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Documentation for Redis, Redis Cloud, and Redis Enterprise

Home Page: https://redis.io/docs/latest/

License: Other

Makefile 0.06% CSS 2.95% SCSS 1.89% HTML 32.51% JavaScript 2.93% Python 56.31% Shell 0.58% Jupyter Notebook 2.76%
redis

docs's Introduction

This README is just a fast quick start document. You can find more detailed documentation at redis.io.

What is Redis?

Redis is often referred to as a data structures server. What this means is that Redis provides access to mutable data structures via a set of commands, which are sent using a server-client model with TCP sockets and a simple protocol. So different processes can query and modify the same data structures in a shared way.

Data structures implemented into Redis have a few special properties:

  • Redis cares to store them on disk, even if they are always served and modified into the server memory. This means that Redis is fast, but that it is also non-volatile.
  • The implementation of data structures emphasizes memory efficiency, so data structures inside Redis will likely use less memory compared to the same data structure modelled using a high-level programming language.
  • Redis offers a number of features that are natural to find in a database, like replication, tunable levels of durability, clustering, and high availability.

Another good example is to think of Redis as a more complex version of memcached, where the operations are not just SETs and GETs, but operations that work with complex data types like Lists, Sets, ordered data structures, and so forth.

If you want to know more, this is a list of selected starting points:

What is Redis Community Edition?

Redis OSS was renamed Redis Community Edition (CE) with the v7.4 release.

Redis Ltd. also offers Redis Software, a self-managed software with additional compliance, reliability, and resiliency for enterprise scaling, and Redis Cloud, a fully managed service integrated with Google Cloud, Azure, and AWS for production-ready apps.

Read more about the differences between Redis Community Edition and Redis here.

Building Redis

Redis can be compiled and used on Linux, OSX, OpenBSD, NetBSD, FreeBSD. We support big endian and little endian architectures, and both 32 bit and 64 bit systems.

It may compile on Solaris derived systems (for instance SmartOS) but our support for this platform is best effort and Redis is not guaranteed to work as well as in Linux, OSX, and *BSD.

It is as simple as:

% make

To build with TLS support, you'll need OpenSSL development libraries (e.g. libssl-dev on Debian/Ubuntu) and run:

% make BUILD_TLS=yes

To build with systemd support, you'll need systemd development libraries (such as libsystemd-dev on Debian/Ubuntu or systemd-devel on CentOS) and run:

% make USE_SYSTEMD=yes

To append a suffix to Redis program names, use:

% make PROG_SUFFIX="-alt"

You can build a 32 bit Redis binary using:

% make 32bit

After building Redis, it is a good idea to test it using:

% make test

If TLS is built, running the tests with TLS enabled (you will need tcl-tls installed):

% ./utils/gen-test-certs.sh
% ./runtest --tls

Fixing build problems with dependencies or cached build options

Redis has some dependencies which are included in the deps directory. make does not automatically rebuild dependencies even if something in the source code of dependencies changes.

When you update the source code with git pull or when code inside the dependencies tree is modified in any other way, make sure to use the following command in order to really clean everything and rebuild from scratch:

% make distclean

This will clean: jemalloc, lua, hiredis, linenoise and other dependencies.

Also if you force certain build options like 32bit target, no C compiler optimizations (for debugging purposes), and other similar build time options, those options are cached indefinitely until you issue a make distclean command.

Fixing problems building 32 bit binaries

If after building Redis with a 32 bit target you need to rebuild it with a 64 bit target, or the other way around, you need to perform a make distclean in the root directory of the Redis distribution.

In case of build errors when trying to build a 32 bit binary of Redis, try the following steps:

  • Install the package libc6-dev-i386 (also try g++-multilib).
  • Try using the following command line instead of make 32bit: make CFLAGS="-m32 -march=native" LDFLAGS="-m32"

Allocator

Selecting a non-default memory allocator when building Redis is done by setting the MALLOC environment variable. Redis is compiled and linked against libc malloc by default, with the exception of jemalloc being the default on Linux systems. This default was picked because jemalloc has proven to have fewer fragmentation problems than libc malloc.

