memcached 1.4.25-1ubuntu2 source package in Ubuntu
Changelog
memcached (1.4.25-1ubuntu2) xenial; urgency=medium * debian/patches/disable_slabs_test.patch: disable unreliable test. -- Marc Deslauriers <email address hidden> Tue, 26 Jan 2016 10:47:19 -0500
Upload details
- Uploaded by:
- Marc Deslauriers
- Uploaded to:
- Xenial
- Original maintainer:
- Ubuntu Developers
- Architectures:
- any
- Section:
- web
- Urgency:
- Medium Urgency
See full publishing history Publishing
Series | Published | Component | Section |
---|
Downloads
File | Size | SHA-256 Checksum |
---|---|---|
memcached_1.4.25.orig.tar.gz | 351.3 KiB | f058437b3c224d321919a9a6bb4e3eedb2312ed718c0caf087ff2f04ab795dda |
memcached_1.4.25-1ubuntu2.debian.tar.xz | 18.0 KiB | d5fcd876c9a8d01f070c63ece1794cd676a1208b2e8dd2b528dcbc5951b8c750 |
memcached_1.4.25-1ubuntu2.dsc | 2.1 KiB | 142dc9a2a14bb705d72cb0e7a79f6324c6a8ac5db6ed452736f3e94c911f5c1b |
Available diffs
- diff from 1.4.24-2ubuntu1 to 1.4.25-1ubuntu2 (25.1 KiB)
- diff from 1.4.25-1ubuntu1 to 1.4.25-1ubuntu2 (1.6 KiB)
Binary packages built by this source
- memcached: high-performance memory object caching system
Danga Interactive developed memcached to enhance the speed of LiveJournal.com,
a site which was already doing 20 million+ dynamic page views per day for 1
million users with a bunch of webservers and a bunch of database servers.
memcached dropped the database load to almost nothing, yielding faster page
load times for users, better resource utilization, and faster access to the
databases on a memcache miss.
.
memcached optimizes specific high-load serving applications that are designed
to take advantage of its versatile no-locking memory access system. Clients
are available in several different programming languages, to suit the needs
of the specific application. Traditionally this has been used in mod_perl
apps to avoid storing large chunks of data in Apache memory, and to share
this burden across several machines.
- memcached-dbgsym: debug symbols for package memcached
Danga Interactive developed memcached to enhance the speed of LiveJournal.com,
a site which was already doing 20 million+ dynamic page views per day for 1
million users with a bunch of webservers and a bunch of database servers.
memcached dropped the database load to almost nothing, yielding faster page
load times for users, better resource utilization, and faster access to the
databases on a memcache miss.
.
memcached optimizes specific high-load serving applications that are designed
to take advantage of its versatile no-locking memory access system. Clients
are available in several different programming languages, to suit the needs
of the specific application. Traditionally this has been used in mod_perl
apps to avoid storing large chunks of data in Apache memory, and to share
this burden across several machines.