NAME
Cache::Memcached::AnyEvent - AnyEvent Compatible Memcached Client
SYNOPSIS
use Cache::Memcached::AnyEvent;
my $memd = Cache::Memcached::AnyEvent->new({
servers => [ '127.0.0.1:11211' ],
compress_threshold => 10_000,
namespace => 'myapp.',
});
$memd->get( $key, sub {
my ($value) = @_;
warn "got $value for $key";
});
DESRIPTION
WARNING: ALPHA QUALITY CODE!
This module implements the memcached protocol as a AnyEvent consumer, and it implments both for text and binary protocols.
RATIONALE
There's another alternative AnyEvent memcached client, AnyEvent::Memcached which is perfectly fine, and I have nothing against you using that module, but I had specific itches to scratch:
- Prerequisites
-
This module, Cache::Memcached::AnyEvent, requires the bare minimum prerequisites to install.
There were more than a few modules that get installed for AnyEvent::Memcached (including some modules that I had to install solely for it) and I wanted to avoid it.
- Binary Protocol
-
I was in the mood to implement the binary protocol. I don't believe it's a requirement to do anything, so this is purely a whim.
- Unimplemented Methods
-
get_multi and the like are not implemented yet on AnyEvent::Memcached.
METHODS
new
add($key, $value[, $exptime, $noreply], $cb->($rc))
connect()
Explicitly connects to each server given. You DO NOT need to call this explicitly.
decr($key, $delta[, $initial], $cb->($value))
delete($key, $cb->($rc))
disconnect()
get($key, $cb->($value))
get_handle( $host_port )
get_multi(\@keys, $cb->(\%values));
get_server($i)
get_server_count()
hashing_algorithm($object)
hashing_algorithm_class($class)
incr($key, $delta[, $initial], $cb->($value))
protocol($object)
protocol_class($class)
replace($key, $value[, $exptime, $noreply], $cb->($rc))
remove($key, $cb->($rc))
Alias to delete
servers()
set($key, $value[, $exptime, $noreply], $cb->($rc))
stats($cmd, $cb->(\%stats))
version($cb->(\%result))
AUTHOR
Daisuke Maki <daisuke@endeworks.jp>
LICENSE
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
See http://www.perl.com/perl/misc/Artistic.html