due to a copy-paste bug, it used to reply with null response rather than empty array.
this commit includes new tests that are looking at the RESP response directly in
order to be able to tell the difference between them.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
fixes test issue introduced in #9167
1. invalid reads due to accessing non-retained string (passed as unblock context).
2. leaking module blocked client context, see #6922 for info.
Modules that use background threads with thread safe contexts are likely
to use RM_BlockClient() without a timeout function, because they do not
set up a timeout.
Before this commit, `CLIENT UNBLOCK` would result with a crash as the
`NULL` timeout callback is called. Beyond just crashing, this is also
logically wrong as it may throw the module into an unexpected client
state.
This commits makes `CLIENT UNBLOCK` on such clients behave the same as
any other client that is not in a blocked state and therefore cannot be
unblocked.
*** [err]: PSYNC2: total sum of full synchronizations is exactly 4 intests/integration/psync2.tcl
Expected 5 == 4 (context: type eval line 8 cmd {assert {$sum == 4}} proc::test)
Sometime the test got an unexpected full sync since a replica switch to master,
before the new master change propagated the new replid to all replicas,
a replica attempted to sync with it using a wrong replid and triggered a full resync.
Consider this scenario:
1 slaveof 4 full resync
0 slaveof 4 full resync
2 slaveof 0 full resync
3 slaveof 1 full resync
1 slaveof no one, replid changed
3 reconnect 1, did a partial resyn and got the new replid
Before 2 inherits the new replid.
3 slaveof 2
3 try to do a partial resyn with 2.
But their replication ids are inconsistent, so a full resync happens.
:) A special thank you for oran and helping me in this test case.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Return a bad score when used with negative count (or count of 1), and non-ziplist encoded zset.
Also add test to validate the return value and cover the issue.
In the past, the first bind address that was explicitly specified was
also used to bind outgoing connections. This could result with some
problems. For example: on some systems using `bind 127.0.0.1` would
result with outgoing connections also binding to `127.0.0.1` and failing
to connect to remote addresses.
With the recent change to the way `bind` is handled, this presented
other issues:
* The default first bind address is '*' which is not a valid address.
* We make no distinction between user-supplied config that is identical
to the default, and the default config.
This commit addresses both these issues by introducing an explicit
configuration parameter to control the bind address on outgoing
connections.
- Introduce a new sdssubstr api as a building block for sdsrange.
The API of sdsrange is many times hard to work with and also has
corner case that cause bugs. sdsrange is easy to work with and also
simplifies the implementation of sdsrange.
- Revert the fix to RM_StringTruncate and just use sdssubstr instead of
sdsrange.
- Solve valgrind warnings from the new tests introduced by the previous
PR.
* Specifying an empty `bind ""` configuration prevents Redis from listening on any TCP port. Before this commit, such configuration was not accepted.
* Using `CONFIG GET bind` will always return an explicit configuration value. Before this commit, if a bind address was not specified the returned value was empty (which was an anomaly).
Another behavior change is that modifying the `bind` configuration to a non-default value will NO LONGER DISABLE protected-mode implicitly.
Previously, passing 0 for newlen would not truncate the string at all.
This adds handling of this case, freeing the old string and creating a new empty string.
Other changes:
- Move `src/modules/testmodule.c` to `tests/modules/basics.c`
- Introduce that basic test into the test suite
- Add tests to cover StringTruncate
- Add `test-modules` build target for the main makefile
- Extend `distclean` build target to clean modules too
# replication-3.tcl
had a test timeout failure with valgrind on daily CI:
```
*** [err]: SLAVE can reload "lua" AUX RDB fields of duplicated scripts in tests/integration/replication-3.tcl
Replication not started.
```
replication took more than 70 seconds.
https://github.com/redis/redis/runs/2854037905?check_suite_focus=true
on my machine it takes only about 30, but i can see how 50 seconds isn't enough.
# replication.tcl
loading was over too quickly in freebsd daily CI:
```
*** [err]: slave fails full sync and diskless load swapdb recovers it in tests/integration/replication.tcl
Expected '0' to be equal to '1' (context: type eval line 44 cmd {assert_equal [s -1 loading] 1} proc ::start_server)
```
# rdb.tcl
loading was over too quickly.
increase the time loading takes, and decrease the amount of work we try to achieve in that time.
The `Tracking gets notification of expired keys` test in tracking.tcl
used to hung in valgrind CI quite a lot.
It turns out the reason is that with valgrind and a busy machine, the
server cron active expire cycle could easily run in the same event loop
as the command that created `mykey`, so that when they key got expired,
there were two change events to broadcast, one that set the key and one
that expired it, but since we used raxTryInsert, the client that was
associated with the "last" change was the one that created the key, so
the NOLOOP filtered that event.
This commit adds a test that reproduces the problem by using lazy expire
in a multi-exec which makes sure the key expires in the same event loop
as the one that added it.
Fix test failure which introduced by #9003.
The following case will occur when querybuf expansion will allocate memory equal to (16*1024)k.
1) make use ```CFLAGS=-DNO_MALLOC_USABLE_SIZE```.
2) ```malloc``` will not allocate more under ```alpine```.
Create new module type enhanced callbacks: mem_usage2, free_effort2, unlink2, copy2.
These will be given a context point from which the module can obtain the key name and database id.
In addition the digest and defrag context can now be used to obtain the key name and database id.
When using RESP3, ZPOPMAX/ZPOPMIN should return nested arrays for consistency
with other commands (e.g. ZRANGE).
We do that only when COUNT argument is present (similarly to how LPOP behaves).
for reasoning see https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/8824#issuecomment-855427955
This is a breaking change only when RESP3 is used, and COUNT argument is present!
The initialize memory of `querybuf` is `PROTO_IOBUF_LEN(1024*16) * 2` (due to sdsMakeRoomFor being greedy), under `jemalloc`, the allocated memory will be 40k.
