The SHUTDOWN command has various flags to change it's default behavior,
but in some cases establishing a connection to redis is complicated and it's easier
for the management software to use signals. however, so far the signals could only
trigger the default shutdown behavior.
Here we introduce the option to control shutdown arguments for SIGTERM and SIGINT.
New config options:
`shutdown-on-sigint [nosave | save] [now] [force]`
`shutdown-on-sigterm [nosave | save] [now] [force]`
Implementation:
Support MULTI_ARG_CONFIG on createEnumConfig to support multiple enums to be applied as bit flags.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Adds the `allow-cross-slot-keys` flag to Eval scripts and Functions to allow
scripts to access keys from multiple slots.
The default behavior is now that they are not allowed to do that (unlike before).
This is a breaking change for 7.0 release candidates (to be part of 7.0.0), but
not for previous redis releases since EVAL without shebang isn't doing this check.
Note that the check is done on both the keys declared by the EVAL / FCALL command
arguments, and also the ones used by the script when making a `redis.call`.
A note about the implementation, there seems to have been some confusion
about allowing access to non local keys. I thought I missed something in our
wider conversation, but Redis scripts do block access to non-local keys.
So the issue was just about cross slots being accessed.
1. Disk error and slave count checks didn't flag the transactions or counted correctly in command stats (regression from #10372 , 7.0 RC3)
2. RM_Call will reply the same way Redis does, in case of non-exisitng command or arity error
3. RM_WrongArtiy will consider the full command name
4. Use lowercase 'u' in "unknonw subcommand" (to align with "unknown command")
Followup work of #10127
This case is interesting because it originates from cron,
rather than from another command.
The idea came from looking at #9890 and #10573, and I was wondering if RM_Call
would work properly when `server.current_client == NULL`
* Fix timing issue in slowlog redact test
This test failed once in my daily CI (test-sanitizer-address (clang))
```
*** [err]: SLOWLOG - Some commands can redact sensitive fields in tests/unit/slowlog.tcl
Expected 'migrate 127.0.0.1 25649 key 9 5000 AUTH2 (redacted) (redacted)' to match '* key 9 5000 AUTH (redacted)' (context: type eval line 12 cmd {assert_match {* key 9 5000 AUTH (redacted)} [lindex [lindex [r slowlog get] 1] 3]} proc ::test)
```
The reason is that with slowlog-log-slower-than 10000,
slowlog get will have a chance to exceed 10ms.
Change slowlog-log-slower-than from 10000 to -1, disable it.
Also handles a same potentially problematic test above.
This is actually the same timing issue as #10432.
But also avoid repeated calls to `SLOWLOG GET`
Add a configuration option to attach an operating system-specific identifier to Redis sockets, supporting advanced network configurations using iptables (Linux) or ipfw (FreeBSD).
RM_Yield was missing a call to protectClient to prevent redis from
processing future commands of the yielding client.
Adding tests that fail without this fix.
This would be complicated to solve since nested calls to RM_Call used to
replace the current_client variable with the module temp client.
It looks like it's no longer necessary to do that, since it was added
back in #9890 to solve two issues, both already gone:
1. call to CONFIG SET maxmemory could trigger a module hook calling
RM_Call. although this specific issue is gone, arguably other hooks
like keyspace notification, can do the same.
2. an assertion in lookupKey that checks the current command of the
current client, introduced in #9572 and removed in #10248
since PUBLISH and SPUBLISH use different dictionaries for channels and clients,
and we already have an API for PUBLISH, it only makes sense to have one for SPUBLISH
Add test coverage and unifying some test infrastructure.
The tests verify that loading a binary payload to the Lua interpreter raises an error.
The Lua code modification was done here: fdf9d45509
which force the Lau interpreter to always use the text parser.
Add APIs to allow modules to compute the memory consumption of opaque objects owned by redis.
Without these, the mem_usage callbacks of module data types are useless in many cases.
Other changes:
Fix streamRadixTreeMemoryUsage to include the size of the rax structure itself
By the convention of errors, there is supposed to be a space between the code and the name.
While looking at some lua stuff I noticed that interpreter errors were not adding the space,
so some clients will try to map the detailed error message into the error.
We have tests that hit this condition, but they were just checking that the string "starts" with ERR.