To force compiling against libc malloc, use:

% make MALLOC=libc

To compile against jemalloc on Mac OS X systems, use:

% make MALLOC=jemalloc

Monotonic clock

By default, Redis will build using the POSIX clock_gettime function as the monotonic clock source. On most modern systems, the internal processor clock can be used to improve performance. Cautions can be found here: http://oliveryang.net/2015/09/pitfalls-of-TSC-usage/

To build with support for the processor's internal instruction clock, use:

% make CFLAGS="-DUSE_PROCESSOR_CLOCK"

Verbose build

Redis will build with a user-friendly colorized output by default. If you want to see a more verbose output, use the following:

% make V=1

Running Redis

To run Redis with the default configuration, just type:

% cd src
% ./redis-server

If you want to provide your redis.conf, you have to run it using an additional parameter (the path of the configuration file):

% cd src
% ./redis-server /path/to/redis.conf

It is possible to alter the Redis configuration by passing parameters directly as options using the command line. Examples:

% ./redis-server --port 9999 --replicaof 127.0.0.1 6379
% ./redis-server /etc/redis/6379.conf --loglevel debug

All the options in redis.conf are also supported as options using the command line, with exactly the same name.

Running Redis with TLS

Please consult the TLS.md file for more information on how to use Redis with TLS.

Playing with Redis

You can use redis-cli to play with Redis. Start a redis-server instance, then in another terminal try the following:

% cd src
% ./redis-cli
redis> ping
PONG
redis> set foo bar
OK
redis> get foo
"bar"
redis> incr mycounter
(integer) 1
redis> incr mycounter
(integer) 2
redis>

You can find the list of all the available commands at https://redis.io/commands.

Installing Redis

In order to install Redis binaries into /usr/local/bin, just use:

% make install

You can use make PREFIX=/some/other/directory install if you wish to use a different destination.

make install will just install binaries in your system, but will not configure init scripts and configuration files in the appropriate place. This is not needed if you just want to play a bit with Redis, but if you are installing it the proper way for a production system, we have a script that does this for Ubuntu and Debian systems:

% cd utils
% ./install_server.sh

Note: install_server.sh will not work on Mac OSX; it is built for Linux only.

The script will ask you a few questions and will setup everything you need to run Redis properly as a background daemon that will start again on system reboots.

You'll be able to stop and start Redis using the script named /etc/init.d/redis_<portnumber>, for instance /etc/init.d/redis_6379.

Code contributions

By contributing code to the Redis project in any form, including sending a pull request via GitHub, a code fragment or patch via private email or public discussion groups, you agree to release your code under the terms of the Redis Software Grant and Contributor License Agreement. Redis software contains contributions to the original Redis core project, which are owned by their contributors and licensed under the 3BSD license. Any copy of that license in this repository applies only to those contributions. Redis releases all Redis Community Edition versions from 7.4.x and thereafter under the RSALv2/SSPL dual-license as described in the LICENSE.txt file included in the Redis Community Edition source distribution.

Please see the CONTRIBUTING.md file in this source distribution for more information. For security bugs and vulnerabilities, please see SECURITY.md.

Redis Trademarks

The purpose of a trademark is to identify the goods and services of a person or company without causing confusion. As the registered owner of its name and logo, Redis accepts certain limited uses of its trademarks but it has requirements that must be followed as described in its Trademark Guidelines available at: https://redis.com/legal/trademark-guidelines/.

Redis internals

If you are reading this README you are likely in front of a GitHub page or you just untarred the Redis distribution tar ball. In both the cases you are basically one step away from the source code, so here we explain the Redis source code layout, what is in each file as a general idea, the most important functions and structures inside the Redis server and so forth. We keep all the discussion at a high level without digging into the details since this document would be huge otherwise and our code base changes continuously, but a general idea should be a good starting point to understand more. Moreover most of the code is heavily commented and easy to follow.

Source code layout

The Redis root directory just contains this README, the Makefile which calls the real Makefile inside the src directory and an example configuration for Redis and Redis Sentinel. You can find a few shell scripts that are used in order to execute the Redis, Redis Cluster and Redis Sentinel unit tests, which are implemented inside the tests directory.

Inside the root are the following important directories:

  • src: contains the Redis implementation, written in C.
  • tests: contains the unit tests, implemented in Tcl.
  • deps: contains libraries Redis uses. Everything needed to compile Redis is inside this directory; your system just needs to provide libc, a POSIX compatible interface and a C compiler. Notably deps contains a copy of jemalloc, which is the default allocator of Redis under Linux. Note that under deps there are also things which started with the Redis project, but for which the main repository is not redis/redis.

