The implementation of the diskless replication was currently diskless only on the master side.
The slave side was still storing the received rdb file to the disk before loading it back in and parsing it.
This commit adds two modes to load rdb directly from socket:
1) when-empty
2) using "swapdb"
the third mode of using diskless slave by flushdb is risky and currently not included.
other changes:
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distinguish between aof configuration and state so that we can re-enable aof only when sync eventually
succeeds (and not when exiting from readSyncBulkPayload after a failed attempt)
also a CONFIG GET and INFO during rdb loading would have lied
When loading rdb from the network, don't kill the server on short read (that can be a network error)
Fix rdb check when performed on preamble AOF
tests:
run replication tests for diskless slave too
make replication test a bit more aggressive
Add test for diskless load swapdb
jemalloc 5 doesn't immediately release memory back to the OS, instead there's a decaying
mechanism, which doesn't work when there's no traffic (no allocations).
this is most evident if there's no traffic after flushdb, the RSS will remain high.
1) enable jemalloc background purging
2) explicitly purge in flushdb
Background threads may run for a long time, especially when the # of dirty pages
is high. Avoid blocking stats calls because of this (which may cause latency
spikes).
see https://github.com/jemalloc/jemalloc/issues/1502
cherry picked from commit 1a71533511027dbe3f9d989659efeec446915d6b
Add tests to check basic functionality of this optional keyword, and also tested with
a module (redisgraph). Checked quickly with valgrind, no issues.
Copies name the type name canonicalisation code from `typeCommand`, perhaps this would
be better factored out to prevent the two diverging and both needing to be edited to
add new `OBJ_*` types, but this is a little fiddly with C strings.
The [redis-doc](https://github.com/antirez/redis-doc/blob/master/commands.json) repo
will need to be updated with this new arg if accepted.
A quirk to be aware of here is that the GEO commands are backed by zsets not their own
type, so they're not distinguishable from other zsets.
Additionally, for sparse types this has the same behaviour as `MATCH` in that it may
return many empty results before giving something, even for large `COUNT`s.