ngx_memc - An extended version of the standard memcached module that supports set, add, delete, and many more memcached commands.
This module is not distributed with the Nginx source. See the installation instructions.
- Version
- Synopsis
- Description
- Memcached commands supported
- get $memc_key
- set $memc_key $memc_flags $memc_exptime $memc_value
- add $memc_key $memc_flags $memc_exptime $memc_value
- replace $memc_key $memc_flags $memc_exptime $memc_value
- append $memc_key $memc_flags $memc_exptime $memc_value
- prepend $memc_key $memc_flags $memc_exptime $memc_value
- delete $memc_key
- delete $memc_key $memc_exptime
- incr $memc_key $memc_value
- decr $memc_key $memc_value
- flush_all
- flush_all $memc_exptime
- stats
- version
- Directives
- Installation
- Compatibility
- Community
- Report Bugs
- Source Repository
- Changes
- Test Suite
- TODO
- Getting involved
- Author
- Copyright & License
- See Also
This document describes ngx_memc v0.19 released on 19 April 2018.
# GET /foo?key=dog
#
# POST /foo?key=cat
# Cat's value...
#
# PUT /foo?key=bird
# Bird's value...
#
# DELETE /foo?key=Tiger
location /foo {
set $memc_key $arg_key;
# $memc_cmd defaults to get for GET,
# add for POST, set for PUT, and
# delete for the DELETE request method.
memc_pass 127.0.0.1:11211;
}
# GET /bar?cmd=get&key=cat
#
# POST /bar?cmd=set&key=dog
# My value for the "dog" key...
#
# DELETE /bar?cmd=delete&key=dog
# GET /bar?cmd=delete&key=dog
location /bar {
set $memc_cmd $arg_cmd;
set $memc_key $arg_key;
set $memc_flags $arg_flags; # defaults to 0
set $memc_exptime $arg_exptime; # defaults to 0
memc_pass 127.0.0.1:11211;
}
# GET /bar?cmd=get&key=cat
# GET /bar?cmd=set&key=dog&val=animal&flags=1234&exptime=2
# GET /bar?cmd=delete&key=dog
# GET /bar?cmd=flush_all
location /bar {
set $memc_cmd $arg_cmd;
set $memc_key $arg_key;
set $memc_value $arg_val;
set $memc_flags $arg_flags; # defaults to 0
set $memc_exptime $arg_exptime; # defaults to 0
memc_cmds_allowed get set add delete flush_all;
memc_pass 127.0.0.1:11211;
}
http {
...
upstream backend {
server 127.0.0.1:11984;
server 127.0.0.1:11985;
}
server {
location /stats {
set $memc_cmd stats;
memc_pass backend;
}
...
}
}
...
# read the memcached flags into the Last-Modified header
# to respond 304 to conditional GET
location /memc {
set $memc_key $arg_key;
memc_pass 127.0.0.1:11984;
memc_flags_to_last_modified on;
}
location /memc {
set $memc_key foo;
set $memc_cmd get;
# access the unix domain socket listend by memcached
memc_pass unix:/tmp/memcached.sock;
}
This module extends the standard memcached module to support almost the whole memcached ascii protocol.
It allows you to define a custom REST interface to your memcached servers or access memcached in a very efficient way from within the nginx server by means of subrequests or independent fake requests.
This module is not supposed to be merged into the Nginx core because I've used Ragel to generate the memcached response parsers (in C) for joy :)
If you are going to use this module to cache location responses out of the box, try srcache-nginx-module with this module to achieve that.
When used in conjunction with lua-nginx-module, it is recommended to use the lua-resty-memcached library instead of this module though, because the former is much more flexible and memory-efficient.
You need HttpUpstreamKeepaliveModule together with this module for keep-alive TCP connections to your backend memcached servers.
Here's a sample configuration:
http {
upstream backend {
server 127.0.0.1:11211;
# a pool with at most 1024 connections
# and do not distinguish the servers:
keepalive 1024;
}
server {
...
location /memc {
set $memc_cmd get;
set $memc_key $arg_key;
memc_pass backend;
}
}
}
It implements the memcached TCP protocol all by itself, based upon the upstream
mechanism. Everything involving I/O is non-blocking.
