memcached man page on MacOSX

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MEMCACHED(1)							  MEMCACHED(1)

NAME
       memcached - high-performance memory object caching system

SYNOPSIS
       memcached [options]

DESCRIPTION
       This  manual page documents briefly the memcached memory object caching
       daemon.

       memcached is a flexible memory object caching daemon designed to	 alle‐
       viate  database	load in dynamic web applications by storing objects in
       memory.	It's based on libevent to scale to any	size  needed,  and  is
       specifically  optimized	to  avoid swapping and always use non-blocking
       I/O.

OPTIONS
       These programs follow the usual GNU command line syntax. A  summary  of
       options is included below.

       -s <file>
	      Unix socket path to listen on (disables network support).

       -a <perms>
	      Permissions  (in	octal  format) for Unix socket created with -s
	      option.

       -l <ip_addr>
	      Listen on <ip_addr>; default to INADDR_ANY. This is an important
	      option  to  consider  as	there  is  no  other way to secure the
	      installation. Binding  to	 an  internal  or  firewalled  network
	      interface is suggested.

       -d     Run memcached as a daemon.

       -u <username>
	      Assume the identity of <username> (only when run as root).

       -m <num>
	      Use  <num>  MB memory max to use for object storage; the default
	      is 64 megabytes.

       -c <num>
	      Use <num> max simultaneous connections; the default is 1024.

       -R <num>
	      This option seeks to prevent  client  starvation	by  setting  a
	      limit  to	 the  number  of  sequential  requests the server will
	      process from an individual client connection. Once a  connection
	      has  exceeded this value, the server will attempt to process I/O
	      on other connections before handling any	further	 request  from
	      this connection. The default value for this option is 20.

       -k     Lock  down all paged memory. This is a somewhat dangerous option
	      with large caches, so consult the README and memcached  homepage
	      for configuration suggestions.

       -p <num>
	      Listen on TCP port <num>, the default is port 11211.

       -U <num>
	      Listen on UDP port <num>, the default is port 11211, 0 is off.

       -M     Disable  automatic  removal  of items from the cache when out of
	      memory.  Additions will not be possible until adequate space  is
	      freed up.

       -r     Raise the core file size limit to the maximum allowable.

       -f <factor>
	      Use <factor> as the multiplier for computing the sizes of memory
	      chunks that items are stored in. A lower	value  may  result  in
	      less  wasted  memory  depending  on  the	total amount of memory
	      available and the distribution of item sizes.   The  default  is
	      1.25.

       -n <size>
	      Allocate	a minimum of <size> bytes for the item key, value, and
	      flags. The default is 48. If you have a lot of  small  keys  and
	      values,  you can get a significant memory efficiency gain with a
	      lower value. If you use a high chunk growth factor (-f  option),
	      on  the other hand, you may want to increase the size to allow a
	      bigger percentage of your items  to  fit	in  the	 most  densely
	      packed (smallest) chunks.

       -C     Disable  the  use	 of  CAS  (and	reduce	the per-item size by 8
	      bytes).

       -h     Show the version of memcached and a summary of options.

       -v     Be verbose during the event loop; print out errors and warnings.

       -vv    Be even more verbose; same as -v but also print client  commands
	      and responses.

       -i     Print memcached and libevent licenses.

       -P <filename>
	      Print pidfile to <filename>, only used under -d option.

       -t <threads>
	      Number  of  threads  to  use  to process incoming requests. This
	      option is only meaningful if memcached was compiled with	thread
	      support  enabled.	 It is typically not useful to set this higher
	      than the number of  CPU  cores  on  the  memcached  server.  The
	      default is 4.

       -D <char>
	      Use  <char>  as the delimiter between key prefixes and IDs. This
	      is used for per-prefix  stats  reporting.	 The  default  is  ":"
	      (colon). If this option is specified, stats collection is turned
	      on automatically; if not, then it may be turned  on  by  sending
	      the "stats detail on" command to the server.

       -L     Try  to  use  large  memory pages (if available). Increasing the
	      memory page size could reduce  the  number  of  TLB  misses  and
	      improve  the  performance.  In order to get large pages from the
	      OS, memcached will allocate the total item-cache	in  one	 large
	      chunk. Only available if supported on your OS.

       -B <proto>
	      Specify  the  binding  protocol  to use.	By default, the server
	      will autonegotiate client connections.  By  using	 this  option,
	      you  can	specify	 the  protocol	clients	 must speak.  Possible
	      options are  "auto"  (the	 default,  autonegotiation  behavior),
	      "ascii" and "binary".

       -I <size>
	      Override	the  default  size  of each slab page. Default is 1mb.
	      Default is 1m, minimum is 1k, max is 128m. Adjusting this	 value
	      changes  the  item  size limit.  Beware that this also increases
	      the number of slabs (use -v to  view),  and  the	overal	memory
	      usage of memcached.

       -o <options>
	      Comma separated list of extended or experimental options. See -h
	      or wiki for up to date list.

LICENSE
       The memcached daemon is copyright Danga Interactive and is  distributed
       under  the  BSD	license.  Note	that daemon clients are licensed sepa‐
       rately.

SEE ALSO
       The README file that comes with memcached
       http://www.danga.com/memcached

AUTHOR
       The memcached daemon was written by Anatoly Vorobey  <mellon@pobox.com>
       and Brad Fitzpatrick <brad@danga.com> and the rest of the crew of Danga
       Interactive http://www.danga.com

				April 11, 2005			  MEMCACHED(1)
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