This will most likely result in the `querybuf` being resized when call `clientsCronResizeQueryBuffer` unless the client requests it fast enough.
Note that this bug existed even before #7875, since the condition for resizing includes the sds headers (32k+6).
## Changes
1. Use non-greedy sdsMakeRoomFor when allocating the initial query buffer (of 16k).
1. Also use non-greedy allocation when working with BIG_ARG (we won't use that extra space anyway)
2. in case we did use a greedy allocation, read as much as we can into the buffer we got (including internal frag), to reduce system calls.
3. introduce a dedicated constant for the shrinking (same value as before)
3. Add test for querybuf.
4. improve a maxmemory test by ignoring the effect of replica query buffers (can accumulate many ACKs on slow env)
5. improve a maxmemory by disabling slowlog (it will cause slight memory growth on slow env).
Today when we load the AOF on startup, the loadAppendOnlyFile checks if
the file is openning for reading.
This check is redundent (dead code) as we open the AOF file for writing at initServer,
and the file will always be existing for the loadAppendOnlyFile.
In this commit:
- remove all the exit(1) from loadAppendOnlyFile, as it is the caller
responsibility to decide what to do in case of failure.
- move the opening of the AOF file for writing, to be after we loading it.
- avoid return -ERR in DEBUG LOADAOF, when the AOF is existing but empty
SINTERSTORE would have deleted the dest key right away,
even when later on it is bound to fail on an (WRONGTYPE) error.
With this change it first picks up all the input keys, and only later
delete the dest key if one is empty.
Also add more tests for some commands.
Mainly focus on
- `wrong type error`:
expand test case (base on sinter bug) in non-store variant
add tests for store variant (although it exists in non-store variant, i think it would be better to have same tests)
- the dstkey result when we meet `non-exist key (empty set)` in *store
sdiff:
- improve test case about wrong type error (the one we found in sinter, although it is safe in sdiff)
- add test about using non-exist key (treat it like an empty set)
sdiffstore:
- according to sdiff test case, also add some tests about `wrong type error` and `non-exist key`
- the different is that in sdiffstore, we will consider the `dstkey` result
sunion/sunionstore add more tests (same as above)
sinter/sinterstore also same as above ...
The root cause is that one test (`5 keys in, 5 keys out`) is leaking a volatile key
that can expire while another later test(`All TTL in commands are propagated
as absolute timestamp in replication stream`) is running.
Such leaked expiration injects an unexpected `DEL` command into the
replication command during the later test, causing it to fail.
The fixes are two fold:
1. Plug the leak in the first test.
2. Add FLUSHALL to the later test, to avoid future interference from other tests.
This PR adds a spell checker CI action that will fail future PRs if they introduce typos and spelling mistakes.
This spell checker is based on blacklist of common spelling mistakes, so it will not catch everything,
but at least it is also unlikely to cause false positives.
Besides that, the PR also fixes many spelling mistakes and types, not all are a result of the spell checker we use.
Here's a summary of other changes:
1. Scanned the entire source code and fixes all sorts of typos and spelling mistakes (including missing or extra spaces).
2. Outdated function / variable / argument names in comments
3. Fix outdated keyspace masks error log when we check `config.notify-keyspace-events` in loadServerConfigFromString.
4. Trim the white space at the end of line in `module.c`. Check: https://github.com/redis/redis/pull/7751
5. Some outdated https link URLs.
6. Fix some outdated comment. Such as:
- In README: about the rdb, we used to said create a `thread`, change to `process`
- dbRandomKey function coment (about the dictGetRandomKey, change to dictGetFairRandomKey)
- notifyKeyspaceEvent fucntion comment (add type arg)
- Some others minor fix in comment (Most of them are incorrectly quoted by variable names)
7. Modified the error log so that users can easily distinguish between TCP and TLS in `changeBindAddr`
This commit revives the improves the ability to run the test suite against
external servers, instead of launching and managing `redis-server` processes as
part of the test fixture.
This capability existed in the past, using the `--host` and `--port` options.
However, it was quite limited and mostly useful when running a specific tests.
Attempting to run larger chunks of the test suite experienced many issues:
* Many tests depend on being able to start and control `redis-server` themselves,
and there's no clear distinction between external server compatible and other
tests.
* Cluster mode is not supported (resulting with `CROSSSLOT` errors).
This PR cleans up many things and makes it possible to run the entire test suite
against an external server. It also provides more fine grained controls to
handle cases where the external server supports a subset of the Redis commands,
limited number of databases, cluster mode, etc.
The tests directory now contains a `README.md` file that describes how this
works.
This commit also includes additional cleanups and fixes:
* Tests can now be tagged.
* Tag-based selection is now unified across `start_server`, `tags` and `test`.
* More information is provided about skipped or ignored tests.
* Repeated patterns in tests have been extracted to common procedures, both at a
global level and on a per-test file basis.
* Cleaned up some cases where test setup was based on a previous test executing
(a major anti-pattern that repeats itself in many places).
* Cleaned up some cases where test teardown was not part of a test (in the
future we should have dedicated teardown code that executes even when tests
fail).
* Fixed some tests that were flaky running on external servers.
Till now GET and NX were mutually exclusive.
This change make their combination mean a "Get or Set" command.
If the key exists it returns the old value and avoids setting,
and if it does't exist it returns nil and sets it to the new value (possibly with expiry time)
The decision to stop trimming due to LIMIT in XADD and XTRIM was after the limit was reached.
i.e. the code was deleting **at least** that count of records (from the LIMIT argument's perspective, not the MAXLEN),
instead of **up to** that count of records.
see #9046
running the "geo" unit would have shown that it completed a unit named
"north". this was because the variable `$name` was overwritten.
