Memcache basic configuration
You did not tell us about your OS/distro. Also, you did not tell us how you installed memcached.
Usually, you will get a sample config file under /etc/
when you install memcached using apt-get
under debian-based systems and rpm
or yum
under redhat, fedora or centos.
If you installed it from source, you may not get a sample file under /etc/
(I did not install memcached from source myself). However, you can look for a sample config file in the unpacked source folder.
Anyway, you can use locate memcached.conf
to look for one in your system. You need to do sudo updatedb
before that to update the search cache.
Here is the config file from my system. You can use it:
# Run memcached as a daemon. This command is implied, and is not needed for the
# daemon to run. See the README.Debian that comes with this package for more
# information.
-d
# Log memcached's output to /var/log/memcached
logfile /var/log/memcached.log
# Be verbose
# -v
# Be even more verbose (print client commands as well)
# -vv
# Start with a cap of 64 megs of memory. It's reasonable, and the daemon default
# Note that the daemon will grow to this size, but does not start out holding this much
# memory
-m 64
# Default connection port is 11211
-p 11211
# Run the daemon as root. The start-memcached will default to running as root if no
# -u command is present in this config file
-u memcache
# Specify which IP address to listen on. The default is to listen on all IP addresses
# This parameter is one of the only security measures that memcached has, so make sure
# it's listening on a firewalled interface.
-l 127.0.0.1
# Limit the number of simultaneous incoming connections. The daemon default is 1024
# -c 1024
# Lock down all paged memory. Consult with the README and homepage before you do this
# -k
# Return error when memory is exhausted (rather than removing items)
-M
# Maximize core file limit
# -r
You can also pass the same options from the command line.
The default (CentOS) /etc/sysconfig/memcached:
PORT="11211"
USER="memcached"
MAXCONN="1024"
CACHESIZE="64"
OPTIONS=""
The init script (CentOS) /etc/init.d/memcached:
...
if [ -f /etc/sysconfig/memcached ];then
. /etc/sysconfig/memcached
fi
...
The above amounts to, if the file exists, 'source' it (i.e. read and evaluate its contents).
As far as I know, memcached does not have a configuration file. It uses command line parameters, for example (from a RHEL/CentOS init script):
daemon --pidfile ${pidfile} memcached -d -p $PORT -u $USER -m $CACHESIZE -c $MAXCONN -P ${pidfile} $OPTIONS
(You'll note that the variables defined above, are used here).
The bottom line, therefore, is:
- Check your init script - if it contains a section similar to that above (the if statement) then certainly, create the matching file, and place the appropriate variables in it.
- There is no configuration file - don't create one as it won't be used.
If you can't find on CentOS /etc/init.d/memcached try this:
nano /usr/lib/systemd/system/memcached.service
and change:
ExecStart=/usr/bin/memcached -u $USER -p $PORT -m $CACHESIZE -c $MAXCONN $OPTIONS
to:
ExecStart=/usr/bin/memcached -u $USER -p $PORT -m $CACHESIZE -I $MAXITEMSIZE -c $MAXCONN $OPTIONS
After add in /etc/sysconfig/memcached
MAXITEMSIZE="128m"
Restart memcached
service memcached restart
To check if parameter is added try:
ps aux | grep memcached