I updated some other tests with similar incorrect string checking. This isn't complete though, as
there are other ways we check for ERR I didn't fix.
Produces some fun output like:
```
# Errorstats
errorstat_ERR:count=1
errorstat_ERRuser_script_1_:count=1
```
Add an optional keyspace event when new keys are added to the db.
This is useful for applications where clients need to be aware of the redis keyspace.
Such an application can SCAN once at startup and then listen for "new" events (plus
others associated with DEL, RENAME, etc).
Allow specifying an ACL log reason, which is shown in the log. Right now it always shows "unknown", which is a little bit cryptic. This is a breaking change, but this API was added as part of 7 so it seems ok to stabilize it still.
Add field to COMMAND DOCS response to denote the name of the module
that added that command.
COMMAND LIST can filter by module, but if you get the full commands list,
you may still wanna know which command belongs to which module.
The alternative would be to do MODULE LIST, and then multiple calls to COMMAND LIST
The bug was when using REDISMODULE_YIELD_FLAG_CLIENTS.
in that case we would have only set the CLIENTS type flag in
server.busy_module_yield_flags and then clear that flag when exiting
RM_Yield, so we would never call unblockPostponedClients when the
context is destroyed.
This didn't really have any actual implication, which is why the tests
couldn't (and still can't) find that since the bug only happens when
using CLIENT, but in this case we won't have any clients to un-postpone
i.e. clients will get rejected with BUSY error, rather than being
postponed.
Unrelated:
* Adding tests for nested contexts, just in case.
* Avoid nested RM_Yield calls
Fixed a bug that used the `hincrbyfloat` or `hincrby` commands to make the field or value exceed the
`hash_max_listpack_value` but did not change the object encoding of the hash structure.
Add a length check for field and value, check the length of value first, if the length of value does not
exceed `hash_max_listpack_value` then check the length of field.
If the length of field or value is too long, it will reduce the efficiency of listpack, and the object encoding
will become hashtable after AOF restart, so this is also to keep the same before and after AOF restart.
## Move library meta data to be part of the library payload.
Following the discussion on https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/10429 and the intention to add (in the future) library versioning support, we believe that the entire library metadata (like name and engine) should be part of the library payload and not provided by the `FUNCTION LOAD` command. The reasoning behind this is that the programmer who developed the library should be the one who set those values (name, engine, and in the future also version). **It is not the responsibility of the admin who load the library into the database.**
The PR moves all the library metadata (engine and function name) to be part of the library payload. The metadata needs to be provided on the first line of the payload using the shebang format (`#!<engine> name=<name>`), example:
```lua
#!lua name=test
redis.register_function('foo', function() return 1 end)
```
The above script will run on the Lua engine and will create a library called `test`.
## API Changes (compare to 7.0 rc2)
* `FUNCTION LOAD` command was change and now it simply gets the library payload and extract the engine and name from the payload. In addition, the command will now return the function name which can later be used on `FUNCTION DELETE` and `FUNCTION LIST`.
* The description field was completely removed from`FUNCTION LOAD`, and `FUNCTION LIST`
## Breaking Changes (compare to 7.0 rc2)
* Library description was removed (we can re-add it in the future either as part of the shebang line or an additional line).
* Loading an AOF file that was generated by either 7.0 rc1 or 7.0 rc2 will fail because the old command syntax is invalid.
## Notes
* Loading an RDB file that was generated by rc1 / rc2 **is** supported, Redis will automatically add the shebang to the libraries payloads (we can probably delete that code after 7.0.3 or so since there's no need to keep supporting upgrades from an RC build).
If, for some reason, Redis decides not to execute the script, we need
to pop the function and error handler from Lua stack. Otherwise, eventually
the Lua stack will explode.
Relevant only for 7.0-rc1 and 7.0-rc2.
* Fix race condition where node loses its last slot and turns into replica
When a node has lost its last slot and finds out from the SETSLOT command
before the cluster bus PONG from the new owner arrives. In this case, the
node didn't turn itself into a replica of the new slot owner.
This commit adds the same logic to the SETSLOT command as already exists
for the cluster bus PONG processing.
* Revert "Fix new / failing cluster slot migration test (#10482)"
This reverts commit 0b21ef8d49.
