Setting up memcache and memcached in Drupal

Memcache had always seemed like some magic black box to me until the last time I set it up and really took the time to understand what it does.

I'd say there are two main benefits to memcache:

  1. Reducing hits on the database - all of Drupal's normal caching can be set to store in memory instead of the database thereby reducing expensive inserts and large numbers of reads
  2. If you have your database on a different server then you will see a massive performance increase because cached data is stored on the web server and therefore you don't have the overhead of network IO

Setting up memcache consists of the following steps:

To install memcached and memcache:
sudo apt-get install php5-memcached php5-memcache

Then in your php.ini:

extension=memcache.so
memcache.hash_strategy="consistent"

Restart Apache and check your phpinfo() for memcache.

Then get the Drupal memcache module (you don't need to install it but you need the module in place). Once in place configure Drupal to use memcache by adding the following lines to your settings.php inside the $conf array (you may need to uncomment the open and close of the array:

'cache_inc' => './sites/all/modules/contrib/memcache/memcache.inc',
'memcache_servers' => array(
'127.0.0.1:11211' => 'default',
),
'memcache_bins' => array(
'cache' => 'default',
'cache_block' => 'default',
'cache_content' => 'default',
'cache_filter' => 'default',
'cache_form' => 'default',
'cache_menu' => 'default',
'cache_page' => 'default',
'cache_update' => 'default',
'cache_views' => 'default',
'session' => 'default',
'users' => 'default',
'cache_performance' => 'default',
),

Later on I might explain all the settings above, but essentially it tells Drupal what file to use to talk to memcache, where the server is and what tables to use memcache for.

How do you know it's working?

Memcache has several tools and you can telnet here and there but I've found the easiest way to know for sure is to check your cache tables aren't being populated. If you comment out the 'cache_inc' line in your settings.php then clear your cache or empty your cache table you should see it gets filled up as you browse your site. With the line uncommented and an empty table, you should find it stays empty. You will also see cache_set and cache_get queries drop out of the devel query logger.

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  • @drupalninja yes I think that's what I did. Actually, I think that's still a table view and I overrode the table template. 15 years 11 weeks ago
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  • RT @Casablanca: RT @philhawksworth Hoping to find a #Drupal Legend at #fosdem to join us working at @TheTeam in London 15 years 12 weeks ago
  • Doing my put to put a nail in the coffin for IE6 http://2tu.us/1ja7 15 years 12 weeks ago
  • @leisa, is your javascript turned off? 15 years 13 weeks ago
Oliver Polden