This commit isn't perfect, but it slightly reduces the chance for
variable name clash.
```
$ ./runtest --single unit/geo
.......
Testing unit/geo
.......
[1/1 done]: north (15 seconds)
```
The test that was merged yesterday fails with valgrind and freebsd CI
that are too slow, and 10 seconds apparently passed between the time the
command was sent to redis and the time it was actually executed.
```
*** [err]: All TTL in commands are propagated as absolute timestamp in replication stream in tests/unit/expire.tcl
Expected 'del a' to match 'set foo1 bar PXAT *' (context: type source line 778 file /home/runner/work/redis/redis/tests/test_helper.tcl cmd {assert_match [lindex $patterns $j] [read_from_replication_stream $s]} proc ::assert_replication_stream level 1)
```
Till now, on replica full-sync we used to transfer absolute time for TTL,
however when a command arrived (EXPIRE or EXPIREAT),
we used to propagate it as is to replicas (possibly with relative time),
but always translate it to EXPIREAT (absolute time) to AOF.
This commit changes that and will always use absolute time for propagation.
see discussion in #8433
Furthermore, we Introduce new commands: `EXPIRETIME/PEXPIRETIME`
that allow extracting the absolute TTL time from a key.
In diskless replication, we create a read pipe for the RDB, between the child and the parent.
When we close this pipe (fd), the read handler also needs to be removed from the event loop (if it still registered).
Otherwise, next time we will use the same fd, the registration will be fail (panic), because
we will use EPOLL_CTL_MOD (the fd still register in the event loop), on fd that already removed from epoll_ctl
When test stop 'load handler' by killing the process that generating the load,
some commands that already in the input buffer, still might be processed by the server.
This may cause some instability in tests, that count on that no more commands
processed after we stop the `load handler'
In this commit, new proc 'wait_load_handlers_disconnected' added, to verify that no more
cammands from any 'load handler' prossesed, by checking that the clients who
genreate the load is disconnceted.
Also, replacing check of dbsize with wait_for_ofs_sync before comparing debug digest, as
it would fail in case the last key the workload wrote was an overridden key (not a new one).
Affected tests
Race fix:
- failover command to specific replica works
- Connect multiple replicas at the same time (issue #141), master diskless=$mdl, replica diskless=$sdl
- AOF rewrite during write load: RDB preamble=$rdbpre
Cleanup and speedup:
- Test replication with blocking lists and sorted sets operations
- Test replication with parallel clients writing in different DBs
- Test replication partial resync: $descr (diskless: $mdl, $sdl, reconnect: $reconnect
I recently saw this failure:
[err]: lazy free a stream with all types of metadata in tests/unit/lazyfree.tcl
Expected '2' to be equal to '1' (context: type eval line 23 cmd {assert_equal [s lazyfreed_objects] 1} proc ::test)
The only explanation for such a thing is that the async flushdb wasn't
done before we did the resetstat
When client breached the output buffer soft limit but then went idle,
we didn't disconnect on soft limit timeout, now we do.
Note this also resolves some sporadic test failures in due to Linux
buffering data which caused tests to fail if during the test we went
back under the soft COB limit.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: sundb <sundbcn@gmail.com>
Adding a new type mask for key space notification, REDISMODULE_NOTIFY_MODULE, to enable unique notifications from commands on REDISMODULE_KEYTYPE_MODULE type keys (which is currently unsupported).
Modules can subscribe to a module key keyspace notification by RM_SubscribeToKeyspaceEvents,
and clients by notify-keyspace-events of redis.conf or via the CONFIG SET, with the characters 'd' or 'A'
(REDISMODULE_NOTIFY_MODULE type mask is part of the '**A**ll' notation for key space notifications).
Refactor: move some pubsub test infra from pubsub.tcl to util.tcl to be re-used by other tests.
Before this commit using RM_Call without "!" could cause the master
to lazy-expire a key (delete it) but without replicating to replicas.
This could cause the replica's memory usage to gradually grow and
could also cause consistency issues if the master and replica have
a clock diff.
This bug was introduced in #8617
Added a test which demonstrates that scenario.
In the initial release of Redis 6.2 setting a user to only allow pubsub access to
a specific channel, and doing ACL SAVE, resulted in an assertion when
ACL LOAD was used. This was later changed by #8723 (not yet released),
but still not properly resolved (now it errors instead of crash).
The problem is that the server that generates an ACL file, doesn't know what
would be the setting of the acl-pubsub-default config in the server that will load it.
so ACL SAVE needs to always start with resetchannels directive.
This should still be compatible with old acl files (from redis 6.0), and ones from earlier
versions of 6.2 that didn't mess with channels.
Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com>
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
The tail size of c->reply is 16kb, but in the test only publish a
few chars each time, due to a change in #8699, the obuf limit
is now checked a new memory allocation is made, so this test
would have sometimes failed to trigger a soft limit disconnection
in time.
The solution is to write bigger payloads to the output buffer, but
still limit their rate (not more than 100k/s).
In github actions CI with valgrind, i saw that even the fast replica
(one that wasn't paused), didn't get to complete the replication fast
enough, and ended up getting disconnected by timeout.
Additionally, due to a typo in uname, we didn't get to actually run the
CPU efficiency part of the test.
1. the `dump_logs` option would have printed only logs of servers that were
spawn before the test proc started, and not ones that the test proc
started inside it.
2. when a server proc catches an exception it should normally forward the
exception upwards, specifically when it's an assertion that should be
caught by a test proc above. however, in `durable` mode, we caught all
exceptions printed them to stdout and let the code continue,
this was wrong to do for assertions, which should have still been
propagated to the test function.
3. don't bother to search for crash log to print if we printed the the
entire log anyway
4. if no crash log was found, no need to print anything (i.e. the fact it
wasn't found)
5. rename warnings_from_file to crashlog_from_file
Starting redis 6.0 (part of the TLS feature), diskless master uses pipe from the fork
child so that the parent is the one sending data to the replicas.
