I'm running the memcached server as well as the applications on my local machine. Also I use consistent hashing. I don't see any code statement doing a flush before the object is accessed again. Any other pointers?
On Mar 9, 3:56 pm, Josef Finsel <[email protected]> wrote: > A couple of possibilities... > > - Do both applications have the same memcached server list? > - Does the client use consistent hashing? If not, are the servers in a > different order on the two applications? > - Can you telnet and see the data after application A has put it in? > - Is it possible (unlikely as it may seem) that the data was flushed for > some reason? > > > > On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 3:48 PM, Ritesh <[email protected]> wrote: > > > Thanks for the reply Ray. > > > Can two independent applications/processes access the same cache? I > > tried and am unable to do so. > > I have two web applications deployed under the same Weblogic instance. > > I put an object in the cache using application A and when I try to > > retrieve it using the same key in application B, I get a null > > reference back. Shouldn't both the applications have access to the > > same cache? > > > On Mar 6, 6:11 pm, Ray Krueger <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > Is there a way to create cache regions using the spymemcached client? > > > > I'm aware of how one can create cache regions in hibernate. Is there a > > > > programmatic way of doing something analogous to that? > > > > > - Ritesh > > > > Memcached itself (regardless of what language or client library you > > > use) doesn't support namespaces or regions at all. See the faq under > > > "Namespaces".http://code.google.com/p/memcached/wiki/FAQ > > > > That being said... > > > The hibernate-memcached library, which uses spymemcached, handles > > > cache regions much in the same way mentioned in the FAQ. Region + key > > > = cache key.http://code.google.com/p/hibernate-memcached/ > > -- > "If you see a whole thing - it seems that it's always beautiful. Planets, > lives... But up close a world's all dirt and rocks. And day to day, life's a > hard job, you get tired, you lose the pattern." > Ursula K. Le Guin > > http://www.finsel.com/words,-words,-words.aspx(My blog) > -http://www.finsel.com/photo-gallery.aspx(My Photogallery) > -http://www.reluctantdba.com/dbas-and-programmers/blog.aspx(My Professional > Blog)