In this test, the old slot owner finds out that it has lost its last
slot in a nondeterministic way. Either the cluster bus PONG from the
new slot owner and sometimes in a SETSLOT command from redis-cli. In
both cases, the result should be the same and the old owner should
turn itself into a replica of the new slot owner.
Fix global `strval` not reset to NULL after being freed, causing a crash on alpine
(most likely because the dynamic library loader doesn't init globals on reload)
By the way, fix the memory leak of using `RedisModule_Free` to free `RedisModuleString`,
and add a corresponding test.
This feature adds the ability to add four different types (Bool, Numeric,
String, Enum) of configurations to a module to be accessed via the redis
config file, and the CONFIG command.
**Configuration Names**:
We impose a restriction that a module configuration always starts with the
module name and contains a '.' followed by the config name. If a module passes
"config1" as the name to a register function, it will be registered as MODULENAME.config1.
**Configuration Persistence**:
Module Configurations exist only as long as a module is loaded. If a module is
unloaded, the configurations are removed.
There is now also a minimal core API for removal of standardConfig objects
from configs by name.
**Get and Set Callbacks**:
Storage of config values is owned by the module that registers them, and provides
callbacks for Redis to access and manipulate the values.
This is exposed through a GET and SET callback.
The get callback returns a typed value of the config to redis. The callback takes
the name of the configuration, and also a privdata pointer. Note that these only
take the CONFIGNAME portion of the config, not the entire MODULENAME.CONFIGNAME.
```
typedef RedisModuleString * (*RedisModuleConfigGetStringFunc)(const char *name, void *privdata);
typedef long long (*RedisModuleConfigGetNumericFunc)(const char *name, void *privdata);
typedef int (*RedisModuleConfigGetBoolFunc)(const char *name, void *privdata);
typedef int (*RedisModuleConfigGetEnumFunc)(const char *name, void *privdata);
```
Configs must also must specify a set callback, i.e. what to do on a CONFIG SET XYZ 123
or when loading configurations from cli/.conf file matching these typedefs. *name* is
again just the CONFIGNAME portion, *val* is the parsed value from the core,
*privdata* is the registration time privdata pointer, and *err* is for providing errors to a client.
```
typedef int (*RedisModuleConfigSetStringFunc)(const char *name, RedisModuleString *val, void *privdata, RedisModuleString **err);
typedef int (*RedisModuleConfigSetNumericFunc)(const char *name, long long val, void *privdata, RedisModuleString **err);
typedef int (*RedisModuleConfigSetBoolFunc)(const char *name, int val, void *privdata, RedisModuleString **err);
typedef int (*RedisModuleConfigSetEnumFunc)(const char *name, int val, void *privdata, RedisModuleString **err);
```
Modules can also specify an optional apply callback that will be called after
value(s) have been set via CONFIG SET:
```
typedef int (*RedisModuleConfigApplyFunc)(RedisModuleCtx *ctx, void *privdata, RedisModuleString **err);
```
**Flags:**
We expose 7 new flags to the module, which are used as part of the config registration.
