this is a followup PR for #8699
instead of copying the deferred reply data to the previous node only if it has room for the entire thing,
we can now split the new payload, put part of it into the spare space in the prev node,
and the rest may fit into the next node.
'processCommandAndResetClient' returns 1 if client is dead. It does it
by checking if serve.current_client is NULL. On script timeout, Redis will re-enter
'processCommandAndResetClient' and when finish we will set server.current_client
to NULL. This will cause later to falsely return 1 and think that the client that
sent the timed-out script is dead (Redis to stop reading from the client buffer).
* SLOWLOG didn't record anything for blocked commands because the client
was reset and argv was already empty. there was a fix for this issue
specifically for modules, now it works for all blocked clients.
* The original command argv (before being re-written) was also reset
before adding the slowlog on behalf of the blocked command.
* Latency monitor is now updated regardless of the slowlog flags of the
command or its execution (their purpose is to hide sensitive info from
the slowlog, not hide the fact the latency happened).
* Latency monitor now uses real_cmd rather than c->cmd (which may be
different if the command got re-written, e.g. GEOADD)
Changes:
* Unify shared code between slowlog insertion in call() and
updateStatsOnUnblock(), hopefully prevent future bugs from happening
due to the later being overlooked.
* Reset CLIENT_PREVENT_LOGGING in resetClient rather than after command
processing.
* Add a test for SLOWLOG and BLPOP
Notes:
- real_cmd == c->lastcmd, except inside MULTI and Lua.
- blocked commands never happen in these cases (MULTI / Lua)
- real_cmd == c->cmd, except for when the command is rewritten (e.g.
GEOADD)
- blocked commands (currently) are never rewritten
- other than the command's CLIENT_PREVENT_LOGGING, and the
execution flag CLIENT_PREVENT_LOGGING, other cases that we want to
avoid slowlog are on AOF loading (specifically CMD_CALL_SLOWLOG will
be off when executed from execCommand that runs from an AOF)
Some operating systems (e.g., NetBSD and OpenBSD) have switched to
using a 64-bit integer for time_t on all platforms. This results in currently
harmless compiler warnings due to potential truncation.
These changes fix these minor portability concerns.
* Fix format string for systems with 64 bit time
* use llabs to avoid truncation with 64 bit time
Originally this was limited to IPv6 address length, but effectively it
has been used for host names and now that Sentinel accepts that as well
we need to be able to store full hostnames.
Fixes#8507
addReplyLongLongWithPrefix, has a check against negative length, and the code
flow removed in this commit bypasses the check.
addReplyAggregateLen has an assertion for negative length, but addReplyBulkLen
does not, so this commit fixes theoretical case of access violation (probably
unreachable though)
Sentinel uses execve to run scripts, so it needs to use FD_CLOEXEC
on all file descriptors, so that they're not accessible by the script it runs.
This commit includes a change to the sentinel tests, which verifies no
FDs are left opened when the script is executed.
This is a refactory commit, isn't suppose to have any actual impact.
it does the following:
- keep just one server struct fork child pid variable instead of 3
- have one server struct variable indicating the purpose of the current fork
child.
- redisFork is now responsible of updating the server struct with the pid,
which means it can be the one that calls updateDictResizePolicy
- move child info pipe handling into redisFork instead of having them
repeated outside
- there are two classes of fork purposes, mutually exclusive group (AOF, RDB,
Module), and one that can create several forks to coexist in parallel (LDB,
but maybe Modules some day too, Module API allows for that).
- minor fix to killRDBChild:
unlike killAppendOnlyChild and TerminateModuleForkChild, the killRDBChild
doesn't clear the pid variable or call wait4, so checkChildrenDone does
the cleanup for it.
This commit removes the explicit calls to rdbRemoveTempFile, closeChildInfoPipe,
updateDictResizePolicy, which didn't do any harm, but where unnecessary.
New command: XAUTOCLAIM <key> <group> <consumer> <min-idle-time> <start> [COUNT <count>] [JUSTID]
The purpose is to claim entries from a stale consumer without the usual
XPENDING+XCLAIM combo which takes two round trips.
The syntax for XAUTOCLAIM is similar to scan: A cursor is returned (streamID)
by each call and should be used as start for the next call. 0-0 means the scan is complete.
This PR extends the deferred reply mechanism for any bulk string (not just counts)
This PR carries some unrelated test code changes:
- Renames the term "client" into "consumer" in the stream-cgroups test
- And also changes DEBUG SLEEP into "after"
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
* man-like consistent long formatting
* Uppercases commands, subcommands and options
* Adds 'HELP' to HELP for all
* Lexicographical order
* Uses value notation and other .md likeness
* Moves const char *help to top
* Keeps it under 80 chars
* Misc help typos, consistent conjuctioning (i.e return and not returns)
* Uses addReplySubcommandSyntaxError(c) all over
Signed-off-by: Itamar Haber <itamar@redislabs.com>
This Commit pushes forward the observability on overall error statistics and command statistics within redis-server:
It extends INFO COMMANDSTATS to have
- failed_calls in - so we can keep track of errors that happen from the command itself, broken by command.
