## Current state
1. Lua has its own parser that handles parsing `reds.call` replies and translates them
to Lua objects that can be used by the user Lua code. The parser partially handles
resp3 (missing big number, verbatim, attribute, ...)
2. Modules have their own parser that handles parsing `RM_Call` replies and translates
them to RedisModuleCallReply objects. The parser does not support resp3.
In addition, in the future, we want to add Redis Function (#8693) that will probably
support more languages. At some point maintaining so many parsers will stop
scaling (bug fixes and protocol changes will need to be applied on all of them).
We will probably end up with different parsers that support different parts of the
resp protocol (like we already have today with Lua and modules)
## PR Changes
This PR attempt to unified the reply parsing of Lua and modules (and in the future
Redis Function) by introducing a new parser unit (`resp_parser.c`). The new parser
handles parsing the reply and calls different callbacks to allow the users (another
unit that uses the parser, i.e, Lua, modules, or Redis Function) to analyze the reply.
### Lua API Additions
The code that handles reply parsing on `scripting.c` was removed. Instead, it uses
the resp_parser to parse and create a Lua object out of the reply. As mentioned
above the Lua parser did not handle parsing big numbers, verbatim, and attribute.
The new parser can handle those and so Lua also gets it for free.
Those are translated to Lua objects in the following way:
1. Big Number - Lua table `{'big_number':'<str representation for big number>'}`
2. Verbatim - Lua table `{'verbatim_string':{'format':'<verbatim format>', 'string':'<verbatim string value>'}}`
3. Attribute - currently ignored and not expose to the Lua parser, another issue will be open to decide how to expose it.
Tests were added to check resp3 reply parsing on Lua
### Modules API Additions
The reply parsing code on `module.c` was also removed and the new resp_parser is used instead.
In addition, the RedisModuleCallReply was also extracted to a separate unit located on `call_reply.c`
(in the future, this unit will also be used by Redis Function). A nice side effect of unified parsing is
that modules now also support resp3. Resp3 can be enabled by giving `3` as a parameter to the
fmt argument of `RM_Call`. It is also possible to give `0`, which will indicate an auto mode. i.e, Redis
will automatically chose the reply protocol base on the current client set on the RedisModuleCtx
(this mode will mostly be used when the module want to pass the reply to the client as is).
In addition, the following RedisModuleAPI were added to allow analyzing resp3 replies:
* New RedisModuleCallReply types:
* `REDISMODULE_REPLY_MAP`
* `REDISMODULE_REPLY_SET`
* `REDISMODULE_REPLY_BOOL`
* `REDISMODULE_REPLY_DOUBLE`
* `REDISMODULE_REPLY_BIG_NUMBER`
* `REDISMODULE_REPLY_VERBATIM_STRING`
* `REDISMODULE_REPLY_ATTRIBUTE`
* New RedisModuleAPI:
* `RedisModule_CallReplyDouble` - getting double value from resp3 double reply
* `RedisModule_CallReplyBool` - getting boolean value from resp3 boolean reply
* `RedisModule_CallReplyBigNumber` - getting big number value from resp3 big number reply
* `RedisModule_CallReplyVerbatim` - getting format and value from resp3 verbatim reply
* `RedisModule_CallReplySetElement` - getting element from resp3 set reply
* `RedisModule_CallReplyMapElement` - getting key and value from resp3 map reply
* `RedisModule_CallReplyAttribute` - getting a reply attribute
* `RedisModule_CallReplyAttributeElement` - getting key and value from resp3 attribute reply
* New context flags:
* `REDISMODULE_CTX_FLAGS_RESP3` - indicate that the client is using resp3
Tests were added to check the new RedisModuleAPI
### Modules API Changes
* RM_ReplyWithCallReply might return REDISMODULE_ERR if the given CallReply is in resp3
but the client expects resp2. This is not a breaking change because in order to get a resp3
CallReply one needs to specifically specify `3` as a parameter to the fmt argument of
`RM_Call` (as mentioned above).
