- Memcached Basics
- Memcached - Home
- Memcached - Overview
- Memcached - Environment
- Memcached - Connection
- Memcached Storage Commands
- Memcached - Set Data
- Memcached - Add Data
- Memcached - Replace Data
- Memcached - Append Data
- Memcached - Prepend Data
- Memcached - CAS
- Memcached Retrieval Commands
- Memcached - Get Data
- Memcached - Get CAS Data
- Memcached - Delete Key
- Memcached - Delete Data
- Memcached - Incr/Decr
- Memcached Statistics Commands
- Memcached - Stats
- Memcached - Stats Items
- Memcached - Stats Slabs
- Memcached - Stats sizes
- Memcached - Clear Data
- Memcached Useful Resources
- Memcached - Quick Guide
- Memcached - Useful Resources
- Memcached - Discussion
- Selected Reading
- UPSC IAS Exams Notes
- Developer's Best Practices
- Questions and Answers
- Effective Resume Writing
- HR Interview Questions
- Computer Glossary
- Who is Who
Memcached - CAS Command
CAS stands for Check-And-Set or Compare-And-Swap. Memcached CAS command is used to set the data if it is not updated since last fetch. If the key does not exist in Memcached, then it returns NOT_FOUND.
Syntax
The basic syntax of Memcached CAS command is as shown below −
set key flags exptime bytes unique_cas_key [noreply] value
The keywords in the syntax are as described below−
key − It is the name of the key by which data is stored and retrieved from Memcached.
flags − It is the 32-bit unsigned integer that the server stores with the data provided by the user, and returns along with the data when the item is retrieved.
exptime − It is the expiration time in seconds. 0 means no delay. If exptime is more than 30 days, Memcached uses it as a UNIX timestamp for expiration.
bytes − It is the number of bytes in the data block that needs to be stored. This is the length of the data that needs to be stored in Memcached.
unique_cas_key − It is the unique key get from gets command.
noreply (optional) − It is a parameter that informs the server not to send any reply.
value − It is the data that needs to be stored. Data needs to be passed on new line after executing the command with the above options.
Output
The output of the command is as shown below −
STORED
STORED indicates success.
ERROR indicates error while saving data or wrong syntax.
EXISTS indicates that someone has modified the CAS data since last fetch.
NOT_FOUND indicates that the key does not exist in the Memcached server.
Example
To execute a CAS command in Memcached, you need to get a CAS token from the Memcached gets command.
cas tp 0 900 9 ERROR cas tp 0 900 9 2 memcached set tp 0 900 9 memcached STORED gets tp VALUE tp 0 9 1 memcached END cas tp 0 900 5 2 redis EXISTS cas tp 0 900 5 1 redis STORED get tp VALUE tp 0 5 redis END
CAS Using Java Application
To get CAS data from a Memcached server, you need to use Memcached gets method.
Example
import net.spy.memcached.MemcachedClient; public class MemcachedJava { public static void main(String[] args) { // Connecting to Memcached server on localhost MemcachedClient mcc = new MemcachedClient(new InetSocketAddress("127.0.0.1", 11211)); System.out.println("Connection to server successful"); System.out.println("set status:"+mcc.set("tutorialspoint", 900, "memcached").isDone()); // Get cas token from cache long castToken = mcc.gets("tutorialspoint").cas; System.out.println("Cas token:"+castToken); // now set new data in memcached server System.out.println("Now set new data:"+mcc.cas("tutorialspoint", castToken, 900, "redis")); System.out.println("Get from Cache:"+mcc.get("tutorialspoint")); } }
Output
On compiling and executing the program, you get to see the following output −
Connection to server successful set status:true Cas token:3 Now set new data:OK Get from Cache:redis