Commit Graph

161 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Madelyn Olson
8bd01a07ae
Allow specifying ACL reason for module log entry (#10559)
Allow specifying an ACL log reason, which is shown in the log. Right now it always shows "unknown", which is a little bit cryptic. This is a breaking change, but this API was added as part of 7 so it seems ok to stabilize it still.
2022-04-11 22:16:17 -07:00
judeng
8a7049d363
use $^ instead of $< for linker in module makefile (#10530) 2022-04-05 17:08:27 +03:00
judeng
9578b67e0e
delete obsolete REDISMODULE_EXPERIMENTAL_API define in module demos (#10527)
This macro was recently removed from redismodule.h, so no longer needed.
2022-04-05 08:21:41 +03:00
sundb
b8eb2a7340
Fix failing moduleconfigs tests and memory leak (#10501)
Fix global `strval` not reset to NULL after being freed, causing a crash on alpine
(most likely because the dynamic library loader doesn't init globals on reload)
By the way, fix the memory leak of using `RedisModule_Free` to free `RedisModuleString`,
and add a corresponding test.
2022-03-31 15:26:10 +03:00
Nick Chun
bda9d74dad
Module Configurations (#10285)
This feature adds the ability to add four different types (Bool, Numeric,
String, Enum) of configurations to a module to be accessed via the redis
config file, and the CONFIG command.

**Configuration Names**:

We impose a restriction that a module configuration always starts with the
module name and contains a '.' followed by the config name. If a module passes
"config1" as the name to a register function, it will be registered as MODULENAME.config1.

**Configuration Persistence**:

Module Configurations exist only as long as a module is loaded. If a module is
unloaded, the configurations are removed.
There is now also a minimal core API for removal of standardConfig objects
from configs by name.

**Get and Set Callbacks**:

Storage of config values is owned by the module that registers them, and provides
callbacks for Redis to access and manipulate the values.
This is exposed through a GET and SET callback.

The get callback returns a typed value of the config to redis. The callback takes
the name of the configuration, and also a privdata pointer. Note that these only
take the CONFIGNAME portion of the config, not the entire MODULENAME.CONFIGNAME.

```
 typedef RedisModuleString * (*RedisModuleConfigGetStringFunc)(const char *name, void *privdata);
 typedef long long (*RedisModuleConfigGetNumericFunc)(const char *name, void *privdata);
 typedef int (*RedisModuleConfigGetBoolFunc)(const char *name, void *privdata);
 typedef int (*RedisModuleConfigGetEnumFunc)(const char *name, void *privdata);
```

Configs must also must specify a set callback, i.e. what to do on a CONFIG SET XYZ 123
or when loading configurations from cli/.conf file matching these typedefs. *name* is
again just the CONFIGNAME portion, *val* is the parsed value from the core,
*privdata* is the registration time privdata pointer, and *err* is for providing errors to a client.

```
typedef int (*RedisModuleConfigSetStringFunc)(const char *name, RedisModuleString *val, void *privdata, RedisModuleString **err);
typedef int (*RedisModuleConfigSetNumericFunc)(const char *name, long long val, void *privdata, RedisModuleString **err);
typedef int (*RedisModuleConfigSetBoolFunc)(const char *name, int val, void *privdata, RedisModuleString **err);
typedef int (*RedisModuleConfigSetEnumFunc)(const char *name, int val, void *privdata, RedisModuleString **err);
```

Modules can also specify an optional apply callback that will be called after
value(s) have been set via CONFIG SET:

```
typedef int (*RedisModuleConfigApplyFunc)(RedisModuleCtx *ctx, void *privdata, RedisModuleString **err);
```

**Flags:**
We expose 7 new flags to the module, which are used as part of the config registration.

```
#define REDISMODULE_CONFIG_MODIFIABLE 0 /* This is the default for a module config. */
#define REDISMODULE_CONFIG_IMMUTABLE (1ULL<<0) /* Can this value only be set at startup? */
#define REDISMODULE_CONFIG_SENSITIVE (1ULL<<1) /* Does this value contain sensitive information */
#define REDISMODULE_CONFIG_HIDDEN (1ULL<<4) /* This config is hidden in `config get <pattern>` (used for tests/debugging) */
#define REDISMODULE_CONFIG_PROTECTED (1ULL<<5) /* Becomes immutable if enable-protected-configs is enabled. */
#define REDISMODULE_CONFIG_DENY_LOADING (1ULL<<6) /* This config is forbidden during loading. */
/* Numeric Specific Configs */
#define REDISMODULE_CONFIG_MEMORY (1ULL<<7) /* Indicates if this value can be set as a memory value */
```

**Module Registration APIs**:

```
int (*RedisModule_RegisterBoolConfig)(RedisModuleCtx *ctx, char *name, int default_val, unsigned int flags, RedisModuleConfigGetBoolFunc getfn, RedisModuleConfigSetBoolFunc setfn, RedisModuleConfigApplyFunc applyfn, void *privdata);
int (*RedisModule_RegisterNumericConfig)(RedisModuleCtx *ctx, const char *name, long long default_val, unsigned int flags, long long min, long long max, RedisModuleConfigGetNumericFunc getfn, RedisModuleConfigSetNumericFunc setfn, RedisModuleConfigApplyFunc applyfn, void *privdata);
int (*RedisModule_RegisterStringConfig)(RedisModuleCtx *ctx, const char *name, const char *default_val, unsigned int flags, RedisModuleConfigGetStringFunc getfn, RedisModuleConfigSetStringFunc setfn, RedisModuleConfigApplyFunc applyfn, void *privdata);
int (*RedisModule_RegisterEnumConfig)(RedisModuleCtx *ctx, const char *name, int default_val, unsigned int flags, const char **enum_values, const int *int_values, int num_enum_vals, RedisModuleConfigGetEnumFunc getfn, RedisModuleConfigSetEnumFunc setfn, RedisModuleConfigApplyFunc applyfn, void *privdata);
int (*RedisModule_LoadConfigs)(RedisModuleCtx *ctx);
```

The module name will be auto appended along with a "." to the front of the name of the config.

**What RM_Register[...]Config does**:

A RedisModule struct now keeps a list of ModuleConfig objects which look like:
```
typedef struct ModuleConfig {
    sds name; /* Name of config without the module name appended to the front */
    void *privdata; /* Optional data passed into the module config callbacks */
    union get_fn { /* The get callback specificed by the module */
        RedisModuleConfigGetStringFunc get_string;
        RedisModuleConfigGetNumericFunc get_numeric;
        RedisModuleConfigGetBoolFunc get_bool;
        RedisModuleConfigGetEnumFunc get_enum;
    } get_fn;
    union set_fn { /* The set callback specified by the module */
        RedisModuleConfigSetStringFunc set_string;
        RedisModuleConfigSetNumericFunc set_numeric;
        RedisModuleConfigSetBoolFunc set_bool;
        RedisModuleConfigSetEnumFunc set_enum;
    } set_fn;
    RedisModuleConfigApplyFunc apply_fn;
    RedisModule *module;
} ModuleConfig;
```
It also registers a standardConfig in the configs array, with a pointer to the
ModuleConfig object associated with it.