Tests were added to check this change
### More small Additions
* Added `debug set-disable-deny-scripts` that allows to turn on and off the commands no-script
flag protection. This is used by the Lua resp3 tests so it will be possible to run `debug protocol`
and check the resp3 parsing code.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: Yossi Gottlieb <yossigo@gmail.com>
Add SINTERCARD and ZINTERCARD commands that are similar to
ZINTER and SINTER but only return the cardinality with minimum
processing and memory overheads.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Add NX, XX, GT, and LT flags to EXPIRE, PEXPIRE, EXPIREAT, PEXAPIREAT.
- NX - only modify the TTL if no TTL is currently set
- XX - only modify the TTL if there is a TTL currently set
- GT - only increase the TTL (considering non-volatile keys as infinite expire time)
- LT - only decrease the TTL (considering non-volatile keys as infinite expire time)
return value of the command is 0 when the operation was skipped due to one of these flags.
Signed-off-by: Ning Sun <sunng@protonmail.com>
Fixes:
- When a consumer is created as a side effect, redis didn't issue a keyspace notification,
nor incremented the server.dirty (affects periodic snapshots).
this was a bug in XREADGROUP, XCLAIM, and XAUTOCLAIM.
- When attempting to delete a non-existent consumer, don't issue a keyspace notification
and don't increment server.dirty
this was a bug in XGROUP DELCONSUMER
Other changes:
- Changed streamLookupConsumer() to always only do lookup consumer (never do implicit creation),
Its last seen time is updated unless the SLC_NO_REFRESH flag is specified.
- Added streamCreateConsumer() to create a new consumer. When the creation is successful,
it will notify and dirty++ unless the SCC_NO_NOTIFY or SCC_NO_DIRTIFY flags is specified.
- Changed streamDelConsumer() to always only do delete consumer.
- Added keyspace notifications tests about stream events.
With an empty src key, we need to deal with two situations:
1. non-STORE: We should return emptyarray.
2. STORE: Try to delete the store key and return 0.
This applies to both GEOSEARCHSTORE (new to v6.2), and
also GEORADIUS STORE (which was broken since forever)
This pr try to fix#9261. i.e. both STORE variants would have behaved
like the non-STORE variants when the source key was missing,
returning an empty array and not deleting the destination key,
instead of returning 0, and deleting the destination key.
Also add more tests for some commands.
- GEORADIUS: wrong type src key, non existing src key, empty search,
store with non existing src key, store with empty search
- GEORADIUSBYMEMBER: wrong type src key, non existing src key,
non existing member, store with non existing src key
- GEOSEARCH: wrong type src key, non existing src key, empty search,
frommember with non existing member
- GEOSEARCHSTORE: wrong type key, non existing src key,
fromlonlat with empty search, frommember with non existing member
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
GETBIT, SETBIT may access wrong address because of wrap.
BITCOUNT and BITPOS may return wrapped results.
BITFIELD may access the wrong address but also allocate insufficient memory and segfault (see CVE-2021-32761).
This commit uses `uint64_t` or `long long` instead of `size_t`.
related https://github.com/redis/redis/pull/8096
At 32bit platform:
> setbit bit 4294967295 1
(integer) 0
> config set proto-max-bulk-len 536870913
OK
> append bit "\xFF"
(integer) 536870913
> getbit bit 4294967296
(integer) 0
When the bit index is larger than 4294967295, size_t can't hold bit index. In the past, `proto-max-bulk-len` is limit to 536870912, so there is no problem.
After this commit, bit position is stored in `uint64_t` or `long long`. So when `proto-max-bulk-len > 536870912`, 32bit platforms can still be correct.
For 64bit platform, this problem still exists. The major reason is bit pos 8 times of byte pos. When proto-max-bulk-len is very larger, bit pos may overflow.
But at 64bit platform, we don't have so long string. So this bug may never happen.
Additionally this commit add a test cost `512MB` memory which is tag as `large-memory`. Make freebsd ci and valgrind ci ignore this test.
