Mike schrieb: > > Hello, > > I’m new to the core PostgreSQL code, so pardon the question if the > answer is really obvious, and I’m just missing it, but I’ve got a > relatively large web application that uses PostgreSQL as a back-end > database, and we’re heavily using memcached to cache frequently > accessed data. > > I’m looking at modifying PostgreSQL (in some way) to push changes > directly to our memcache servers, in hopes of moving towards a system > where only writes are actually sent to the databases, and reads are > exclusively sent to the memcache servers. > > I’m guessing that I could intercept the WAL writes, and use this > information to push out to my memcache servers, similar to a > replication model. > > Can somebody point to the most logical place in the code to intercept > the WAL writes? (just a rough direction would be enough)- or if this > doesn’t make sense at all, another suggestion on where to get the > data? (I’m trying to avoid doing it using triggers). > > Thanks, > > Mike > Why not use rules? They are far more easy to use than patching at C Level, and you can simply write some functions at C level and load those as a postgres extension, and interact with MemCache at this level. -- Sent via pgsql-hackers mailing list (pgsql-hackers@postgresql.org) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-hackers