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17 | <div class="index"> | |
18 | <!-- This is a (PRE) block. Make sure it's left aligned or your toc title will be off. --> | |
19 | <b>ProtocolSpecification: Contents</b><br> <a href="#Networking layer">Networking layer</a><br> <a href="#Simple INLINE commands">Simple INLINE commands</a><br> <a href="#Bulk commands">Bulk commands</a><br> <a href="#Bulk replies">Bulk replies</a><br> <a href="#Multi-Bulk replies">Multi-Bulk replies</a><br> <a href="#Nil elements in Multi-Bulk replies">Nil elements in Multi-Bulk replies</a><br> <a href="#Single line reply">Single line reply</a><br> <a href="#Integer reply">Integer reply</a><br> <a href="#Multi bulk commands">Multi bulk commands</a><br> <a href="#Multiple commands and pipelining">Multiple commands and pipelining</a> | |
20 | </div> | |
21 | ||
22 | <h1 class="wikiname">ProtocolSpecification</h1> | |
23 | ||
24 | <div class="summary"> | |
25 | ||
26 | </div> | |
27 | ||
28 | <div class="narrow"> | |
29 | = Protocol Specification =<br/><br/>The Redis protocol is a compromise between being easy to parse by a computer | |
30 | and being easy to parse by an human. Before reading this section you are | |
31 | strongly encouraged to read the "REDIS TUTORIAL" section of this README in order | |
32 | to get a first feeling of the protocol playing with it by TELNET.<h2><a name="Networking layer">Networking layer</a></h2>A client connects to a Redis server creating a TCP connection to the port 6379. | |
33 | Every redis command or data transmitted by the client and the server is | |
34 | terminated by "\r\n" (CRLF).<h2><a name="Simple INLINE commands">Simple INLINE commands</a></h2>The simplest commands are the inline commands. This is an example of a | |
35 | server/client chat (the server chat starts with S:, the client chat with C:)<br/><br/><pre class="codeblock python" name="code"> | |
36 | C: PING | |
37 | S: +PONG | |
38 | </pre>An inline command is a CRLF-terminated string sent to the client. The server can reply to commands in different ways: | |
39 | <ul><li> With an error message (the first byte of the reply will be "-")</li><li> With a single line reply (the first byte of the reply will be "+)</li><li> With bulk data (the first byte of the reply will be "$")</li><li> With multi-bulk data, a list of values (the first byte of the reply will be "<code name="code" class="python">*</code>")</li><li> With an integer number (the first byte of the reply will be ":")</li></ul> | |
40 | The following is another example of an INLINE command returning an integer:<br/><br/><pre class="codeblock python python" name="code"> | |
41 | C: EXISTS somekey | |
42 | S: :0 | |
43 | </pre>Since 'somekey' does not exist the server returned ':0'.<br/><br/>Note that the EXISTS command takes one argument. Arguments are separated | |
44 | simply by spaces.<h2><a name="Bulk commands">Bulk commands</a></h2>A bulk command is exactly like an inline command, but the last argument | |
45 | of the command must be a stream of bytes in order to send data to the server. | |
46 | the "SET" command is a bulk command, see the following example:<br/><br/><pre class="codeblock python python python" name="code"> | |
47 | C: SET mykey 6 | |
48 | C: foobar | |
49 | S: +OK | |
50 | </pre>The last argument of the commnad is '6'. This specify the number of DATA | |
51 | bytes that will follow (note that even this bytes are terminated by two | |
52 | additional bytes of CRLF).<br/><br/>All the bulk commands are in this exact form: instead of the last argument | |
53 | the number of bytes that will follow is specified, followed by the bytes, | |
54 | and CRLF. In order to be more clear for the programmer this is the string | |
55 | sent by the client in the above sample:<br/><br/><blockquote>"SET mykey 6\r\nfoobar\r\n"</blockquote> | |
56 | <h2><a name="Bulk replies">Bulk replies</a></h2>The server may reply to an inline or bulk command with a bulk reply. See | |
57 | the following example:<br/><br/><pre class="codeblock python python python python" name="code"> | |
58 | C: GET mykey | |
59 | S: $6 | |
60 | S: foobar | |
61 | </pre>A bulk reply is very similar to the last argument of a bulk command. The | |
62 | server sends as the first line a "$" byte followed by the number of bytes | |
63 | of the actual reply followed by CRLF, then the bytes are sent followed by | |
64 | additional two bytes for the final CRLF. The exact sequence sent by the | |
65 | server is:<br/><br/><blockquote>"$6\r\nfoobar\r\n"</blockquote> | |
66 | If the requested value does not exist the bulk reply will use the special | |
67 | value -1 as data length, example:<br/><br/><pre class="codeblock python python python python python" name="code"> | |
68 | C: GET nonexistingkey | |
69 | S: $-1 | |
70 | </pre>The client library API should not return an empty string, but a nil object, when the requested object does not exist. | |
71 | For example a Ruby library should return 'nil' while a C library should return | |
72 | NULL, and so forth.<h2><a name="Multi-Bulk replies">Multi-Bulk replies</a></h2>Commands similar to LRANGE needs to return multiple values (every element | |
73 | of the list is a value, and LRANGE needs to return more than a single element). This is accomplished using multiple bulk writes, | |
74 | prefixed by an initial line indicating how many bulk writes will follow. | |
75 | The first byte of a multi bulk reply is always <code name="code" class="python">*</code>. Example:<br/><br/><pre class="codeblock python python python python python python" name="code"> | |
