root/trunk/server/doc/protocol.txt @ 620

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Add append command support written by Filipe Laborde. Tests/protocol doc updates by me.

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1Protocol
2--------
3
4Clients of memcached communicate with server through TCP connections.
5(A UDP interface is also available; details are below under "UDP
6protocol.") A given running memcached server listens on some
7(configurable) port; clients connect to that port, send commands to
8the server, read responses, and eventually close the connection.
9
10There is no need to send any command to end the session. A client may
11just close the connection at any moment it no longer needs it. Note,
12however, that clients are encouraged to cache their connections rather
13than reopen them every time they need to store or retrieve data.  This
14is because memcached is especially designed to work very efficiently
15with a very large number (many hundreds, more than a thousand if
16necessary) of open connections. Caching connections will eliminate the
17overhead associated with establishing a TCP connection (the overhead
18of preparing for a new connection on the server side is insignificant
19compared to this).
20
21There are two kinds of data sent in the memcache protocol: text lines
22and unstructured data.  Text lines are used for commands from clients
23and responses from servers. Unstructured data is sent when a client
24wants to store or retrieve data. The server will transmit back
25unstructured data in exactly the same way it received it, as a byte
26stream. The server doesn't care about byte order issues in
27unstructured data and isn't aware of them. There are no limitations on
28characters that may appear in unstructured data; however, the reader
29of such data (either a client or a server) will always know, from a
30preceding text line, the exact length of the data block being
31transmitted.
32
33Text lines are always terminated by \r\n. Unstructured data is _also_
34terminated by \r\n, even though \r, \n or any other 8-bit characters
35may also appear inside the data. Therefore, when a client retrieves
36data from a server, it must use the length of the data block (which it
37will be provided with) to determine where the data block ends, and not
38the fact that \r\n follows the end of the data block, even though it
39does.
40
41Keys
42----
43
44Data stored by memcached is identified with the help of a key. A key
45is a text string which should uniquely identify the data for clients
46that are interested in storing and retrieving it.  Currently the
47length limit of a key is set at 250 characters (of course, normally
48clients wouldn't need to use such long keys); the key must not include
49control characters or whitespace.
50
51Commands
52--------
53
54There are three types of commands.
55
56Storage commands (there are five: "set", "add", "replace", "append"
57and "cas") ask the server to store some data identified by a key. The
58client sends a command line, and then a data block; after that the
59client expects one line of response, which will indicate success or
60faulure.
61
62Retrieval commands (there are two: "get" and "gets") ask the server to
63retrieve data corresponding to a set of keys (one or more keys in one
64request). The client sends a command line, which includes all the
65requested keys; after that for each item the server finds it sends to
66the client one response line with information about the item, and one
67data block with the item's data; this continues until the server
68finished with the "END" response line.
69
70All other commands don't involve unstructured data. In all of them,
71the client sends one command line, and expects (depending on the
72command) either one line of response, or several lines of response
73ending with "END" on the last line.
74
75A command line always starts with the name of the command, followed by
76parameters (if any) delimited by whitespace. Command names are
77lower-case and are case-sensitive.
78
79Expiration times
80----------------
81
82Some commands involve a client sending some kind of expiration time
83(relative to an item or to an operation requested by the client) to
84the server. In all such cases, the actual value sent may either be
85Unix time (number of seconds since January 1, 1970, as a 32-bit
86value), or a number of seconds starting from current time. In the
87latter case, this number of seconds may not exceed 60*60*24*30 (number
88of seconds in 30 days); if the number sent by a client is larger than
89that, the server will consider it to be real Unix time value rather
90than an offset from current time.
91
92
93Error strings
94-------------
95
96Each command sent by a client may be answered with an error string
97from the server. These error strings come in three types:
98
99- "ERROR\r\n"
100
101  means the client sent a nonexistent command name.
102
103- "CLIENT_ERROR <error>\r\n"
104
105  means some sort of client error in the input line, i.e. the input
106  doesn't conform to the protocol in some way. <error> is a
107  human-readable error string.