There are a few more directories but they are not very important for our goals here. We'll focus mostly on src, where the Redis implementation is contained, exploring what there is inside each file. The order in which files are exposed is the logical one to follow in order to disclose different layers of complexity incrementally.

Note: lately Redis was refactored quite a bit. Function names and file names have been changed, so you may find that this documentation reflects the unstable branch more closely. For instance, in Redis 3.0 the server.c and server.h files were named redis.c and redis.h. However the overall structure is the same. Keep in mind that all the new developments and pull requests should be performed against the unstable branch.

server.h

The simplest way to understand how a program works is to understand the data structures it uses. So we'll start from the main header file of Redis, which is server.h.

All the server configuration and in general all the shared state is defined in a global structure called server, of type struct redisServer. A few important fields in this structure are:

  • server.db is an array of Redis databases, where data is stored.
  • server.commands is the command table.
  • server.clients is a linked list of clients connected to the server.
  • server.master is a special client, the master, if the instance is a replica.

There are tons of other fields. Most fields are commented directly inside the structure definition.

Another important Redis data structure is the one defining a client. In the past it was called redisClient, now just client. The structure has many fields, here we'll just show the main ones:

struct client {
    int fd;
    sds querybuf;
    int argc;
    robj **argv;
    redisDb *db;
    int flags;
    list *reply;
    // ... many other fields ...
    char buf[PROTO_REPLY_CHUNK_BYTES];
}

The client structure defines a connected client:

  • The fd field is the client socket file descriptor.
  • argc and argv are populated with the command the client is executing, so that functions implementing a given Redis command can read the arguments.
  • querybuf accumulates the requests from the client, which are parsed by the Redis server according to the Redis protocol and executed by calling the implementations of the commands the client is executing.
  • reply and buf are dynamic and static buffers that accumulate the replies the server sends to the client. These buffers are incrementally written to the socket as soon as the file descriptor is writable.

As you can see in the client structure above, arguments in a command are described as robj structures. The following is the full robj structure, which defines a Redis object:

struct redisObject {
    unsigned type:4;
    unsigned encoding:4;
    unsigned lru:LRU_BITS; /* LRU time (relative to global lru_clock) or
                            * LFU data (least significant 8 bits frequency
                            * and most significant 16 bits access time). */
    int refcount;
    void *ptr;
};

Basically this structure can represent all the basic Redis data types like strings, lists, sets, sorted sets and so forth. The interesting thing is that it has a type field, so that it is possible to know what type a given object has, and a refcount, so that the same object can be referenced in multiple places without allocating it multiple times. Finally the ptr field points to the actual representation of the object, which might vary even for the same type, depending on the encoding used.

Redis objects are used extensively in the Redis internals, however in order to avoid the overhead of indirect accesses, recently in many places we just use plain dynamic strings not wrapped inside a Redis object.

server.c

This is the entry point of the Redis server, where the main() function is defined. The following are the most important steps in order to startup the Redis server.

  • initServerConfig() sets up the default values of the server structure.
  • initServer() allocates the data structures needed to operate, setup the listening socket, and so forth.
  • aeMain() starts the event loop which listens for new connections.

There are two special functions called periodically by the event loop:

  1. serverCron() is called periodically (according to server.hz frequency), and performs tasks that must be performed from time to time, like checking for timed out clients.
  2. beforeSleep() is called every time the event loop fired, Redis served a few requests, and is returning back into the event loop.

Inside server.c you can find code that handles other vital things of the Redis server:

  • call() is used in order to call a given command in the context of a given client.
  • activeExpireCycle() handles eviction of keys with a time to live set via the EXPIRE command.
  • performEvictions() is called when a new write command should be performed but Redis is out of memory according to the maxmemory directive.
  • The global variable redisCommandTable defines all the Redis commands, specifying the name of the command, the function implementing the command, the number of arguments required, and other properties of each command.

commands.c

This file is auto generated by utils/generate-command-code.py, the content is based on the JSON files in the src/commands folder. These are meant to be the single source of truth about the Redis commands, and all the metadata about them. These JSON files are not meant to be used by anyone directly, instead that metadata can be obtained via the COMMAND command.

networking.c

This file defines all the I/O functions with clients, masters and replicas (which in Redis are just special clients):

