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memcache-client

NodeJS memcached client

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memcache-client

NodeJS memcached client with the most efficient ASCII protocol parser.

Primary developed to be used at @WalmartLabs to power the http://www.walmart.com eCommerce site.

Features

  • Very efficient memcached ASCII protocol parser by using only NodeJS Buffer APIs.
  • Optional compression for the data before sending to memcached
  • Auto reconnects when there's network error or timeout
  • Support sending arbitrary commands. Read up on the protocol doc here.
  • Support storing Buffer, string, numeric, and JSON values
  • APIs Support callback or Promise
  • Support fire and forget requests
  • Support multiple connections
  • Support TLS connections

Install

$ npm i memcache-client --save

Notes

  • If you want to use compression features and a compression library is not provided, zstd.ts is used by default, for that implementation to work, zstd is required to be an executable program in the OS

Usage

import {
  MemcacheClient,
  MultiRetrievalResponse,
  MultiCasRetrievalResponse,
  StatsCommandResponse,
} from "memcache-client";
import assert from "node:assert";
const server = "localhost:11211";
// create a normal client

const client = new MemcacheClient({ server });

// Create a client that ignores NOT_STORED response (for McRouter AllAsync mode)

const mrClient = new MemcacheClient({ server, ignoreNotStored: true });

// You can specify maxConnections by using an object for server
// Default maxConnections is 1

const mClient = new MemcacheClient({ server: { server, maxConnections: 5 } });

// with callback

client.set("key", "data", (err, r) => {
  assert.deepEqual(r, ["STORED"]);
});
client.get("key", (err, data) => {
  assert.equal(data?.value, "data");
});

// with callback - use generic to provide type of data.value

client.get<string>("key", (err, data) => {
  assert.equal(data?.value, "data"); // data?.value is string instead of unknown
});

// with promise

client.set("key", "data").then((r) => assert.deepEqual(r, ["STORED"]));
client.get("key").then((data) => assert.equal(data?.value, "data"));

// with promise - use generic to provide type of data.value

client.get<string>("key").then((data) => assert.equal(data?.value, "data"));

// concurrency using promise

Promise.all([client.set("key1", "data1"), client.set("key2", "data2")]).then((r) =>
  assert.deepEqual(r, [["STORED"], ["STORED"]])
);
Promise.all([client.get("key1"), client.get("key2")]).then((r) => {
  assert.equal(r[0].value, "data1");
  assert.equal(r[1].value, "data2");
});

// get multiple keys
// NOTE: For being able to correctly type the result of getting multiple keys with a single call,
// use the helper type MultiRetrievalResponse or MultiCasRetrievalResponse
// depending of the executed function, and send the desire type

// use MultiRetrievalResponse for client.get
client.get<MultiRetrievalResponse<string>>(["key1", "key2"]).then((results) => {
  assert.equal(results["key1"].value, "data1");
  assert.equal(results["key2"].value, "data2");
});

// use MultiCasRetrievalResponse for client.gets
client.gets<MultiCasRetrievalResponse<string>>(["key1", "key2"]).then((results) => {
  assert.equal(results["key1"].value, "data1");
  assert.equal(results["key2"].value, "data2");
});

// gets and cas (check and set)

client.gets("key1").then((v) => client.cas("key1", "casData", { casUniq: v.casUniq }));

// enable compression (if data size >= 100 bytes)

const data = Buffer.alloc(500);
client.set("key", data, { compress: true }).then((r) => assert.deepEqual(r, ["STORED"]));

// fire and forget

client.set("key", data, { noreply: true });

// send any arbitrary command (\r\n will be appended automatically)
// NOTE: client.cmd can accept a generic same way as client.get and client.gets

// there is already a type for "stats" command
client.cmd<StatsCommandResponse>("stats").then((r) => {
  console.log(r.STAT);
});
client.set("foo", "10", { noreply: true });
client.cmd<string>("incr foo 5").then((v) => assert.equal(+v, 15));

// you can also send arbitary command with noreply option (noreply will be appended automatically)

client.cmd("incr foo 5", { noreply: true });

// send any arbitrary data (remember \r\n)

client.send("set foo 0 0 5\r\nhello\r\n").then((r) => assert.deepEqual(r, ["STORED"]));

// disconnect from the memcached server(s)
client.shutdown();

Commands with a method

All take an optional callback. If it's not provided then all return a Promise.

