Memcache::get

(PECL memcache >= 0.2.0)

Memcache::getRécupère un élément du serveur de cache

Description

Memcache::get(string $key, int &$flags = ?): string
Memcache::get(array $keys, array &$flags = ?): array

Memcache::get() retourne les données précédemment stockées dans l'élément identifié par la clé key s'il existe sur le serveur au moment de l'appel.

Vous pouvez passer un tableau de clés à la fonction Memcache::get() pour obtenir un tableau de valeurs. Le tableau résultant contiendra seulement les paires de clé-valeur trouvées.

Liste de paramètres

key

La clé ou le tableau de clés à récupérer.

flags

Si ce paramètre est présent, il représentera les drapeaux des valeurs à récupérer. Ces drapeaux sont les mêmes que ceux donnés en exemple de la fonction Memcache::set(). L'octet le plus faible de la valeur est réservé à un usage interne de pecl/memcache (e.g. pour indiquer le statut de compression et de sérialisation).

Valeurs de retour

Retourne la valeur associée avec le paramètre key ou un tableau contenant les paires clé/valeur trouvées lorsque le paramètre key est un tableau. Retourne false si une erreur survient, si le paramètre key n'est pas trouvé, ou si le paramètre key est un tableau vide.

Exemples

Exemple #1 Exemple avec Memcache::get()

<?php

/* API procédurale */
$memcache_obj = memcache_connect('memcache_host', 11211);
$var = memcache_get($memcache_obj, 'some_key');

/* API orientée objet */
$memcache_obj = new Memcache;
$memcache_obj->connect('memcache_host', 11211);
$var = $memcache_obj->get('some_key');

/*
Vous pouvez également utiliser un tableau de clés en tant que paramètre.
Si un tel élément n'est pas trouvé sur le serveur, le tableau
résultat ne comprendra simplement pas une telle clé.
*/

/* API procédurale */
$memcache_obj = memcache_connect('memcache_host', 11211);
$var = memcache_get($memcache_obj, Array('some_key', 'another_key'));

/* API Orientée Objet */
$memcache_obj = new Memcache;
$memcache_obj->connect('memcache_host', 11211);
$var = $memcache_obj->get(Array('some_key', 'second_key'));

?>

add a note add a note

User Contributed Notes 8 notes

up
10
clover at fromru dot com
11 years ago
$flags stays untouched if $key was not found on the server, it's helpfull to determine if bool(false) was stored:

<?php

$memcache
= new Memcache();

$memcache->set('test', false); //
$flags = false;
var_dump($memcache->get('test', $flags)); // bool(false)
var_dump($flags); // int(256) - changed to int

$memcache->delete('test');

$flags = false;
var_dump($memcache->get('test', $flags)); // bool(false)
var_dump($flags); // bool(false) - untouched

?>
up
4
Michael Brenden
13 years ago
Beware, if there's a backslash present in the key name then the results are unpredictable and random.

I was generating keys like this:

$mc_key = get_called_class(). $_COOKIE['crumb'];

This works fine when get_called_class() returns CLASSNAME.

But then I began using namespaces, and get_class_class() of course returned NAMESPACE\CLASSNAME

Well that backslash sends Memcache into quite the tizzy.
No errors, mind you, just insanity.
up
4
bijay dot rungta at gmail dot com
11 years ago
Note that if you include spaces in your keys when saving Data and use array of keys to get the Data, The returned array will replace spaces with underscores in the keys.

<?php

$memcache
= new Memcache;
$memcache->connect('localhost');
$memcache->set('my-key', 'value1', 0, 300);
$memcache->set('key with space', 'value 2', 0, 300);

print_r($memcache->get(array('my-key', 'key with space'))); // Array ( [my-key] => value1 [key_with_space] => value 2 )

?>

Memcache replaces spaces with underscores when saving, it does so when doing a get too, but when you do a get with single key (string) you don't notice this as it merely returns the value. But when you do a get for array of keys, you would expect the same keys in the returned array but it replaces spaces by underscores in them.
up
0
csongor at halmai dot hu
10 years ago
Avoid reading too many values from memcahce. Each get() consumes some memory. You should cache the values instead, once they are read. Illustration of bad practice:

<?php   // reading from memcache leaks

   
$m = new Memcache();
   
$m -> connect( "localhost", "11211" );
   
$m -> add("foo", "bar");

    for(;;) { 
// this "endless" loop will finish because it eats up all the memory
       
$res = $m -> get("foo");
        print
memory_get_usage()."\n"// this writes bigger and bigger numbers
   
}
up
0
jakub dot lopuszanski at nasza-klasa dot pl
16 years ago
If deserialization fails for some reason, that is when memcache server returned flag 1 set, but the value was not a correctly serialized PHP data,
then Memcache::get acts in a following way:

If it was called with a single key to retrieve, then a warning is raised, but since it was not actually a bug of a server, the warning says something confusing like "Memcached Server Error: null" and the function returns bool(false).

If it was called by passing an array (even with a single element in it), then the warning is not raised and the resulting array contains a value bool(false).

Since there are some buffer overrun bugs present in Memcached Server, which from time to time cause overwriting of [part of] data and therefore rendering it impossible to deserialize, make sure to check if the result of Memcache::get contains only string, or deserialized structure. If the result is bool,dobule or long, then something went wrong.
up
-1
nate
16 years ago
Be aware that when using the multi-key version, Memcache::get returns bool false if no servers are configured for the pool (and possibly if other errors occur as well while attempting to fetch). Also, Memcache class throws annoying warnings on every get/set/delete-type calls if you have no servers added to the pool.

The following snippet var_dump's bool false, not an empty array like you might expect.

<?php
$cache
= new Memcache;

// no $cache->addServer calls (for example,
due to temporarily disabling use of cache)

// use @ symbol to ignore warning

var_dump(
    @
$cache->get(array('one', 'two'))
);
?>
up
-3
a dot karabiowski at gmx dot net
10 years ago
Signature is not correct.

<?php
$memcache
= new Memcache();
$memcache->connect('localhost', 11211);
class
Test { public $property = "testvalue"; }
$test = new Test();
$memcache->set("asdf", $test);
var_dump($memcache->get("asdf"));
/* will return the object, not the string:
    class Test#3 (1) {
      public $property =>
      string(9) "testvalue"
    }
*/
?>
up
-10
janis at unrepublic dot com
14 years ago
For me it was the case that if such key doesn't exist, null is returned not false.
To Top