367 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
antirez
d3b4662347 Cluster: don't check keys hash slots when the source is our master.
Usually we redirect clients to the right hash slot, however we don't
want to do that with our master, we want just to mirror it.
2013-03-05 13:02:44 +01:00
antirez
f7dac639a9 Remove warning when printing redisBuildId(). 2013-02-27 12:33:27 +01:00
antirez
f9b5ca29fd Use GCC printf format attribute for redisLog().
This commit also fixes redisLog() statements producing warnings.
2013-02-27 12:27:15 +01:00
antirez
c35b065a64 Better panic message for failed time event creation. 2013-02-27 12:00:11 +01:00
Stam He
e431a97660 add a check for aeCreateTimeEvent
1) Add a check for aeCreateTimeEvent in function initServer.
2013-02-27 11:57:35 +01:00
Stam He
9c8be6cab9 Set proctitle: avoid the use of __attribute__((constructor)).
This cased a segfault in some Linux system and was GCC-specific.

Commit modified by @antirez:

1) Stripped away the part to set the proc title via config for now.
2) Handle initialization of setproctitle only when the replacement
   is used.
3) Don't require GCC now that the attribute constructor is no
   longer used.
2013-02-27 11:50:35 +01:00
antirez
6356cf6808 Set process name in ps output to make operations safer.
This commit allows Redis to set a process name that includes the binding
address and the port number in order to make operations simpler.

Redis children processes doing AOF rewrites or RDB saving change the
name into redis-aof-rewrite and redis-rdb-bgsave respectively.

This in general makes harder to kill the wrong process because of an
error and makes simpler to identify saving children.

This feature was suggested by Arnaud GRANAL in the Redis Google Group,
Arnaud also pointed me to the setproctitle.c implementation includeed in
this commit.

This feature should work on all the Linux, OSX, and all the three major
BSD systems.
2013-02-26 11:52:12 +01:00
antirez
9947b0d96d A comment in main() clarified. 2013-02-25 11:40:21 +01:00
antirez
ad3bca1fdf Cluster: added stub for verifyClusterConfigWithData().
See the top-comment for the function in this commit for details about
what the function is supposed to do.
2013-02-25 11:20:17 +01:00
antirez
ea7fc82a4a Cluster: new command flag forcing implicit ASKING.
Also using this new flag the RESTORE-ASKING command was implemented that
will be used by MIGRATE.
2013-02-20 17:28:35 +01:00
antirez
455da35c7f Cluster: specific error code for cluster down condition. 2013-02-15 16:53:24 +01:00
antirez
1649e509c3 Cluster: the cluster state structure is now heap allocated. 2013-02-14 13:20:56 +01:00
antirez
dc24a6b132 Return a specific NOAUTH error if authentication is required. 2013-02-12 16:25:41 +01:00
antirez
24f258360b Replication: added new stats counting full and partial resynchronizations. 2013-02-12 15:33:54 +01:00
antirez
078882025e PSYNC: work in progress, preview #2, rebased to unstable. 2013-02-12 12:52:21 +01:00
antirez
e34a35a511 Use the new unified protocol to send SELECT to slaves.
SELECT was still transmitted to slaves using the inline protocol, that
is conceived mostly for humans to type into telnet sessions, and is
notably not understood by redis-cli --slave.

Now the new protocol is used instead.
2013-02-12 12:50:28 +01:00
antirez
7465ac7ab1 Emit SELECT to slaves in a centralized way.
Before this commit every Redis slave had its own selected database ID
state. This was not actually useful as the emitted stream of commands
is identical for all the slaves.

Now the the currently selected database is a global state that is set to
-1 when a new slave is attached, in order to force the SELECT command to
be re-emitted for all the slaves.

This change is useful in order to implement replication partial
resynchronization in the future, as makes sure that the stream of
commands received by slaves, including SELECT commands, are exactly the
same for every slave connected, at any time.

In this way we could have a global offset that can identify a specific
piece of the master -> slaves stream of commands.
2013-02-12 12:50:28 +01:00
antirez
124a635bc5 Set SO_KEEPALIVE on client sockets if configured to do so. 2013-02-08 16:40:59 +01:00
antirez
46dd4c62b3 LASTSAVE is a "random" command. 2013-02-07 19:13:00 +01:00
antirez
b70b459b0e TCP_NODELAY after SYNC: changes to the implementation. 2013-02-05 12:04:30 +01:00
charsyam
c85647f354 Turn off TCP_NODELAY on the slave socket after SYNC.
Further details from @antirez:

It was reported by @StopForumSpam on Twitter that the Redis replication
link was strangely using multiple TCP packets for multiple commands.
This wastes a lot of bandwidth and is due to the TCP_NODELAY option we
enable on the socket after accepting a new connection.