**What happens on a CONFIG GET/SET MODULENAME.MODULECONFIG:**

For CONFIG SET, we do the same parsing as is done in config.c and pass that
as the argument to the module set callback. For CONFIG GET, we call the
module get callback and return that value to config.c to return to a client.

**CONFIG REWRITE**:

Starting up a server with module configurations in a .conf file but no module load
directive will fail. The flip side is also true, specifying a module load and a bunch
of module configurations will load those configurations in using the module defined
set callbacks on a RM_LoadConfigs call. Configs being rewritten works the same
way as it does for standard configs, as the module has the ability to specify a
default value. If a module is unloaded with configurations specified in the .conf file
those configurations will be commented out from the .conf file on the next config rewrite.

**RM_LoadConfigs:**

`RedisModule_LoadConfigs(RedisModuleCtx *ctx);`

This last API is used to make configs available within the onLoad() after they have
been registered. The expected usage is that a module will register all of its configs,
then call LoadConfigs to trigger all of the set callbacks, and then can error out if any
of them were malformed. LoadConfigs will attempt to set all configs registered to
either a .conf file argument/loadex argument or their default value if an argument is
not specified. **LoadConfigs is a required function if configs are registered.
** Also note that LoadConfigs **does not** call the apply callbacks, but a module
can do that directly after the LoadConfigs call.

**New Command: MODULE LOADEX [CONFIG NAME VALUE] [ARGS ...]:**

This command provides the ability to provide startup context information to a module.
LOADEX stands for "load extended" similar to GETEX. Note that provided config
names need the full MODULENAME.MODULECONFIG name. Any additional
arguments a module might want are intended to be specified after ARGS.
Everything after ARGS is passed to onLoad as RedisModuleString **argv.

Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <madelyneolson@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <matolson@amazon.com>
Co-authored-by: sundb <sundbcn@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Madelyn Olson <34459052+madolson@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: Yossi Gottlieb <yossigo@gmail.com>
2022-03-30 15:47:06 +03:00
Meir Shpilraien (Spielrein)
f3855a0930
Add new RM_Call flags for script mode, no writes, and error replies. (#10372)
The PR extends RM_Call with 3 new capabilities using new flags that
are given to RM_Call as part of the `fmt` argument.
It aims to assist modules that are getting a list of commands to be
executed from the user (not hard coded as part of the module logic),
think of a module that implements a new scripting language...

* `S` - Run the command in a script mode, this means that it will raise an
  error if a command which are not allowed inside a script (flaged with the
  `deny-script` flag) is invoked (like SHUTDOWN). In addition, on script mode,
  write commands are not allowed if there is not enough good replicas (as
  configured with `min-replicas-to-write`) and/or a disk error happened.

* `W` - no writes mode, Redis will reject any command that is marked with `write`
  flag. Again can be useful to modules that implement a new scripting language
  and wants to prevent any write commands.

* `E` - Return errors as RedisModuleCallReply. Today the errors that happened
  before the command was invoked (like unknown commands or acl error) return
  a NULL reply and set errno. This might be missing important information about
  the failure and it is also impossible to just pass the error to the user using
  RM_ReplyWithCallReply. This new flag allows you to get a RedisModuleCallReply
  object with the relevant error message and treat it as if it was an error that was
  raised by the command invocation.

Tests were added to verify the new code paths.

In addition small refactoring was done to share some code between modules,
scripts, and `processCommand` function:
1. `getAclErrorMessage` was added to `acl.c` to unified to log message extraction
  from the acl result
2. `checkGoodReplicasStatus` was added to `replication.c` to check the status of
  good replicas. It is used on `scriptVerifyWriteCommandAllow`, `RM_Call`, and
  `processCommand`.
3. `writeCommandsGetDiskErrorMessage` was added to `server.c` to get the error
  message on persistence failure. Again it is used on `scriptVerifyWriteCommandAllow`,
  `RM_Call`, and `processCommand`.
2022-03-22 14:13:28 +02:00
Madelyn Olson
416c9ac2ef
Add module API for redacting command arguments (#10425)
Add module API for redacting client commands
2022-03-15 18:21:13 -07:00
guybe7
2a2954086a
XREADGROUP: Unblock client if stream is deleted (#10306)
Deleting a stream while a client is blocked XREADGROUP should unblock the client.

The idea is that if a client is blocked via XREADGROUP is different from
any other blocking type in the sense that it depends on the existence of both
the key and the group. Even if the key is deleted and then revived with XADD
it won't help any clients blocked on XREADGROUP because the group no longer
exist, so they would fail with -NOGROUP anyway.
The conclusion is that it's better to unblock these clients (with error) upon
the deletion of the key, rather than waiting for the first XADD. 

Other changes:
1. Slightly optimize all `serveClientsBlockedOn*` functions by checking `server.blocked_clients_by_type`
2. All `serveClientsBlockedOn*` functions now use a list iterator rather than looking at `listFirst`, relying
  on `unblockClient` to delete the head of the list. Before this commit, only `serveClientsBlockedOnStreams`
  used to work like that.
3. bugfix: CLIENT UNBLOCK ERROR should work even if the command doesn't have a timeout_callback
  (only relevant to module commands)
2022-03-08 17:10:36 +02:00
Shaya Potter
23f03e7965
Modules: Add REDISMODULE_EVENT_CONFIG (#10311)
Add a new REDISMODULE_EVENT_CONFIG event type for notifying modules when Redis configuration changes.
2022-03-07 17:37:57 +02:00
Madelyn Olson
71204f9632
Implemented module getchannels api and renamed channel keyspec (#10299)
This implements the following main pieces of functionality:
* Renames key spec "CHANNEL" to be "NOT_KEY", and update the documentation to
  indicate it's for cluster routing and not for any other key related purpose.
* Add the getchannels-api, so that modules can now define commands that are subject to
  ACL channel permission checks. 
* Add 4 new flags that describe how a module interacts with a command (SUBSCRIBE, PUBLISH,
  UNSUBSCRIBE, and PATTERN). They are all technically composable, however not sure how a
  command could both subscribe and unsubscribe from a command at once, but didn't see
  a reason to add explicit validation there.
* Add two new module apis RM_ChannelAtPosWithFlags and RM_IsChannelsPositionRequest to
  duplicate the functionality provided by the keys position APIs.
* The RM_ACLCheckChannelPermissions (only released in 7.0 RC1) was changed to take flags
  rather than a boolean literal.
* The RM_ACLCheckKeyPermissions (only released in 7.0 RC1) was changed to take flags
  corresponding to keyspecs instead of custom permission flags. These keyspec flags mimic
  the flags for ACLCheckChannelPermissions.
2022-02-22 11:00:03 +02:00
Oran Agra
66be30f7fc
Handle key-spec flags with modules (#10237)
- add COMMAND GETKEYSANDFLAGS sub-command
- add RM_KeyAtPosWithFlags and GetCommandKeysWithFlags
- RM_KeyAtPos and RM_CreateCommand set flags requiring full access for keys
- RM_CreateCommand set VARIABLE_FLAGS
- expose `variable_flags` flag in COMMAND INFO key-specs
- getKeysFromCommandWithSpecs prefers key-specs over getkeys-api
- add tests for all of these
2022-02-08 10:01:35 +02:00
Viktor Söderqvist
0a82fe8447
Command info module API (#10108)
Adds RM_SetCommandInfo, allowing modules to provide the following command info:

* summary
* complexity
* since
* history
* hints
* arity
* key specs
* args

This information affects the output of `COMMAND`, `COMMAND INFO` and `COMMAND DOCS`,
Cluster, ACL and is used to filter commands with the wrong number of arguments before
the call reaches the module code.