- promote the code in DEBUG PROTOCOL to addReplyBigNum
- DEBUG PROTOCOL ATTRIB skips the attribute when client is RESP2
- networking.c addReply for push and attributes generate assertion when
called on a RESP2 client, anything else would produce a broken
protocol that clients can't handle.
There are two issues fixed in this commit:
1. we want to fail the EXEC command in case there is a watched key that's logically
expired but not yet deleted by active expire or lazy expire.
2. we saw that currently cache time is update in every `call()` (including nested calls),
this time is being also being use for the isKeyExpired comparison, we want to update
the cache time only in the first call (execCommand)
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
due to a copy-paste bug, it used to reply with null response rather than empty array.
this commit includes new tests that are looking at the RESP response directly in
order to be able to tell the difference between them.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Modules that use background threads with thread safe contexts are likely
to use RM_BlockClient() without a timeout function, because they do not
set up a timeout.
Before this commit, `CLIENT UNBLOCK` would result with a crash as the
`NULL` timeout callback is called. Beyond just crashing, this is also
logically wrong as it may throw the module into an unexpected client
state.
This commits makes `CLIENT UNBLOCK` on such clients behave the same as
any other client that is not in a blocked state and therefore cannot be
unblocked.
Return a bad score when used with negative count (or count of 1), and non-ziplist encoded zset.
Also add test to validate the return value and cover the issue.
In the past, the first bind address that was explicitly specified was
also used to bind outgoing connections. This could result with some
problems. For example: on some systems using `bind 127.0.0.1` would
result with outgoing connections also binding to `127.0.0.1` and failing
to connect to remote addresses.
With the recent change to the way `bind` is handled, this presented
other issues:
* The default first bind address is '*' which is not a valid address.
* We make no distinction between user-supplied config that is identical
to the default, and the default config.
This commit addresses both these issues by introducing an explicit
configuration parameter to control the bind address on outgoing
connections.
* Specifying an empty `bind ""` configuration prevents Redis from listening on any TCP port. Before this commit, such configuration was not accepted.
* Using `CONFIG GET bind` will always return an explicit configuration value. Before this commit, if a bind address was not specified the returned value was empty (which was an anomaly).
Another behavior change is that modifying the `bind` configuration to a non-default value will NO LONGER DISABLE protected-mode implicitly.
Previously, passing 0 for newlen would not truncate the string at all.
This adds handling of this case, freeing the old string and creating a new empty string.
Other changes:
- Move `src/modules/testmodule.c` to `tests/modules/basics.c`
- Introduce that basic test into the test suite
- Add tests to cover StringTruncate
- Add `test-modules` build target for the main makefile
- Extend `distclean` build target to clean modules too
The `Tracking gets notification of expired keys` test in tracking.tcl
used to hung in valgrind CI quite a lot.
It turns out the reason is that with valgrind and a busy machine, the
server cron active expire cycle could easily run in the same event loop
as the command that created `mykey`, so that when they key got expired,
there were two change events to broadcast, one that set the key and one
that expired it, but since we used raxTryInsert, the client that was
associated with the "last" change was the one that created the key, so
the NOLOOP filtered that event.
This commit adds a test that reproduces the problem by using lazy expire
in a multi-exec which makes sure the key expires in the same event loop
as the one that added it.
Fix test failure which introduced by #9003.
The following case will occur when querybuf expansion will allocate memory equal to (16*1024)k.
1) make use ```CFLAGS=-DNO_MALLOC_USABLE_SIZE```.
2) ```malloc``` will not allocate more under ```alpine```.
Create new module type enhanced callbacks: mem_usage2, free_effort2, unlink2, copy2.
These will be given a context point from which the module can obtain the key name and database id.
In addition the digest and defrag context can now be used to obtain the key name and database id.
When using RESP3, ZPOPMAX/ZPOPMIN should return nested arrays for consistency
with other commands (e.g. ZRANGE).
We do that only when COUNT argument is present (similarly to how LPOP behaves).
for reasoning see https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/8824#issuecomment-855427955
This is a breaking change only when RESP3 is used, and COUNT argument is present!
