Likely fix#6723.
This is what happens AFAIK: we enter the main loop where we expire stuff
until a given percentage of keys is still found to be logically expired.
There are however other potential exit conditions.
However the "sampled" variable is not always incremented inside the
loop, because we may found no valid slot as we scan the hash table, but
just NULLs ad dict entries. So when the do/while loop condition is
triggered at the end, we do (expired*100/sampled), dividing by zero if
we sampled 0 keys.
This bug is from the first version of Redis. Probably the problem here
is that before we used an SDS split function that created empty strings
for additional spaces, like in "SET foo bar".
AFAIK later we replaced it with the curretn sdssplitarg() API that has
no such a problem. As a result, we introduced a bug, where it is no
longer possible to do something like:
SET foo ""
Using the inline protocol. Now it is fixed.
- make lua-replicate-commands mutable (it never was, but i don't see why)
- make tcp-backlog immutable (fix a recent refactory mistake)
- increase the max limit of a few configs to match what they were before
the recent refactory
This commit solves several edge cases that are related to
exhausting the streamID limits: We should correctly calculate
the succeeding streamID instead of blindly incrementing 'seq'
This affects both XREAD and XADD.
Other (unrelated) changes:
Reply with a better error message when trying to add an entry
to a stream that has exhausted last_id
With the previous API, a NULL return value was ambiguous and could
represent either an old value of NULL or an error condition. The new API
returns a status code and allows the old value to be returned
by-reference.
This commit also includes test coverage based on
tests/modules/datatype.c which did not exist at the time of the original
commit.
since the refactory of config.c, it was initialized from config_hz in initServer
but apparently that's too late since the config file loading creates objects
which call LRU_CLOCK
This is useful to tell redis and modules to try to avoid doing things that may
increment the replication offset, and should be used when draining a master
and waiting for replicas to be in perfect sync before a failover.