introduces a NOMKSTREAM option for xadd command, this would be useful for some
use cases when we do not want to create new stream by default:
XADD key [MAXLEN [~|=] <count>] [NOMKSTREAM] <ID or *> [field value] [field value]
This cleans up and simplifies the API by passing the command name as the
first argument. Previously the command name was specified explicitly,
but was still included in the argv.
* Introduce a new API's: RM_GetContextFlagsAll, and
RM_GetKeyspaceNotificationFlagsAll that will return the
full flags mask of each feature. The module writer can
check base on this value if the Flags he needs are
supported or not.
* For each flag, introduce a new value on redismodule.h,
this value represents the LAST value and should be there
as a reminder to update it when a new value is added,
also it will be used in the code to calculate the full
flags mask (assuming flags are incrementally increasing).
In addition, stated that the module writer should not use
the LAST flag directly and he should use the GetFlagAll API's.
* Introduce a new API: RM_IsSubEventSupported, that returns for a given
event and subevent, whether or not the subevent supported.
* Introduce a new macro RMAPI_FUNC_SUPPORTED(func) that returns whether
or not a function API is supported by comparing it to NULL.
* Introduce a new API: int RM_GetServerVersion();, that will return the
current Redis version in the format 0x00MMmmpp; e.g. 0x00060008;
* Changed unstable version from 999.999.999 to 255.255.255
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: Yossi Gottlieb <yossigo@gmail.com>
The main motivation here is to provide a way for modules to create a
single, global context that can be used for logging.
Currently, it is possible to obtain a thread-safe context that is not
attached to any blocked client by using `RM_GetThreadSafeContext`.
However, the attached context is not linked to the module identity so
log messages produced are not tagged with the module name.
Ideally we'd fix this in `RM_GetThreadSafeContext` itself but as it
doesn't accept the current context as an argument there's no way to do
that in a backwards compatible manner.
This is essentially the same as calling COMMAND GETKEYS but provides a
more efficient interface that can be used in every context (i.e. not a
Redis command).
Adding [B]LMOVE <src> <dst> RIGHT|LEFT RIGHT|LEFT. deprecating [B]RPOPLPUSH.
Note that when receiving a BRPOPLPUSH we'll still propagate an RPOPLPUSH,
but on BLMOVE RIGHT LEFT we'll propagate an LMOVE
improvement to existing tests
- Replace "after 1000" with "wait_for_condition" when wait for
clients to block/unblock.
- Add a pre-existing element to target list on basic tests so
that we can check if the new element was added to the correct
side of the list.
- check command stats on the replica to make sure the right
command was replicated
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
I suppose that it was overlooked, since till recently none of the blocked commands were readonly.
other changes:
- add test for the above.
- add better support for additional (and deferring) clients for
cluster tests
- improve a test which left the client in MULTI state.
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.
Add optional GET parameter to SET command in order to set a new value to
a key and retrieve the old key value. With this change we can deprecate
`GETSET` command and use only the SET command with the GET parameter.
PROBLEM:
[$rd1 read] reads invalidation messages one by one, so it's never going to see the second invalidation message produced after INCR b, whether or not it exists. Adding another read will block incase no invalidation message is produced.
FIX:
We switch the order of "INCR a" and "INCR b" - now "INCR b" comes first. We still only read the first invalidation message produces. If an invalidation message is wrongly produces for b - then it will be produced before that of a, since "INCR b" comes before "INCR a".
Co-authored-by: Nitai Caro <caronita@amazon.com>
Before this commit, we would have continued to add replies to the reply buffer even if client
output buffer limit is reached, so the used memory would keep increasing over the configured limit.
What's more, we shouldn’t write any reply to the client if it is set 'CLIENT_CLOSE_ASAP' flag
because that doesn't conform to its definition and we will close all clients flagged with
'CLIENT_CLOSE_ASAP' in ‘beforeSleep’.
Because of code execution order, before this, we may firstly write to part of the replies to
the socket before disconnecting it, but in fact, we may can’t send the full replies to clients
since OS socket buffer is limited. But this unexpected behavior makes some commands work well,
for instance ACL DELUSER, if the client deletes the current user, we need to send reply to client
and close the connection, but before, we close the client firstly and write the reply to reply
buffer. secondly, we shouldn't do this despite the fact it works well in most cases.
