172

How can I get all the keys set in my memcached instance(s)?

I tried googling, but didn't find much except that PHP supports a getAllKeys method, which means it is actually possible to do this somehow. How can I get the same within a telnet session?

I have tried out all the retrieval related options mentioned in memcached cheat sheet and Memcached telnet command summary, but none of them work and I am at a loss to find the correct way to do this.

Note: I am currently doing this in development, so it can be assumed that there will be no issues due to new keys being set or other such race conditions happening, and the number of keys will also be limited.

2
  • Check my Post. I had the same problem and I found a solution. Apr 3, 2016 at 7:46
  • github.com/clickalicious/phpmemadmin looks helpful (if I can figure out how to get it to work with Laravel Homestead Vagrant; currently it's showing no keys).
    – Ryan
    Jul 5, 2017 at 23:04

9 Answers 9

230

Found a way, thanks to the link here (with the original google group discussion here)

First, Telnet to your server:

telnet 127.0.0.1 11211

Next, list the items to get the slab ids:

stats items
STAT items:3:number 1
STAT items:3:age 498
STAT items:22:number 1
STAT items:22:age 498
END

The first number after ‘items’ is the slab id. Request a cache dump for each slab id, with a limit for the max number of keys to dump:

stats cachedump 3 100
ITEM views.decorators.cache.cache_header..cc7d9 [6 b; 1256056128 s]
END

stats cachedump 22 100
ITEM views.decorators.cache.cache_page..8427e [7736 b; 1256056128 s]
END

11
  • 4
    Please note that stats cachedump is an undocumented feature and is not supported by the memcached team. It is meant for debugging only and not intended for production use.
    – mikewied
    Oct 24, 2013 at 21:23
  • 4
    b is bytes, s is epoch time seconds Dec 20, 2016 at 17:26
  • 2
    @Dan Maybe you are viewing by active answers first, which sorts the answer posts based on when they last had activity. If yes, you can change that by selecting one of active/oldest/votes from just below the question text. Other than that, this answer is at the top in incognito mode. Mar 29, 2018 at 4:24
  • 1
    @NikhilTalreja Feel free to post a better answer for benefit of community, this one worked for my use case at the time. Aug 9, 2018 at 10:08
  • 9
    There is also lru_crawler metadump all that will dump all cache keys, not "just" the first 1M.. github.com/memcached/memcached/blob/…
    – Kaos
    Nov 6, 2018 at 8:41
82

memdump

There is a memcdump (sometimes memdump) command for that (part of libmemcached-tools), e.g.:

memcdump --servers=localhost

which will return all the keys.


memcached-tool

In the recent version of memcached there is also memcached-tool command, e.g.

memcached-tool localhost:11211 dump | less

which dumps all keys and values.

See also:

5
  • 4
    careful with 'memdump' this command is a great way to crash your terminal. Sep 23, 2016 at 1:08
  • 9
    Careful! The dump sub-command for memcached-tool seems to clear out the cache :( --might be safer to use display or stats first.
    – MarkHu
    Jan 19, 2017 at 23:25
  • 4
    In Ubuntu Xenial, the package that contains memdump is called libmemcached-tools, and the tool's binary is called memcdump instead. Apr 8, 2017 at 23:09
  • 8
    For those looking for memcached-tool it's somewhat hidden in a directory, which may not be in a standard PATH - at least on Ubuntu Xenial - here: /usr/share/memcached/scripts/
    – sxc731
    Jan 6, 2018 at 16:05
  • alias memctool=/usr/share/memcached/scripts/memcached-tool if you're lazy.
    – nikhilweee
    Apr 8, 2023 at 14:53
22

Base on @mu 無 answer here. I've written a cache dump script.

The script dumps all the content of a memcached server. It's tested with Ubuntu 12.04 and a localhost memcached, so your milage may vary.

#!/usr/bin/env bash

echo 'stats items'  \
| nc localhost 11211  \
| grep -oe ':[0-9]*:'  \
| grep -oe '[0-9]*'  \
| sort  \
| uniq  \
| xargs -L1 -I{} bash -c 'echo "stats cachedump {} 1000" | nc localhost 11211'

What it does, it goes through all the cache slabs and print 1000 entries of each.