This mechanism has an issue in which a hung replica will cause the master to wait
for it to read the data sent to it forever, thus preventing the fork child from terminating
and preventing the creations of any other forks.
This PR adds a timeout mechanism, much like the ACK-based timeout,
we disconnect replicas that aren't reading the RDB file fast enough.
Disable replica migration to avoid a race condition where the
migrated-from node turns into a replica.
Long term, this test should probably be improved to handle multiple
slots and accept such auto migrations but this is a quick fix to
stabilize the CI without completely dropping this test.
Fix out of range error messages to be clearer (avoid mentioning 9223372036854775807)
* Fix XAUTOCLAIM COUNT option confusing error msg
* Fix other RPOP and alike error message to mention positive
With this fix, module data type registration will fail if the load or save callbacks are not defined, or the optional aux load and save callbacks are not either both defined or both missing.
This is work in progress, focusing on two main areas:
* Avoiding race conditions with cluster configuration propagation.
* Ignoring limitations with redis-cli --cluster fix which makes it hard
to distinguish real errors (e.g. failure to fix) from expected
conditions in this test (e.g. nodes not agreeing on configuration).
Background:
Redis 6.2 added ACL control for pubsub channels (#7993), which were supposed
to be permissive by default to retain compatibility with redis 6.0 ACL.
But due to a bug, only newly created users got this `acl-pubsub-default` applied,
while overwritten (updated) users got reset to `resetchannels` (denied).
Since the "default" user exists before loading the config file,
any ACL change to it, results in an update / overwrite.
So when a "default" user is loaded from config file or include ACL
file with no channels related rules, the user will not have any
permissions to any channels. But other users will have default
permissions to any channels.
When upgraded from 6.0 with config rewrite, this will lead to
"default" user channels permissions lost.
When users are loaded from include file, then call "acl load", users
will also lost channels permissions.
Similarly, the `reset` ACL rule, would have reset the user to be denied
access to any channels, ignoring `acl-pubsub-default` and breaking
compatibility with redis 6.0.
The implication of this fix is that it regains compatibility with redis 6.0,
but breaks compatibility with redis 6.2.0 and 2.0.1. e.g. after the upgrade,
the default user will regain access to pubsub channels.
Other changes:
Additionally this commit rename server.acl_pubusub_default to
server.acl_pubsub_default and fix typo in acl tests.
Previously (and by default after commit) when master loose its last slot
(due to migration, for example), its replicas will migrate to new last slot
holder.
There are cases where this is not desired:
* Consolidation that results with removed nodes (including the replica, eventually).
* Manually configured cluster topologies, which the admin wishes to preserve.
Needlessly migrating a replica triggers a full synchronization and can have a negative impact, so
we prefer to be able to avoid it where possible.
This commit adds 'cluster-allow-replica-migration' configuration option that is
enabled by default to preserve existed behavior. When disabled, replicas will
not be auto-migrated.
Fixes#4896
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
This command used to return the last scanned entry id as the cursor,
instead of the next one to be scanned.
so in the next call, the user could / should have sent `(cursor` and not
just `cursor` if he wanted to avoid scanning the same record twice.
Scanning the record twice would look odd if someone is checking what
exactly was scanned, but it also has a side effect of incrementing the
delivery count twice.
5629dbe71 added a change that configures the tcp (plaintext) port
alongside the tls port, this causes the INFO command for tcp_port
to return that instead of the tls port when running in tls, and that broke
the sentinel tests that query it.
the fix is to add a method that gets the right port from CONFIG instead
of relying on the tcp_port info field.
If GT/LT fails the operation we need to reply with
nill (like failure due to NX).
Other changes:
Add the missing $encoding suffix to many zset tests
Note: there's a behavior change just in case of INCR + GT/LT that fails.
The old code was replying with the wrong (rejected) score, and now it'll reply with nil.
Note that that's anyway a corner case so this "behavior change" shouldn't have too much affect.
Using GT/LT with INCR has a predictable result even before we run the command
(INCR GT will only only / always fail if the increment is negative).
Problem:
Currently, when performing random distribution verification, we determine
the probability of each element occurring in the sum, but the probability is
only an estimate, these tests had rare sporadic failures, and we cannot verify
what the probability of failure will be.
Solution:
Using the chi-square distribution instead of the original random distribution
validation makes the test more reasonable and easier to find problems.
The 'sentinel replicas <master>' command will ignore replicas with
`replica-announced` set to no.
The goal of disabling the config setting replica-announced is to allow ghost
replicas. The replica is in the cluster, synchronize with its master, can be
promoted to master and is not exposed to sentinel clients. This way, it is
acting as a live backup or living ghost.
In addition, to prevent the replica to be promoted as master, set
replica-priority to 0.
The cluster bus is established over TLS or non-TLS depending on the configuration tls-cluster. The client ports distributed in the cluster and sent to clients are assumed to be TLS or non-TLS also depending on tls-cluster.
The cluster bus is now extended to also contain the non-TLS port of clients in a TLS cluster, when available. The non-TLS port of a cluster node, when available, is sent to clients connected without TLS in responses to CLUSTER SLOTS, CLUSTER NODES, CLUSTER SLAVES and MOVED and ASK redirects, instead of the TLS port.
The user was able to override the client port by defining cluster-announce-port. Now cluster-announce-tls-port is added, so the user can define an alternative announce port for both TLS and non-TLS clients.
Fixes#8134
the bug was also discussed in #8716, and was solved in #8719, but incompletely:
when the server is started, and the save option is default, if you issue the " config set save "" "
to change the save option, and then issue the “config rewrite” command, the " save "" " won't be saved.
