server.repl_down_since used to be initialized to the current time at
startup. This is wrong since the replication never started. Clients
testing this filed to check if data is uptodate should never believe
data is recent if we never ever connected to our master.
This fixes cases where the RDB file does exist but can't be accessed for
any reason. For instance, when the Redis process doesn't have enough
permissions on the file.
activeExpireCycle() tries to test just a few DBs per iteration so that
it scales if there are many configured DBs in the Redis instance.
However this commit makes it a bit smarter when one a few of those DBs
are under expiration pressure and there are many many keys to expire.
What we do is to remember if in the last iteration had to return because
we ran out of time. In that case the next iteration we'll test all the
configured DBs so that we are sure we'll test again the DB under
pressure.
Before of this commit after some mass-expire in a given DB the function
tested just a few of the next DBs, possibly empty, a few per iteration,
so it took a long time for the function to reach again the DB under
pressure. This resulted in a lot of memory being used by already expired
keys and never accessed by clients.
This small number of DBs is set to 16 so actually in the default
configuraiton Redis should behave exactly like in the past.
However the difference is that when the user configures a very large
number of DBs we don't do an O(N) operation, consuming a non trivial
amount of CPU per serverCron() iteration.
This is the first step to lower the CPU usage when many databases are
configured. The other is to also process a limited number of DBs per
call in the active expire cycle.
A new server.orig_commands table was added to the server structure, this
contains a copy of the commant table unaffected by rename-command
statements in redis.conf.
A new API lookupCommandOrOriginal() was added that checks both tables,
new first, old later, so that rewriteClientCommandVector() and friends
can lookup commands with their new or original name in order to fix the
client->cmd pointer when the argument vector is renamed.
This fixes the segfault of issue #986, but does not fix a wider range of
problems resulting from renaming commands that actually operate on data
and are registered into the AOF file or propagated to slaves... That is
command renaming should be handled with care.
This cased a segfault in some Linux system and was GCC-specific.
Commit modified by @antirez:
1) Stripped away the part to set the proc title via config for now.
2) Handle initialization of setproctitle only when the replacement
is used.
3) Don't require GCC now that the attribute constructor is no
longer used.
This commit allows Redis to set a process name that includes the binding
address and the port number in order to make operations simpler.
Redis children processes doing AOF rewrites or RDB saving change the
name into redis-aof-rewrite and redis-rdb-bgsave respectively.
This in general makes harder to kill the wrong process because of an
error and makes simpler to identify saving children.
This feature was suggested by Arnaud GRANAL in the Redis Google Group,
Arnaud also pointed me to the setproctitle.c implementation includeed in
this commit.
This feature should work on all the Linux, OSX, and all the three major
BSD systems.
SELECT was still transmitted to slaves using the inline protocol, that
is conceived mostly for humans to type into telnet sessions, and is
notably not understood by redis-cli --slave.
Now the new protocol is used instead.
Before this commit every Redis slave had its own selected database ID
state. This was not actually useful as the emitted stream of commands
is identical for all the slaves.
Now the the currently selected database is a global state that is set to
-1 when a new slave is attached, in order to force the SELECT command to
be re-emitted for all the slaves.
This change is useful in order to implement replication partial
resynchronization in the future, as makes sure that the stream of
commands received by slaves, including SELECT commands, are exactly the
same for every slave connected, at any time.
In this way we could have a global offset that can identify a specific
piece of the master -> slaves stream of commands.
Further details from @antirez:
It was reported by @StopForumSpam on Twitter that the Redis replication
link was strangely using multiple TCP packets for multiple commands.
This wastes a lot of bandwidth and is due to the TCP_NODELAY option we
enable on the socket after accepting a new connection.
However the master -> slave channel is a one-way channel since Redis
replication is asynchronous, so there is no point in trying to reduce
the latency, we should aim to reduce the bandwidth. For this reason this
commit introduces the ability to disable the nagle algorithm on the
socket after a successful SYNC.
This feature is off by default because the delay can be up to 40
milliseconds with normally configured Linux kernels.
When keyspace events are enabled, the overhead is not sever but
noticeable, so this commit introduces the ability to select subclasses
of events in order to avoid to generate events the user is not
interested in.
The events can be selected using redis.conf or CONFIG SET / GET.
This commit fixes issue #875 that was caused by the following events:
1) There is an active child doing BGSAVE.
2) flushall is called (or any other condition that makes Redis killing
the saving child process).
3) An error is sensed by Redis as the child exited with an error (killed
by a singal), that stops accepting write commands until a BGSAVE happens
to be executed with success.
Whitelisting SIGUSR1 and making sure Redis always uses this signal in
order to kill its own children fixes the issue.
When a SIGTERM is received Redis schedules a shutdown. However if it
fails to perform the shutdown it must be clear the shutdown_asap flag
otehrwise it will try again and again possibly making the server
unusable.
The Redis Slow Log always used to log the slow commands executed inside
a MULTI/EXEC block. However also EXEC was logged at the end, which is
perfectly useless.
Now EXEC is no longer logged and a test was added to test this behavior.
This fixes issue #759.