The initialize memory of `querybuf` is `PROTO_IOBUF_LEN(1024*16) * 2` (due to sdsMakeRoomFor being greedy), under `jemalloc`, the allocated memory will be 40k.
This will most likely result in the `querybuf` being resized when call `clientsCronResizeQueryBuffer` unless the client requests it fast enough.
Note that this bug existed even before #7875, since the condition for resizing includes the sds headers (32k+6).
## Changes
1. Use non-greedy sdsMakeRoomFor when allocating the initial query buffer (of 16k).
1. Also use non-greedy allocation when working with BIG_ARG (we won't use that extra space anyway)
2. in case we did use a greedy allocation, read as much as we can into the buffer we got (including internal frag), to reduce system calls.
3. introduce a dedicated constant for the shrinking (same value as before)
3. Add test for querybuf.
4. improve a maxmemory test by ignoring the effect of replica query buffers (can accumulate many ACKs on slow env)
5. improve a maxmemory by disabling slowlog (it will cause slight memory growth on slow env).
SINTERSTORE would have deleted the dest key right away,
even when later on it is bound to fail on an (WRONGTYPE) error.
With this change it first picks up all the input keys, and only later
delete the dest key if one is empty.
Also add more tests for some commands.
Mainly focus on
- `wrong type error`:
expand test case (base on sinter bug) in non-store variant
add tests for store variant (although it exists in non-store variant, i think it would be better to have same tests)
- the dstkey result when we meet `non-exist key (empty set)` in *store
sdiff:
- improve test case about wrong type error (the one we found in sinter, although it is safe in sdiff)
- add test about using non-exist key (treat it like an empty set)
sdiffstore:
- according to sdiff test case, also add some tests about `wrong type error` and `non-exist key`
- the different is that in sdiffstore, we will consider the `dstkey` result
sunion/sunionstore add more tests (same as above)
sinter/sinterstore also same as above ...
The root cause is that one test (`5 keys in, 5 keys out`) is leaking a volatile key
that can expire while another later test(`All TTL in commands are propagated
as absolute timestamp in replication stream`) is running.
Such leaked expiration injects an unexpected `DEL` command into the
replication command during the later test, causing it to fail.
The fixes are two fold:
1. Plug the leak in the first test.
2. Add FLUSHALL to the later test, to avoid future interference from other tests.
This PR adds a spell checker CI action that will fail future PRs if they introduce typos and spelling mistakes.
This spell checker is based on blacklist of common spelling mistakes, so it will not catch everything,
but at least it is also unlikely to cause false positives.
Besides that, the PR also fixes many spelling mistakes and types, not all are a result of the spell checker we use.
Here's a summary of other changes:
1. Scanned the entire source code and fixes all sorts of typos and spelling mistakes (including missing or extra spaces).
2. Outdated function / variable / argument names in comments
3. Fix outdated keyspace masks error log when we check `config.notify-keyspace-events` in loadServerConfigFromString.
4. Trim the white space at the end of line in `module.c`. Check: https://github.com/redis/redis/pull/7751
5. Some outdated https link URLs.
6. Fix some outdated comment. Such as:
- In README: about the rdb, we used to said create a `thread`, change to `process`
- dbRandomKey function coment (about the dictGetRandomKey, change to dictGetFairRandomKey)
- notifyKeyspaceEvent fucntion comment (add type arg)
- Some others minor fix in comment (Most of them are incorrectly quoted by variable names)
7. Modified the error log so that users can easily distinguish between TCP and TLS in `changeBindAddr`
This commit revives the improves the ability to run the test suite against
external servers, instead of launching and managing `redis-server` processes as
part of the test fixture.
This capability existed in the past, using the `--host` and `--port` options.
However, it was quite limited and mostly useful when running a specific tests.
Attempting to run larger chunks of the test suite experienced many issues:
* Many tests depend on being able to start and control `redis-server` themselves,
and there's no clear distinction between external server compatible and other
tests.
