLs.
  • Fix: Debugger wp_remote_get args and header checks (Via header scalar/array).
  • Polish: Typo fix in DevMode settings message.

5.2.2 (2024-08)

  • Fix: Warning / Notices resolved.

5.2.1 (2024-01)

  • New: Allow custom X-Varnish header name.

5.2.0 (2023-07)

  • Fix: Debug if Via headers are an array.