On Fri, Sep 5, 2008 at 7:35 AM, TK <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi! All
>
> I am new to memcache. I wanted to find out what are the statistics
> which we care about. I just came across the following:
> #tackable-image:11211 Field       Value
>                   bytes    17962932
>              bytes_read    17450985
>           bytes_written       90519
>                 cmd_get           0
>                 cmd_set       10047
>   connection_structures           3
>        curr_connections           2
>              curr_items       10047
>               evictions           0
>                get_hits           0
>              get_misses           0
>          limit_maxbytes    67108864
>                     pid       25215
>            pointer_size          64
>           rusage_system    0.627904
>             rusage_user    0.172973
>                 threads           1
>                    time  1220625172
>       total_connections          30
>             total_items       10047
>                  uptime       57071
>                 version       1.2.6
>
> And
>
>  #  Item_Size   Max_age  1MB_pages Count   Full?
>  9     696 B    56043 s       7   10000      no
>  32   117.5 kB   57031 s       1       1      no
>  36   286.9 kB   56991 s      10      30     yes
>  37   358.6 kB   56950 s       5      10     yes
>  38   448.2 kB   57052 s       3       6     yes
>
> Are there any other statistics which we can look at? Also what is the
> 1MB_pages? And if someone can explain in detail the -m option? By
> default the memory allocated is 64MB, is it for each slab or for the
> whole memcache?
>
> If these questions are answered some other place, please point me the
> location.
>
> thanks in advance.
>
> TK
>

The stats commands include...
 stats
 stats slabs
 stats items
 // dumps out a list of objects of each size, with granularity of 32 bytes
 stats sizes
 // turn on/off details stats collections, at some performance cost
 stats detail [on|off|dump]
 stats cachedump [id] [limit]

The -m option is max amount of memory for the whole of memcached.

steve

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