The recently added API functions for key specs (never released) are removed.

A minimalist example would look like so:
```c
    RedisModuleCommand *mycmd = RedisModule_GetCommand(ctx,"mymodule.mycommand");
    RedisModuleCommandInfo mycmd_info = {
        .version = REDISMODULE_COMMAND_INFO_VERSION,
        .arity = -5,
        .summary = "some description",
    };
    if (RedisModule_SetCommandInfo(mycmd, &mycmd_info) == REDISMODULE_ERR)
        return REDISMODULE_ERR;
````

Notes:
* All the provided information (including strings) is copied, not keeping references to the API input data.
* The version field is actually a static struct that contains the sizes of the the structs used in arrays,
  so we can extend these in the future and old version will still be able to take the part they can support.
2022-02-04 21:09:36 +02:00
Binbin
7fdcada67b
Fix unused variable warning in subcommand.c (#10184)
Forgot to handle it in #10135.
2022-01-26 10:21:51 +02:00
Viktor Söderqvist
857dc5bacd
Disable keyspec module API in 7.0 RC1 (#10135)
The keyspec API is not yet released and there is a plan to change it
in #10108, which is going to be included in RC2. Therefore, we hide
it in RC1 to avoid introducing a breaking change in RC2.

Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2022-01-24 15:02:07 +02:00
Binbin
23325c135f
sub-command support for ACL CAT and COMMAND LIST. redisCommand always stores fullname (#10127)
Summary of changes:
1. Rename `redisCommand->name` to `redisCommand->declared_name`, it is a
  const char * for native commands and SDS for module commands.
2. Store the [sub]command fullname in `redisCommand->fullname` (sds).
3. List subcommands in `ACL CAT`
4. List subcommands in `COMMAND LIST`
5. `moduleUnregisterCommands` now will also free the module subcommands.
6. RM_GetCurrentCommandName returns full command name

Other changes:
1. Add `addReplyErrorArity` and `addReplyErrorExpireTime`
2. Remove `getFullCommandName` function that now is useless.
3. Some cleanups about `fullname` since now it is SDS.
4. Delete `populateSingleCommand` function from server.h that is useless.
5. Added tests to cover this change.
6. Add some module unload tests and fix the leaks
7. Make error messages uniform, make sure they always contain the full command
  name and that it's quoted.
7. Fixes some typos

see the history in #9504, fixes #10124

Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: guybe7 <guy.benoish@redislabs.com>
2022-01-23 10:05:06 +02:00
Madelyn Olson
55c81f2cd3
ACL V2 - Selectors and key based permissions (#9974)
* Implemented selectors which provide multiple different sets of permissions to users
* Implemented key based permissions 
* Added a new ACL dry-run command to test permissions before execution
* Updated module APIs to support checking key based permissions

Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2022-01-20 13:05:27 -08:00
perryitay
c4b788230c
Adding module api for processing commands during busy jobs and allow flagging the commands that should be handled at this status (#9963)
Some modules might perform a long-running logic in different stages of Redis lifetime, for example:
* command execution
* RDB loading
* thread safe context

During this long-running logic Redis is not responsive.

This PR offers 
1. An API to process events while a busy command is running (`RM_Yield`)
2. A new flag (`ALLOW_BUSY`) to mark the commands that should be handled during busy
  jobs which can also be used by modules (`allow-busy`)
3. In slow commands and thread safe contexts, this flag will start rejecting commands with -BUSY only
  after `busy-reply-threshold`
4. During loading (`rdb_load` callback), it'll process events right away (not wait for `busy-reply-threshold`),
  but either way, the processing is throttled to the server hz rate.
5. Allow modules to Yield to redis background tasks, but not to client commands

* rename `script-time-limit` to `busy-reply-threshold` (an alias to the pre-7.0 `lua-time-limit`)

Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2022-01-20 09:05:53 +02:00
Oran Agra
eef9c6b0ee
New detailed key-spec flags (RO, RW, OW, RM, ACCESS, UPDATE, INSERT, DELETE) (#10122)
The new ACL key based permissions in #9974 require the key-specs (#8324) to have more
explicit flags rather than just READ and WRITE. See discussion in #10040

This PR defines two groups of flags:
One about how redis internally handles the key (mutually-exclusive).
The other is about the logical operation done from the user's point of view (3 mutually exclusive
write flags, and one read flag, all optional).
In both groups, if we can't explicitly flag something as explicit read-only, delete-only, or
insert-only, we flag it as `RW` or `UPDATE`.
here's the definition from the code:
```
/* Key-spec flags *
 * -------------- */
/* The following refer what the command actually does with the value or metadata
 * of the key, and not necessarily the user data or how it affects it.
 * Each key-spec may must have exaclty one of these. Any operation that's not
 * distinctly deletion, overwrite or read-only would be marked as RW. */
#define CMD_KEY_RO (1ULL<<0)     /* Read-Only - Reads the value of the key, but
                                  * doesn't necessarily returns it. */
#define CMD_KEY_RW (1ULL<<1)     /* Read-Write - Modifies the data stored in the
                                  * value of the key or its metadata. */
#define CMD_KEY_OW (1ULL<<2)     /* Overwrite - Overwrites the data stored in
                                  * the value of the key. */
#define CMD_KEY_RM (1ULL<<3)     /* Deletes the key. */
/* The follwing refer to user data inside the value of the key, not the metadata
 * like LRU, type, cardinality. It refers to the logical operation on the user's
 * data (actual input strings / TTL), being used / returned / copied / changed,
 * It doesn't refer to modification or returning of metadata (like type, count,
 * presence of data). Any write that's not INSERT or DELETE, would be an UPADTE.
 * Each key-spec may have one of the writes with or without access, or none: */
#define CMD_KEY_ACCESS (1ULL<<4) /* Returns, copies or uses the user data from
                                  * the value of the key. */
#define CMD_KEY_UPDATE (1ULL<<5) /* Updates data to the value, new value may
                                  * depend on the old value. */
#define CMD_KEY_INSERT (1ULL<<6) /* Adds data to the value with no chance of,
                                  * modification or deletion of existing data. */
#define CMD_KEY_DELETE (1ULL<<7) /* Explicitly deletes some content
                                  * from the value of the key. */
```

Unrelated changes:
- generate-command-code.py is only compatible with python3 (modified the shabang)
- generate-command-code.py print file on json parsing error
- rename `shard_channel` key-spec flag to just `channel`.
- add INCOMPLETE flag in input spec of SORT and SORT_RO
2022-01-18 16:00:00 +02:00
Wang Yuan
d697daa7a5
Use const char pointer in redismodule.h as far as possible (#10064)
When I used C++ to develop a redis module. i  used `string.data()` as the second parameter `ele`
of  `RedisModule_DigestAddStringBuffer`, but there is a warning, since we never change the `ele`,
i think we should use `const char` for it.

