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I've been paying some attention to Microsoft's fairly recent promoting of Velocity as a distributed caching solution that would compete with the likes of Memcached.

I've been looking for a 64bit version of Memcached for Windows for some time now with no luck, and since everything about the ASP.Net MVC project I'm working on is 64bit, it doesn't make sense to use anything but 64bit.

Now we're already hedging our bets with ASP.NET MVC in Beta (RTM soon hopefully), but StackOverflow doesn't seem to be doing too badly, so I have limited concerns there. But Velocity is still very much an unknown quantity and will still be Beta (or CTP) for ages - but it does have 64bit!

Does anyone have relevant experience or point of view to offer in this situation? Should we bide our time for Velocity - is it even anywhere near good enough to compete with a giant like Memcached, or should we invest time trying to get a 64bit version of Memcached going?

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  • Great question - I'd like to hear from developers experienced with both these products.
    – Guy
    Jan 27, 2009 at 19:12
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    Does anyone have any recent experiences? the accepted answer is based on info over 1 year old.
    – UpTheCreek
    Aug 27, 2010 at 15:10

3 Answers 3

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We have done recently a fair amount of comparing of Velocity and Memcached. In the nutshell, we found Velocity to be 3x - 5x slower than Memcached, and (even more crucially) it does not have currently support for a multi-get operation. So at the moment, I would recommend going with Memcached. Also, another lesson we have learned was that the slowest operation in distributed caching is serialization and deserialization (at least in ASP.NET). The in-process ASP.NET cache is order of magnitudes faster. So you have to choose caching strategies much more carefully.

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    Velocity does provide more features (locking, replication, object tagging to name couple performance-impacting ones) -- oftentimes the decision is not just about raw put/get performance of the cache
    – user8032
    Mar 5, 2009 at 18:18
  • @pcawa27: then you should ask yourself if you want a cache or a remote and distributed memory system. Two different problems.
    – graffic
    Apr 29, 2010 at 10:10
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    It should be noted that a multi-get operation, BulkGet, was added in the final bits.
    – Drew Marsh
    Sep 14, 2010 at 5:11
  • Here is the reference for AppFabric BulkGet. Currently only regions are supported and not at named cache level.
    – fozylet
    Mar 27, 2012 at 14:32
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If you don't mind paying for a license, you can use Scale Out State Server, which I talk about in my answer to a similar question here. They have both 32- and 64-bit versions.

EDIT: Despite the name of the product, it handles both Session State and distributed caching.

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    Caching isn't the same as ASP.NET session tracking in my book. But thanks for the suggestion. Sep 15, 2009 at 19:19
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    no, sessions need to be held reliably whereas cached objects can be removed when the cache gets full, so they are two different things.
    – zcrar70
    Jun 13, 2010 at 13:53
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Memcached has some open source libraries if I'm not mistaken so if you want to go the 64bit route can you not just recompile?

I evaluated Velocity when it first arrived but came to the conclusion it was a bit undeveloped at that stage. Being able to run memcached on non-windows servers is also a bonus.

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    You're right, libevent is something it uses, but unfortunately when it comes to memory management, you can't just compile it to 64bit directly - some tweaks need to be made by those who know how - I'm not one of those unfortunately :-) Otherwise, it becomes very unstable. Jan 29, 2009 at 19:21

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