```
#define REDISMODULE_CONFIG_MODIFIABLE 0 /* This is the default for a module config. */
#define REDISMODULE_CONFIG_IMMUTABLE (1ULL<<0) /* Can this value only be set at startup? */
#define REDISMODULE_CONFIG_SENSITIVE (1ULL<<1) /* Does this value contain sensitive information */
#define REDISMODULE_CONFIG_HIDDEN (1ULL<<4) /* This config is hidden in `config get <pattern>` (used for tests/debugging) */
#define REDISMODULE_CONFIG_PROTECTED (1ULL<<5) /* Becomes immutable if enable-protected-configs is enabled. */
#define REDISMODULE_CONFIG_DENY_LOADING (1ULL<<6) /* This config is forbidden during loading. */
/* Numeric Specific Configs */
#define REDISMODULE_CONFIG_MEMORY (1ULL<<7) /* Indicates if this value can be set as a memory value */
```
**Module Registration APIs**:
```
int (*RedisModule_RegisterBoolConfig)(RedisModuleCtx *ctx, char *name, int default_val, unsigned int flags, RedisModuleConfigGetBoolFunc getfn, RedisModuleConfigSetBoolFunc setfn, RedisModuleConfigApplyFunc applyfn, void *privdata);
int (*RedisModule_RegisterNumericConfig)(RedisModuleCtx *ctx, const char *name, long long default_val, unsigned int flags, long long min, long long max, RedisModuleConfigGetNumericFunc getfn, RedisModuleConfigSetNumericFunc setfn, RedisModuleConfigApplyFunc applyfn, void *privdata);
int (*RedisModule_RegisterStringConfig)(RedisModuleCtx *ctx, const char *name, const char *default_val, unsigned int flags, RedisModuleConfigGetStringFunc getfn, RedisModuleConfigSetStringFunc setfn, RedisModuleConfigApplyFunc applyfn, void *privdata);
int (*RedisModule_RegisterEnumConfig)(RedisModuleCtx *ctx, const char *name, int default_val, unsigned int flags, const char **enum_values, const int *int_values, int num_enum_vals, RedisModuleConfigGetEnumFunc getfn, RedisModuleConfigSetEnumFunc setfn, RedisModuleConfigApplyFunc applyfn, void *privdata);
int (*RedisModule_LoadConfigs)(RedisModuleCtx *ctx);
```
The module name will be auto appended along with a "." to the front of the name of the config.
**What RM_Register[...]Config does**:
A RedisModule struct now keeps a list of ModuleConfig objects which look like:
```
typedef struct ModuleConfig {
sds name; /* Name of config without the module name appended to the front */
void *privdata; /* Optional data passed into the module config callbacks */
union get_fn { /* The get callback specificed by the module */
RedisModuleConfigGetStringFunc get_string;
RedisModuleConfigGetNumericFunc get_numeric;
RedisModuleConfigGetBoolFunc get_bool;
RedisModuleConfigGetEnumFunc get_enum;
} get_fn;
union set_fn { /* The set callback specified by the module */
RedisModuleConfigSetStringFunc set_string;
RedisModuleConfigSetNumericFunc set_numeric;
RedisModuleConfigSetBoolFunc set_bool;
RedisModuleConfigSetEnumFunc set_enum;
} set_fn;
RedisModuleConfigApplyFunc apply_fn;
RedisModule *module;
} ModuleConfig;
```
It also registers a standardConfig in the configs array, with a pointer to the
ModuleConfig object associated with it.
**What happens on a CONFIG GET/SET MODULENAME.MODULECONFIG:**
For CONFIG SET, we do the same parsing as is done in config.c and pass that
as the argument to the module set callback. For CONFIG GET, we call the
module get callback and return that value to config.c to return to a client.
**CONFIG REWRITE**:
Starting up a server with module configurations in a .conf file but no module load
directive will fail. The flip side is also true, specifying a module load and a bunch
of module configurations will load those configurations in using the module defined
set callbacks on a RM_LoadConfigs call. Configs being rewritten works the same
way as it does for standard configs, as the module has the ability to specify a
default value. If a module is unloaded with configurations specified in the .conf file
those configurations will be commented out from the .conf file on the next config rewrite.
**RM_LoadConfigs:**
`RedisModule_LoadConfigs(RedisModuleCtx *ctx);`
This last API is used to make configs available within the onLoad() after they have
been registered. The expected usage is that a module will register all of its configs,
then call LoadConfigs to trigger all of the set callbacks, and then can error out if any
of them were malformed. LoadConfigs will attempt to set all configs registered to
either a .conf file argument/loadex argument or their default value if an argument is
not specified. **LoadConfigs is a required function if configs are registered.
** Also note that LoadConfigs **does not** call the apply callbacks, but a module
can do that directly after the LoadConfigs call.
**New Command: MODULE LOADEX [CONFIG NAME VALUE] [ARGS ...]:**
This command provides the ability to provide startup context information to a module.
LOADEX stands for "load extended" similar to GETEX. Note that provided config
names need the full MODULENAME.MODULECONFIG name. Any additional
arguments a module might want are intended to be specified after ARGS.
Everything after ARGS is passed to onLoad as RedisModuleString **argv.
Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <matolson@amazon.com>
Co-authored-by: sundb <sundbcn@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <34459052+madolson@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: Yossi Gottlieb <yossigo@gmail.com>
There are a few places that use a hard coded const of 128 to allocate a buffer for d2string.