Another test race condition in the macos tests.
the test was waiting for PINGs to be generated and put on the replication stream,
but waiting for 1 or 2 seconds doesn't really guarantee that.
then the test that expected 6 full syncs, found only 4
Add tests for fixing migrating slot at all stages:
1. when migration is half inited on "migrating" node
2. when migration is half inited on "importing" node
3. migration inited, but not finished
4. migration is half finished on "migrating" node
5. migration is half finished on "importing" node
Also add tests for many simultaneous slot migrations.
Co-authored-by: Yossi Gottlieb <yossigo@gmail.com>
'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).
Add publish channel permissions check in processCommand.
processCommand didn't check publish channel permissions, so we can
queue a publish command in a transaction. But when exec the transaction,
it will fail with -NOPERM.
We also union keys/commands/channels permissions check togegher in
ACLCheckAllPerm. Remove pubsubCheckACLPermissionsOrReply in
publishCommand/subscribeCommand/psubscribeCommand. Always
check permissions in processCommand/execCommand/
luaRedisGenericCommand.
* 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)
the corrupt-dump-fuzzer test found a case where an access to a corrupt
stream would have caused accessing to uninitialized memory.
now it'll panic instead.
The issue was that there was a stream that says it has more than 0
records, but looking for the max ID came back empty handed.
p.s. when sanitize-dump-payload is used, this corruption is detected,
and the RESTORE command is gracefully rejected.
Since redis 6.2, redis immediately tries to connect to the master, not
waiting for replication cron.
in the slow freebsd CI, this test failed and master_link_status was
already "up" when INFO was called.
pcall function runs another LUA function in protected mode, this means
that any error will be caught by this function and will not stop the LUA
execution. The script kill mechanism uses error to stop the running script.
Scripts that uses pcall can catch the error raise by the script kill mechanism,
this will cause a script like this to be unkillable:
local f = function()
while 1 do
redis.call('ping')
end
end
while 1 do
pcall(f)
end
The fix is, when we want to kill the script, we set the hook function to be invoked
after each line. This will promise that the execution will get another
error before it is able to enter the pcall function again.
In certain scenario start_server may think it failed to start a redis server
although it started successfully. in these cases, it'll not terminate it, and
it'll remain running when the test is over.
In start_server if config doesn't have bind (the minimal.conf in introspection.tcl),
it will try to bind ipv4 and ipv6. One may success while other fails. It will
output "Could not create server TCP listening socket".
wait_server_started uses this message to check whether instance started
successfully. So it will consider that it failed even though redis started successfully.
Additionally, in some cases it wasn't clear to users why the server exited,
since the warning message printed to the log, could in some cases be harmless,
and in some cases fatal.
This PR adds makes a clear distinction between a warning log message and
a fatal one, and changes the test suite to look for the fatal message.
1. moduleReplicateMultiIfNeeded should use server.in_eval like
moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback
2. server.in_eval could have been set to 1 and not reset back
to 0 (a lot of missed early-exits after in_eval is already 1)
Note: The new assertions in processCommand cover (2) and I added
two module tests to cover (1)
Implications:
If an EVAL that failed (and thus left server.in_eval=1) runs before a module
command that replicates, the replication stream will contain MULTI (because
moduleReplicateMultiIfNeeded used to check server.lua_caller which is NULL
at this point) but not EXEC (because server.in_eval==1)
This only affects modules as module.c the only user of server.in_eval.
Affects versions 6.2.0, 6.2.1
Bug 1:
When a module ctx is freed moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback
is called and handles propagation. We want to prevent it from propagating
commands that were not replicated by the same context. Example:
1. module1.foo does: RM_Replicate(cmd1); RM_Call(cmd2); RM_Replicate(cmd3)
2. RM_Replicate(cmd1) propagates MULTI and adds cmd1 to also_propagagte
3. RM_Call(cmd2) create a new ctx, calls call() and destroys the ctx.
4. moduleHandlePropagationAfterCommandCallback is called, calling
alsoPropagates EXEC (Note: EXEC is still not written to socket),
setting server.in_trnsaction = 0
5. RM_Replicate(cmd3) is called, propagagting yet another MULTI (now
we have nested MULTI calls, which is no good) and then cmd3
We must prevent RM_Call(cmd2) from resetting server.in_transaction.
REDISMODULE_CTX_MULTI_EMITTED was revived for that purpose.
Bug 2:
Fix issues with nested RM_Call where some have '!' and some don't.
Example:
1. module1.foo does RM_Call of module2.bar without replication (i.e. no '!')
2. module2.bar internally calls RM_Call of INCR with '!'
3. at the end of module1.foo we call RM_ReplicateVerbatim
We want the replica/AOF to see only module1.foo and not the INCR from module2.bar
Introduced a global replication_allowed flag inside RM_Call to determine
whether we need to replicate or not (even if '!' was specified)
Other changes:
Split beforePropagateMultiOrExec to beforePropagateMulti afterPropagateExec
just for better readability
It seems like non-Linux sockets may be less greedy, resulting with more
transient client output buffers.
Haven't proven this but empirically when stressing this test on
non-Linux tends to exhibit increased mem_clients_normal values.
* The `redis-cli --scan` output should honor output mode (set explicitly or implicitly), and quote key names when not in raw mode.
* Technically this is a breaking change, but it should be very minor since raw mode is by default on for non-tty output.
* It should only affect TTY output (human users) or non-tty output if `--no-raw` is specified.
* Added `--quoted-input` option to treat all arguments as potentially quoted strings.
* Added `--quoted-pattern` option to accept a potentially quoted pattern.
Unquoting is applied to potentially quoted input only if single or double quotes are used.
Fixes#8561, #8563
When sanitizing the stream listpack, we need to count the deleted records too.
otherwise the last line that checks the next pointer fails.
Add test to cover that state in the stream tests.