  • client.get<ReturnValueType>(key, [callback]) or client.get([key1, key2], [callback])
  • client.gets<ReturnValueType>(key, [callback]) or client.gets([key1, key2], [callback])
  • client.set(key, data, [options], [callback])
  • client.add(key, data, [options], [callback])
  • client.replace(key, data, [options], [callback])
  • client.append(key, data, [options], [callback])
  • client.prepend(key, data, [options], [callback])
  • client.cas(key, data, options, [callback])
  • client.delete(key, [options], [callback])
  • client.incr(key, value, [options], [callback])
  • client.decr(key, value, [options], [callback])
  • client.touch(key, exptime, [options], [callback])
  • client.version([callback])

For all store commands, set, add, replace, append, prepend, and cas, the data can be a Buffer, string, number, or a JSON object.

Client Options

The client constructor takes the following values in options.

const options = {
  server: { server: "host:port", maxConnections: 3 },
  ignoreNotStored: true, // ignore NOT_STORED response
  lifetime: 100, // TTL 100 seconds
  cmdTimeout: 3000, // command timeout in milliseconds
  connectTimeout: 8000, // connect to server timeout in ms
  keepAlive: 120000, // keepalive initial delay in ms, or `false` to disable
  noDelay: true, // whether to enable TCP_NODELAY on connections
  compressor: require("custom-compressor"),
  logger: require("./custom-logger"),
  Promise,
  tls: {}
};

const client = new MemcacheClient(options);
  • server - required A string in host:port format, or an object:
{ server: "host:port", maxConnections: 3 }

Default maxConnections is 1

  • ignoreNotStored - optional If set to true, then will not treat NOT_STORED reply from any store commands as error. Use this for Mcrouter AllAsyncRoute mode.
  • lifetime - optional Your cache TTL in seconds to use for all entries. DEFAULT: 60 seconds.
  • noDelay - optional Whether to enable TCP_NODELAY on connections to decrease latency. DEFAULT: false
  • cmdTimeout - optional Command timeout in milliseconds. DEFAULT: 5000 ms.
    • If a command didn't receive response before this timeout value, then it will cause the connection to shutdown and returns Error.
  • connectTimeout - optional Custom self connect to server timeout in milliseconds. It's disabled if set to 0. DEFAULT: 0
    • The error object from this will have connecting set to true
  • keepAlive - optional Initial delay (in milliseconds) between the last data packet received on a connection and when a keepalive probe should be sent, or false to disable the SO_KEEPALIVE socket option entirely. DEFAULT: 1 minute (60000 milliseconds)
  • keepDangleSocket - optional After connectTimeout trigger, do not destroy the socket but keep listening for errors on it. DEFAULT: false
  • dangleSocketWaitTimeout - optional How long to wait for errors on dangle socket before destroying it. DEFAULT: 5 minutes (30000 milliseconds)
  • compressor - optional a custom compressor for compressing the data. See data compression for more details.
  • logger - optional Custom logger like this:
    module.exports = {
      debug: (msg) => console.log(msg),
      info: (msg) => console.log(msg),
      warn: (msg) => console.warn(msg),
      error: (msg) => console.error(msg)
    };
    
  • Promise - optional Internally this module will try to find bluebird in your node_modules and fallback to global.Promise. You can set this option to force the Promise to use.
  • tls - optional If set, defines the TLS options to make the client connect to server in TLS mode
connectTimeout

Note that the connectTimeout option is a custom timeout this client adds. It will preempt the system's connect timeout, for which you typically get back a connect ETIMEDOUT error.

Since from NodeJS there's no way to change the system's connect timeout, which is usually fairly long, this option allows you to set a shorter timeout. When it triggers, the client will shutdown the connection and destroys the socket, and rejects with an error. The error's message will be "connect timeout" and has the field connecting set to true.

If you want to let the system connect timeout to take place, then set this option to 0 to completely disable it, or set it to a high value like 10 minutes in milliseconds (60000).

Dangle Socket

If you set a small custom connectTimeout and do not want to destroy the socket after it triggers, then you will end up with a dangling socket.