108
109- "SERVER_ERROR <error>\r\n"
110
111  means some sort of server error prevents the server from carrying
112  out the command. <error> is a human-readable error string. In cases
113  of severe server errors, which make it impossible to continue
114  serving the client (this shouldn't normally happen), the server will
115  close the connection after sending the error line. This is the only
116  case in which the server closes a connection to a client.
117
118
119In the descriptions of individual commands below, these error lines
120are not again specifically mentioned, but clients must allow for their
121possibility.
122
123
124Storage commands
125----------------
126
127First, the client sends a command line which looks like this:
128
129<command name> <key> <flags> <exptime> <bytes> [<unqiue>]\r\n
130
131- <command name> is "set", "add", "replace", "append", or "cas"
132
133  "set" means "store this data". 
134
135  "add" means "store this data, but only if the server *doesn't* already
136  hold data for this key". 
137
138  "replace" means "store this data, but only if the server *does*
139  already hold data for this key".
140
141  "append" means "add this data to an existing key".
142
143  "cas" is a check and set operation which means "store this data but
144  only if no one else has updated since I last fetched it."
145
146- <key> is the key under which the client asks to store the data
147
148- <flags> is an arbitrary 16-bit unsigned integer (written out in
149  decimal) that the server stores along with the data and sends back
150  when the item is retrieved. Clients may use this as a bit field to
151  store data-specific information; this field is opaque to the server.
152  Note that in memcached 1.2.1 and higher, flags may be 32-bits, instead
153  of 16, but you might want to restrict yourself to 16 bits for
154  compatibility with older versions.
155
156- <exptime> is expiration time. If it's 0, the item never expires
157  (although it may be deleted from the cache to make place for other
158  items). If it's non-zero (either Unix time or offset in seconds from
159  current time), it is guaranteed that clients will not be able to
160  retrieve this item after the expiration time arrives (measured by
161  server time). 
162
163- <bytes> is the number of bytes in the data block to follow, *not*
164  including the delimiting \r\n. <bytes> may be zero (in which case
165  it's followed by an empty data block).
166
167- <cas unique> is a unique 64-bit value of an existing entry.
168
169After this line, the client sends the data block:
170
171<data block>\r\n
172
173- <data block> is a chunk of arbitrary 8-bit data of length <bytes>
174  from the previous line.
175
176After sending the command line and the data blockm the client awaits
177the reply, which may be:
178
179- "STORED\r\n", to indicate success.
180
181- "NOT_STORED\r\n" to indicate the data was not stored, but not
182because of an error. This normally means that either that the
183condition for an "add" or a "replace" command wasn't met, or that the
184item is in a delete queue (see the "delete" command below).
185
186- "EXISTS\r\n" to indicate that the item you are trying to store with
187a "cas" command has been modified since you last fetched it.
188
189
190Retrieval command:
191------------------
192
193The retrieval commands "get" and "gets" operates like this:
194
195get <key>*\r\n
196gets <key>*\r\n
197
198- <key>* means one or more key strings separated by whitespace.
199
200After this command, the client expects zero or more items, each of
201which is received as a text line followed by a data block. After all
202the items have been transmitted, the server sends the string
203
204"END\r\n"
205
206to indicate the end of response.
207
208Each item sent by the server looks like this:
209
210VALUE <key> <flags> <bytes> [<cas unique>]\r\n
211<data block>\r\n
212
213- <key> is the key for the item being sent
214
215- <flags> is the flags value set by the storage command
216
217- <bytes> is the length of the data block to follow, *not* including
218  its delimiting \r\n
219
220- <cas unique> is a unique 64-bit integer that uniquely identifies
221  this specific item.
222
223- <data block> is the data for this item.
224
225If some of the keys appearing in a retrieval request are not sent back
226by the server in the item list this means that the server does not
227hold items with such keys (because they were never stored, or stored
228but deleted to make space for more items, or expired, or explicitly
229deleted by a client).