Replace these with a clear macro.
Note that In theory, converting double into string could take as much as nearly 400 chars,
but since d2string uses `%g` and not `%f`, it won't pass some 40 chars.
unrelated:
restore some changes to auto generated commands.c that got accidentally reverted in #10293
#10381 fixed an issue in `redis-cli --cluster reshard` that used to fail it (redis-cli) because
of a race condition.
the race condition is / was that when moving the last slot from a node, sometimes the PONG
messages delivering the configuration change arrive to that node before the SETSLOT arrives
to it, and it becomes a replica.
other times the the SETSLOT arrive first, and then PONG **doesn't** demote it.
**however**, the PR also added a new test that suffers from exactly the same race condition,
and the tests started failing a lot.
The fact is (if i understand it correctly), that this test (the one being deleted here), isn't related
to the fix that PR fixed (which was to fix redis-cli).
The race condition in the cluster code still happens, and as long as we don't solve it, there's
no reason to test it.
For now, even if my understandings are wrong, i'm gonna delete that failing test, since as far as
i understand, #10381 didn't introduce any new risks for that matter (which are gonna be
compromised by removing this check), this race existed since forever, and still exists, and the
fact that redis-cli is now immune to it is still being tested.
Additional work should be carried to fix it, and i live it for other PRs to handle.
The PR extends RM_Call with 3 new capabilities using new flags that
are given to RM_Call as part of the `fmt` argument.
It aims to assist modules that are getting a list of commands to be
executed from the user (not hard coded as part of the module logic),
think of a module that implements a new scripting language...
* `S` - Run the command in a script mode, this means that it will raise an
error if a command which are not allowed inside a script (flaged with the
`deny-script` flag) is invoked (like SHUTDOWN). In addition, on script mode,
write commands are not allowed if there is not enough good replicas (as
configured with `min-replicas-to-write`) and/or a disk error happened.
* `W` - no writes mode, Redis will reject any command that is marked with `write`
flag. Again can be useful to modules that implement a new scripting language
and wants to prevent any write commands.
* `E` - Return errors as RedisModuleCallReply. Today the errors that happened
before the command was invoked (like unknown commands or acl error) return
a NULL reply and set errno. This might be missing important information about
the failure and it is also impossible to just pass the error to the user using
RM_ReplyWithCallReply. This new flag allows you to get a RedisModuleCallReply
object with the relevant error message and treat it as if it was an error that was
raised by the command invocation.
Tests were added to verify the new code paths.
In addition small refactoring was done to share some code between modules,
scripts, and `processCommand` function:
1. `getAclErrorMessage` was added to `acl.c` to unified to log message extraction
from the acl result
2. `checkGoodReplicasStatus` was added to `replication.c` to check the status of
good replicas. It is used on `scriptVerifyWriteCommandAllow`, `RM_Call`, and
`processCommand`.
3. `writeCommandsGetDiskErrorMessage` was added to `server.c` to get the error
message on persistence failure. Again it is used on `scriptVerifyWriteCommandAllow`,
`RM_Call`, and `processCommand`.
fix#10439. see https://github.com/redis/redis/pull/9872
When executing SHUTDOWN we pause the client so we can un-pause it
if the shutdown fails.
this could happen during the timeout, if the shutdown is aborted, but could
also happen from withing the initial `call()` to shutdown, if the rdb save fails.
in that case when we return to `call()`, we'll crash if `c->cmd` has been set to NULL.
The call stack is:
```
unblockClient(c)
replyToClientsBlockedOnShutdown()
cancelShutdown()
finishShutdown()
prepareForShutdown()
shutdownCommand()
```
what's special about SHUTDOWN in that respect is that it can be paused,
and then un-paused before the original `call()` returns.
tests where added for both failed shutdown, and a followup successful one.
When ::singledb is 0, we will use db 9 for the test db.
Since ::singledb is set to 1 in the cluster-related tests, but not restored, some subsequent
tests associated with db 9 will fail.
After migrating a slot, send CLUSTER SETSLOT NODE to the destination
node first to make sure the slot isn't left without an owner in case
the destination node crashes before it is set as new owner.