Please be aware of certain limits of this script i.e. it may not scale for a 5GB cache server for example. But it's useful for debugging purposes on a local machine.

4
  • 4
    On Debian 8 with memcached 1.4.21-1.1+deb8u1 I had to explicitly send a quit command to memcached. I modified your command to this and works properly now: echo -e "stats items\nquit" | nc localhost 11211 | grep -oe ':[0-9]*:' | grep -oe '[0-9]*' | sort | uniq | xargs -L1 -I{} bash -c 'echo -e "stats cachedump {} 1000\nquit" | nc localhost 11211' Thanks for sharing this! Quite useful for debugging :)
    – Cha0s
    Jan 12, 2017 at 23:28
  • for some reason grep -oe '[0-9]*' doesn't work in iTerm2 on mac, had to replace with grep -Eo '[0-9]{1,99}'
    – max4ever
    Feb 4, 2019 at 15:05
  • This is nifty, but it misses some keys, any idea why ?
    – user
    May 29, 2020 at 7:02
  • IMO this is automated version of the currently most upvoted option. i have not tried it myself yet. but i give upvote for trying to automate. Oct 14, 2021 at 20:25
21

If you have PHP & PHP-memcached installed, you can run

$ php -r '$c = new Memcached(); $c->addServer("localhost", 11211); var_dump( $c->getAllKeys() );'
4
  • 1
    You need to do this after addServer : $c->setOption(Memcached::OPT_BINARY_PROTOCOL, false); For newer versions of Memcached Feb 24, 2018 at 6:50
  • Still the answer is bool(false) :-( Apr 23, 2018 at 13:49
  • 2
    @WolfgangBlessen - that's due to a bug in memcached - it's fixed in newest versions. github.com/php-memcached-dev/php-memcached/issues/203 Nov 27, 2018 at 17:38
  • @billynoah Thx, I really see results now and memcached is starting to get useful :-) Nov 28, 2018 at 10:32
17

Bash

To get list of keys in Bash, follow the these steps.

First, define the following wrapper function to make it simple to use (copy and paste into shell):

function memcmd() {
  exec {memcache}<>/dev/tcp/localhost/11211
  printf "%s\n%s\n" "$*" quit >&${memcache}
  cat <&${memcache}
}

Memcached 1.4.31 and above

You can use lru_crawler metadump all command to dump (most of) the metadata for (all of) the items in the cache.

As opposed to cachedump, it does not cause severe performance problems and has no limits on the amount of keys that can be dumped.

Example command by using the previously defined function:

memcmd lru_crawler metadump all

See: ReleaseNotes1431.


Memcached 1.4.30 and below

Get list of slabs by using items statistics command, e.g.:

memcmd stats items

For each slub class, you can get list of items by specifying slub id along with limit number (0 - unlimited):

memcmd stats cachedump 1 0
memcmd stats cachedump 2 0
memcmd stats cachedump 3 0
memcmd stats cachedump 4 0
...

Note: You need to do this for each memcached server.

To list all the keys from all stubs, here is the one-liner (per one server):

for id in $(memcmd stats items | grep -o ":[0-9]\+:" | tr -d : | sort -nu); do
    memcmd stats cachedump $id 0
done

Note: The above command could cause severe performance problems while accessing the items, so it's not advised to run on live.


Notes:

stats cachedump only dumps the HOT_LRU (IIRC?), which is managed by a background thread as activity happens. This means under a new enough version which the 2Q algo enabled, you'll get snapshot views of what's in just one of the LRU's.

If you want to view everything, lru_crawler metadump 1 (or lru_crawler metadump all) is the new mostly-officially-supported method that will asynchronously dump as many keys as you want. you'll get them out of order but it hits all LRU's, and unless you're deleting/replacing items multiple runs should yield the same results.

Source: GH-405.


Related:

6

The easiest way is to use python-memcached-stats package, https://github.com/abstatic/python-memcached-stats

The keys() method should get you going.

