It was verified in practice that this test is able to stress much more
the implementation by introducing errors that were only trivially to
detect with different offsets but impossible to detect starting always
at zero and counting bits the full length of the string.
UNSUBSCRIBE and PUNSUBSCRIBE commands are designed to mass-unsubscribe
the client respectively all the channels and patters if called without
arguments.
However when these functions are called without arguments, but there are
no channels or patters we are subscribed to, the old behavior was to
don't reply at all.
This behavior is broken, as every command should always reply.
Also it is possible that we are no longer subscribed to a channels but we
are subscribed to patters or the other way around, and the client should
be notified with the correct number of subscriptions.
Also it is not pretty that sometimes we did not receive a reply at all
in a redis-cli session from these commands, blocking redis-cli trying
to read the reply.
This fixes issue #714.
The Redis Slow Log always used to log the slow commands executed inside
a MULTI/EXEC block. However also EXEC was logged at the end, which is
perfectly useless.
Now EXEC is no longer logged and a test was added to test this behavior.
This fixes issue #759.
SDIFF used an algorithm that was O(N) where N is the total number
of elements of all the sets involved in the operation.
The algorithm worked like that:
ALGORITHM 1:
1) For the first set, add all the members to an auxiliary set.
2) For all the other sets, remove all the members of the set from the
auxiliary set.
So it is an O(N) algorithm where N is the total number of elements in
all the sets involved in the diff operation.
Cristobal Viedma suggested to modify the algorithm to the following:
ALGORITHM 2:
1) Iterate all the elements of the first set.
2) For every element, check if the element also exists in all the other
remaining sets.
3) Add the element to the auxiliary set only if it does not exist in any
of the other sets.
The complexity of this algorithm on the worst case is O(N*M) where N is
the size of the first set and M the total number of sets involved in the
operation.
However when there are elements in common, with this algorithm we stop
the computation for a given element as long as we find a duplicated
element into another set.
I (antirez) added an additional step to algorithm 2 to make it faster,
that is to sort the set to subtract from the biggest to the
smallest, so that it is more likely to find a duplicate in a larger sets
that are checked before the smaller ones.
WHAT IS BETTER?
None of course, for instance if the first set is much larger than the
other sets the second algorithm does a lot more work compared to the
first algorithm.
Similarly if the first set is much smaller than the other sets, the
original algorithm will less work.
So this commit makes Redis able to guess the number of operations
required by each algorithm, and select the best at runtime according
to the input received.
However, since the second algorithm has better constant times and can do
less work if there are duplicated elements, an advantage is given to the
second algorithm.
EVALSHA used to crash if the SHA1 was not lowercase (Issue #783).
Fixed using a case insensitive dictionary type for the sha -> script
map used for replication of scripts.
The previous behavior was to return -1 if:
1) Existing key but without an expire set.
2) Non existing key.
Now the second case is handled in a different, and TTL will return -2
if the key does not exist at all.
PTTL follows the same behavior as well.
With COPY now MIGRATE does not remove the key from the source instance.
With REPLACE it uses RESTORE REPLACE on the target host so that even if
the key already eixsts in the target instance it will be overwritten.
The options can be used together.