When informing the source node, it can happen that the destination
node has already informed it and if the source node has lost its
last slot, it has already turned itself into a replica. Redis-cli
should ignore this error in this case.
The new module redact test will fail with valgrind:
```
[err]: modules can redact arguments in tests/unit/moduleapi/auth.tcl
Expected 'slowlog reset' to be equal to 'auth.redact 1 (redacted) 3 (redacted)' (context: type eval line 12 cmd {assert_equal {slowlog reset} [lindex [lindex [r slowlog get] 2] 3]} proc ::test)
```
The reason is that with `slowlog-log-slower-than 10000`,
`slowlog get` will have a chance to exceed 10ms.
Made two changes to avoid failure:
1. change `slowlog-log-slower-than` from 10000 to -1, distable it.
2. assert to use the previous execution result.
In theory, the second one can actually be left unchanged, but i
think it will be better if it is changed.
Currently the sort and sort_ro can access external keys via `GET` and `BY`
in order to make sure the user cannot violate the authorization ACL
rules, the decision is to reject external keys access patterns unless ACL allows
SORT full access to all keys.
I.e. for backwards compatibility, SORT with GET/BY keeps working, but
if ACL has restrictions to certain keys, these features get permission denied.
### Implemented solution
We have discussed several potential solutions and decided to only allow the GET and BY
arguments when the user has all key permissions with the SORT command. The reasons
being that SORT with GET or BY is problematic anyway, for instance it is not supported in
cluster mode since it doesn't declare keys, and we're not sure the combination of that feature
with ACL key restriction is really required.
**HOWEVER** If in the fullness of time we will identify a real need for fine grain access
support for SORT, we would implement the complete solution which is the alternative
described below.
### Alternative (Completion solution):
Check sort ACL rules after executing it and before committing output (either via store or
to COB). it would require making several changes to the sort command itself. and would
potentially cause performance degradation since we will have to collect all the get keys
instead of just applying them to a temp array and then scan the access keys against the
ACL selectors. This solution can include an optimization to avoid the overheads of collecting
the key names, in case the ACL rules grant SORT full key-access, or if the ACL key pattern
literal matches the one used in GET/BY. It would also mean that authorization would be
O(nlogn) since we will have to complete most of the command execution before we can
perform verification
Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Deleting a stream while a client is blocked XREADGROUP should unblock the client.
The idea is that if a client is blocked via XREADGROUP is different from
any other blocking type in the sense that it depends on the existence of both
the key and the group. Even if the key is deleted and then revived with XADD
it won't help any clients blocked on XREADGROUP because the group no longer
exist, so they would fail with -NOGROUP anyway.
The conclusion is that it's better to unblock these clients (with error) upon
the deletion of the key, rather than waiting for the first XADD.
Other changes:
1. Slightly optimize all `serveClientsBlockedOn*` functions by checking `server.blocked_clients_by_type`
2. All `serveClientsBlockedOn*` functions now use a list iterator rather than looking at `listFirst`, relying
on `unblockClient` to delete the head of the list. Before this commit, only `serveClientsBlockedOnStreams`
used to work like that.
3. bugfix: CLIENT UNBLOCK ERROR should work even if the command doesn't have a timeout_callback
(only relevant to module commands)
In some special commands like eval_ro / fcall_ro we allow no-writes commands.
But may-replicate commands are no-writes too, that leads crash when client pause write:
`Expected '*table size: 4096*' to match '*table size: 8192*'`
This test failed once on daily macOS, the reason is because
the bgsave has not stopped after the kill and `after 200`.
So there is a child process and no rehash triggered.
This commit use `waitForBgsave` to wait for it to finish.
In order to resolve some flaky tests which hard rely on examine memory footprint.
we introduce the following fixes:
# Fix in client-eviction test - by @yoav-steinberg
Sometime the libc allocator can use different size client struct allocations.
this may cause unexpected memory calculations to fail the test.
# Introduce new DEBUG command for disabling reply buffer resizing
In order to eliminate reply buffer resizing during specific tests.
we introduced the ability to disable (and enable) the resizing cron job
Co-authored-by: yoav-steinberg yoav@redislabs.com
After introducing #9822 need to prevent client reply buffer shrink
to maintain correct client memory math.
add needs:debug missing one one test.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
This PR fix 2 issues on Lua scripting:
* Server error reply statistics (some errors were counted twice).
