MySQL 8.0 Reference Manual Including MySQL NDB Cluster 8.0
Benchmarks suggest that the daemon_memcached
plugin speeds up DML operations
(inserts, updates, and deletes) more than it speeds up queries.
Therefore, consider focussing initial development efforts on
write-intensive applications that are I/O-bound, and look for
opportunities to use MySQL with the
daemon_memcached plugin for new
write-intensive applications.
Single-row DML statements are the easiest types of statements to
turn into memcached operations.
INSERT becomes add,
UPDATE becomes set,
incr or decr, and
DELETE becomes delete.
These operations are guaranteed to only affect one row when
issued through the memcached interface,
because the key is unique within the
table.
In the following SQL examples, t1 refers to
the table used for memcached operations,
based on the configuration in the
innodb_memcache.containers table.
key refers to the column listed under
key_columns, and val
refers to the column listed under
value_columns.
INSERT INTO t1 (key,val) VALUES (some_key,some_value); SELECT val FROM t1 WHERE key =some_key; UPDATE t1 SET val =new_valueWHERE key =some_key; UPDATE t1 SET val = val + x WHERE key =some_key; DELETE FROM t1 WHERE key =some_key;
The following TRUNCATE TABLE and
DELETE statements, which remove
all rows from the table, correspond to the
flush_all operation, where
t1 is configured as the table for
memcached operations, as in the previous
example.
TRUNCATE TABLE t1; DELETE FROM t1;