We add a flag 'CLIENT_CLOSE_AFTER_COMMAND' to mark clients, this flag means we will close the
client after executing commands and send all entire replies, so that we can write replies to
reply buffer during executing commands, send replies to clients, and close them later.
We also fix some implicit problems. If client output buffer limit is enforced in 'multi/exec',
all commands will be executed completely in redis and clients will not read any reply instead of
partial replies. Even more, if the client executes 'ACL deluser' the using user in 'multi/exec',
it will not read the replies after 'ACL deluser' just like before executing 'client kill' itself
in 'multi/exec'.
We added some tests for output buffer limit breach during multi-exec and using a pipeline of
many small commands rather than one with big response.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
XREADGROUP auto-creates the consumer inside the consumer group the
first time it saw it.
When XREADGROUP is being used with NOACK option, the message will not
be added into the client's PEL and XGROUP SETID would be propagated.
When the replica gets the XGROUP SETID it will only update the last delivered
id of the group, but will not create the consumer.
So, in this commit XGROUP CREATECONSUMER is being added.
Command pattern: XGROUP CREATECONSUMER <key> <group> <consumer>.
When NOACK option is being used, createconsumer command would be
propagated as well.
In case of AOFREWRITE, consumer with an empty PEL would be saved with
XGROUP CREATECONSUMER whereas consumer with pending entries would be
saved with XCLAIM
When all replicas waiting for a bgsave get disconnected (possibly due to output buffer limit),
It may be good to kill the bgsave child. in diskless replication it already happens, but in
disk-based, the child may still serve some purpose (for persistence).
By killing the child, we prevent it from eating COW memory in vain, and we also allow a new child fork sooner for the next full synchronization or bgsave.
We do that only if rdb persistence wasn't enabled in the configuration.
Btw, now, rdbRemoveTempFile in killRDBChild won't block server, so we can killRDBChild safely.
We're already using bg_unlink in several places to delete the rdb file in the background,
and avoid paying the cost of the deletion from our main thread.
This commit uses bg_unlink to remove the temporary rdb file in the background too.
However, in case we delete that rdb file just before exiting, we don't actually wait for the
background thread or the main thread to delete it, and just let the OS clean up after us.
i.e. we open the file, unlink it and exit with the fd still open.
Furthermore, rdbRemoveTempFile can be called from a thread and was using snprintf which is
not async-signal-safe, we now use ll2string instead.
This test was nearly always failing on MacOS github actions.
This is because of bugs in the test that caused it to nearly always run
all 3 attempts and just look at the last one as the pass/fail creteria.
i.e. the test was nearly always running all 3 attempts and still sometimes
succeed. this is because the break condition was different than the test
completion condition.
The reason the test succeeded is because the break condition tested the
results of all 3 tests (PSETEX/PEXPIRE/PEXPIREAT), but the success check
at the end was only testing the result of PSETEX.
The reason the PEXPIREAT test nearly always failed is because it was
getting the current time wrong: getting the current second and loosing
the sub-section time, so the only chance for it to succeed is if it run
right when a certain second started.
Because i now get the time from redis, adding another round trip, i
added another 100ms to the PEXPIRE test to make it less fragile, and
also added many more attempts.
Adding many more attempts before failure to account for slow platforms,
github actions and valgrind
This is a catch-all test to confirm that that rewrite produces a valid
output for all parameters and that this process does not introduce
undesired configuration changes.
Save parameters should either be default or whatever specified in the
config file. This fixes an issue introduced in #7092 which causes
configuration file settings to be applied on top of the defaults.
There was a bug. Although cluster replicas would allow read commands,
they would not allow a MULTI-EXEC that's composed solely of read commands.
Adds tests for coverage.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: Eran Liberty <eranl@amazon.com>
if there are nested tests and nested servers, we need to restore the
previous value of cur_test when a test exist.
example:
```
test{test 1} {
start_server {
test{test 1.1 - master only} {
}
start_server {
test{test 1.2 - with replication} {
}
}
}
}
```
when `test 1.1 - master only exists`, we're still inside `test 1`
1) cur_test: when restart_server, "no such variable" error occurs
./runtest --single integration/rdb
test {client freed during loading}
SET ::cur_test
restart_server
kill_server
test "Check for memory leaks (pid $pid)"
SET ::cur_test
UNSET ::cur_test
UNSET ::cur_test // This global variable has been unset.