230
231
232Deletion
233--------
234
235The command "delete" allows for explicit deletion of items:
236
237delete <key> <time>\r\n
238
239- <key> is the key of the item the client wishes the server to delete
240
241- <time> is the amount of time in seconds (or Unix time until which)
242  the client wishes the server to refuse "add" and "replace" commands
243  with this key. For this amount of item, the item is put into a
244  delete queue, which means that it won't possible to retrieve it by
245  the "get" command, but "add" and "replace" command with this key
246  will also fail (the "set" command will succeed, however). After the
247  time passes, the item is finally deleted from server memory.
248
249  The parameter <time> is optional, and, if absent, defaults to 0
250  (which means that the item will be deleted immediately and further
251  storage commands with this key will succeed).
252
253The response line to this command can be one of:
254
255- "DELETED\r\n" to indicate success
256
257- "NOT_FOUND\r\n" to indicate that the item with this key was not
258  found.
259
260See the "flush_all" command below for immediate invalidation
261of all existing items.
262
263
264Increment/Decrement
265-------------------
266
267Commands "incr" and "decr" are used to change data for some item
268in-place, incrementing or decrementing it. The data for the item is
269treated as decimal representation of a 64-bit unsigned integer. If the
270current data value does not conform to such a representation, the
271commands behave as if the value were 0. Also, the item must already
272exist for incr/decr to work; these commands won't pretend that a
273non-existent key exists with value 0; instead, they will fail.
274
275The client sends the command line:
276
277incr <key> <value>\r\n
278
279or
280
281decr <key> <value>\r\n
282
283- <key> is the key of the item the client wishes to change
284
285- <value> is the amount by which the client wants to increase/decrease
286the item. It is a decimal representation of a 64-bit unsigned integer.
287
288The response will be one of:
289
290- "NOT_FOUND\r\n" to indicate the item with this value was not found
291
292- <value>\r\n , where <value> is the new value of the item's data,
293  after the increment/decrement operation was carried out.
294
295Note that underflow in the "decr" command is caught: if a client tries
296to decrease the value below 0, the new value will be 0.  Overflow in
297the "incr" command will wrap around the 64 bit mark.
298
299Note also that decrementing a number such that it loses length isn't
300guaranteed to decrement its returned length.  The number MAY be
301space-padded at the end, but this is purely an implementation
302optimization, so you also shouldn't rely on that.
303
304Statistics
305----------
306
307The command "stats" is used to query the server about statistics it
308maintains and other internal data. It has two forms. Without
309arguments:
310
311stats\r\n
312
313it causes the server to output general-purpose statistics and
314settings, documented below.  In the other form it has some arguments:
315
316stats <args>\r\n
317
318Depending on <args>, various internal data is sent by the server. The
319kinds of arguments and the data sent are not documented in this vesion
320of the protocol, and are subject to change for the convenience of
321memcache developers.
322
323
324General-purpose statistics
325--------------------------
326
327Upon receiving the "stats" command without arguments, the server sents
328a number of lines which look like this:
329
330STAT <name> <value>\r\n
331
332The server terminates this list with the line
333
334END\r\n
335
336In each line of statistics, <name> is the name of this statistic, and
337<value> is the data.  The following is the list of all names sent in
338response to the "stats" command, together with the type of the value
339sent for this name, and the meaning of the value.
340
341In the type column below, "32u" means a 32-bit unsigned integer, "64u"
342means a 64-bit unsigner integer. '32u:32u' means two 32-but unsigned
343integers separated by a colon.
344
345
346Name              Type     Meaning
347----------------------------------
348pid               32u      Process id of this server process
349uptime            32u      Number of seconds this server has been running
350time              32u      current UNIX time according to the server
351version           string   Version string of this server
352pointer_size      32       Default size of pointers on the host OS
353                           (generally 32 or 64)
354rusage_user       32u:32u  Accumulated user time for this process
355                           (seconds:microseconds)
356rusage_system     32u:32u  Accumulated system time for this process
357                           (seconds:microseconds)
358curr_items        32u      Current number of items stored by the server
359total_items       32u      Total number of items stored by this server
360                           ever since it started
361bytes             64u      Current number of bytes used by this server
362                           to store items
363curr_connections  32u      Number of open connections
364total_connections 32u      Total number of connections opened since
365                           the server started running
366connection_structures 32u  Number of connection structures allocated
367                           by the server
368cmd_get           64u      Cumulative number of retrieval requests
369cmd_set           64u      Cumulative number of storage requests
370get_hits          64u      Number of keys that have been requested and
371                           found present
372get_misses        64u      Number of items that have been requested
373                           and not found
374evictions         64u      Number of valid items removed from cache                                                                           
375                           to free memory for new items                                                                                       
376bytes_read        64u      Total number of bytes read by this server
377                           from network
378bytes_written     64u      Total number of bytes sent by this server to
379                           network
380limit_maxbytes    32u      Number of bytes this server is allowed to
381                           use for storage.
