In some cases processMultibulkBuffer uses sdsMakeRoomFor to
expand the querybuf, but later in some cases it uses that query
buffer as is for an argv element (see "Optimization"), which means
that the sds in argv may have a lot of wasted space, and then in case
modules keep that argv RedisString inside their data structure, this
space waste will remain for long (until restarted from rdb).
It does not make much sense to limit what modules can do: the admin
should instead limit what module commnads an user may call. So
RedisModule_Call() and other module operations should be able to execute
everything they want: the limitation should be posed by the API exported
by the module itself.
Storing the context is useless, because we can't really reuse that
later. For instance in the API RM_DictNext() that returns a
RedisModuleString for the next key iterated, the user should pass the
new context, because we may run the keys of the dictionary in a
different context of the one where the dictionary was created. Also the
dictionary may be created without a context, but we may still demand
automatic memory management for the returned strings while iterating.
By using the "C" suffix for functions getting pointer/len, we can do the
same in the future for other modules APIs that need a variant with
pointer/len and that are now accepting a RedisModuleString.
The burden of having to always create RedisModuleString objects within a
module context was too much, especially now that we have threaded
operations and modules are doing more interesting things. The context in
the string API is currently only used for automatic memory managemnet,
so now the API was modified so that the user can opt-out this feature by
passing a NULL context.