The module itself does not keep TCP connections to the upstream memcached servers across requests, just like other upstream modules. For a working solution, see section Keep-alive connections to memcached servers.
The memcached storage commands set, add, replace, prepend, and append uses the $memc_key
as the key, $memc_exptime
as the expiration time (or delay) (defaults to 0), $memc_flags
as the flags (defaults to 0), to build the corresponding memcached queries.
If $memc_value
is not defined at all, then the request body will be used as the value of the $memc_value
except for the incr and decr commands. Note that if $memc_value
is defined as an empty string (""
), that empty string will still be used as the value as is.
The following memcached commands have been implemented and tested (with their parameters marked by corresponding nginx variables defined by this module):
Retrieves the value using a key.
location /foo {
set $memc_cmd 'get';
set $memc_key 'my_key';
memc_pass 127.0.0.1:11211;
add_header X-Memc-Flags $memc_flags;
}
Returns 200 OK
with the value put into the response body if the key is found, or 404 Not Found
otherwise. The flags
number will be set into the $memc_flags
variable so it's often desired to put that info into the response headers by means of the standard add_header directive.
It returns 502
for ERROR
, CLIENT_ERROR
, or SERVER_ERROR
.
To use the request body as the memcached value, just avoid setting the $memc_value
variable:
# POST /foo
# my value...
location /foo {
set $memc_cmd 'set';
set $memc_key 'my_key';
set $memc_flags 12345;
set $memc_exptime 24;
memc_pass 127.0.0.1:11211;
}
Or let the $memc_value
hold the value:
location /foo {
set $memc_cmd 'set';
set $memc_key 'my_key';
set $memc_flags 12345;
set $memc_exptime 24;
set $memc_value 'my_value';
memc_pass 127.0.0.1:11211;
}
Returns 201 Created
if the upstream memcached server replies STORED
, 200
for NOT_STORED
, 404
for NOT_FOUND
, 502
for ERROR
, CLIENT_ERROR
, or SERVER_ERROR
.
The original memcached responses are returned as the response body except for 404 NOT FOUND
.
Similar to the set command.
Similar to the set command.
Similar to the set command.
Note that at least memcached version 1.2.2 does not support the "append" and "prepend" commands. At least 1.2.4 and later versions seem to supports these two commands.
Similar to the append command.
Deletes the memcached entry using a key.
location /foo
set $memc_cmd delete;
set $memc_key my_key;
memc_pass 127.0.0.1:11211;
}
Returns 200 OK
if deleted successfully, 404 Not Found
for NOT_FOUND
, or 502
for ERROR
, CLIENT_ERROR
, or SERVER_ERROR
.
The original memcached responses are returned as the response body except for 404 NOT FOUND
.
Similar to the delete $memc_key command except it accepts an optional expiration
time specified by the $memc_exptime
variable.
This command is no longer available in the latest memcached version 1.4.4.
Increments the existing value of $memc_key
by the amount specified by $memc_value
:
location /foo {
set $memc_cmd incr;
set $memc_key my_key;
set $memc_value 2;
memc_pass 127.0.0.1:11211;
}
In the preceding example, every time we access /foo
will cause the value of my_key
increments by 2
.
Returns 200 OK
with the new value associated with that key as the response body if successful, or 404 Not Found
if the key is not found.
It returns 502
for ERROR
, CLIENT_ERROR
, or SERVER_ERROR
.
Similar to incr $memc_key $memc_value.
Mark all the keys on the memcached server as expired:
location /foo {
set $memc_cmd flush_all;
memc_pass 127.0.0.1:11211;
}
Just like flush_all but also accepts an expiration time specified by the $memc_exptime
variable.
Causes the memcached server to output general-purpose statistics and settings
location /foo {
set $memc_cmd stats;
memc_pass 127.0.0.1:11211;
}
Returns 200 OK
if the request succeeds, or 502 for ERROR
, CLIENT_ERROR
, or SERVER_ERROR
.
The raw stats
command output from the upstream memcached server will be put into the response body.