  • createClient() allocates and initializes a new client.
  • The addReply*() family of functions are used by command implementations in order to append data to the client structure, that will be transmitted to the client as a reply for a given command executed.
  • writeToClient() transmits the data pending in the output buffers to the client and is called by the writable event handler sendReplyToClient().
  • readQueryFromClient() is the readable event handler and accumulates data read from the client into the query buffer.
  • processInputBuffer() is the entry point in order to parse the client query buffer according to the Redis protocol. Once commands are ready to be processed, it calls processCommand() which is defined inside server.c in order to actually execute the command.
  • freeClient() deallocates, disconnects and removes a client.

aof.c and rdb.c

As you can guess from the names, these files implement the RDB and AOF persistence for Redis. Redis uses a persistence model based on the fork() system call in order to create a process with the same (shared) memory content of the main Redis process. This secondary process dumps the content of the memory on disk. This is used by rdb.c to create the snapshots on disk and by aof.c in order to perform the AOF rewrite when the append only file gets too big.

The implementation inside aof.c has additional functions in order to implement an API that allows commands to append new commands into the AOF file as clients execute them.

The call() function defined inside server.c is responsible for calling the functions that in turn will write the commands into the AOF.

db.c

Certain Redis commands operate on specific data types; others are general. Examples of generic commands are DEL and EXPIRE. They operate on keys and not on their values specifically. All those generic commands are defined inside db.c.

Moreover db.c implements an API in order to perform certain operations on the Redis dataset without directly accessing the internal data structures.

The most important functions inside db.c which are used in many command implementations are the following:

  • lookupKeyRead() and lookupKeyWrite() are used in order to get a pointer to the value associated to a given key, or NULL if the key does not exist.
  • dbAdd() and its higher level counterpart setKey() create a new key in a Redis database.
  • dbDelete() removes a key and its associated value.
  • emptyData() removes an entire single database or all the databases defined.

The rest of the file implements the generic commands exposed to the client.

object.c

The robj structure defining Redis objects was already described. Inside object.c there are all the functions that operate with Redis objects at a basic level, like functions to allocate new objects, handle the reference counting and so forth. Notable functions inside this file:

  • incrRefCount() and decrRefCount() are used in order to increment or decrement an object reference count. When it drops to 0 the object is finally freed.
  • createObject() allocates a new object. There are also specialized functions to allocate string objects having a specific content, like createStringObjectFromLongLong() and similar functions.

This file also implements the OBJECT command.

replication.c

This is one of the most complex files inside Redis, it is recommended to approach it only after getting a bit familiar with the rest of the code base. In this file there is the implementation of both the master and replica role of Redis.

One of the most important functions inside this file is replicationFeedSlaves() that writes commands to the clients representing replica instances connected to our master, so that the replicas can get the writes performed by the clients: this way their data set will remain synchronized with the one in the master.

This file also implements both the SYNC and PSYNC commands that are used in order to perform the first synchronization between masters and replicas, or to continue the replication after a disconnection.

Script

The script unit is composed of 3 units:

  • script.c - integration of scripts with Redis (commands execution, set replication/resp, ...)
  • script_lua.c - responsible to execute Lua code, uses script.c to interact with Redis from within the Lua code.
  • function_lua.c - contains the Lua engine implementation, uses script_lua.c to execute the Lua code.
  • functions.c - contains Redis Functions implementation (FUNCTION command), uses functions_lua.c if the function it wants to invoke needs the Lua engine.
  • eval.c - contains the eval implementation using script_lua.c to invoke the Lua code.

Other C files

  • t_hash.c, t_list.c, t_set.c, t_string.c, t_zset.c and t_stream.c contains the implementation of the Redis data types. They implement both an API to access a given data type, and the client command implementations for these data types.
  • ae.c implements the Redis event loop, it's a self contained library which is simple to read and understand.
  • sds.c is the Redis string library, check https://github.com/antirez/sds for more information.
  • anet.c is a library to use POSIX networking in a simpler way compared to the raw interface exposed by the kernel.
  • dict.c is an implementation of a non-blocking hash table which rehashes incrementally.
  • cluster.c implements the Redis Cluster. Probably a good read only after being very familiar with the rest of the Redis code base. If you want to read cluster.c make sure to read the Redis Cluster specification.