This PR adds const to just a handful of module APIs that required it, all not very widely used.
The implication is a breaking change in terms of compilation error that's easy to resolve, and no ABI impact.
The affected APIs are around Digest, Info injection, and Cluster bus messages.
2022-01-18 15:55:20 +02:00
Ozan Tezcan
99ab4236af
Add event loop support to the module API (#10001)
Modules can now register sockets/pipe to the Redis main thread event loop and do network operations asynchronously. Previously, modules had to maintain an event loop and another thread for asynchronous network operations.

Also, if a module is calling API functions after doing some network operations, it had to synchronize its event loop thread's access with Redis main thread by locking the GIL, causing contention on the lock. After this commit, no synchronization is needed as module can operate in Redis main thread context. So, this commit may improve the performance for some use cases.

Added three functions to the module API:

* RedisModule_EventLoopAdd(int fd, int mask, RedisModuleEventLoopFunc func, void *user_data)
* RedisModule_EventLoopDel(int fd, int mask)
* RedisModule_EventLoopAddOneShot(RedisModuleEventLoopOneShotFunc func, void *user_data) - This function can be called from other threads to trigger callback on Redis main thread. Callback will be triggered only once. If Redis main thread is sleeping, this call will wake up the Redis main thread.
Event loop callbacks are called by Redis main thread after locking the GIL. Inside callbacks, modules can operate as if they are holding the GIL.

Added REDISMODULE_EVENT_EVENTLOOP event with two subevents:

* REDISMODULE_SUBEVENT_EVENTLOOP_BEFORE_SLEEP
* REDISMODULE_SUBEVENT_EVENTLOOP_AFTER_SLEEP

These events are for modules that want to participate in the before and after sleep action. e.g It might be useful to implement batching : Read data from the network, write all to a file in one go on BEFORE_SLEEP event.
2022-01-18 13:10:07 +02:00
Ozan Tezcan
f41cc87088
Added RM_MonotonicMicroseconds() API to provide monotonic time function (#10101)
Added RM_MonotonicMicroseconds(). Modules can use monotonic timestamp counter for measurements.
2022-01-13 11:36:03 +02:00
chenyang8094
e9bff7978a
Always create base AOF file when redis start from empty. (#10102)
Force create a BASE file (use a foreground `rewriteAppendOnlyFile`) when redis starts from an
empty data set and  `appendonly` is  yes.

The reasoning is that normally, after redis is running for some time, and the AOF has gone though
a few rewrites, there's always a base rdb file. and the scenario where the base file is missing, is
kinda rare (happens only at empty startup), so this change normalizes it.
But more importantly, there are or could be some complex modules that are started with some
configuration, when they create persistence they write that configuration to RDB AUX fields, so
that can can always know with which configuration the persistence file they're loading was
created (could be critical). there is (was) one scenario in which they could load their persisted data,
and that configuration was missing, and this change fixes it.

Add a new module event: REDISMODULE_SUBEVENT_PERSISTENCE_SYNC_AOF_START, similar to
REDISMODULE_SUBEVENT_PERSISTENCE_AOF_START which is async.

Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2022-01-13 08:49:26 +02:00
Viktor Söderqvist
e4b3a257ee
Modules: Mark all APIs non-experimental (#9983)
These exist for quite some time, and are no longer experimental
2021-12-30 12:17:22 +02:00
guybe7
7ac213079c
Sort out mess around propagation and MULTI/EXEC (#9890)
The mess:
Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()),
causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs

The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the
top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping
them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function,
propagatePendingCommands.

Callers to propagatePendingCommands:
1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most
   one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand`
2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`. 
3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the
   expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate
   the deletion explicitly.
4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff
5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications,
   threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one
   place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module
   context may cause propagation.
6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module
   must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when
   releasing the GIL.

A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl):
   When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order:
   first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate

Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one
write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant.
not anymore.

This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs.
propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function.

Optimizations:
1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas
2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove

Bugfixes:
1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules.
   we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas
2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario:
   - CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call
   - assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE
3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands
   (we always send a notification before propagating the command)
2021-12-23 00:03:48 +02:00
guybe7
867816003e
Auto-generate the command table from JSON files (#9656)
Delete the hardcoded command table and replace it with an auto-generated table, based
on a JSON file that describes the commands (each command must have a JSON file).

These JSON files are the SSOT of everything there is to know about Redis commands,
and it is reflected fully in COMMAND INFO.

These JSON files are used to generate commands.c (using a python script), which is then
committed to the repo and compiled.

The purpose is:
* Clients and proxies will be able to get much more info from redis, instead of relying on hard coded logic.
* drop the dependency between Redis-user and the commands.json in redis-doc.
* delete help.h and have redis-cli learn everything it needs to know just by issuing COMMAND (will be
  done in a separate PR)
* redis.io should stop using commands.json and learn everything from Redis (ultimately one of the release
  artifacts should be a large JSON, containing all the information about all of the commands, which will be
  generated from COMMAND's reply)
* the byproduct of this is:
  * module commands will be able to provide that info and possibly be more of a first-class citizens
  * in theory, one may be able to generate a redis client library for a strictly typed language, by using this info.

### Interface changes

#### COMMAND INFO's reply change (and arg-less COMMAND)

Before this commit the reply at index 7 contained the key-specs list
and reply at index 8 contained the sub-commands list (Both unreleased).
Now, reply at index 7 is a map of:
- summary - short command description
- since - debut version
- group - command group
- complexity - complexity string
- doc-flags - flags used for documentation (e.g. "deprecated")
- deprecated-since - if deprecated, from which version?
- replaced-by - if deprecated, which command replaced it?
- history - a list of (version, what-changed) tuples
- hints - a list of strings, meant to provide hints for clients/proxies. see https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/9876
- arguments - an array of arguments. each element is a map, with the possibility of nesting (sub-arguments)
- key-specs - an array of keys specs (already in unstable, just changed location)
- subcommands - a list of sub-commands (already in unstable, just changed location)
- reply-schema - will be added in the future (see https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/9845)

more details on these can be found in https://github.com/redis/redis-doc/pull/1697

only the first three fields are mandatory 

#### API changes (unreleased API obviously)

now they take RedisModuleCommand opaque pointer instead of looking up the command by name

- RM_CreateSubcommand
- RM_AddCommandKeySpec
- RM_SetCommandKeySpecBeginSearchIndex
- RM_SetCommandKeySpecBeginSearchKeyword
- RM_SetCommandKeySpecFindKeysRange
- RM_SetCommandKeySpecFindKeysKeynum

Currently, we did not add module API to provide additional information about their commands because
we couldn't agree on how the API should look like, see https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/9944.

