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crabmusket 2 hours ago

> silently fail

Mature ops would be tracking cache hit ratios right?

It sounds like memcached would be really good in a use case where you really just need an optional stateless pure cache with absolutely zero rope to hang yourself on. A use case where "cache hit ratio" is the goal, not "fiddly in-memory data store".

tempest_ 2 hours ago | parent [-]

> Mature ops would be tracking cache hit ratios right?

Sure, and sentry integrates well with redis in python which is what I use primarily with redis.

I don't think memcached is bad, I just think its old and industry has moved to redis because it offers more while covering the previous use case.

Calling redis fiddly is a mischaracterization. For many use cases I have not had to think more than 30s to setup redis.

(also when I say redis I mean Valkey at this point, even if they are starting to diverge)

hparadiz an hour ago | parent [-]

There's basically zero reason to use redis. Pretty much every rdbms like mariadb, postgres, etc is just as fast. So then why redis? It's basically needless complexity in your system.

robotresearcher 34 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

Postgres etc are more complex than Redis, are they not?

Does your argument assume you already have a database, so you might as well use it for your cache mechanism?

imp0cat an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

Security. More precisely, the ability to secure access to redis with a password.

hparadiz an hour ago | parent [-]

Okay but I can do that with any rdbms and I can secure memcached too lol. So what? How is redis better than a fixed length table in MySQL?