However the master -> slave channel is a one-way channel since Redis
replication is asynchronous, so there is no point in trying to reduce
the latency, we should aim to reduce the bandwidth. For this reason this
commit introduces the ability to disable the nagle algorithm on the
socket after a successful SYNC.

This feature is off by default because the delay can be up to 40
milliseconds with normally configured Linux kernels.
2013-02-05 12:04:25 +01:00
Salvatore Sanfilippo
aca005c246 Merge pull request #914 from catwell/unstable
fix comments forgotten in #285 (zipmap -> ziplist)
2013-01-31 03:37:48 -08:00
antirez
fce016d31b Keyspace events: it is now possible to select subclasses of events.
When keyspace events are enabled, the overhead is not sever but
noticeable, so this commit introduces the ability to select subclasses
of events in order to avoid to generate events the user is not
interested in.

The events can be selected using redis.conf or CONFIG SET / GET.
2013-01-28 13:15:12 +01:00
antirez
5b9357a6b3 Initial test events for the new keyspace notification API. 2013-01-28 13:14:46 +01:00
antirez
4cdbce341e Keyspace events notification API. 2013-01-28 13:14:36 +01:00
Pierre Chapuis
50d43a9823 fix comments forgotten in #285 (zipmap -> ziplist) 2013-01-28 11:07:17 +01:00
antirez
79a0ef62db Whitelist SIGUSR1 to avoid auto-triggering errors.
This commit fixes issue #875 that was caused by the following events:

1) There is an active child doing BGSAVE.
2) flushall is called (or any other condition that makes Redis killing
the saving child process).
3) An error is sensed by Redis as the child exited with an error (killed
by a singal), that stops accepting write commands until a BGSAVE happens
to be executed with success.

Whitelisting SIGUSR1 and making sure Redis always uses this signal in
order to kill its own children fixes the issue.
2013-01-19 13:30:38 +01:00
antirez
ab247fc176 Clear server.shutdown_asap on failed shutdown.
When a SIGTERM is received Redis schedules a shutdown. However if it
fails to perform the shutdown it must be clear the shutdown_asap flag
otehrwise it will try again and again possibly making the server
unusable.
2013-01-19 13:19:41 +01:00
antirez
08d200baeb Slowlog: don't log EXEC but just the executed commands.
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.
2013-01-19 12:53:21 +01:00
guiquanz
9d09ce3981 Fixed many typos. 2013-01-19 10:59:44 +01:00
antirez
f5fa6824db Comment in the call() function clarified a bit. 2013-01-10 11:19:40 +01:00
antirez
f1481d4a03 serverCron() frequency is now a runtime parameter (was REDIS_HZ).
REDIS_HZ is the frequency our serverCron() function is called with.
A more frequent call to this function results into less latency when the
server is trying to handle very expansive background operations like
mass expires of a lot of keys at the same time.

Redis 2.4 used to have an HZ of 10. This was good enough with almost
every setup, but the incremental key expiration algorithm was working a
bit better under *extreme* pressure when HZ was set to 100 for Redis
2.6.

However for most users a latency spike of 30 milliseconds when million
of keys are expiring at the same time is acceptable, on the other hand a
default HZ of 100 in Redis 2.6 was causing idle instances to use some
CPU time compared to Redis 2.4. The CPU usage was in the order of 0.3%
for an idle instance, however this is a shame as more energy is consumed
by the server, if not important resources.

This commit introduces HZ as a runtime parameter, that can be queried by
INFO or CONFIG GET, and can be modified with CONFIG SET. At the same
time the default frequency is set back to 10.

In this way we default to a sane value of 10, but allows users to
easily switch to values up to 500 for near real-time applications if
needed and if they are willing to pay this small CPU usage penalty.
2012-12-14 17:10:40 +01:00
antirez
2f62c9663c Introduced the Build ID in INFO and --version output.
The idea is to be able to identify a build in a unique way, so for
instance after a bug report we can recognize that the build is the one
of a popular Linux distribution and perform the debugging in the same
environment.
2012-11-29 14:20:08 +01:00
antirez
95f68f7b0f EVALSHA is now case insensitive.
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.
2012-11-22 15:50:00 +01:00
antirez
3d1391272a Safer handling of MULTI/EXEC on errors.
After the transcation starts with a MULIT, the previous behavior was to
return an error on problems such as maxmemory limit reached. But still
to execute the transaction with the subset of queued commands on EXEC.

