= Quick Start =
This quickstart is a five minutes howto on how to get started with Redis. For more information on Redis check
Redis Documentation Index.
The latest stable source distribution of Redis can be obtained
at this location as a tarball.
$ wget http://redis.googlecode.com/files/redis-1.02.tar.gz
The unstable source code, with more features but not ready for production, can be downloaded using git:
$ git clone git://github.com/antirez/redis.git
Redis can be compiled in most
POSIX systems. To compile Redis just untar the tar.gz, enter the directly and type 'make'.
$ tar xvzf redis-1.02.tar.gz
$ cd redis-1.02
$ make
In order to test if the Redis server is working well in your computer make sure to run
make test
and check that all the tests are passed.
Redis can run just fine without a configuration file (when executed without a config file a standard configuration is used). To run Redis just type the following command:
$ ./redis-server
With the
default configuration Redis will log to the standard output so you can check what happens. Later, you can
change the default settings.
Redis ships with a command line client that is automatically compiled when you ran
make
and it is called
redis-cli
For instance to set a key and read back the value use the following:
$ ./redis-cli set mykey somevalue
OK
$ ./redis-cli get mykey
somevalue
What about adding elements to a
list:
$ ./redis-cli lpush mylist firstvalue
OK
$ ./redis-cli lpush mylist secondvalue
OK
$ ./redis-cli lpush mylist thirdvalue
OK
$ ./redis-cli lrange mylist 0 -1
1. thirdvalue
2. secondvalue
3. firstvalue
$ ./redis-cli rpop mylist
firstvalue
$ ./redis-cli lrange mylist 0 -1
1. thirdvalue
2. secondvalue