### Somehow related changes
1. Literals should be in uppercase while placeholder in lowercase. Now all the GEO* command
   will be documented with M|KM|FT|MI and can take both lowercase and uppercase

### Unrelated changes
1. Bugfix: no_madaory_keys was absent in COMMAND's reply
2. expose CMD_MODULE as "module" via COMMAND
3. have a dedicated uint64 for ACL categories (instead of having them in the same uint64 as command flags)

Co-authored-by: Itamar Haber <itamar@garantiadata.com>
2021-12-15 21:23:15 +02:00
Viktor Söderqvist
acf3495eb8
Sort out the mess around writable replicas and lookupKeyRead/Write (#9572)
Writable replicas now no longer use the values of expired keys. Expired keys are
deleted when lookupKeyWrite() is used, even on a writable replica. Previously,
writable replicas could use the value of an expired key in write commands such
as INCR, SUNIONSTORE, etc..

This commit also sorts out the mess around the functions lookupKeyRead() and
lookupKeyWrite() so they now indicate what we intend to do with the key and
are not affected by the command calling them.

Multi-key commands like SUNIONSTORE, ZUNIONSTORE, COPY and SORT with the
store option now use lookupKeyRead() for the keys they're reading from (which will
not allow reading from logically expired keys).

This commit also fixes a bug where PFCOUNT could return a value of an
expired key.

Test modules commands have their readonly and write flags updated to correctly
reflect their lookups for reading or writing. Modules are not required to
correctly reflect this in their command flags, but this change is made for
consistency since the tests serve as usage examples.

Fixes #6842. Fixes #7475.
2021-11-28 11:26:28 +02:00
guybe7
b161cff5f9
QUIT is a command, HOST: and POST are not (#9798)
Some people complain that QUIT is missing from help/command table.
Not appearing in COMMAND command, command stats, ACL, etc.
and instead, there's a hack in processCommand with a comment that looks outdated.
Note that it is [documented](https://redis.io/commands/quit)

At the same time, HOST: and POST are there in the command table although these are not real commands.
They would appear in the COMMAND command, and even in commandstats.

Other changes:
1. Initialize the static logged_time static var in securityWarningCommand
2. add `no-auth` flag to RESET so it can always be executed.
2021-11-23 10:38:25 +02:00
Eduardo Semprebon
91d0c758e5
Replica keep serving data during repl-diskless-load=swapdb for better availability (#9323)
For diskless replication in swapdb mode, considering we already spend replica memory
having a backup of current db to restore in case of failure, we can have the following benefits
by instead swapping database only in case we succeeded in transferring db from master:

- Avoid `LOADING` response during failed and successful synchronization for cases where the
  replica is already up and running with data.
- Faster total time of diskless replication, because now we're moving from Transfer + Flush + Load
  time to Transfer + Load only. Flushing the tempDb is done asynchronously after swapping.
- This could be implemented also for disk replication with similar benefits if consumers are willing
  to spend the extra memory usage.

General notes:
- The concept of `backupDb` becomes `tempDb` for clarity.
- Async loading mode will only kick in if the replica is syncing from a master that has the same
  repl-id the one it had before. i.e. the data it's getting belongs to a different time of the same timeline. 
- New property in INFO: `async_loading` to differentiate from the blocking loading
- Slot to Key mapping is now a field of `redisDb` as it's more natural to access it from both server.db
  and the tempDb that is passed around.
- Because this is affecting replicas only, we assume that if they are not readonly and write commands
  during replication, they are lost after SYNC same way as before, but we're still denying CONFIG SET
  here anyways to avoid complications.

Considerations for review:
- We have many cases where server.loading flag is used and even though I tried my best, there may
  be cases where async_loading should be checked as well and cases where it shouldn't (would require
  very good understanding of whole code)
- Several places that had different behavior depending on the loading flag where actually meant to just
  handle commands coming from the AOF client differently than ones coming from real clients, changed
  to check CLIENT_ID_AOF instead.

**Additional for Release Notes**
- Bugfix - server.dirty was not incremented for any kind of diskless replication, as effect it wouldn't
  contribute on triggering next database SAVE
- New flag for RM_GetContextFlags module API: REDISMODULE_CTX_FLAGS_ASYNC_LOADING
- Deprecated RedisModuleEvent_ReplBackup. Starting from Redis 7.0, we don't fire this event.
  Instead, we have the new RedisModuleEvent_ReplAsyncLoad holding 3 sub-events: STARTED,
  ABORTED and COMPLETED.
- New module flag REDISMODULE_OPTIONS_HANDLE_REPL_ASYNC_LOAD for RedisModule_SetModuleOptions
  to allow modules to declare they support the diskless replication with async loading (when absent, we fall
  back to disk-based loading).

Co-authored-by: Eduardo Semprebon <edus@saxobank.com>
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2021-11-04 10:46:50 +02:00
Oran Agra
f1f3cceb50
fix valgrind issues with long double module test (#9709)
The module test in reply.tcl was introduced by #8521 but didn't run until recently (see #9639)
and then it started failing with valgrind.
This is because valgrind uses 64 bit long double (unlike most other platforms that have at least 80 bits)
But besides valgrind, the tests where also incompatible with ARM32, which also uses 64 bit long doubles.

We now use appropriate value to avoid issues with either valgrind or ARM32

In all the double tests, i use 3.141, which is safe since since addReplyDouble uses
`%.17Lg` which is able to represent this value without adding any digits due to precision loss. 

In the long double, since we use `%.17Lf` in ld2string, it preserves 17 significant
digits, rather than 17 digit after the decimal point (like in `%.17Lg`).
So to make these similar, i use value lower than 1 (no digits left of
the period)

Lastly, we have the same issue with TCL (no long doubles) so we read
raw protocol in that test.

Note that the only error before this fix (in both valgrind and ARM32 is this:
```
*** [err]: RM_ReplyWithLongDouble: a float reply in tests/unit/moduleapi/reply.tcl
Expected '3.141' to be equal to '3.14100000000000001' (context: type eval line 2 cmd {assert_equal 3.141 [r rw.longdouble 3.141]} proc ::test)
```
so the changes to debug.c and scripting.tcl aren't really needed, but i consider them a cleanup
(i.e. scripting.c validated a different constant than the one that's sent to it from debug.c).

Another unrelated change is to add the RESP version to the repeated tests in reply.tcl
2021-11-01 13:41:35 +02:00
Yossi Gottlieb
f26e90be0c
Use 'gcc' instead of 'ld' to link test modules. (#9710)
This solves several problems in a more elegant way:

* No need to explicitly use `-lc` on x86_64 when building with `-m32`.
* Avoids issues with undefined floating point emulation funcs on ARM.
2021-10-31 16:25:57 +02:00
Guy Korland
6cf6c36937
Replace deprecated REDISMODULE_POSTPONED_ARRAY_LEN in module tests and examples (#9677)
REDISMODULE_POSTPONED_ARRAY_LEN is deprecated, use REDISMODULE_POSTPONED_LEN instead
2021-10-25 12:00:43 +03:00
Shaya Potter
12ce2c3925
Add RM_ReplyWithBigNumber module API (#9639)
Let modules use additional type of RESP3 response (unused by redis so far)
Also fix tests that where introduced in #8521 but didn't actually run.

Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2021-10-25 11:31:20 +03:00
Shaya Potter
cf860df599
Fix module blocked clients RESP version (#9634)
Before this commit, module blocked clients did not carry through the original RESP version, resulting with RESP3 clients receiving unexpected RESP2 replies.
2021-10-21 14:01:10 +03:00
Yossi Gottlieb
8bf4c2e38c
Fix test modules build issue on OS X 11. (#9658) 2021-10-20 21:01:30 +03:00
guybe7
43e736f79b
Treat subcommands as commands (#9504)
## Intro

The purpose is to allow having different flags/ACL categories for
subcommands (Example: CONFIG GET is ok-loading but CONFIG SET isn't)

We create a small command table for every command that has subcommands
and each subcommand has its own flags, etc. (same as a "regular" command)

This commit also unites the Redis and the Sentinel command tables

## Affected commands

CONFIG
Used to have "admin ok-loading ok-stale no-script"
Changes:
1. Dropped "ok-loading" in all except GET (this doesn't change behavior since
there were checks in the code doing that)

XINFO
Used to have "read-only random"
Changes:
1. Dropped "random" in all except CONSUMERS

XGROUP
Used to have "write use-memory"
Changes:
1. Dropped "use-memory" in all except CREATE and CREATECONSUMER

COMMAND
No changes.

MEMORY
Used to have "random read-only"
Changes:
1. Dropped "random" in PURGE and USAGE

ACL
Used to have "admin no-script ok-loading ok-stale"
Changes:
1. Dropped "admin" in WHOAMI, GENPASS, and CAT

LATENCY
No changes.

MODULE
No changes.

SLOWLOG
Used to have "admin random ok-loading ok-stale"
Changes:
1. Dropped "random" in RESET

OBJECT
Used to have "read-only random"
Changes:
1. Dropped "random" in ENCODING and REFCOUNT

SCRIPT
Used to have "may-replicate no-script"
Changes:
1. Dropped "may-replicate" in all except FLUSH and LOAD

CLIENT
Used to have "admin no-script random ok-loading ok-stale"
Changes:
1. Dropped "random" in all except INFO and LIST
2. Dropped "admin" in ID, TRACKING, CACHING, GETREDIR, INFO, SETNAME, GETNAME, and REPLY

STRALGO
No changes.

PUBSUB
No changes.

CLUSTER
Changes:
1. Dropped "admin in countkeysinslots, getkeysinslot, info, nodes, keyslot, myid, and slots

SENTINEL
No changes.

(note that DEBUG also fits, but we decided not to convert it since it's for
debugging and anyway undocumented)

## New sub-command
This commit adds another element to the per-command output of COMMAND,
describing the list of subcommands, if any (in the same structure as "regular" commands)
Also, it adds a new subcommand:
```
COMMAND LIST [FILTERBY (MODULE <module-name>|ACLCAT <cat>|PATTERN <pattern>)]
```
which returns a set of all commands (unless filters), but excluding subcommands.

## Module API
A new module API, RM_CreateSubcommand, was added, in order to allow
module writer to define subcommands

## ACL changes:
1. Now, that each subcommand is actually a command, each has its own ACL id.
2. The old mechanism of allowed_subcommands is redundant
(blocking/allowing a subcommand is the same as blocking/allowing a regular command),
but we had to keep it, to support the widespread usage of allowed_subcommands
to block commands with certain args, that aren't subcommands (e.g. "-select +select|0").
3. I have renamed allowed_subcommands to allowed_firstargs to emphasize the difference.
4. Because subcommands are commands in ACL too, you can now use "-" to block subcommands
(e.g. "+client -client|kill"), which wasn't possible in the past.
5. It is also possible to use the allowed_firstargs mechanism with subcommand.
For example: `+config -config|set +config|set|loglevel` will block all CONFIG SET except
for setting the log level.
6. All of the ACL changes above required some amount of refactoring.

## Misc
1. There are two approaches: Either each subcommand has its own function or all
   subcommands use the same function, determining what to do according to argv[0].
   For now, I took the former approaches only with CONFIG and COMMAND,
   while other commands use the latter approach (for smaller blamelog diff).
2. Deleted memoryGetKeys: It is no longer needed because MEMORY USAGE now uses the "range" key spec.
4. Bugfix: GETNAME was missing from CLIENT's help message.
5. Sentinel and Redis now use the same table, with the same function pointer.
   Some commands have a different implementation in Sentinel, so we redirect
   them (these are ROLE, PUBLISH, and INFO).
6. Command stats now show the stats per subcommand (e.g. instead of stats just
   for "config" you will have stats for "config|set", "config|get", etc.)
7. It is now possible to use COMMAND directly on subcommands:
   COMMAND INFO CONFIG|GET (The pipeline syntax was inspired from ACL, and
   can be used in functions lookupCommandBySds and lookupCommandByCString)
8. STRALGO is now a container command (has "help")

## Breaking changes:
1. Command stats now show the stats per subcommand (see (5) above)
2021-10-20 11:52:57 +03:00
qetu3790
4962c5526d
Release clients blocked on module commands in cluster resharding and down state (#9483)
Prevent clients from being blocked forever in cluster when they block with their own module command
and the hash slot is migrated to another master at the same time.
These will get a redirection message when unblocked.
Also, release clients blocked on module commands when cluster is down (same as other blocked clients)

This commit adds basic tests for the main (non-cluster) redis test infra that test the cluster.
This was done because the cluster test infra can't handle some common test features,
but most importantly we only build the test modules with the non-cluster test suite.

note that rather than really supporting cluster operations by the test infra, it was added (as dup code)
in two files, one for module tests and one for non-modules tests, maybe in the future we'll refactor that.

Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2021-10-19 11:50:37 +03:00
Viktor Söderqvist
b7f2a1a217
Add RedisModule_KeyExists (#9600)
The LRU of the key is not touched. Locically expired keys are
logically not existing, so they're treated as such.
2021-10-18 22:21:19 +03:00
Hanna Fadida
61bb044156
Modify mem_usage2 module callback to enable to take sample_size argument (#9612)
This is useful for approximating size computation of complex module types.
Note that the mem_usage2 callback is new and has not been released yet, which is why we can modify it.
2021-10-17 17:31:06 +03:00
Yossi Gottlieb
6d5a911707
Fix daily failures due to macos-latest change. (#9637)
* Fix test modules linking on macOS 11.x.
* Use macOS 10.x for FreeBSD VM as VirtualBox is not yet supported on
  11.
2021-10-17 00:07:27 +03:00
Hanna Fadida
ffafb434fb
Modules: add RM_LoadDataTypeFromStringEncver (#9537)
adding an advanced api to enable loading data that was sereialized with a specific encoding version
2021-09-30 11:21:32 +03:00
Yossi Gottlieb
bebc7f8470
Add RM_TrimStringAllocation(). (#9540)
This commit makes it possible to explicitly trim the allocation of a
RedisModuleString.