382threads           32u      Number of worker threads requested.
383                           (see doc/threads.txt)
384
385
386
387Other commands
388--------------
389
390"flush_all" is a command with an optional numeric argument. It always
391succeeds, and the server sends "OK\r\n" in response. Its effect is to
392invalidate all existing items immediately (by default) or after the
393expiration specified.  After invalidation none of the items will be returned
394in response to a retrieval command (unless it's stored again under the
395same key *after* flush_all has invalidated the items). flush_all doesn't
396actually free all the memory taken up by existing items; that will
397happen gradually as new items are stored. The most precise definition
398of what flush_all does is the following: it causes all items whose
399update time is earlier than the time at which flush_all was set to be
400executed to be ignored for retrieval purposes.
401
402The intent of flush_all with a delay, was that in a setting where you
403have a pool of memcached servers, and you need to flush all content,
404you have the option of not resetting all memcached servers at the
405same time (which could e.g. cause a spike in database load with all
406clients suddenly needing to recreate content that would otherwise
407have been found in the memcached daemon).
408
409The delay option allows you to have them reset in e.g. 10 second
410intervals (by passing 0 to the first, 10 to the second, 20 to the
411third, etc. etc.).
412
413
414"version" is a command with no arguments:
415
416version\r\n
417
418In response, the server sends
419
420"VERSION <version>\r\n", where <version> is the version string for the
421server.
422
423"verbosity" is a command with a numeric argument. It always                                                 
424succeeds, and the server sends "OK\r\n" in response. Its effect is to                                       
425set the verbosity level of the logging output.                                                               
426
427"quit" is a command with no arguments:
428
429quit\r\n
430
431Upon receiving this command, the server closes the
432connection. However, the client may also simply close the connection
433when it no longer needs it, without issuing this command.
434
435
436UDP protocol
437------------
438
439For very large installations where the number of clients is high enough
440that the number of TCP connections causes scaling difficulties, there is
441also a UDP-based interface. The UDP interface does not provide guaranteed
442delivery, so should only be used for operations that aren't required to
443succeed; typically it is used for "get" requests where a missing or
444incomplete response can simply be treated as a cache miss.
445
446Each UDP datagram contains a simple frame header, followed by data in the
447same format as the TCP protocol described above. In the current
448implementation, requests must be contained in a single UDP datagram, but
449responses may span several datagrams. (The only common requests that would
450span multiple datagrams are huge multi-key "get" requests and "set"
451requests, both of which are more suitable to TCP transport for reliability
452reasons anyway.)
453
454The frame header is 8 bytes long, as follows (all values are 16-bit integers
455in network byte order, high byte first):
456
4570-1 Request ID
4582-3 Sequence number
4594-5 Total number of datagrams in this message
4606-7 Reserved for future use; must be 0
461
462The request ID is supplied by the client. Typically it will be a
463monotonically increasing value starting from a random seed, but the client
464is free to use whatever request IDs it likes. The server's response will
465contain the same ID as the incoming request. The client uses the request ID
466to differentiate between responses to outstanding requests if there are
467several pending from the same server; any datagrams with an unknown request
468ID are probably delayed responses to an earlier request and should be
469discarded.
470
471The sequence number ranges from 0 to n-1, where n is the total number of
472datagrams in the message. The client should concatenate the payloads of the
473datagrams for a given response in sequence number order; the resulting byte
474stream will contain a complete response in the same format as the TCP
475protocol (including terminating \r\n sequences).
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