76 | C: LRANGE mylist 0 3 | |
77 | S: *4 | |
78 | S: $3 | |
79 | S: foo | |
80 | S: $3 | |
81 | S: bar | |
82 | S: $5 | |
83 | S: Hello | |
84 | S: $5 | |
85 | S: World | |
86 | </pre>The first line the server sent is "<b>4\r\n" in order to specify that four bulk | |
87 | write will follow. Then every bulk write is transmitted.<br/><br/>If the specified key does not exist instead of the number of elements in the | |
88 | list, the special value -1 is sent as count. Example:<br/><br/><pre class="codeblock python python python python python python python" name="code"> | |
89 | C: LRANGE nokey 0 1 | |
90 | S: *-1 | |
91 | </pre>A client library API SHOULD return a nil object and not an empty list when this | |
92 | happens. This makes possible to distinguish between empty list and non existing ones.<h2><a name="Nil elements in Multi-Bulk replies">Nil elements in Multi-Bulk replies</a></h2>Single elements of a multi bulk reply may have -1 length, in order to signal that this elements are missing and not empty strings. This can happen with the SORT command when used with the GET <i>pattern</i> option when the specified key is missing. Example of a multi bulk reply containing an empty element:<br/><br/><pre class="codeblock python python python python python python python python" name="code"> | |
93 | S: *3 | |
94 | S: $3 | |
95 | S: foo | |
96 | S: $-1 | |
97 | S: $3 | |
98 | S: bar | |
99 | </pre>The second element is nul. The client library should return something like this:<br/><br/><pre class="codeblock python python python python python python python python python" name="code"> | |
100 | ["foo",nil,"bar"] | |
101 | </pre><h2><a name="Single line reply">Single line reply</a></h2>As already seen a single line reply is in the form of a single line string | |
102 | starting with "+" terminated by "\r\n". For example:<br/><br/><pre class="codeblock python python python python python python python python python python" name="code"> | |
103 | +OK | |
104 | </pre>The client library should return everything after the "+", that is, the string "OK" in the example.<br/><br/>The following commands reply with a status code reply: | |
105 | PING, SET, SELECT, SAVE, BGSAVE, SHUTDOWN, RENAME, LPUSH, RPUSH, LSET, LTRIM<h2><a name="Integer reply">Integer reply</a></h2>This type of reply is just a CRLF terminated string representing an integer, prefixed by a ":" byte. For example ":0\r\n", or ":1000\r\n" are integer replies.<br/><br/>With commands like INCR or LASTSAVE using the integer reply to actually return a value there is no special meaning for the returned integer. It is just an incremental number for INCR, a UNIX time for LASTSAVE and so on.<br/><br/>Some commands like EXISTS will return 1 for true and 0 for false.<br/><br/>Other commands like SADD, SREM and SETNX will return 1 if the operation was actually done, 0 otherwise.<br/><br/>The following commands will reply with an integer reply: SETNX, DEL, EXISTS, INCR, INCRBY, DECR, DECRBY, DBSIZE, LASTSAVE, RENAMENX, MOVE, LLEN, SADD, SREM, SISMEMBER, SCARD<h2><a name="Multi bulk commands">Multi bulk commands</a></h2>As you can see with the protocol described so far there is no way to | |
106 | send multiple binary-safe arguments to a command. With bulk commands the | |
107 | last argument is binary safe, but there are commands where multiple binary-safe | |
108 | commands are needed, like the MSET command that is able to SET multiple keys | |
109 | in a single operation.<br/><br/>In order to address this problem Redis 1.1 introduced a new way of seding | |
110 | commands to a Redis server, that uses exactly the same protocol of the | |
111 | multi bulk replies. For instance the following is a SET command using the | |
112 | normal bulk protocol:<br/><br/><pre class="codeblock python python python python python python python python python python python" name="code"> | |
113 | SET mykey 8 | |
114 | myvalue | |
115 | </pre>While the following uses the multi bulk command protocol:<br/><br/><pre class="codeblock python python python python python python python python python python python python" name="code"> | |
116 | *3 | |
117 | $3 | |
118 | SET | |
119 | $5 | |
120 | mykey | |
121 | $8 | |
122 | myvalue | |
123 | </pre>Commands sent in this format are longer, so currently they are used only in | |
124 | order to transmit commands containing multiple binary-safe arguments, but | |
125 | actually this protocol can be used to send every kind of command, without to | |
126 | know if it's an inline, bulk or multi-bulk command.<br/><br/>It is possible that in the future Redis will support only this format.<br/><br/>A good client library may implement unknown commands using this | |
127 | command format in order to support new commands out of the box without | |
128 | modifications.<h2><a name="Multiple commands and pipelining">Multiple commands and pipelining</a></h2>A client can use the same connection in order to issue multiple commands. | |
129 | Pipelining is supported so multiple commands can be sent with a single | |
130 | write operation by the client, it is not needed to read the server reply | |
131 | in order to issue the next command. All the replies can be read at the end.<br/><br/>Usually Redis server and client will have a very fast link so this is not | |
132 | very important to support this feature in a client implementation, still | |
133 | if an application needs to issue a very large number of commands in short | |
134 | time to use pipelining can be much faster. | |
135 | </b> | |
136 | </div> | |
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