Queries the memcached server's version number:
location /foo {
set $memc_cmd version;
memc_pass 127.0.0.1:11211;
}
Returns 200 OK
if the request succeeds, or 502 for ERROR
, CLIENT_ERROR
, or SERVER_ERROR
.
The raw version
command output from the upstream memcached server will be put into the response body.
All the standard memcached module directives in nginx 0.8.28 are directly inherited, with the memcached_
prefixes replaced by memc_
. For example, the memcached_pass
directive is spelled memc_pass
.
Here we only document the most important two directives (the latter is a new directive introduced by this module).
syntax: memc_pass <memcached server IP address>:<memcached server port>
syntax: memc_pass <memcached server hostname>:<memcached server port>
syntax: memc_pass <upstream_backend_name>
syntax: memc_pass unix:<path_to_unix_domain_socket>
default: none
context: http, server, location, if
phase: content
Specify the memcached server backend.
syntax: memc_cmds_allowed <cmd>...
default: none
context: http, server, location, if
Lists memcached commands that are allowed to access. By default, all the memcached commands supported by this module are accessible. An example is
location /foo {
set $memc_cmd $arg_cmd;
set $memc_key $arg_key;
set $memc_value $arg_val;
memc_pass 127.0.0.1:11211;
memc_cmds_allowed get;
}
syntax: memc_flags_to_last_modified on|off
default: off
context: http, server, location, if
Read the memcached flags as epoch seconds and set it as the value of the Last-Modified
header. For conditional GET, it will signal nginx to return 304 Not Modified
response to save bandwidth.
syntax: memc_connect_timeout <time>
default: 60s
context: http, server, location
The timeout for connecting to the memcached server, in seconds by default.
It's wise to always explicitly specify the time unit to avoid confusion. Time units supported are "s"(seconds), "ms"(milliseconds), "y"(years), "M"(months), "w"(weeks), "d"(days), "h"(hours), and "m"(minutes).
This time must be less than 597 hours.
syntax: memc_send_timeout <time>
default: 60s
context: http, server, location
The timeout for sending TCP requests to the memcached server, in seconds by default.
It is wise to always explicitly specify the time unit to avoid confusion. Time units supported are "s"(seconds), "ms"(milliseconds), "y"(years), "M"(months), "w"(weeks), "d"(days), "h"(hours), and "m"(minutes).
This time must be less than 597 hours.
syntax: memc_read_timeout <time>
default: 60s
context: http, server, location
The timeout for reading TCP responses from the memcached server, in seconds by default.
It's wise to always explicitly specify the time unit to avoid confusion. Time units supported are "s"(seconds), "ms"(milliseconds), "y"(years), "M"(months), "w"(weeks), "d"(days), "h"(hours), and "m"(minutes).
This time must be less than 597 hours.
syntax: memc_buffer_size <size>
default: 4k/8k
context: http, server, location
This buffer size is used for the memory buffer to hold
- the complete response for memcached commands other than
get
, - the complete response header (i.e., the first line of the response) for the
get
memcached command.
This default size is the page size, may be 4k
or 8k
.
syntax: memc_ignore_client_abort on|off
default: off
context: location
Determines whether the connection with a memcache server should be closed when a client closes a connection without waiting for a response.
This directive was first added in the v0.14
release.
You're recommended to install this module (as well as the Nginx core and many other goodies) via the OpenResty bundle. See the installation steps for OpenResty
.
Alternatively, you can compile this module into the standard Nginx source distribution by hand:
Grab the nginx source code from nginx.org, for example, the version 1.13.6 (see nginx compatibility), and then build the source with this module:
wget 'http://nginx.org/download/nginx-1.13.6.tar.gz'
tar -xzvf nginx-1.13.6.tar.gz
cd nginx-1.13.6/
# Here we assume you would install you nginx under /opt/nginx/.
./configure --prefix=/opt/nginx \
--add-module=/path/to/memc-nginx-module
make -j2
make install
Download the latest version of the release tarball of this module from memc-nginx-module file list.
