SELECT used to read the index into a `long` variable, and then pass it to a function
that takes an `int`, possibly causing an overflow before the range check.
Now all these commands use better and cleaner range check, and that also results in
a slight change of the error response in case of an invalid database index.
SELECT:
in the past it would have returned either `-ERR invalid DB index` (if not a number),
or `-ERR DB index is out of range` (if not between 1..16 or alike).
now it'll return either `-ERR value is out of range` (if not a number), or
`-ERR value is out of range, value must between -2147483648 and 2147483647`
(if not in the range for an int), or `-ERR DB index is out of range`
(if not between 0..16 or alike)
MOVE:
in the past it would only fail with `-ERR index out of range` no matter the reason.
now return the same errors as the new ones for SELECT mentioned above.
(i.e. unlike for SELECT even for a value like 17 we changed the error message)
COPY:
doesn't really matter how it behaved in the past (new command), new behavior is
like the above two.
Syntax:
COPY <key> <new-key> [DB <dest-db>] [REPLACE]
No support for module keys yet.
Co-authored-by: tmgauss
Co-authored-by: Itamar Haber <itamar@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
MOVE was not able to move the TTL: when a key was moved into a different
database number, it became persistent like if PERSIST was used.
In some incredible way (I guess almost nobody uses Redis MOVE) this bug
remained unnoticed inside Redis internals for many years.
Finally Andy Grunwald discovered it and opened an issue.
This commit fixes the bug and adds a regression test.
Close#2765.