I've run benchmarks -- I wouldn't make statements like that without trying it. BerkeleyDB is insanely fast. You can run Rob Mueller's benchmark yourself and see what you think, although it doesn't currently include a memcached comparison. It makes sense that it would be faster than Memcached, since it has no network overhead or separate server process and can cache things in shared memory.

Striping your data across multiple machines is an advantage of memcached, although it doesn't seem relevant to this particular person's needs.


In reply to Re^4: persistent cache using Cache::FileCache by perrin
in thread persistent cache using Cache::FileCache by johnnywang

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