Anatomy of a Redis command

All the Redis commands are defined in the following way:

void foobarCommand(client *c) {
    printf("%s",c->argv[1]->ptr); /* Do something with the argument. */
    addReply(c,shared.ok); /* Reply something to the client. */
}

The command function is referenced by a JSON file, together with its metadata, see commands.c described above for details. The command flags are documented in the comment above the struct redisCommand in server.h. For other details, please refer to the COMMAND command. https://redis.io/commands/command/

After the command operates in some way, it returns a reply to the client, usually using addReply() or a similar function defined inside networking.c.

There are tons of command implementations inside the Redis source code that can serve as examples of actual commands implementations (e.g. pingCommand). Writing a few toy commands can be a good exercise to get familiar with the code base.

There are also many other files not described here, but it is useless to cover everything. We just want to help you with the first steps. Eventually you'll find your way inside the Redis code base :-)

Enjoy!

docs's People

Contributors

0exp avatar adrianoamaral avatar alonre24 avatar andy-stark-redis avatar avivfisher avatar cmilesb avatar dharkness avatar dmaier-redislabs avatar dwdougherty avatar gnaneshkunal avatar havijs avatar isitgreg avatar joeywhelan avatar joshrotenberg avatar jruaux avatar kaitlynmichael avatar liorkogan avatar mich-elle-luna avatar noamsternredis avatar paoloredis avatar raz-mon avatar rbs333 avatar rrelledge avatar tishun avatar tylerhutcherson avatar uglide avatar viktarstarastsenka avatar vladvildanov avatar vmihailenco avatar yaronp68 avatar

Stargazers

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docs's Issues

Create a database with Replica Of

  1. In the "Encrypt replica database traffic" section, the instructions should be to take the Proxy certificate from the source, not the Syncer certificate (see attached image)
  2. The "Encrypt source database traffic" section should come before the "Encrypt replica database traffic" section. This is because in the current order, the user will see a "sync error" message after configuring the target, as the source is still missing the target's syncer certificate

image

Commands pages not using full width

The content on both the page listing commands and the pages for each command is not properly set to use the full width of the container (up to 1920px). For pages where the content may not naturally take up the full width, the entire main section of the page is a different width.

In the image below, the content is able to fill the full width and is thus capped at 1920px.
all commands

However, when one searches for a single command, the content no longer takes up the full width, creating a jarring transition as the right sidebar appears in a different spot.
searching for command

A similar issue occurs with the pages for individual commands. Here, the HGETALL command has documentation that takes up the full width.
hgetall command

HGET has much shorter documentation that does not take up the full width, resulting again in a shifting right sidebar when navigating between pages.
hget command

The expected appearance would have the content set to fill the maximum width available, keeping the right sidebar fixed when navigating between pages.

CLUSTER MEET

redis-cli -a xxx --cluster create redis-sts-0.redis.default.svc.cluster.local:7000 redis-sts-1.redis.default.svc.cluster.local:7000 redis-sts-2.redis.default.svc.cluster.local:7000 --cluster-replicas 0

after i restart the redis-sts

redis-cli -p 7000 -a HZB183318a. -c

Warning: Using a password with '-a' or '-u' option on the command line interface may not be safe.
127.0.0.1:7000> CLUSTER NODES
100d8187a633dcc07357be4d523be7a8c77d064c 10.42.0.26:7000@17000 master,fail? - 1717653304824 1717653302251 2 connected 5461-10922
0bd437def75a8b165eca1e3f785733fed209c257 10.42.0.21:7000@17000 myself,master - 0 1717653302251 1 connected 0-5460
e437576ae42c24795513b9e727b6c60150ccd56c 10.42.0.29:7000@17000 master,fail? - 1717653303194 1717653302251 3 connected 10923-16383

wehy the cluster use ip, not dns name, this cause node fail after restart

TS.MRANGE filter labels!=. not work

i try to use ts.mrange filter filterExpr syntanx. labels!=1 , retrieve (error) ERR TSDB: please provide at least one matcher
did i use the wrong syntax?