While it is true that the client was able to check for errors
distinguish QUEUED by an error reply, MULTI/EXEC in most client
implementations uses pipelining for speed, so all the commands and EXEC
are sent without caring about replies.

With this change:

1) EXEC fails if at least one command was not queued because of an
error. The EXECABORT error is used.
2) A generic error is always reported on EXEC.
3) The client DISCARDs the MULTI state after a failed EXEC, otherwise
pipelining multiple transactions would be basically impossible:
After a failed EXEC the next transaction would be simply queued as
the tail of the previous transaction.
2012-11-22 10:32:07 +01:00
antirez
c8852ebf19 MIGRATE count of cached sockets in INFO output. 2012-11-12 14:01:56 +01:00
antirez
e23d281e48 MIGRATE TCP connections caching.
By caching TCP connections used by MIGRATE to chat with other Redis
instances a 5x performance improvement was measured with
redis-benchmark against small keys.

This can dramatically speedup cluster resharding and other processes
where an high load of MIGRATE commands are used.
2012-11-12 00:47:24 +01:00
antirez
4365e5b2d3 BSD license added to every C source and header file. 2012-11-08 18:31:32 +01:00
antirez
1237d71c4e COPY and REPLACE options for MIGRATE.
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.
2012-11-07 15:32:27 +01:00
antirez
e5b5763f56 REPLACE option for RESTORE.
The REPLACE option deletes an existing key with the same name (if any)
and materializes the new one. The default behavior without RESTORE is to
return an error if a key already exists.
2012-11-07 10:57:23 +01:00
antirez
c4b0b6854e Type mismatch errors are now prefixed with WRONGTYPE.
So instead to reply with a generic error like:

-ERR ... wrong kind of value ...

now it replies with:

-WRONGTYPE ... wrong kind of value ...

This makes this particular error easy to check without resorting to
(fragile) pattern matching of the error string (however the error string
used to be consistent already).

Client libraries should return a specific exeption type for this error.

Most of the commit is about fixing unit tests.
2012-11-06 20:25:34 +01:00
antirez
05d8e2c938 More robust handling of AOF rewrite child.
After the wait3() syscall we used to do something like that:

    if (pid == server.rdb_child_pid) {
        backgroundSaveDoneHandler(exitcode,bysignal);
    } else {
        ....
    }

So the AOF rewrite was handled in the else branch without actually
checking if the pid really matches. This commit makes the check explicit
and logs at WARNING level if the pid returned by wait3() does not match
neither the RDB or AOF rewrite child.
2012-11-01 22:39:39 +01:00
Yecheng Fu
f0266532fc fix typo in comments (redis.c, networking.c) 2012-11-01 22:26:46 +01:00
antirez
89e74abfb6 A filed called slave_read_only added in INFO output.
This was an important information missing from the INFO output in the
replication section.

It obviously reflects if the slave is read only or not.
2012-10-22 19:21:47 +02:00
antirez
c2661ed761 Default memory limit for 32bit instanced moved from 3.5 GB to 3 GB.
In some system, notably osx, the 3.5 GB limit was too far and not able
to prevent a crash for out of memory. The 3 GB limit works better and it
is still a lot of memory within a 4 GB theorical limit so it's not going
to bore anyone :-)

This fixes issue #711
2012-10-22 10:43:39 +02:00
antirez
a1b1c1ea3a Fix MULTI / EXEC rendering in MONITOR output.
Before of this commit it used to be like this:

MULTI
EXEC
... actual commands of the transaction ...

Because after all that is the natural order of things. Transaction
commands are queued and executed *only after* EXEC is called.

However this makes debugging with MONITOR a mess, so the code was
modified to provide a coherent output.

What happens is that MULTI is rendered in the MONITOR output as far as
possible, instead EXEC is propagated only after the transaction is
executed, or even in the case it fails because of WATCH, so in this case
you'll simply see:

MULTI
EXEC

An empty transaction.
2012-10-16 17:35:50 +02:00
antirez
be6cbd3a6e Allow AUTH when Redis is busy because of timedout Lua script.
If the server is password protected we need to accept AUTH when there is
a server busy (-BUSY) condition, otherwise it will be impossible to send
SHUTDOWN NOSAVE or SCRIPT KILL.

This fixes issue #708.
2012-10-11 18:34:05 +02:00
antirez
c43aea7e9f Warn when configured maxmemory value seems odd.
This commit warns the user with a log at "warning" level if:

1) After the server startup the maxmemory limit was found to be < 1MB.
2) After a CONFIG SET command modifying the maxmemory setting the limit
is set to a value that is smaller than the currently used memory.