Add ability to modify port, tls-port and bind configurations by CONFIG SET command.
To simplify the code and make it cleaner, a new structure
added, socketFds, which contains the file descriptors array and its counter,
and used for TCP, TLS and Cluster sockets file descriptors.
Because when the RM_Call is invoked. It will create a faker client.
The point is client connection is NULL, so server will crash in connGetInfo
Co-authored-by: Viktor Söderqvist <viktor.soderqvist@est.tech>
A single client pointer is added in the server struct. This is
initialized by the first RM_Call() and reused for every subsequent
RM_Call() except if it's already in use, which means that it's not
used for (recursive) module calls to modules. For these, a new
"fake" client is created each time.
Other changes:
* Avoid allocating a dict iterator in pubsubUnsubscribeAllChannels
when not needed
* Remove linux/version.h dependency.
This introduces unnecessary dependencies, and generally not a good idea
as the platform we build on may be different than the platform we run
on.
To determine if sync_file_range exists we can simply rely on header file
hints.
* Fix setproctitle() on libmusl.
The previous ifdef checks were a bit too strict for no apparent
reason.
* Fix tests failure on Linux with no backtrace.
* Add alpine daily CI job.
This validation was only done for sub-commands and not for commands.
These would have been valid (not produce any error)
ACL SETUSER bob +@all +client
ACL SETUSER bob +client +client
so no reason for this one to fail:
ACL SETUSER bob +client +client|id
One example why this is needed is that pfdebug wasn't part of the @hyperloglog
group and now it is. so something like:
acl setuser user1 +@hyperloglog +pfdebug|test
would have succeeded in early 6.0.x, and fail in 6.2 RC3
Co-authored-by: Harkrishn Patro <harkrisp@amazon.com>
Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
When redis responds with tracking-redir-broken push message (RESP3),
it was responding with a broken protocol: an array of 3 elements, but only
pushes 2 elements.
Some bugs in the test make this pass. Read the push reply
will consume an extra reply, because the reply length is 3, but there
are only two elements, so the next reply will be treated as third
element. So the test is corrected too.
Other changes:
* checkPrefixCollisionsOrReply success should return 1 instead of -1,
this bug didn't have any implications.
* improve client tracking tests to validate more of the response it reads.
Respond with error if expire time overflows from positive to negative of vice versa.
* `SETEX`, `SET EX`, `GETEX` etc would have already error on negative value,
but now they would also error on overflows (i.e. when the input was positive but
after the manipulation it becomes negative, which would have passed before)
* `EXPIRE` and `EXPIREAT` was ok taking negative values (would implicitly delete
the key), we keep that, but we do error if the user provided a value that changes
sign when manipulated (except the case of changing sign when `basetime` is added)
Signed-off-by: Gnanesh <gnaneshkunal@outlook.com>
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
* Adding current_save_keys_total and current_save_keys_processed info fields.
Present in replication, BGSAVE and AOFRW.
* Changing RM_SendChildCOWInfo() to RM_SendChildHeartbeat(double progress)
* Adding new info field current_fork_perc. Present in Replication, BGSAVE, AOFRW,
and module forks.
There are two tests in other.tcl that were dependant of the sha1 package
import which meant that they didn't usually run.
The reason it was like that was that prior to the creation of DEBUG
DIGEST, the test suite used to have an equivalent function, but that's
no longer the case and this dependency isn't needed.
The other change is to revert config changes done by the test before the
test suite continues. can be useful if using `--host` to run multiple
units against the same server
The added flag affects the return value of RM_HashSet() to include
the number of inserted fields, in addition to updated and deleted
fields.
errno is set on errors, tests are added and documentation updated.
* Don't run test script on non-Linux.
* Verify that reported fds do indeed exist also in parent, to avoid
false negatives on some systems (namely CentOS).
Co-authored-by: Andy Pan <panjf2000@gmail.com>
- removes time sensitive checks from block on background tests during leak checks.
- fix uninitialized variable on RedisModuleBlockedClient() when calling
RM_BlockedClientMeasureTimeEnd() without RM_BlockedClientMeasureTimeStart()
1. Rename 18-cluster-nodes-slots.tcl to 19-cluster-nodes-slots.tcl.
it was conflicting with another test prefixed by 18
2. Release memory on exit in redis-cli.c.
3. Fix freeConvertedSds indentation.
* For consistency, use tclsh for the script as well
* Ignore leaked fds that originate from grandparent process, since we
only care about fds redis-sentinel itself is responsible for
* Check every test iteration to catch problems early
* Some cleanups, e.g. parameterization of file name, etc.
The test failed from time to time on Github actions.
We think it's possible that on the module's blocking timeout
time tracking test, the timeout is happening prior we issue the
RedisModule_BlockedClientMeasureTimeStart(bc) on the
background thread. If that is the case one possible solution
is to increase the timeout.
Increasing to 200ms to 500ms to see if nightly stops failing.
Without this fix, RM_ZsetRem can leave empty sorted sets which are
not allowed to exist.
Removing from a sorted set while iterating seems to work (while
inserting causes failed assetions). RM_ZsetRangeEndReached is
modified to return 1 if the key doesn't exist, to terminate
iteration when the last element has been removed.
Changes to HRANDFIELD and ZRANDMEMBER:
* Fix risk of OOM panic when client query a very big negative count (avoid allocating huge temporary buffer).
* Fix uneven random distribution in HRANDFIELD with negative count (wasn't using dictGetFairRandomKey).
* Add tests to check an even random distribution (HRANDFIELD, SRANDMEMBER, ZRANDMEMBER).
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Fix errors of GEOSEARCH bybox search due to:
1. projection of the box to a trapezoid (when the meter box is converted to long / lat it's no longer a box).