* Error code and error strings returning from scripts (error code was missing / misplaced).
## Statistics
a Lua script user is considered part of the user application, a sophisticated transaction,
so we want to count an error even if handled silently by the script, but when it is
propagated outwards from the script we don't wanna count it twice. on the other hand,
if the script decides to throw an error on its own (using `redis.error_reply`), we wanna
count that too.
Besides, we do count the `calls` in command statistics for the commands the script calls,
we we should certainly also count `failed_calls`.
So when a simple `eval "return redis.call('set','x','y')" 0` fails, it should count the failed call
to both SET and EVAL, but the `errorstats` and `total_error_replies` should be counted only once.
The PR changes the error object that is raised on errors. Instead of raising a simple Lua
string, Redis will raise a Lua table in the following format:
```
{
err='<error message (including error code)>',
source='<User source file name>',
line='<line where the error happned>',
ignore_error_stats_update=true/false,
}
```
The `luaPushError` function was modified to construct the new error table as describe above.
The `luaRaiseError` was renamed to `luaError` and is now simply called `lua_error` to raise
the table on the top of the Lua stack as the error object.
The reason is that since its functionality is changed, in case some Redis branch / fork uses it,
it's better to have a compilation error than a bug.
The `source` and `line` fields are enriched by the error handler (if possible) and the
`ignore_error_stats_update` is optional and if its not present then the default value is `false`.
If `ignore_error_stats_update` is true, the error will not be counted on the error stats.
When parsing Redis call reply, each error is translated to a Lua table on the format describe
above and the `ignore_error_stats_update` field is set to `true` so we will not count errors
twice (we counted this error when we invoke the command).
The changes in this PR might have been considered as a breaking change for users that used
Lua `pcall` function. Before, the error was a string and now its a table. To keep backward
comparability the PR override the `pcall` implementation and extract the error message from
the error table and return it.
Example of the error stats update:
```
127.0.0.1:6379> lpush l 1
(integer) 2
127.0.0.1:6379> eval "return redis.call('get', 'l')" 0
(error) WRONGTYPE Operation against a key holding the wrong kind of value. script: e471b73f1ef44774987ab00bdf51f21fd9f7974a, on @user_script:1.
127.0.0.1:6379> info Errorstats
# Errorstats
errorstat_WRONGTYPE:count=1
127.0.0.1:6379> info commandstats
# Commandstats
cmdstat_eval:calls=1,usec=341,usec_per_call=341.00,rejected_calls=0,failed_calls=1
cmdstat_info:calls=1,usec=35,usec_per_call=35.00,rejected_calls=0,failed_calls=0
cmdstat_lpush:calls=1,usec=14,usec_per_call=14.00,rejected_calls=0,failed_calls=0
cmdstat_get:calls=1,usec=10,usec_per_call=10.00,rejected_calls=0,failed_calls=1
```
## error message
We can now construct the error message (sent as a reply to the user) from the error table,
so this solves issues where the error message was malformed and the error code appeared
in the middle of the error message:
```diff
127.0.0.1:6379> eval "return redis.call('set','x','y')" 0
-(error) ERR Error running script (call to 71e6319f97b0fe8bdfa1c5df3ce4489946dda479): @user_script:1: OOM command not allowed when used memory > 'maxmemory'.
+(error) OOM command not allowed when used memory > 'maxmemory' @user_script:1. Error running script (call to 71e6319f97b0fe8bdfa1c5df3ce4489946dda479)
```
```diff
127.0.0.1:6379> eval "redis.call('get', 'l')" 0
-(error) ERR Error running script (call to f_8a705cfb9fb09515bfe57ca2bd84a5caee2cbbd1): @user_script:1: WRONGTYPE Operation against a key holding the wrong kind of value
+(error) WRONGTYPE Operation against a key holding the wrong kind of value script: 8a705cfb9fb09515bfe57ca2bd84a5caee2cbbd1, on @user_script:1.