截圖 2024-05-09 19 14 36

Install Redis on Linux failing on Ubuntu 24.04 LTS

Err:6 https://packages.redis.io/deb noble InRelease
  403  Forbidden [IP: 2600:9000:204b:5600:13:e54d:6980:93a1 443]
Reading package lists... Done
E: Failed to fetch https://packages.redis.io/deb/dists/noble/InRelease  403  Forbidden [IP: 2600:9000:204b:5600:13:e54d:6980:93a1 443]
E: The repository 'https://packages.redis.io/deb noble InRelease' is not signed.
N: Updating from such a repository can't be done securely, and is therefore disabled by default.
N: See apt-secure(8) manpage for repository creation and user configuration details.

CLIENT UNBLOCK - return value doc is misleading (Redis 7.2.4)

As of Redis 7.2.4, if I block client 42 on a BRPOP (as in the docs), and then I do CLIENT UNBLOCK 42 in a different client, the return value is 1. Whereas, if client 42 is not blocked, then doing CLIENT UNBLOCK 42 in a different client returns 0.

The docs on this return value are a bit unclear, but seem to suggest that the opposite will be true. I suggest the following documentation change:

Integer reply: 0 if the target client was not blocked, so this call had no effect.
integer reply: 1 if the target client was unblocked as a result of this call.

I am happy to submit a PR with this change if desired.

TLS

After I configure TLS: redis service cannot start, and it get this error in logs:

Redis version=7.0.12, bits=64, commit=00000000, modified=0, pid=2320, just started

Configuration loaded

Failed to load certificate: /etc/redis/server.crt: error:8000000D:system library::Permission denied

Failed to configure TLS. Check logs for more info.

Configuration in redis.conf:
tls-cert-file /etc/redis/server.crt
tls-key-file /etc/redis/server.key

server.crt and server.key are created by openssl.
server.crt and server.key: owner: redis, group: root, permission 777.

It is run in linux.

Use the WAIT command for strong consistency

I think we should not use the term strong here. We don't provide strong consistency, at least not the definition most people who use ACID RDBMS databases are familiar with.

https://redis.io/docs/latest/operate/rs/clusters/optimize/wait/#:~:text=Use%20the%20wait%20command%20to,on%20disk%20permanently%20for%20durability

See https://www.baeldung.com/cs/eventual-consistency-vs-strong-eventual-consistency-vs-strong-consistency

Note I don't like the term "strong eventual consistency" either, because at least in Redis's case, it's not strong

Redis CLI in Examples sections fails to load

I'm not sure if it's expected, but currently redis cli in Examples section fails to load properly and gives 503
image

Such behavior is consistent in both Firefox and Google Chrome browsers

High availability and replication

https://redis.io/docs/latest/operate/rc/databases/configuration/high-availability/#dataset-size

For Redis Cloud Essentials, the size of the plan you choose includes replication. Therefore, if you choose replication, the dataset size you can use is half of the stated plan size. For example, if you choose a 1GB plan, Redis allocates 512 GB for the memory limit, and the other 512 MB for Replication.

The above mentioned paragraph says - Out of the mentioned 1GB, Redis allocates 512 GB for the memory limit and the other 512MB for replication.

It should have been 512 MB and not 512 GB

The final text would have been -

For Redis Cloud Essentials, the size of the plan you choose includes replication. Therefore, if you choose replication, the dataset size you can use is half of the stated plan size. For example, if you choose a 1GB plan, Redis allocates 512 MB for the memory limit, and the other 512 MB for Replication.

Install Redis on macOS - Dark mode

I couldn't find a way to switch from the light mode to a dark mode

Is it something you could consider adding to the doc? Some people have health issues, there is this phobia called photophobia, personally I can't spend more than 2 minutes on this screen, unless I use these dark mode chrome extension, which are not 100% accurrate, as you can see below:
Screenshot 2024-05-15 at 18 45 22
But, in the overall, I like going through this documentation, it's well explained and easy to follow 💯

Update for openshift OperatorHub Note: Known Limitation

On the note:

Known Limitation - The automatic use of the security constraint is limited. The Redis Enterprise must be named rec for the constraint to be used automatically. Use the cluster name rec when deploying with the OperatorHub

one may add:

or ensure that rec yaml is using the proper rec service account by setting "rec.spec.serviceAccountName: rec" and "rec.spec.createServiceAccount: false" into your yaml definition.

If you require a different name, you must grant the SCC to the project namespace.

