Provided by: libcache-perl_2.11-1_all bug

NAME

       Cache::Memory - Memory based implementation of the Cache interface

SYNOPSIS

         use Cache::Memory;

         my $cache = Cache::Memory->new( namespace => 'MyNamespace',
                                         default_expires => '600 sec' );

       See Cache for the usage synopsis.

DESCRIPTION

       The Cache::Memory class implements the Cache interface.  This cache stores data on a per-process basis.
       This is the fastest of the cache implementations, but is memory intensive and data can not be shared
       between processes.  It also does not persist after the process dies.  However data will remain in the
       cache until cleared or it expires.  The data will be shared between instances of the cache object, a
       cache object going out of scope will not destroy the data.

CONSTRUCTOR

         my $cache = Cache::Memory->new( %options )

       The constructor takes cache properties as named arguments, for example:

         my $cache = Cache::Memory->new( namespace => 'MyNamespace',
                                         default_expires => '600 sec' );

       See 'PROPERTIES' below and in the Cache documentation for a list of all available properties that can be
       set.

METHODS

       See 'Cache' for the API documentation.

PROPERTIES

       Cache::Memory adds the property 'namespace', which allows you to specify a different caching store area
       to use from the default.  All methods will work ONLY on the namespace specified.

        my $ns = $c->namespace();
        $c->set_namespace( $namespace );

       For additional properties, see the 'Cache' documentation.

SEE ALSO

       Cache

AUTHOR

        Chris Leishman <chris@leishman.org>
        Based on work by DeWitt Clinton <dewitt@unto.net>

COPYRIGHT

        Copyright (C) 2003-2006 Chris Leishman.  All Rights Reserved.

       This module is distributed on an "AS IS" basis, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either expressed or
       implied. This program is free software; you can redistribute or modify it under the same terms as Perl
       itself.

       $Id: Memory.pm,v 1.9 2006/01/31 15:23:58 caleishm Exp $