Currently, Redis automatically trims strings that have been retained by
a module command when it returns. However, this is not thread safe and
may result with corruption in threaded modules.

Supporting explicit trimming offers a backwards compatible workaround to
this problem.
2021-09-23 15:00:37 +03:00
YaacovHazan
a56d4533b7
Adding ACL support for modules (#9309)
This commit introduced a new flag to the RM_Call:
'C' - Check if the command can be executed according to the ACLs associated with it.

Also, three new API's added to check if a command, key, or channel can be executed or accessed
by a user, according to the ACLs associated with it.
- RM_ACLCheckCommandPerm
- RM_ACLCheckKeyPerm
- RM_ACLCheckChannelPerm

The user for these API's is a RedisModuleUser object, that for a Module user returned by the RM_CreateModuleUser API, or for a general ACL user can be retrieved by these two new API's:
- RM_GetCurrentUserName - Retrieve the user name of the client connection behind the current context.
- RM_GetModuleUserFromUserName - Get a RedisModuleUser from a user name

As a result of getting a RedisModuleUser from name, it can now also access the general ACL users (not just ones created by the module).
This mean the already existing API RM_SetModuleUserACL(), can be used to change the ACL rules for such users.
2021-09-23 08:52:56 +03:00
guybe7
03fcc211de
A better approach for COMMAND INFO for movablekeys commands (#8324)
Fix #7297

The problem:

Today, there is no way for a client library or app to know the key name indexes for commands such as
ZUNIONSTORE/EVAL and others with "numkeys", since COMMAND INFO returns no useful info for them.

For cluster-aware redis clients, this requires to 'patch' the client library code specifically for each of these commands or to
resolve each execution of these commands with COMMAND GETKEYS.

The solution:

Introducing key specs other than the legacy "range" (first,last,step)

The 8th element of the command info array, if exists, holds an array of key specs. The array may be empty, which indicates
the command doesn't take any key arguments or may contain one or more key-specs, each one may leads to the discovery
of 0 or more key arguments.

A client library that doesn't support this key-spec feature will keep using the first,last,step and movablekeys flag which will
obviously remain unchanged.

A client that supports this key-specs feature needs only to look at the key-specs array. If it finds an unrecognized spec, it
must resort to using COMMAND GETKEYS if it wishes to get all key name arguments, but if all it needs is one key in order
to know which cluster node to use, then maybe another spec (if the command has several) can supply that, and there's no
need to use GETKEYS.

Each spec is an array of arguments, first one is the spec name, the second is an array of flags, and the third is an array
containing details about the spec (specific meaning for each spec type)
The initial flags we support are "read" and "write" indicating if the keys that this key-spec finds are used for read or for write.
clients should ignore any unfamiliar flags.

In order to easily find the positions of keys in a given array of args we introduce keys specs. There are two logical steps of
key specs:
1. `start_search`: Given an array of args, indicate where we should start searching for keys
2. `find_keys`: Given the output of start_search and an array of args, indicate all possible indices of keys.

### start_search step specs
- `index`: specify an argument index explicitly
  - `index`: 0 based index (1 means the first command argument)
- `keyword`: specify a string to match in `argv`. We should start searching for keys just after the keyword appears.
  - `keyword`: the string to search for
  - `start_search`: an index from which to start the keyword search (can be negative, which means to search from the end)

Examples:
- `SET` has start_search of type `index` with value `1`
- `XREAD` has start_search of type `keyword` with value `[“STREAMS”,1]`
- `MIGRATE` has start_search of type `keyword` with value `[“KEYS”,-2]`

### find_keys step specs
- `range`: specify `[count, step, limit]`.
  - `lastkey`: index of the last key. relative to the index returned from begin_search. -1 indicating till the last argument, -2 one before the last
  - `step`: how many args should we skip after finding a key, in order to find the next one
  - `limit`: if count is -1, we use limit to stop the search by a factor. 0 and 1 mean no limit. 2 means ½ of the remaining args, 3 means ⅓, and so on.
- “keynum”: specify `[keynum_index, first_key_index, step]`.
  - `keynum_index`: is relative to the return of the `start_search` spec.
  - `first_key_index`: is relative to `keynum_index`.
  - `step`: how many args should we skip after finding a key, in order to find the next one

Examples:
- `SET` has `range` of `[0,1,0]`
- `MSET` has `range` of `[-1,2,0]`
- `XREAD` has `range` of `[-1,1,2]`
- `ZUNION` has `start_search` of type `index` with value `1` and `find_keys` of type `keynum` with value `[0,1,1]`
- `AI.DAGRUN` has `start_search` of type `keyword` with value `[“LOAD“,1]` and `find_keys` of type `keynum` with value
  `[0,1,1]` (see https://oss.redislabs.com/redisai/master/commands/#aidagrun)

Note: this solution is not perfect as the module writers can come up with anything, but at least we will be able to find the key
args of the vast majority of commands.
If one of the above specs can’t describe the key positions, the module writer can always fall back to the `getkeys-api` option.

Some keys cannot be found easily (`KEYS` in `MIGRATE`: Imagine the argument for `AUTH` is the string “KEYS” - we will
start searching in the wrong index). 
The guarantee is that the specs may be incomplete (`incomplete` will be specified in the spec to denote that) but we never
report false information (assuming the command syntax is correct).
For `MIGRATE` we start searching from the end - `startfrom=-1` - and if one of the keys is actually called "keys" we will
report only a subset of all keys - hence the `incomplete` flag.
Some `incomplete` specs can be completely empty (i.e. UNKNOWN begin_search) which should tell the client that
COMMAND GETKEYS (or any other way to get the keys) must be used (Example: For `SORT` there is no way to describe
the STORE keyword spec, as the word "store" can appear anywhere in the command).

We will expose these key specs in the `COMMAND` command so that clients can learn, on startup, where the keys are for
all commands instead of holding hardcoded tables or use `COMMAND GETKEYS` in runtime.

Comments:
1. Redis doesn't internally use the new specs, they are only used for COMMAND output.
2. In order to support the current COMMAND INFO format (reply array indices 4, 5, 6) we created a synthetic range, called
   legacy_range, that, if possible, is built according to the new specs.
3. Redis currently uses only getkeys_proc or the legacy_range to get the keys indices (in COMMAND GETKEYS for
   example).