```
Notica that `redis.pcall` was not change:
```
127.0.0.1:6379> eval "return redis.pcall('get', 'l')" 0
(error) WRONGTYPE Operation against a key holding the wrong kind of value
```
## other notes
Notice that Some commands (like GEOADD) changes the cmd variable on the client stats so we
can not count on it to update the command stats. In order to be able to update those stats correctly
we needed to promote `realcmd` variable to be located on the client struct.
Tests was added and modified to verify the changes.
Related PR's: #10279, #10218, #10278, #10309
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Adds the ability to track the lag of a consumer group (CG), that is, the number
of entries yet-to-be-delivered from the stream.
The proposed constant-time solution is in the spirit of "best-effort."
Partially addresses #8737.
## Description of approach
We add a new "entries_added" property to the stream. This starts at 0 for a new
stream and is incremented by 1 with every `XADD`. It is essentially an all-time
counter of the entries added to the stream.
Given the stream's length and this counter value, we can trivially find the logical
"entries_added" counter of the first ID if and only if the stream is contiguous.
A fragmented stream contains one or more tombstones generated by `XDEL`s.
The new "xdel_max_id" stream property tracks the latest tombstone.
The CG also tracks its last delivered ID's as an "entries_read" counter and
increments it independently when delivering new messages, unless the this
read counter is invalid (-1 means invalid offset). When the CG's counter is
available, the reported lag is the difference between added and read counters.
Lastly, this also adds a "first_id" field to the stream structure in order to make
looking it up cheaper in most cases.
## Limitations
There are two cases in which the mechanism isn't able to track the lag.
In these cases, `XINFO` replies with `null` in the "lag" field.
The first case is when a CG is created with an arbitrary last delivered ID,
that isn't "0-0", nor the first or the last entries of the stream. In this case,
it is impossible to obtain a valid read counter (short of an O(N) operation).
The second case is when there are one or more tombstones fragmenting
the stream's entries range.
In both cases, given enough time and assuming that the consumers are
active (reading and lacking) and advancing, the CG should be able to
catch up with the tip of the stream and report zero lag.
Once that's achieved, lag tracking would resume as normal (until the
next tombstone is set).
## API changes
* `XGROUP CREATE` added with the optional named argument `[ENTRIESREAD entries-read]`
for explicitly specifying the new CG's counter.
* `XGROUP SETID` added with an optional positional argument `[ENTRIESREAD entries-read]`
for specifying the CG's counter.
* `XINFO` reports the maximal tombstone ID, the recorded first entry ID, and total
number of entries added to the stream.
* `XINFO` reports the current lag and logical read counter of CGs.
* `XSETID` is an internal command that's used in replication/aof. It has been added with
the optional positional arguments `[ENTRIESADDED entries-added] [MAXDELETEDID max-deleted-entry-id]`
for propagating the CG's offset and maximal tombstone ID of the stream.
## The generic unsolved problem
The current stream implementation doesn't provide an efficient way to obtain the
approximate/exact size of a range of entries. While it could've been nice to have
that ability (#5813) in general, let alone specifically in the context of CGs, the risk
and complexities involved in such implementation are in all likelihood prohibitive.
## A refactoring note
The `streamGetEdgeID` has been refactored to accommodate both the existing seek
of any entry as well as seeking non-deleted entries (the addition of the `skip_tombstones`
argument). Furthermore, this refactoring also migrated the seek logic to use the
`streamIterator` (rather than `raxIterator`) that was, in turn, extended with the
`skip_tombstones` Boolean struct field to control the emission of these.
Co-authored-by: Guy Benoish <guy.benoish@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
The test will fail on slow machines (valgrind or FreeBsd).
Because in #10256 when WATCH is called on a key that's already
logically expired, we will add an `expired` flag, and we will
skip it in `isWatchedKeyExpired` check.
Apparently we need to increase the expiration time so that
the key can not expire logically then the WATCH is called.
Also added retries to make sure it doesn't fail. I suppose
100ms is enough in valgrind, tested locally, no need to retry.
When WATCH is called on a key that's already logically expired, avoid discarding the
transaction when the keys is actually deleted.
When WATCH is called, a flag is stored if the key is already expired
at the time of watch. The expired key is not deleted, only checked.
When a key is "touched", if it is deleted and it was already expired
when a client watched it, the client is not marked as dirty.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: zhaozhao.zz <zhaozhao.zz@alibaba-inc.com>