FT.SEARCH looks to have limitations to find points contained for Polygons with big number values of vertices (Redis Enterprise Software release notes 7.2.4-52 August 2023)

Description:

  1. I created a Index
  2. I created a hash set for geoshape polygon (square) where vertices values are around 10000000
    HSET shape:6 t "this is in my house" g "POLYGON((10000000 10000000, 15000000 10000000, 15000000 30000000, 10000000 30000000, 10000000 10000000))"
  3. I tried FT.SEARCH and I didn't get expected result (it didn't get any polygon, I expected to see shape:6)
    FT.SEARCH polygon_idx "@g:[CONTAINS $point]" PARAMS 2 point 'POINT(10000002 10000002)' DIALECT 3
  4. I overwrote shape:6 to have vertices with lower numbers
    HSET shape:6 t "this is in my house" g "POLYGON((1000000 1000000, 1500000 1000000, 1500000 3000000, 1000000 3000000, 1000000 1000000))"
  5. I tried FT.SEARCH again and I got expected result (it got shape:6)
  6. I overwrote shape:6 to have a very small square with big number value for vertices in order to lower amount of points and I got no polygon (same as depicted in point 3)
    HSET shape:6 t "this is in my house" g "POLYGON((10000000 10000000, 10000010 10000000, 10000010 10000010, 10000000 10000010, 10000000 10000000))"
    FT.SEARCH polygon_idx "@g:[CONTAINS $point]" PARAMS 2 point 'POINT(10000002 10000002)' DIALECT 3

Scenario:
Running Redis Enterprise Server deployed from RHOCP Operator
Those big numbers for vertices came from trying to use datum Campo Inchauspe for geo
image

BITPOS is returning -1 if I use optional arguments.

RedisIssue

Please let me know How can get success while using optional arguments. I am using staclexchange API (StringBitPosition ) of .NET in my code . Its implementation using optional parameters as default arguments hence it cannot be avoided,

Thanks.

Redis as a document database quick start guide

The text

Wildcard query
You can retrieve all indexed documents using the [FT.SEARCH](https://redis.io/docs/latest/commands/ft.search//) command. Note the LIMIT clause below, which allows result pagination.

Should be amended to advise the end-user that retrieving all indexed documents is an extreme operation and therefore may be contraindicated for production environments.

Please also add to use the FT.CURSOR API instead

Install ncjourney.so

Hi Team,

I am running Redis 6.2.14 on centos9.

Can anyone help to install ncjourney.so

I followed the below commands to install Redis package

dnf install redis redis-devel 

but no modules found at /usr/lib64/redis/modules/

Thank you

Broken links to these docs

Many links from our site to your docs site broke recently with 404s.

We have documentation that points to Redis docs pages. It'd be nice if you can add redirection to fix the issues to prevent 404s when pages move.

404 recently:
https://redis.io/docs/getting-started/#install-redis
https://redis.io/docs/about/about-stack/
https://redis.io/docs/interact/search-and-query/search/vectors/#creating-a-vss-range-query
https://redis.io/docs/manual/replication/#how-redis-replication-works
https://redis.io/docs/manual/pubsub/
https://docs.redis.com/latest/modules/redisjson/
https://docs.redis.com/latest/modules/redisearch/
https://docs.redis.com/latest/modules/redisbloom/

New links have the same domain, but folder structure must be different throughout the site.
https://redis.io/docs/latest/operate/oss_and_stack/install/

Thanks so much, Jason

Audit connection events - small fix required

The following line:
"Status reports success or failure. Values of 2 or 8 indicate success; other values indicate failure."

Should be replaced with the following:
"The status field reports the following: values of 2, 7 or 8 indicate success; values of 3 or 5 indicate that the client authentication is in progress, and should conclude later. Other values indicate failures"

@rrelledge LMK if you have any Qs.
Thanks.

Redis Insight v2.48.0, April 2024: Keys are not reliably sorted in Browser

Sorting by key name mostly sorts by key, but some rows are sorted incorrectly. Note the keys start at 01HW3..., then 01HW5..., then 01HW4...

Similar behavior when sorting ASC or DESC.

I am using delimited keys, the full keys start with conversations:01HW...

This is new in 2.48.0; I've never noticed this issue before (using Redis Insight regularly for more than a year).

Screenshot 2024-04-23 at 10 29 42

Migrate a database to Active-Active

Following this fix: https://redislabs.atlassian.net/browse/RED-115447

The modals were fixed to ask the user for the proxy certificate, not syncer certificates.
In this page, the modal images were not adjusted.