2. width and height mismatch
Changes:
- New GEOSEARCH point in rectangle algorithm
- Fix GEOSEARCH bybox width and height mismatch bug
- Add GEOSEARCH bybox testing to the existing "GEOADD + GEORANGE randomized test"
- Add new fuzzy test to stress test the bybox corners and edges
- Add some tests for edge cases of the bybox algorithm
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
* Add bash temporarily to allow sentinel fd leaks test to run.
* Use vmactions-freebsd rdist sync to work around bind permission denied
and slow execution issues.
* Upgrade to tcl8.6 to be aligned with latest Ubuntu envs.
* Concat all command executions to avoid ignoring failures.
* Skip intensive fuzzer on FreeBSD. For some yet unknown reason, generate_fuzzy_traffic_on_key causes TCL to significantly bloat on FreeBSD resulting with out of memory.
* The corrupt dump fuzzer found a division by zero.
* in some cases the random fields from the HRANDFIELD tests produced
fields with newlines and other special chars (due to \ char), this caused
the TCL tests to see a bulk response that has a newline in it and add {}
around it, later it can think this is a nested list. in fact the `alpha` random
string generator isn't using spaces and newlines, so it should not use `\`
either.
This commit fixes sentinel announces hostnames test error in certain linux environment
Before this commit, we only check localhost is resolved into 127.0.0.1, however in ubuntu
or some other linux environments "localhost" will be resolved into ::1 ipv6 address first if
the network stack is capable.
This commit enables tracking time of the background tasks and on replies,
opening the door for properly tracking commands that rely on blocking / background
work via the slowlog, latency history, and commandstats.
Some notes:
- The time spent blocked waiting for key changes, or blocked on synchronous
replication is not accounted for.
- **This commit does not affect latency tracking of commands that are non-blocking
or do not have background work.** ( meaning that it all stays the same with exception to
`BZPOPMIN`,`BZPOPMAX`,`BRPOP`,`BLPOP`, etc... and module's commands that rely
on background threads ).
- Specifically for latency history command we've added a new event class named
`command-unblocking` that will enable latency monitoring on commands that spawn
background threads to do the work.
- For blocking commands we're now considering the total time of a command as the
time spent on call() + the time spent on replying when unblocked.
- For Modules commands that rely on background threads we're now considering the
total time of a command as the time spent on call (main thread) + the time spent on
the background thread ( if marked within `RedisModule_MeasureTimeStart()` and
`RedisModule_MeasureTimeEnd()` ) + the time spent on replying (main thread)
To test for this feature we've added a `unit/moduleapi/blockonbackground` test that relies on
a module that blocks the client and sleeps on the background for a given time.
- check blocked command that uses RedisModule_MeasureTimeStart() is tracking background time
- check blocked command that uses RedisModule_MeasureTimeStart() is tracking background time even in timeout
- check blocked command with multiple calls RedisModule_MeasureTimeStart() is tracking the total background time
- check blocked command without calling RedisModule_MeasureTimeStart() is not reporting background time
New commands:
`HRANDFIELD [<count> [WITHVALUES]]`
`ZRANDMEMBER [<count> [WITHSCORES]]`
Algorithms are similar to the one in SRANDMEMBER.
Both return a simple bulk response when no arguments are given, and an array otherwise.
In case values/scores are requested, RESP2 returns a long array, and RESP3 a nested array.
note: in all 3 commands, the only option that also provides random order is the one with negative count.
Changes to SRANDMEMBER
* Optimization when count is 1, we can use the more efficient algorithm of non-unique random
* optimization: work with sds strings rather than robj
Other changes:
* zzlGetScore: when zset needs to convert string to double, we use safer memcpy (in
case the buffer is too small)
* Solve a "bug" in SRANDMEMBER test: it intended to test a positive count (case 3 or
case 4) and by accident used a negative count
Co-authored-by: xinluton <xinluton@qq.com>
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
APIs added for these stream operations: add, delete, iterate and
trim (by ID or maxlength). The functions are prefixed by RM_Stream.
* RM_StreamAdd
* RM_StreamDelete
* RM_StreamIteratorStart
* RM_StreamIteratorStop
* RM_StreamIteratorNextID
* RM_StreamIteratorNextField
* RM_StreamIteratorDelete
* RM_StreamTrimByLength
* RM_StreamTrimByID
The type RedisModuleStreamID is added and functions for converting
from and to RedisModuleString.
* RM_CreateStringFromStreamID
* RM_StringToStreamID
Whenever the stream functions return REDISMODULE_ERR, errno is set to
provide additional error information.
Refactoring: The zset iterator fields in the RedisModuleKey struct
are wrapped in a union, to allow the same space to be used for type-
specific info for streams and allow future use for other key types.
This is both a bugfix and an enhancement.
Internally, Sentinel relies entirely on IP addresses to identify
instances. When configured with a new master, it also requires users to
specify and IP and not hostname.
However, replicas may use the replica-announce-ip configuration to
announce a hostname. When that happens, Sentinel fails to match the
announced hostname with the expected IP and considers that a different
instance, triggering reconfiguration, etc.
Another use case is where TLS is used and clients are expected to match
the hostname to connect to with the certificate's SAN attribute. To
properly implement this configuration, it is necessary for Sentinel to
redirect clients to a hostname rather than an IP address.
The new 'resolve-hostnames' configuration parameter determines if
Sentinel is willing to accept hostnames. It is set by default to no,
which maintains backwards compatibility and avoids unexpected DNS
resolution delays on systems with DNS configuration issues.
Internally, Sentinel continues to identify instances by their resolved
IP address and will also report the IP by default. The new
'announce-hostnames' parameter determines if Sentinel should prefer to
announce a hostname, when available, rather than an IP address. This
applies to addresses returned to clients, as well as their
representation in the configuration file, REPLICAOF configuration
commands, etc.