The behaviour of the Redis server is unmodified, and this wil not make
the CONFIG SET command or a wrong configuration in redis.conf less
likely to create problems, but at least this will make aware most users
about a possbile error they committed without resorting to external
help.

However no warning is issued if, as a result of loading the AOF or RDB
file, we are very near the maxmemory setting, or key eviction will be
needed in order to go under the specified maxmemory setting. The reason
is that in servers configured as a cache with an aggressive
maxmemory-policy most of the times restarting the server will cause this
condition to happen if persistence is not switched off.

This fixes issue #429.
2012-10-05 11:16:22 +02:00
antirez
be90c803e3 Added the SRANDMEMBER key <count> variant.
SRANDMEMBER called with just the key argument can just return a single
random element from a Redis Set. However many users need to return
multiple unique elements from a Set, this is not a trivial problem to
handle in the client side, and for truly good performance a C
implementation was required.

After many requests for this feature it was finally implemented.

The problem implementing this command is the strategy to follow when
the number of elements the user asks for is near to the number of
elements that are already inside the set. In this case asking random
elements to the dictionary API, and trying to add it to a temporary set,
may result into an extremely poor performance, as most add operations
will be wasted on duplicated elements.

For this reason this implementation uses a different strategy in this
case: the Set is copied, and random elements are returned to reach the
specified count.

The code actually uses 4 different algorithms optimized for the
different cases.

If the count is negative, the command changes behavior and allows for
duplicated elements in the returned subset.
2012-09-21 11:55:28 +02:00
antirez
7eb850ef0e A reimplementation of blocking operation internals.
Redis provides support for blocking operations such as BLPOP or BRPOP.
This operations are identical to normal LPOP and RPOP operations as long
as there are elements in the target list, but if the list is empty they
block waiting for new data to arrive to the list.

All the clients blocked waiting for th same list are served in a FIFO
way, so the first that blocked is the first to be served when there is
more data pushed by another client into the list.

The previous implementation of blocking operations was conceived to
serve clients in the context of push operations. For for instance:

1) There is a client "A" blocked on list "foo".
2) The client "B" performs `LPUSH foo somevalue`.
3) The client "A" is served in the context of the "B" LPUSH,
synchronously.

Processing things in a synchronous way was useful as if "A" pushes a
value that is served by "B", from the point of view of the database is a
NOP (no operation) thing, that is, nothing is replicated, nothing is
written in the AOF file, and so forth.

However later we implemented two things:

1) Variadic LPUSH that could add multiple values to a list in the
context of a single call.
2) BRPOPLPUSH that was a version of BRPOP that also provided a "PUSH"
side effect when receiving data.

This forced us to make the synchronous implementation more complex. If
client "B" is waiting for data, and "A" pushes three elemnents in a
single call, we needed to propagate an LPUSH with a missing argument
in the AOF and replication link. We also needed to make sure to
replicate the LPUSH side of BRPOPLPUSH, but only if in turn did not
happened to serve another blocking client into another list ;)

This were complex but with a few of mutually recursive functions
everything worked as expected... until one day we introduced scripting
in Redis.

Scripting + synchronous blocking operations = Issue #614.

Basically you can't "rewrite" a script to have just a partial effect on
the replicas and AOF file if the script happened to serve a few blocked
clients.

The solution to all this problems, implemented by this commit, is to
change the way we serve blocked clients. Instead of serving the blocked
clients synchronously, in the context of the command performing the PUSH
operation, it is now an asynchronous and iterative process:

1) If a key that has clients blocked waiting for data is the subject of
a list push operation, We simply mark keys as "ready" and put it into a
queue.
2) Every command pushing stuff on lists, as a variadic LPUSH, a script,
or whatever it is, is replicated verbatim without any rewriting.
3) Every time a Redis command, a MULTI/EXEC block, or a script,
completed its execution, we run the list of keys ready to serve blocked
clients (as more data arrived), and process this list serving the
blocked clients.
4) As a result of "3" maybe more keys are ready again for other clients
(as a result of BRPOPLPUSH we may have push operations), so we iterate
back to step "3" if it's needed.

The new code has a much simpler semantics, and a simpler to understand
implementation, with the disadvantage of not being able to "optmize out"
a PUSH+BPOP as a No OP.

This commit will be tested with care before the final merge, more tests
will be added likely.
2012-09-17 10:26:46 +02:00