-BEFORE REDIS 1.0.0-rc1
+VERSION 1.1 TODO
-- What happens if the saving child gets killed instead to end normally? Handle this.
-- Make sinterstore / unionstore / sdiffstore returning the cardinality of the resulting set.
-- Remove max number of args limit
-- network layer stresser in test in demo, make sure to set/get random streams of data and check that what we read back is byte-by-byte the same.
-- maxclients directive
-- check 'server.dirty' everywere
-- replication automated tests
-- an external tool able to perform the 'difference' between two Redis servers. It's like 'diff', but against Redis servers, and the output is the set of commands needed to turn the first server into the second, suitable to be sent via netcat.
- $ ./redis-diff 192.168.1.1 192.168.1.2 > diff.txt
- $ cat diff.txt | nc 192.168.1.1 6379
- $ ./redis-diff 192.168.1.1 192.168.1.2
- $ # No output now the servers are identical
+* For now only the last argument gets integer encoded, so make sure that: 1) every multi bulk commands implemented will have the last arg that is indeed a value, and not used otherwise. 2) to explicitly call the function to encode the object in MSET and other commands where there are multiple "values".
+* Man pages for MSET MSETNX and SRANDMEMBER, Z-commands, ...
+* ZSETs missing stuff: ZINCRBY
+* Add all the missing symbols for the static functions into the table. Crete a Tcl script to check this. This backtrace on segfault is indeed *very* useful.
+* Use strcoll() to compare objects in sorted sets, like it already happens for SORT.
+* LMOVE, as discussed in the Redis group.
+* EXPIRE, EXPIREAT, ZSCORE tests.
+* Write docs for the "STORE" operaiton of SORT, and GET "#" option.
+* Append only mode: testing and a command to rebuild the log from scratch.
+* Profiling and optimizations. For instance the commands lookup is probably starting to eat too CPU being a simple list. To implement binary search or an hash table lookup can be a win probably.
+* Expiring algorithm should be adaptive. Use the following algorithm. Start testing REDIS_EXPIRELOOKUPS_PER_CRON in the first iteration, and continue with the same amount of keys until the percentage of expired keys > 25%.
-This command should be smart and don't use too much memory, that is, take two connections at the same time against the two servers and perform the comparison key by key. Probably the initial "KEYS *" is unavoidable.
+VERSION 1.2 TODO
-- Shutdown must kill other background savings before to start saving. Otherwise the DB can get replaced by the child that rename(2) after the parent for some reason.
-- Add missing commands in documentation
-- Document replication
-- Objects sharing configuration, add the directive "objectsharingpool <size>"
-- Make sure to convert all the fstat() calls to 64bit versions.
-- SINTERCOUNT, SUNIONCOUNT, SDIFFCOUNT
+* Basic Redis-cluster (at least all the features of the Ruby client distribute implementation + ability to set every key in M nodes).
+* Hashes (HSET, HGET, HEXISTS, HLEN, ...).
+* An utility able to export an .rdb file into a text-only JSON dump, we can't live anymore without such a tool. Probably an extension to redis-cli.
+
+LONG TERM TODO
+
+ * Add a command to inspect the currently selected DB index
+ * Consistent hashing implemented in all the client libraries having an user base
+ * SORT: Don't copy the list into a vector when BY argument is constant.
+ * Profiling and optimization in order to limit the CPU usage at minimum
+ * Write the hash table size of every db in the dump, so that Redis can resize the hash table just one time when loading a big DB.
+ * Elapsed time in logs for SAVE when saving is going to take more than 2 seconds
+ * LOCK / TRYLOCK / UNLOCK as described many times in the google group
+ * Replication automated tests
+ * BITMAP / BYTEARRAY type?
+ * zmalloc() should avoid to add a private header for archs where there is some other kind of libc-specific way to get the size of a malloced block.
FUTURE HINTS
-- if in-memory values compression will be implemented, make sure to implement this so that addReply() is able to handle compressed objects, just creating an uncompressed version on the fly and adding this to the output queue instead of the original one. When insetad we need to look at the object string value (SORT BY for example), call a function that will turn the object into an uncompresed one.
+- In memory compression: if in-memory values compression will be implemented, make sure to implement this so that addReply() is able to handle compressed objects, just creating an uncompressed version on the fly and adding this to the output queue instead of the original one. When insetad we need to look at the object string value (SORT BY for example), call a function that will turn the object into an uncompresed one. (Note, Redis 1.1 beta already has this feature actually, but is for now only used to compress strings representing integers)