To enable keeping the dangling socket, set the option keepDangleSocket to true.

The client will automatically add a new error handler for the socket in case the system's ETIMEDOUT eventually comes back. The client also sets a timeout to eventually destroy the socket in case the system never comes back with anything.

To control the dangling wait timeout, use the option dangleSocketWaitTimeout. It's default to 5 minutes.

The client will emit the event dangle-wait with the following data:

  • Start waiting: { type: "wait", socket }
  • Wait timeout: { type: "timeout" }
  • error received: { type: "error", err }

Generally it's better to just destroy the socket instead of leaving it dangling.

Multiple redundant servers support

If you have multiple redundant servers, you can pass them to the client with the server option:

{
  server: {
    servers: [
      {
        server: "name1.domain.com:11211",
        maxConnections: 3
      },
      {
        server: "name2.domain.com:11211",
        maxConnections: 3
      }
    ],
    config: {
      retryFailedServerInterval: 1000, // milliseconds - how often to check failed servers
      failedServerOutTime: 30000, // (ms) how long a failed server should be out before retrying it
      keepLastServer: false
    }
  }
}

You can also pass in server.config with the following options:

  • retryFailedServerInterval - (ms) how often to check failed servers. Default 10000 ms (10 secs)
  • failedServerOutTime - (ms) how long a failed server should be out before retrying it. Default 60000 ms (1 min).
  • keepLastServer - (boolean) Keep at least one server even if it failed connection. Default true.

TLS / SSL

If the memcached server is configured with TLS, you can make the client connect to it via specifying the tls ConnectionOptions.

For production environments, the server should be using a TLS certificate that is signed by a trusted public CA. In this case you can simply do the following to create the client:

const client = new MemcacheClient({server: "{server_hostname}:11211", tls: {}});
client.set("key", "value");

If the server requires client certificate authentication, you can do the following:

import Fs from "fs";
const client = new MemcacheClient({server: "{server_hostname}:11211", tls: {
  key: Fs.readFileSync("client-key.pem"),
  cert: Fs.readFileSync("client-cert.pem"),
}});
client.set("key", "value");

If you are running the server with a self-signed certificate (i.e. for local developments), you can create the client by specifying the CA certificate and disable hostname verification as follows:

import Fs from "fs";
const client = new MemcacheClient({server: "localhost:11211", tls: {
  ca: Fs.readFileSync("ca-cert.pem"),
  checkServerIdentity: () => {return undefined;}
}});
client.set("key", "value");

Data Compression

The client supports automatic compression/decompression of the data you set. It's turned off by default.

To enable this, you need to:

  • Provide a compressor
  • Set the compress flag when calling the store commands
Compressor

By default, the client is modeled to use node-zstd version 2's APIs, specifically, it requires a compressor with these two methods:

  • compressSync(value)
  • decompressSync(value)

Both must take and return Buffer data.

If you just add node-zstd version 2 to your dependencies, then you can start setting the compress flag when calling the store commands to enable compression.

If you want to use another major version of node-zstd or another compressor that doesn't offer the two APIs expected above, then you need to create a wrapper compressor and pass it to the client constructor.

Command Options

noreply

Almost all commands take a noreply field for options, which if set to true, then the command is fire & forget for the memcached server.

Obviously this doesn't apply to commands like get and gets, which exist to retrieve from the server.

lifetime and compress

For all store commands, set, add, replace, append, prepend, and cas, they take:

  • A lifetime field that specify the TTL time in seconds for the entry. If this is not set, then will try to use client options.lifetime or 60 seconds.
  • A compress field, which if set to true, will cause any data with size >= 100 bytes to be compressed.
    • A default compressor using node-zstd is provided, but you can set your own compressor when creating the client.
casUniq

For the cas command, options must contain a casUniq value that you received from an gets command you called earlier.

Other methods

  • client.send<ReturnValueType>(data, [options], [callback])
  • client.xsend(data, [options])
  • client.cmd<ReturnValueType>(data, [options], [callback])
  • client.store(cmd, key, value, [optons], [callback])
  • client.retrieve<ReturnValueType>(cmd, key, [options], [callback])
  • client.xretrieve(cmd, key)
  • client.shutdown()

License

Apache-2.0 © Joel Chen

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Package last updated on 20 Oct 2023

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