Example -

from memcached_stats import MemcachedStats
mem = MemcachedStats()

mem.keys()
['key-1',
 'key-2',
 'key-3',
 ... ]
3
  • 1
    You can even do it from the command line with python -m memcached_stats <ip> <port>
    – Martijn
    Jul 5, 2017 at 8:35
  • 1
    Python2 only, at the moment.
    – Marius
    Feb 11, 2019 at 7:46
  • Will there be any limit in terms of the number of keys returned or size?
    – loknath
    Dec 17, 2019 at 12:06
1

I was using Java's spyMemcached, and used this code. It is based on Anshul Goyal's answer

@Autowired
@Qualifier("initMemcachedClient")
private MemcachedClient memcachedClient;

public List<String> getCachedKeys(){
    Set<Integer> slabIds = new HashSet<>();
    Map<SocketAddress, Map<String, String>> stats;
    List<String> keyNames = new ArrayList<>();

    // Gets all the slab IDs
    stats = memcachedClient.getStats("items");
    stats.forEach((socketAddress, value) -> {
        System.out.println("Socket address: "+socketAddress.toString());
        value.forEach((propertyName, propertyValue) -> {
            slabIds.add(Integer.parseInt(propertyName.split(":")[1]));
        });
    });

    // Gets all keys in each slab ID and adds in List keyNames
    slabIds.forEach(slabId -> {
        Map<SocketAddress, Map<String, String>> keyStats = memcachedClient.getStats("cachedump "+slabId+" 0");
        keyStats.forEach((socketAddress, value) -> {
            value.forEach((propertyName, propertyValue) -> {
                keyNames.add(propertyName);
            });
        });
    });

    System.out.println("number of keys: "+keyNames.size());
    return keyNames;
}
1

Edit - first I posted here yet another solution based on slab list + stats cachedump, but then I've learnt a hard lesson, that the latter doesn't return all of the keys.

See also memcached issue #405.

Luckily, there is better solution: lru_crawler metadump all.

The only funny thing is that lru_crawler returns url-encoded keys. I didn't like that, so my shortest script looks like this:

#!/bin/bash
host=localhost
port=11211

run_memc() {
    nc -q0 $host $port
}

echo 'lru_crawler metadump all' | run_memc | grep -v ^END \
    | ruby -rcgi -ne 'puts CGI.unescape $_' | sort

I used Ruby's unescape because that was the shortest: Perl doesn't seem to have unescape/urldecode out of the box, Python import + loop would be definitely not a oneliner, and I always got some Ruby installed. Your mileage may vary.

1
  • 1
    To run above script on macOs I had to use nc $host $port (removed -q0)
    – drt
    Feb 12 at 21:51
0

Java Solution:

Thanks! @Satvik Nema Your solution helped me to find the approach, but it doesn't work for memcached 2.4.6 version. (implementation 'com.googlecode.xmemcached:xmemcached:2.4.6') Not sure when did new method getStatsByItem included. I figured out required changes using documentation and below code worked for me.

// Gets all the slab IDs
            Set<Integer> slabIds = new HashSet<>();
            Map<InetSocketAddress, Map<String, String>> itemsMap = null;
            try {
                itemsMap = this.memcachedClient.getStatsByItem("items");
            } catch (Exception e) {
                log.error("Failed while pulling 'items'. ERROR", e);
            }
    
            if (Objects.nonNull(itemsMap)) {
                itemsMap.forEach((key, value) -> {
                    log.info("itemsMap {} : {}", key, value);
                    value.forEach((k, v) -> {
                        slabIds.add(Integer.parseInt(k.split(":")[1]));
                    });
                });
            }
    
            // Gets all keys in each slab ID and adds in List keyNames
            slabIds.forEach(slabId -> {
                Map<InetSocketAddress, Map<String, String>> keyStats = null;
                try {
                    keyStats = this.memcachedClient.getStatsByItem("cachedump " + slabId + " 0");
                } catch (Exception e) {
                    log.error("Failed while pulling 'cachedump' for slabId: {}. ERROR", slabId, e);
                }
                if (Objects.nonNull(keyStats)) {
                    keyStats.forEach((socketAddress, value) -> {
                        value.forEach((propertyName, propertyValue) -> {
                            //keyNames.add(propertyName);
                            log.info("keyName: {} Value: {}", propertyName, propertyValue);
                        });
                    });
                }
            });

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