This commit also introduces SENTINEL CONFIG GET and SENTINEL CONFIG SET
which can be used to introspect or configure global Sentinel
configuration that was previously was only possible by directly
accessing the configuration file and possibly restarting the instance.
Co-authored-by: myl1024 <myl92916@qq.com>
Co-authored-by: sundb <sundbcn@gmail.com>
if option `set-proc-title' is no, then do nothing for proc title.
The reason has been explained long ago, see following:
We update redis to 2.8.8, then found there are some side effect when
redis always change the process title.
We run several slave instance on one computer, and all these salves
listen on unix socket only, then ps will show:
1 S redis 18036 1 0 80 0 - 56130 ep_pol 14:02 ? 00:00:31 /usr/sbin/redis-server *:0
1 S redis 23949 1 0 80 0 - 11074 ep_pol 15:41 ? 00:00:00 /usr/sbin/redis-server *:0
for redis 2.6 the output of ps is like following:
1 S redis 18036 1 0 80 0 - 56130 ep_pol 14:02 ? 00:00:31 /usr/sbin/redis-server /etc/redis/a.conf
1 S redis 23949 1 0 80 0 - 11074 ep_pol 15:41 ? 00:00:00 /usr/sbin/redis-server /etc/redis/b.conf
Later is more informational in our case. The situation
is worse when we manage the config and process running
state by salt. Salt check the process by running "ps |
grep SIG" (for Gentoo System) to check the running
state, where SIG is the string to search for when
looking for the service process with ps. Previously, we
define sig as "/usr/sbin/redis-server
/etc/redis/a.conf". Since the ps output is identical for
our case, so we have no way to check the state of
specified redis instance.
So, for our case, we prefer the old behavior, i.e, do
not change the process title for the main redis process.
Or add an option such as "set-proc-title [yes|no]" to
control this behavior.
Co-authored-by: Yossi Gottlieb <yossigo@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
This commit introduces two new command and two options for an existing command
GETEX <key> [PERSIST][EX seconds][PX milliseconds] [EXAT seconds-timestamp]
[PXAT milliseconds-timestamp]
The getexCommand() function implements extended options and variants of the GET
command. Unlike GET command this command is not read-only. Only one of the options
can be used at a given time.
1. PERSIST removes any TTL associated with the key.
2. EX Set expiry TTL in seconds.
3. PX Set expiry TTL in milliseconds.
4. EXAT Same like EX instead of specifying the number of seconds representing the
TTL (time to live), it takes an absolute Unix timestamp
5. PXAT Same like PX instead of specifying the number of milliseconds representing the
TTL (time to live), it takes an absolute Unix timestamp
Command would return either the bulk string, error or nil.
GETDEL <key>
Would delete the key after getting.
SET key value [NX] [XX] [KEEPTTL] [GET] [EX <seconds>] [PX <milliseconds>]
[EXAT <seconds-timestamp>][PXAT <milliseconds-timestamp>]
Two new options added here are EXAT and PXAT
Key implementation notes
- `SET` with `PX/EX/EXAT/PXAT` is always translated to `PXAT` in `AOF`. When relative time is
specified (`PX/EX`), replication will always use `PX`.
- `setexCommand` and `psetexCommand` would no longer need translation in `feedAppendOnlyFile`
as they are modified to invoke `setGenericCommand ` with appropriate flags which will take care of
correct AOF translation.
- `GETEX` without any optional argument behaves like `GET`.
- `GETEX` command is never propagated, It is either propagated as `PEXPIRE[AT], or PERSIST`.
- `GETDEL` command is propagated as `DEL`
- Combined the validation for `SET` and `GETEX` arguments.
- Test cases to validate AOF/Replication propagation
It was confusing as to why these don't return a map type.
the reason is that order matters, so we need to make sure the client
library knows to respect it.
Added comments in the implementation and tests to cover it.
This commit fixes a well known and an annoying issue in Sentinel mode.
Cause of this issue:
Currently, Redis rewrite process works well in server mode, however in sentinel mode,
the sentinel config has variant semantics for different configurations, in example configuration
https://github.com/redis/redis/blob/unstable/sentinel.conf, we put comments on these.
However the rewrite process only treat the sentinel config as a single option. During rewrite
process, it will mess up with the lines and comments.
Approaches:
In order to solve this issue, we need to differentiate different subconfig options in sentinel separately,
for example, sentinel monitor <master-name> <ip> <redis-port> <quorum>
we can treat it as sentinel monitor option, instead of the sentinel option.
This commit also fixes the dependency issue when putting configurations in sentinel.conf.
For example before this commit,we must put
`sentinel monitor <master-name> <ip> <redis-port> <quorum>` before
`sentinel auth-pass <master-name> <password>` for a single master,
otherwise the server cannot start and will return error. This commit fixes this issue, as long as
the monitoring master was configured, no matter the sequence is, the sentinel can start and run properly.
some tests use attach_to_replication_stream to watch what's propagated
to replicas, but in some cases the periodic ping may slip in and fail
the test.
we disable that ping by setting the period to once an hour (tests should
not run for that long).
other change is so that the next time this oom-score-adj test fails,
we'll see the value (assert_equals prints it)
1. Valgrind leak in a recent change in a module api test
2. Increase treshold of a RESTORE TTL test
3. Change assertions to use assert_range which prints the values
BLPOP and other blocking list commands can only block on empty keys
and LPUSH only wakes up clients when the list is created.
Using the module API, it's possible to block on a non-empty key.
Unblocking a client blocked on a non-empty list (or zset) can only
be done using RedisModule_SignalKeyAsReady(). This commit tests it.
the test was misleading because the module would actually woke up on a wrong type and
re-blocked, while the test name suggests the module doesn't not wake up at all on a wrong type..
i changed the name of the test + added verification that indeed the module wakes up and gets
re-blocked after it understand it's the wrong type