The Run ID is a field that identifies a single execution of the Redis
server. It can be useful for many purposes as it makes easy to detect if
the instance we are talking about is the same, or if it is a different
one or was rebooted. An application of run_id will be in the partial
synchronization of replication, where a slave may request a partial sync
from a given offset only if it is talking with the same master. Another
application is in failover and monitoring scripts.
Redis now refuses accepting write queries if RDB persistence is
configured, but RDB snapshots can't be generated for some reason.
The status of the latest background save operation is now exposed
in the INFO output as well. This fixes issue #90.
The new code uses a more generic data structure to describe redis operations.
The new design allows for multiple alsoPropagate() calls within the scope of a
single command, that is useful in different contexts. For instance there
when there are multiple clients doing BRPOPLPUSH against the same list,
and a variadic LPUSH is performed against this list, the blocked clients
will both be served, and we should correctly replicate multiple LPUSH
commands after the replication of the current command.
The cron is responsible for expiring keys. When keys are expired at
load time, it is possible that the snapshot of a master node gets
modified. This can in turn lead to inconsistencies in the data set.
A more concrete example of this behavior follows. A user reported a
slave that would show an monotonically increase input buffer length,
shortly after completing a SYNC. Also, `INFO` output showed a single
blocked client, which could only be the master link. Investigation
showed that indeed the `BRPOP` command was fed by the master. This
command can only end up in the stream of write operations when it did
NOT block, and effectively executed `RPOP`. However, when the key
involved in the `BRPOP` is expired BEFORE the command is executed, the
client executing it will block. The client in this case, is the master
link.