- rejected_calls - so we can keep track of errors that were triggered outside the commmand processing per se
Adds a new section to INFO, named ERRORSTATS that enables keeping track of the different errors that
occur within redis ( within processCommand and call ) based on the reply Error Prefix ( The first word
after the "-", up to the first space ).
This commit also fixes RM_ReplyWithError so that it can be correctly identified as an error reply.
Recently efaf09ee4 started using addReplyErrorSds in place of
addReplySds the later takes ownership of the string but the former did
not.
This introduced memory leaks when a script returns an error to redis,
and also in clusterRedirectClient (two new usages of
addReplyErrorSds which was mostly unused till now.
This commit chagnes two thanks.
1. change addReplyErrorSds to take ownership of the error string.
2. scripting.c doesn't actually need to use addReplyErrorSds, it's a
perfect match for addReplyErrorFormat (replaces newlines with spaces)
As discussed in https://github.com/antirez/redis/issues/7364, it is good
to have a HELLO command variant, which does not switch the current proto
version of a redis server.
While `HELLO` will work, it introduced a certain difficulty on parsing
options of the command. We will need to offset the index of authentication
and setname option by -1.
So 0 is marked a special version meaning non-switching. And we do not
need to change the code much.
Normally IO threads should simply read data from the socket into the
buffer and attempt to parse it.
If a protocol error is detected, a reply is generated which may result
with installing a write handler which is not thread safe. This fix
delays that until the client is processed back in the main thread.
Fixes#8220
In response to large client query buffer optimization introduced in 1898e6c. The calculation of the amount of
remaining bytes we need to write to the query buffer was calculated wrong, as a result we are unnecessarily
growing the client query buffer by sdslen(c->querybuf) always. This fix corrects that behavior.
Please note the previous behavior prior to the before-mentioned change was correctly calculating the remaining
additional bytes, and this change makes that calculate to be consistent.
Useful context, the argument of size `ll` starts at qb_pos (which is now the beginning of the sds), but much of it
may have already been read from the socket, so we only need to grow the sds for the remainder of it.
Module blocked clients cache the response in a temporary client,
the reply list in this client would be affected by the recent fix
in #7202, but when the reply is later copied into the real client,
it would have bypassed all the checks for output buffer limit, which
would have resulted in both: responding with a partial response to
the client, and also not disconnecting it at all.
* Add CLIENT INFO subcommand.
The output is identical to CLIENT LIST but provides a single line for
the current client only.
* Add CLIENT LIST ID [id...].
Co-authored-by: Itamar Haber <itamar@redislabs.com>
The test creates keys with various encodings, DUMP them, corrupt the payload
and RESTORES it.
It utilizes the recently added use-exit-on-panic config to distinguish between
asserts and segfaults.
If the restore succeeds, it runs random commands on the key to attempt to
trigger a crash.
It runs in two modes, one with deep sanitation enabled and one without.
In the first one we don't expect any assertions or segfaults, in the second one
we expect assertions, but no segfaults.
We also check for leaks and invalid reads using valgrind, and if we find them
we print the commands that lead to that issue.
Changes in the code (other than the test):
- Replace a few NPD (null pointer deference) flows and division by zero with an
assertion, so that it doesn't fail the test. (since we set the server to use
`exit` rather than `abort` on assertion).
- Fix quite a lot of flows in rdb.c that could have lead to memory leaks in
RESTORE command (since it now responds with an error rather than panic)
- Add a DEBUG flag for SET-SKIP-CHECKSUM-VALIDATION so that the test don't need
to bother with faking a valid checksum
- Remove a pile of code in serverLogObjectDebugInfo which is actually unsafe to
run in the crash report (see comments in the code)
- fix a missing boundary check in lzf_decompress
test suite infra improvements:
- be able to run valgrind checks before the process terminates
- rotate log files when restarting servers
Perform full reset of all client connection states, is if the client was
disconnected and re-connected. This affects:
* MULTI state
* Watched keys
* MONITOR mode
* Pub/Sub subscription
* ACL/Authenticated state
* Client tracking state
* Cluster read-only/asking state
* RESP version (reset to 2)
* Selected database
* CLIENT REPLY state
The response is +RESET to make it easily distinguishable from other
responses.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: Itamar Haber <itamar@redislabs.com>
Useful when you want to know through which bind address the client connected to
the server in case of multiple bind addresses.
- Adding `laddr` field to CLIENT list showing the local (bind) address.
- Adding `LADDR` option to CLIENT KILL to kill all the clients connected
to a specific local address.
- Refactoring to share code.
track and report memory used by clients argv.
this is very usaful in case clients started sending a command and didn't
complete it. in which case the first args of the command are already
trimmed from the query buffer.
in an effort to avoid cache misses and overheads while keeping track of
these, i avoid calling sdsZmallocSize and instead use the sdslen /
bulk-len which can at least give some insight into the problem.
This memory is now added to the total clients memory usage, as well as
the client list.