"Migrate from the same cluster" section:

  • The modal image for "Migrate to Active-Active" is wrong: the user should be instructed to enter the proxy certificate, not the syncer certificate.

"Migrate from a different cluster" section: same issue

"Migrate from source available Redis" section: same issue

Configure high availability for replica shards

There is a typo in the below mentioned paragraph ----

Enabling replica_ha configures the cluster to automatically replace the promoted replica on an available node. This automatically returns the database to a state where there are two copies of the data: the former replica shard which has been promoted to primary and a new replica shard.

The marked word should have been "replicate".

The final understanding would be - Enabling replica_ha will automatically create a replica of a promoted replica on another node making sure that there is no single point of failure.

Updated text ---

Enabling replica_ha configures the cluster to automatically replicate the promoted replica on an available node. This automatically returns the database to a state where there are two copies of the data: the former replica shard which has been promoted to primary and a new replica shard.

Typo: Redis sets

typo on Check whether bike:1 or bike:2 are racing in the US. example for python

typo:
print(res6) # >>> 1

should be:
print(res6) # >>> 0

Redis-Stack Daemon not working

Redis-Stack Daemon not working.

/etc/redis-stack.conf

port 6379
daemonize yes
loadmodule /opt/redis-stack/lib/redisearch.so
loadmodule /opt/redis-stack/lib/rejson.so
appendonly yes
appendfsync everysec
auto-aof-rewrite-percentage 100
auto-aof-rewrite-min-size 128mb
supervised auto
dir /var/lib/redis

/etc/systemd/system/redis.service

[Unit]
Description=Redis In-Memory Data Store
After=network.target

[Service]
User=redis
Group=redis
ExecStart=/usr/local/bin/redis-server /etc/redis-stack.conf
ExecStop=/usr/local/bin/redis-cli shutdown
Restart=always

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

sudo systemctl enable /etc/systemd/system/redis.service
sudo systemctl start redis.service
sudo systemctl status redis.service

RESULT

× redis.service - Redis In-Memory Data Store
Loaded: loaded (/etc/systemd/system/redis.service; enabled; vendor preset: enabled)
Active: failed (Result: exit-code) since Thu 2024-06-27 13:58:38 UTC; 652ms ago
Process: 1378 ExecStart=/usr/local/bin/redis-server /etc/redis-stack.conf (code=exited, status=203/EXEC)
Main PID: 1378 (code=exited, status=203/EXEC)
CPU: 649us

Jun 27 13:58:38 ip-10-0-2-13 systemd[1]: redis.service: Scheduled restart job, restart counter is at 5.
Jun 27 13:58:38 ip-10-0-2-13 systemd[1]: Stopped Redis In-Memory Data Store.
Jun 27 13:58:38 ip-10-0-2-13 systemd[1]: redis.service: Start request repeated too quickly.
Jun 27 13:58:38 ip-10-0-2-13 systemd[1]: redis.service: Failed with result 'exit-code'.
Jun 27 13:58:38 ip-10-0-2-13 systemd[1]: Failed to start Redis In-Memory Data Store.

Tried all kinds of settings in the conf
daemonize yes/no
surpervised none/auto/systemd
with and without dir

Nothing is changing anything. Please advice. Works fine when I run
redis-server /etc/redis-stack.conf and start it from the CLI

Strange formatting/extra text

Looks like maybe some of the values are repeated here:

| client_cert_subject_validation_type | **disabled**<br />san_cn<br />full_subject; Enables additional certificate validations that further limit connections to clients with valid certificates during TLS client authentication.<br />**disabled**: Authenticates clients with valid certificates. No additional validations are enforced.<br />**san_cn**: A client certificate is valid only if its Common Name (CN) matches an entry in the list of valid subjects. Ignores other Subject attributes.<br />**full_subject**: A client certificate is valid only if its Subject attributes match an entry in the list of valid subjects. |

Screenshot 2024-06-11 at 12 32 21 PM

Tokenization not working with JSON

When using redisearch for JSON documents like {"id":"456.00.0000"}
FT.SEARCH myIndex 456 delivers the document.
FT.SEARCH myIndex 456\\.0 or FT.SEARCH myIndex "456\\.0" delivers no result tested with redisearch 2.10.3.
Or did I misunderstood the mechanism? How to search for text fields containing "." characters?

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