"incomplete" specs:
the command we have issues with are MIGRATE, STRALGO, and SORT
for MIGRATE, because the token KEYS, if exists, must be the last token, we can search in reverse. it one of the keys is
actually the string "keys" will return just a subset of the keys (hence, it's "incomplete")
for SORT and STRALGO we can use this heuristic (the keys can be anywhere in the command) and therefore we added a
key spec that is both "incomplete" and of "unknown type"

if a client encounters an "incomplete" spec it means that it must find a different way (either COMMAND GETKEYS or have
its own parser) to retrieve the keys.
please note that all commands, apart from the three mentioned above, have "complete" key specs
2021-09-15 11:10:29 +03:00
Viktor Söderqvist
ea36d4de17
Modules: Add remaining list API functions (#8439)
List functions operating on elements by index:

* RM_ListGet
* RM_ListSet
* RM_ListInsert
* RM_ListDelete

Iteration is done using a simple for loop over indices.
The index based functions use an internal iterator as an optimization.
This is explained in the docs:

```
 * Many of the list functions access elements by index. Since a list is in
 * essence a doubly-linked list, accessing elements by index is generally an
 * O(N) operation. However, if elements are accessed sequentially or with
 * indices close together, the functions are optimized to seek the index from
 * the previous index, rather than seeking from the ends of the list.
 *
 * This enables iteration to be done efficiently using a simple for loop:
 *
 *     long n = RM_ValueLength(key);
 *     for (long i = 0; i < n; i++) {
 *         RedisModuleString *elem = RedisModule_ListGet(key, i);
 *         // Do stuff...
 *     }
```
2021-09-14 17:48:06 +03:00
sundb
1376d83363
Fix memory leak due to missing freeCallback in blockonbackground moduleapi test (#9499)
Before #9497, before redis-server was shut down, we did not manually shut down all the clients,
which would have prevented valgrind from detecting a memory leak in the client's argc.
2021-09-14 15:14:09 +03:00
Meir Shpilraien (Spielrein)
05e6b97bed
Fix RedisModule_Call tests on 32bit (#9481) 2021-09-09 23:03:02 +03:00
chenyang8094
bc0c22fabc
Fix callReplyParseCollection memleak when use AutoMemory (#9446)
When parsing an array type reply, ctx will be lost when recursively parsing its
elements, which will cause a memory leak in automemory mode.

This is a result of the changes in #9202

Add test for callReplyParseCollection fix
2021-09-09 11:03:05 +03:00
Meir Shpilraien (Spielrein)
56eb7f7de4
Fix tests failure on 32bit build (#9318)
Fix test introduced in #9202 that failed on 32bit CI.
The failure was due to a wrong double comparison.
Change code to stringify the double first and then compare.
2021-08-04 21:33:38 +03:00
Meir Shpilraien (Spielrein)
2237131e15
Unified Lua and modules reply parsing and added RESP3 support to RM_Call (#9202)
## Current state
1. Lua has its own parser that handles parsing `reds.call` replies and translates them
  to Lua objects that can be used by the user Lua code. The parser partially handles
  resp3 (missing big number, verbatim, attribute, ...)
2. Modules have their own parser that handles parsing `RM_Call` replies and translates
  them to RedisModuleCallReply objects. The parser does not support resp3.

In addition, in the future, we want to add Redis Function (#8693) that will probably
support more languages. At some point maintaining so many parsers will stop
scaling (bug fixes and protocol changes will need to be applied on all of them).
We will probably end up with different parsers that support different parts of the
resp protocol (like we already have today with Lua and modules)

## PR Changes
This PR attempt to unified the reply parsing of Lua and modules (and in the future
Redis Function) by introducing a new parser unit (`resp_parser.c`). The new parser
handles parsing the reply and calls different callbacks to allow the users (another
unit that uses the parser, i.e, Lua, modules, or Redis Function) to analyze the reply.

### Lua API Additions
The code that handles reply parsing on `scripting.c` was removed. Instead, it uses
the resp_parser to parse and create a Lua object out of the reply. As mentioned
above the Lua parser did not handle parsing big numbers, verbatim, and attribute.
The new parser can handle those and so Lua also gets it for free.
Those are translated to Lua objects in the following way:
1. Big Number - Lua table `{'big_number':'<str representation for big number>'}`
2. Verbatim - Lua table `{'verbatim_string':{'format':'<verbatim format>', 'string':'<verbatim string value>'}}`
3. Attribute - currently ignored and not expose to the Lua parser, another issue will be open to decide how to expose it.

Tests were added to check resp3 reply parsing on Lua

### Modules API Additions
The reply parsing code on `module.c` was also removed and the new resp_parser is used instead.
In addition, the RedisModuleCallReply was also extracted to a separate unit located on `call_reply.c`
(in the future, this unit will also be used by Redis Function). A nice side effect of unified parsing is
that modules now also support resp3. Resp3 can be enabled by giving `3` as a parameter to the
fmt argument of `RM_Call`. It is also possible to give `0`, which will indicate an auto mode. i.e, Redis
will automatically chose the reply protocol base on the current client set on the RedisModuleCtx
(this mode will mostly be used when the module want to pass the reply to the client as is).
In addition, the following RedisModuleAPI were added to allow analyzing resp3 replies:

* New RedisModuleCallReply types:
   * `REDISMODULE_REPLY_MAP`
   * `REDISMODULE_REPLY_SET`
   * `REDISMODULE_REPLY_BOOL`
   * `REDISMODULE_REPLY_DOUBLE`
   * `REDISMODULE_REPLY_BIG_NUMBER`
   * `REDISMODULE_REPLY_VERBATIM_STRING`
   * `REDISMODULE_REPLY_ATTRIBUTE`

* New RedisModuleAPI:
   * `RedisModule_CallReplyDouble` - getting double value from resp3 double reply
   * `RedisModule_CallReplyBool` - getting boolean value from resp3 boolean reply
   * `RedisModule_CallReplyBigNumber` - getting big number value from resp3 big number reply
   * `RedisModule_CallReplyVerbatim` - getting format and value from resp3 verbatim reply
   * `RedisModule_CallReplySetElement` - getting element from resp3 set reply
   * `RedisModule_CallReplyMapElement` - getting key and value from resp3 map reply
   * `RedisModule_CallReplyAttribute` - getting a reply attribute
   * `RedisModule_CallReplyAttributeElement` - getting key and value from resp3 attribute reply
   
* New context flags:
   * `REDISMODULE_CTX_FLAGS_RESP3` - indicate that the client is using resp3

Tests were added to check the new RedisModuleAPI

### Modules API Changes
* RM_ReplyWithCallReply might return REDISMODULE_ERR if the given CallReply is in resp3
  but the client expects resp2. This is not a breaking change because in order to get a resp3
  CallReply one needs to specifically specify `3` as a parameter to the fmt argument of
  `RM_Call` (as mentioned above).

Tests were added to check this change

### More small Additions
* Added `debug set-disable-deny-scripts` that allows to turn on and off the commands no-script
flag protection. This is used by the Lua resp3 tests so it will be possible to run `debug protocol`
and check the resp3 parsing code.

Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: Yossi Gottlieb <yossigo@gmail.com>
2021-08-04 16:28:07 +03:00
Ariel Shtul
bdbf5eedae
Module api support for RESP3 (#8521)
Add new Module APS for RESP3 responses:
- RM_ReplyWithMap
- RM_ReplyWithSet
- RM_ReplyWithAttribute
- RM_ReplySetMapLength
- RM_ReplySetSetLength
- RM_ReplySetAttributeLength
- RM_ReplyWithBool

Deprecate REDISMODULE_POSTPONED_ARRAY_LEN in favor of a generic REDISMODULE_POSTPONED_LEN

Improve documentation
Add tests

Co-authored-by: Guy Benoish <guy.benoish@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
2021-08-03 11:37:19 +03:00