Dalli Tests

Dalli is a high performance pure Ruby client for accessing memcached servers.

Dalli supports:

  • Simple and complex memcached configurations
  • Failover between memcached instances
  • Fine-grained control of data serialization and compression
  • Thread-safe operation (either through use of a connection pool, or by using the Dalli client in threadsafe mode)
  • SSL/TLS connections to memcached
  • SASL authentication

The name is a variant of Salvador Dali for his famous painting The Persistence of Memory.

Persistence of Memory

Documentation and Information

  • User Documentation - The documentation is maintained in the repository's wiki.
  • Announcements - Announcements of interest to the Dalli community will be posted here.
  • Bug Reports - If you discover a problem with Dalli, please submit a bug report in the tracker.
  • Forum - If you have questions about Dalli, please post them here.
  • Client API - Ruby documentation for the Dalli::Client API

Development

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. You can run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install.

Contributing

If you have a fix you wish to provide, please fork the code, fix in your local project and then send a pull request on github. Please ensure that you include a test which verifies your fix and update the changelog with a one sentence description of your fix so you get credit as a contributor.

Appreciation

Dalli would not exist in its current form without the contributions of many people. But special thanks go to several individuals and organizations:

  • Mike Perham - for originally authoring the Dalli project and serving as maintainer and primary contributor for many years
  • Eric Wong - for help using his kgio library.
  • Brian Mitchell - for his remix-stash project which was helpful when implementing and testing the binary protocol support.
  • CouchBase - for their sponsorship of the original development

Authors

Copyright (c) Mike Perham, Peter M. Goldstein. See LICENSE for details.