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
Sentinel uses execve to run scripts, so it needs to use FD_CLOEXEC
on all file descriptors, so that they're not accessible by the script it runs.
This commit includes a change to the sentinel tests, which verifies no
FDs are left opened when the script is executed.
This commit adds tests to make sure that relative and absolute expire commands
are propagated as is to replicas and stop any future attempt to change that without
a proper discussion. see #8327 and #5171
Additionally it slightly improve the AOF test that tests the opposite (always
propagating absolute times), by covering more commands, and shaving 2
seconds from the test time.
This was a regression from #7625 (only in 6.2 RC2).
This makes it possible again to implement blocking list and zset
commands using the modules API.
This commit also includes a test case for the reverse: A module
unblocks a client blocked on BLPOP by inserting elements using
RedisModule_ListPush(). This already works, but it was untested.
This adds basic coverage to IO threads by running the cluster and few selected Redis test suite tests with the IO threads enabled.
Also provides some necessary additional improvements to the test suite:
* Add --config to sentinel/cluster tests for arbitrary configuration.
* Fix --tags whitelisting which was broken.
* Add a `network` tag to some tests that are more network intensive. This is work in progress and more tests should be properly tagged in the future.
* Adds ASYNC and SYNC arguments to SCRIPT FLUSH
* Adds SYNC argument to FLUSHDB and FLUSHALL
* Adds new config to control the default behavior of FLUSHDB, FLUSHALL and SCRIPT FLUASH.
the new behavior is as follows:
* FLUSH[ALL|DB],SCRIPT FLUSH: Determine sync or async according to the
value of lazyfree-lazy-user-flush.
* FLUSH[ALL|DB],SCRIPT FLUSH ASYNC: Always flushes the database in an async manner.
* FLUSH[ALL|DB],SCRIPT FLUSH SYNC: Always flushes the database in a sync manner.
This fixes three issues:
1. Using debug SLEEP was impacting the subsequent test, and causing it to pass reliably even though it should have failed. There was exactly 5 seconds of artificial pause (after 1000, wait 3000, wait 1000) between the debug sleep 5 and when we needed to unblock the client in the subsequent test. Now the test properly makes sure the client is unblocked, and the subsequent test is fixed.
2. Minor, the client pause types were using & comparisons instead of ==, since it was previously a flag.
3. Test is faster now that some of the hand wavy time is removed.
The test was trying to wait for the replica to start loading the rdb
from the master before it kills the master, but it was actually waiting
for ROLE to be in "sync" mode, which corresponds to REPL_STATE_TRANSFER
that starts before the actual loading starts.
now instead it waits for the loading flag to be set.
Besides, the test was dependent on the previous configuration of the
servers, relying on the fact the replica is configured to persist
(either RDB of AOF), now it is set explicitly.
- the last COW report wasn't always read from the pipe
(receiveLastChildInfo wasn't used)
- but in fact, there's no reason we won't always try to drain that pipe
so i'm unifying receiveLastChildInfo with receiveChildInfo
- adjust threshold of the COW test when run in accurate mode
- add some prints in case this test fails again
- fix indentation, page size, and PID! in MacOS proc info
p.s. it seems that pri_pages_dirtied is always 0
This PR adds another trimming strategy to XADD and XTRIM named MINID
(complements the existing MAXLEN).
It also adds a new LIMIT argument that allows incremental trimming by repeated
calls (rather than all at once).
This provides the ability to trim all records older than a certain ID (which makes it
possible for the user to trim by age too).
Example:
XTRIM mystream MINID ~ 1608540753 will trim entries with id < 1608540753,
but might not trim all (because of the ~ modifier)
The purpose is to ease the use of streams. many users use streams as logs and
the common case is wanting a log
of the last X seconds rather than a log that contains maximum X entries (new
MINID vs existing MAXLEN)
The new LIMIT modifier is only supported when the trim strategy uses ~.
i.e. when the user asked for exact trimming, it all happens in one go (no
possibility for incremental trimming).
However, when ~ is provided, we trim full rax nodes, up to the limit number
of records.
The default limit is 100*stream_node_max_entries (used when LIMIT is not
provided).
I.e. this is a behavior change (even if the existing MAXLEN strategy is used).
An explicit limit of 0 means unlimited (but note that it's not the default).
Other changes:
Refactor arg parsing code for XADD and XTRIM to use common code.
The defragger works well on these systems, but the tests and their
thresholds are not adjusted for these big pages, so the defragger isn't
able to get down the fragmentation to the levels the test expects and it
fails on "defrag didn't stop".
Randomly choosing 8k as the threshold for the skipping
Fixes#8265 (which had 65k pages)
Add INFO field, rdb_active_cow_size, to report COW of a live fork child while
it's active.
- once in 1024 keys check the time, and if there's more than one second since
the last report send a report to the parent via the pipe.
- refactor the child_info_data struct, it's an implementation detail that
shouldn't be in the server struct, and not used to communicate data between
caller and callee
- remove the magic value from that struct (not sure what it was good for), and
instead add handling of short reads.
- add another value to the structure, cow_type, to indicate if the report is
for the new rdb_active_cow_size field, or it's the last report of a
successful operation
- add new Module API to report the active COW
- add more asserts variants to test.tcl
Add ZRANGESTORE command, and improve ZSTORE command to deprecated Z[REV]RANGE[BYSCORE|BYLEX].
Syntax for the new ZRANGESTORE command:
ZRANGESTORE [BYSCORE | BYLEX] [REV] [LIMIT offset count]
New syntax for ZRANGE:
ZRANGE [BYSCORE | BYLEX] [REV] [WITHSCORES] [LIMIT offset count]
Old syntax for ZRANGE:
ZRANGE [WITHSCORES]
Other ZRANGE commands remain unchanged.
