From: Brian Aker Date: Thu, 14 Apr 2011 01:27:25 +0000 (-0700) Subject: Merge in new examples. X-Git-Tag: 0.51~14^2~1 X-Git-Url: https://git.m6w6.name/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=a4093dc41fb5d8b3087d706289cc9d575c0c3830;p=awesomized%2Flibmemcached Merge in new examples. --- diff --git a/docs/libmemcached_examples.rst b/docs/libmemcached_examples.rst index 5c3acf6a..b0374981 100644 --- a/docs/libmemcached_examples.rst +++ b/docs/libmemcached_examples.rst @@ -13,24 +13,6 @@ For full examples, test cases are found in tests/\*.c in the main distribution. These are always up to date, and are used for each test run of the library. ------------------------------------------------ -Creating and Freeing the memcached_st structure ------------------------------------------------ - - -.. code-block:: c - - memcached_st *memc; - memcached_return_t rc; - - memc= memcached_create(NULL); - ...do stuff... - memcached_free(memc); - - -The above code would create a connection and then free the connection when -finished. - --------------------- Connecting to servers @@ -41,7 +23,7 @@ Connecting to servers .. code-block:: c const char *config_string= "--SERVER=host10.example.com --SERVER=host11.example.com --SERVER=host10.example.com" - memcached_st *memc= memcached_create_with_options(config_string, strlen(config_string); + memcached_st *memc= memcached(config_string, strlen(config_string); { ... } @@ -97,25 +79,14 @@ Adding a value to the server .. code-block:: c char *key= "foo"; - char *value; - size_t value_length= 8191; - unsigned int x; - - value = (char*)malloc(value_length); - assert(value); - - for (x= 0; x < value_length; x++) - value[x] = (char) (x % 127); - - for (x= 0; x < 1; x++) + char *value= "value"; + + memcached_return_t rc= memcached_set(memc, key, strlen(key), value, value_length, (time_t)0, (uint32_t)0); + + if (rc != MEMCACHED_SUCCESS) { - rc= memcached_set(memc, key, strlen(key), - value, value_length, - (time_t)0, (uint32_t)0); - assert(rc == MEMCACHED_SUCCESS); + ... // handle failure } - - free(value); It is best practice to always look at the return value of any operation.