* Cluster mode is not supported (resulting with `CROSSSLOT` errors).
This PR cleans up many things and makes it possible to run the entire test suite
against an external server. It also provides more fine grained controls to
handle cases where the external server supports a subset of the Redis commands,
limited number of databases, cluster mode, etc.
The tests directory now contains a `README.md` file that describes how this
works.
This commit also includes additional cleanups and fixes:
* Tests can now be tagged.
* Tag-based selection is now unified across `start_server`, `tags` and `test`.
* More information is provided about skipped or ignored tests.
* Repeated patterns in tests have been extracted to common procedures, both at a
global level and on a per-test file basis.
* Cleaned up some cases where test setup was based on a previous test executing
(a major anti-pattern that repeats itself in many places).
* Cleaned up some cases where test teardown was not part of a test (in the
future we should have dedicated teardown code that executes even when tests
fail).
* Fixed some tests that were flaky running on external servers.
Till now GET and NX were mutually exclusive.
This change make their combination mean a "Get or Set" command.
If the key exists it returns the old value and avoids setting,
and if it does't exist it returns nil and sets it to the new value (possibly with expiry time)
The decision to stop trimming due to LIMIT in XADD and XTRIM was after the limit was reached.
i.e. the code was deleting **at least** that count of records (from the LIMIT argument's perspective, not the MAXLEN),
instead of **up to** that count of records.
see #9046
The test that was merged yesterday fails with valgrind and freebsd CI
that are too slow, and 10 seconds apparently passed between the time the
command was sent to redis and the time it was actually executed.
```
*** [err]: All TTL in commands are propagated as absolute timestamp in replication stream in tests/unit/expire.tcl
Expected 'del a' to match 'set foo1 bar PXAT *' (context: type source line 778 file /home/runner/work/redis/redis/tests/test_helper.tcl cmd {assert_match [lindex $patterns $j] [read_from_replication_stream $s]} proc ::assert_replication_stream level 1)
```
Till now, on replica full-sync we used to transfer absolute time for TTL,
however when a command arrived (EXPIRE or EXPIREAT),
we used to propagate it as is to replicas (possibly with relative time),
but always translate it to EXPIREAT (absolute time) to AOF.
This commit changes that and will always use absolute time for propagation.
see discussion in #8433
Furthermore, we Introduce new commands: `EXPIRETIME/PEXPIRETIME`
that allow extracting the absolute TTL time from a key.
When test stop 'load handler' by killing the process that generating the load,
some commands that already in the input buffer, still might be processed by the server.
This may cause some instability in tests, that count on that no more commands
processed after we stop the `load handler'
In this commit, new proc 'wait_load_handlers_disconnected' added, to verify that no more
cammands from any 'load handler' prossesed, by checking that the clients who
genreate the load is disconnceted.
Also, replacing check of dbsize with wait_for_ofs_sync before comparing debug digest, as
it would fail in case the last key the workload wrote was an overridden key (not a new one).
Affected tests
Race fix:
- failover command to specific replica works
- Connect multiple replicas at the same time (issue #141), master diskless=$mdl, replica diskless=$sdl
- AOF rewrite during write load: RDB preamble=$rdbpre
Cleanup and speedup:
- Test replication with blocking lists and sorted sets operations
- Test replication with parallel clients writing in different DBs
- Test replication partial resync: $descr (diskless: $mdl, $sdl, reconnect: $reconnect
I recently saw this failure:
[err]: lazy free a stream with all types of metadata in tests/unit/lazyfree.tcl
Expected '2' to be equal to '1' (context: type eval line 23 cmd {assert_equal [s lazyfreed_objects] 1} proc ::test)
The only explanation for such a thing is that the async flushdb wasn't
done before we did the resetstat
When client breached the output buffer soft limit but then went idle,
we didn't disconnect on soft limit timeout, now we do.
Note this also resolves some sporadic test failures in due to Linux
buffering data which caused tests to fail if during the test we went
back under the soft COB limit.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: sundb <sundbcn@gmail.com>