go-cache is an in-memory key:value store/cache similar to memcached that is
suitable for applications running on a single machine. Its major advantage is
that, being essentially a thread-safe map[string]interface{}
with expiration
times, it doesn't need to serialize or transmit its contents over the network.
Any object can be stored, for a given duration or forever, and the cache can be safely used by multiple goroutines.
Although go-cache isn't meant to be used as a persistent datastore, the entire
cache can be saved to and loaded from a file (using c.Items()
to retrieve the
items map to serialize, and NewFrom()
to create a cache from a deserialized
one) to recover from downtime quickly. (See the docs for NewFrom()
for caveats.)
In this fork of the original repo, the map of which is used inside the caching
component is the sync.Map
instead of using the the default Map
with
all the locking/unlocking boilerplate.
go get github.com/patrickmn/go-cache
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/patrickmn/go-cache"
"time"
)
func main() {
// Create a cache with a default expiration time of 5 minutes, and which
// purges expired items every 10 minutes
c := cache.New(5*time.Minute, 10*time.Minute)
// Set the value of the key "foo" to "bar", with the default expiration time
c.Set("foo", "bar", cache.DefaultExpiration)
// Set the value of the key "baz" to 42, with no expiration time
// (the item won't be removed until it is re-set, or removed using
// c.Delete("baz")
c.Set("baz", 42, cache.NoExpiration)
// Get the string associated with the key "foo" from the cache
foo, found := c.Get("foo")
if found {
fmt.Println(foo)
}
// Since Go is statically typed, and cache values can be anything, type
// assertion is needed when values are being passed to functions that don't
// take arbitrary types, (i.e. interface{}). The simplest way to do this for
// values which will only be used once--e.g. for passing to another
// function--is:
foo, found := c.Get("foo")
if found {
MyFunction(foo.(string))
}
// This gets tedious if the value is used several times in the same function.
// You might do either of the following instead:
if x, found := c.Get("foo"); found {
foo := x.(string)
// ...
}
// or
var foo string
if x, found := c.Get("foo"); found {
foo = x.(string)
}
// ...
// foo can then be passed around freely as a string
// Want performance? Store pointers!
c.Set("foo", &MyStruct, cache.DefaultExpiration)
if x, found := c.Get("foo"); found {
foo := x.(*MyStruct)
// ...
}
}