Using the is_key_ready() callback plus the reply callback later, creates
different issues AFAIK:
1. More complex API.
2. We need to call the reply callback() ASAP if the is_key_ready()
interface returned success, however the internals do not work in that
way, so when the reply callback is called the setup could be different.
To fix that, there is to break the current design that handles the
unblocked clients asyncrhonously, and run the list ASAP.
* replication hooks: role change, master link status, replica online/offline
* persistence hooks: saving, loading, loading progress
* misc hooks: cron loop, shutdown, module loaded/unloaded
* change the way hooks test work, and add tests for all of the above
startLoading() now gets flag indicating what is loaded.
stopLoading() now gets an indication of success or failure.
adding startSaving() and stopSaving() with similar args and role.
sometimes we have several assertions with the same condition in the same test
at different stages, and when these fail (the ones that print the condition
text) you don't know which one it was. other assertions didn't print the
condition text (variable names), just the expected and unexpected values.
So now, all assertions print context line, and conditin text.
besides, one of the major differences between 'assert' and 'assert_equal',
is that the later is able to print the value that doesn't match the expected.
if there is a rare non-reproducible failure, it is helpful to know what was
the value the test encountered and how far it was from the threshold.
So now, adding assert_lessthan and assert_range that can be used in some places.
were we used just 'assert { a > b }' so far.
Some commands would want to open a key without touching it's LRU/LFU
similarly to the OBJECT or DEBUG command do.
Other commands may want to implement logic similar to what RESTORE
does (and in the future MIGRATE) and get/set the LRU or LFU.
Adding a test for coverage for RM_Call in a new "misc" unit
to be used for various short simple tests
also solves compilation warnings in redismodule.h and fork.c
As we know if a module exports module-side data types,
unload it is not allowed. This rule is the same with
blocked clients in module, because we use background
threads to implement module blocked clients, and it's
not safe to unload a module if there are background
threads running. So it's necessary to check if any
blocked clients running in this module when unload it.
Moreover, after that we can ensure that if no modules,
then no module blocked clients even module unloaded.
So, we can call moduleHandleBlockedClients only when
we have installed modules.