The implementation uses common code for all of these, by utilizing a consumer interface that in one
command response to the client, and in the other command stores a zset key.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
New command: XAUTOCLAIM <key> <group> <consumer> <min-idle-time> <start> [COUNT <count>] [JUSTID]
The purpose is to claim entries from a stale consumer without the usual
XPENDING+XCLAIM combo which takes two round trips.
The syntax for XAUTOCLAIM is similar to scan: A cursor is returned (streamID)
by each call and should be used as start for the next call. 0-0 means the scan is complete.
This PR extends the deferred reply mechanism for any bulk string (not just counts)
This PR carries some unrelated test code changes:
- Renames the term "client" into "consumer" in the stream-cgroups test
- And also changes DEBUG SLEEP into "after"
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
When a Lua script returns a map to redis (a feature which was added in
redis 6 together with RESP3), it would have returned the value first and
the key second.
If the client was using RESP2, it was getting them out of order, and if
the client was in RESP3, it was getting a map of value => key.
This was happening regardless of the Lua script using redis.setresp(3)
or not.
This also affects a case where the script was returning a map which it got
from from redis by doing something like: redis.setresp(3); return redis.call()
This fix is a breaking change for redis 6.0 users who happened to rely
on the wrong order (either ones that used redis.setresp(3), or ones that
returned a map explicitly).
This commit also includes other two changes in the tests:
1. The test suite now handles RESP3 maps as dicts rather than nested
lists
2. Remove some redundant (duplicate) tests from tracking.tcl
This PR not only fixes the problem that swapdb does not make the
transaction fail, but also optimizes the FLUSHALL and FLUSHDB command to
set the CLIENT_DIRTY_CAS flag to avoid unnecessary traversal of clients.
FLUSHDB was changed to first iterate on all watched keys, and then on the
clients watching each key.
Instead of iterating though all clients, and for each iterate on watched keys.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
New command flags similar to what SADD already has.
Co-authored-by: huangwei03 <huangwei03@kuaishou.com>
Co-authored-by: Itamar Haber <itamar@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
This Commit pushes forward the observability on overall error statistics and command statistics within redis-server:
It extends INFO COMMANDSTATS to have
- failed_calls in - so we can keep track of errors that happen from the command itself, broken by command.
- rejected_calls - so we can keep track of errors that were triggered outside the commmand processing per se
Adds a new section to INFO, named ERRORSTATS that enables keeping track of the different errors that
occur within redis ( within processCommand and call ) based on the reply Error Prefix ( The first word
after the "-", up to the first space ).
This commit also fixes RM_ReplyWithError so that it can be correctly identified as an error reply.
Adds: `L/RPOP <key> [count]`
Implements no. 2 of the following strategies:
1. Loop on listTypePop - this would result in multiple calls for memory freeing and allocating (see 769167a079)
2. Iterate the range to build the reply, then call quickListDelRange - this requires two iterations and **is the current choice**
3. Refactor quicklist to have a pop variant of quickListDelRange - probably optimal but more complex
Also:
* There's a historical check for NULL after calling listTypePop that was converted to an assert.
* This refactors common logic shared between LRANGE and the new form of LPOP/RPOP into addListRangeReply (adds test for b/w compat)
* Consequently, it may have made sense to have `LRANGE l -1 -2` and `LRANGE l 9 0` be legit and return a reverse reply. Due to historical reasons that would be, however, a breaking change.
* Added minimal comments to existing commands to adhere to the style, make core dev life easier and get commit karma, naturally.
Apparently the "leaks" took reports a different error string about process
that's not found in each version of MacOS.
This cause the test suite to fail on some OS versions, since some tests terminate
the process before looking for leaks.
Instead of looking at the error string, we now look at the (documented) exit code.
In the distant history there was only the read flag for commands, and whatever
command that didn't have the read flag was a write one.
Then we added the write flag, but some portions of the code still used !read
Also some commands that don't work on the keyspace at all, still have the read
flag.
Changes in this commit:
1. remove the read-only flag from TIME, ECHO, ROLE and LASTSAVE
2. EXEC command used to decides if it should propagate a MULTI by looking at
the command flags (!read & !admin).
When i was about to change it to look at the write flag instead, i realized
that this would cause it not to propagate a MULTI for PUBLISH, EVAL, and
SCRIPT, all 3 are not marked as either a read command or a write one (as
they should), but all 3 are calling forceCommandPropagation.
So instead of introducing a new flag to denote a command that "writes" but
not into the keyspace, and still needs propagation, i decided to rely on
the forceCommandPropagation, and just fix the code to propagate MULTI when
needed rather than depending on the command flags at all.
The implication of my change then is that now it won't decide to propagate
MULTI when it sees one of these: SELECT, PING, INFO, COMMAND, TIME and
other commands which are neither read nor write.
3. Changing getNodeByQuery and clusterRedirectBlockedClientIfNeeded in
cluster.c to look at !write rather than read flag.
This should have no implications, since these code paths are only reachable
for commands which access keys, and these are always marked as either read
or write.
This commit improve MULTI propagation tests, for modules and a bunch of
other special cases, all of which used to pass already before that commit.
the only one that test change that uncovered a change of behavior is the
one that DELs a non-existing key, it used to propagate an empty
multi-exec block, and no longer does.
Additionally the older defrag tests are using an obsolete way to check
if the defragger is suuported (the error no longer contains "DISABLED").
this doesn't usually makes a difference since these tests are completely
skipped if the allocator is not jemalloc, but that would fail if the
allocator is a jemalloc that doesn't support defrag.