Share Data Between Small Low-End Devices

Shared Memories

© Lead Image © Lightwise, 123RF.com

© Lead Image © Lightwise, 123RF.com

Article from Issue 307/2026
Author(s):

With memcached, you can establish communication between Arduinos, Pi Picos, handhelds, and other small microcontrollers.

When you're connecting your microcontrollers, you have some excellent networking options such as MQTT [1], Redis [2], and even SQL databases to choose from. If you work with low-end hardware or have some software limitations, memcached [3] is another good option to consider: It is a high-performance, distributed memory key-value caching solution. Memcached servers are supported on all major operating systems, and clients are available for almost all programming languages. Memcached is commonly used in back-end web applications, but it can also be used in distributed microcontroller projects.

Small systems only require network sockets to access a memcached server. This minimal requirement lets low-end hardware platforms such as gaming consoles (Figure 1) share information with Linux and Raspberry Pi systems. Bash users will be happy to hear that it only takes a one-liner to get or set a memcached key value.

This last winter was colder than usual, so I built a simple home temperature monitoring system using some low-end hardware (Figure 2). In this article, I'll show you how I used memcached with Bash, Python, and socket connections for my monitoring project.

[...]

Use Express-Checkout link below to read the full article (PDF).

Buy Linux Magazine

Related content

  • Memcached

    This practical caching tool can reduce the load on a web database server by as much as 90%.

  • Security Lessons: Rate Limiting

    Maybe we should listen to those network guys.

  • Onion OS

    Adding custom firmware to a handheld gaming device enhances your gaming experience and lets you write custom apps. We show you how with Onion OS on a Miyoo Mini Plus.

  • Netdata

    What cannot be measured cannot be improved. Netdata lets you measure almost anything – at least as long as it's about the performance and health of a Linux computer.

comments powered by Disqus
Subscribe to our Linux Newsletters
Find Linux and Open Source Jobs
Subscribe to our ADMIN Newsletters

Support Our Work

Linux Magazine content is made possible with support from readers like you. Please consider contributing when you’ve found an article to be beneficial.

Learn More

News