Starting from NGINX 1.9.11, you can also compile this module as a dynamic module, by using the --add-dynamic-module=PATH
option instead of --add-module=PATH
on the
./configure
command line above. And then you can explicitly load the module in your nginx.conf
via the load_module
directive, for example,
load_module /path/to/modules/ngx_http_memc_module.so;
The memached response parsers were generated by Ragel. If you want to regenerate the parser's C file, i.e., src/ngx_http_memc_response.c, use the following command from the root of the memc module's source tree:
$ ragel -G2 src/ngx_http_memc_response.rl
The following versions of Nginx should work with this module:
- 1.17.x (last tested: 1.17.4)
- 1.16.x
- 1.15.x (last tested: 1.15.8)
- 1.14.x
- 1.13.x (last tested: 1.13.6)
- 1.12.x
- 1.11.x (last tested: 1.11.2)
- 1.10.x
- 1.9.x (last tested: 1.9.15)
- 1.8.x
- 1.7.x (last tested: 1.7.10)
- 1.6.x
- 1.5.x (last tested: 1.5.12)
- 1.4.x (last tested: 1.4.4)
- 1.2.x (last tested: 1.2.9)
- 1.1.x (last tested: 1.1.5)
- 1.0.x (last tested: 1.0.10)
- 0.9.x (last tested: 0.9.4)
- 0.8.x (last tested: 0.8.54)
- 0.7.x >= 0.7.46 (last tested: 0.7.68)
It's worth mentioning that some 0.7.x versions older than 0.7.46 might also work, but I can't easily test them because the test suite makes extensive use of the echo module's echo_location directive, which requires at least nginx 0.7.46 :)
Earlier versions of Nginx like 0.6.x and 0.5.x will not work.
If you find that any particular version of Nginx above 0.7.46 does not work with this module, please consider reporting a bug.
The openresty-en mailing list is for English speakers.
The openresty mailing list is for Chinese speakers.
Although a lot of effort has been put into testing and code tuning, there must be some serious bugs lurking somewhere in this module. So whenever you are bitten by any quirks, please don't hesitate to
- create a ticket on the issue tracking interface provided by GitHub,
- or send a bug report or even patches to the nginx mailing list.
Available on github at openresty/memc-nginx-module.
The changes of every release of this module can be obtained from the OpenResty bundle's change logs:
This module comes with a Perl-driven test suite. The test cases are declarative too. Thanks to the Test::Base module in the Perl world.
To run it on your side:
$ PATH=/path/to/your/nginx-with-memc-module:$PATH prove -r t
You need to terminate any Nginx processes before running the test suite if you have changed the Nginx server binary.
Either LWP::UserAgent or IO::Socket is used by the test scaffold.
Because a single nginx server (by default, localhost:1984
) is used across all the test scripts (.t
files), it's meaningless to run the test suite in parallel by specifying -jN
when invoking the prove
utility.
You should also keep a memcached server listening on the 11211
port at localhost before running the test suite.
Some parts of the test suite requires modules rewrite and echo to be enabled as well when building Nginx.
- add support for the memcached commands
cas
,gets
andstats $memc_value
. - add support for the
noreply
option.
You'll be very welcomed to submit patches to the author or just ask for a commit bit to the source repository on GitHub.
Yichun "agentzh" Zhang (章亦春) <agentzh@gmail.com>, OpenResty Inc.
This wiki page is also maintained by the author himself, and everybody is encouraged to improve this page as well.
The code base is borrowed directly from the standard memcached module in the Nginx core. This part of code is copyrighted by Igor Sysoev and Nginx Inc.
Copyright (c) 2009-2018, Yichun "agentzh" Zhang (章亦春) agentzh@gmail.com, OpenResty Inc.
This module is licensed under the terms of the BSD license.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
- Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
- Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
- The original announcement email on the nginx mailing list: ngx_memc: "an extended version of ngx_memcached that supports set, add, delete, and many more commands"
- My slides demonstrating various ngx_memc usage: http://agentzh.org/misc/slides/nginx-conf-scripting/nginx-conf-scripting.html#34 (use the arrow or pageup/pagedown keys on the keyboard to swith pages)
- The latest memcached TCP protocol.
- The ngx_srcache module
- The lua-resty-memcached library based on the lua-nginx-module cosocket API.
- The standard memcached module.
- The echo module for Nginx module's automated testing.
- The standard headers module and the 3rd-parth headers-more module.