2) `ps --ppid` not available on macOS platform, can be replaced with
`pgrep -P pid`.
This test was failing from time to time see discussion at the bottom of #7635
This was probably due to timing, the DEBUG SLEEP executed by redis-cli
didn't sleep for enough time.
This commit changes:
1) use SET-ACTIVE-EXPIRE instead of DEBUG SLEEP
2) reduce many `after` sleeps with retry loops to speed up the test.
3) add many comment explaining the different steps of the test and
it's purpose.
4) config appendonly before populating the volatile keys, so that they'll
be part of the AOF command stream rather than the preamble RDB portion.
other complications: recently kill_instance switched from SIGKILL to
SIGTERM, and this would sometimes fail since there was an AOFRW running
in the background. now we wait for it to end before attempting the kill.
There is an inherent race condition in port allocation for spawned
servers. If a server fails to start because a port is taken, a new port
is allocated. This fixes a problem where the logs are not truncated and
as a result a large number of unmonitored servers are started.
2b998de46 added a file for stderr to keep valgrind log but i forgot to
add a similar thing when valgrind isn't being used.
the result is that `glob */err.txt` fails.
Starting redis 6.0 and the changes we made to the diskless master to be
suitable for TLS, I made the master avoid reaping (wait3) the pid of the
child until we know all replicas are done reading their rdb.
I did that in order to avoid a state where the rdb_child_pid is -1 but
we don't yet want to start another fork (still busy serving that data to
replicas).
It turns out that the solution used so far was problematic in case the
fork child was being killed (e.g. by the kernel OOM killer), in that
case there's a chance that we currently disabled the read event on the
rdb pipe, since we're waiting for a replica to become writable again.
and in that scenario the master would have never realized the child
exited, and the replica will remain hung too.
Note that there's no mechanism to detect a hung replica while it's in
rdb transfer state.
The solution here is to add another pipe which is used by the parent to
tell the child it is safe to exit. this mean that when the child exits,
for whatever reason, it is safe to reap it.
Besides that, i'm re-introducing an adjustment to REPLCONF ACK which was
part of #6271 (Accelerate diskless master connections) but was dropped
when that PR was rebased after the TLS fork/pipe changes (5a47794).
Now that RdbPipeCleanup no longer calls checkChildrenDone, and the ACK
has chance to detect that the child exited, it should be the one to call
it so that we don't have to wait for cron (server.hz) to do that.
- redirect valgrind reports to a dedicated file rather than console
- try to avoid killing instances with SIGKILL so that we get the memory
leak report (killing with SIGTERM before resorting to SIGKILL)
- search for valgrind reports when done, print them and fail the tests
- add --dont-clean option to keep the logs on exit
- fix exit error code when crash is found (would have exited with 0)
changes that affect the normal redis test suite:
- refactor check_valgrind_errors into two functions one to search and
one to report
- move the search half into util.tcl to serve the cluster tests too
- ignore "address range perms" valgrind warnings which seem non relevant.
in some cases a command that returns an error possibly due to a timing
issue causes the tcl code to crash and thus prevents the rest of the
tests from running. this adds an option to make the test proceed despite
the crash.
maybe it should be the default mode some day.
- skip full units
- skip a single test (not just a list of tests)
- when skipping tag, skip spinning up servers, not just the tests
- skip tags when running against an external server too
- allow using multiple tags (split them)
During long running scripts or loading RDB/AOF, we may need to do some
defragging. Since processEventsWhileBlocked is called periodically at
unknown intervals, and many cron jobs either depend on run_with_period
(including active defrag), or rely on being called at server.hz rate
(i.e. active defrag knows ho much time to run by looking at server.hz),
the whileBlockedCron may have to run a loop triggering the cron jobs in it
(currently only active defrag) several times.
Other changes:
- Adding a test for defrag during aof loading.
- Changing key-load-delay config to take negative values for fractions
of a microsecond sleep