X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/redis.git/blobdiff_plain/5215ab1418479ba7820ddfcf0f342305be4b7e24..ca2344f9916f048667304bfa1e476fc52d1bc15d:/00-RELEASENOTES diff --git a/00-RELEASENOTES b/00-RELEASENOTES index b3ad39b8..49221f2c 100644 --- a/00-RELEASENOTES +++ b/00-RELEASENOTES @@ -1,15 +1,79 @@ -This is Redis 2.3.x. +Redis 2.6 release notes -It was forked from 2.2 branch a few weeks ago, and is going to be the playground -for many new developments, especially related to replacing the VM with something -better. +Migrating from 2.4 to 2.6 +========================= -VM is already completely removed from this release, and instead diskstore was -implemented. You can read more about it here: +Redis 2.4 is mostly a strict subset of 2.6. However there are a few things +that you should be aware of: -http://groups.google.com/group/redis-db/browse_thread/thread/d444bc786689bde9 +* You can't use .rdb and AOF files generated with 2.6 into a 2.4 instance. +* 2.4 slaves can be attached to 2.6 masters, but not the contrary, and only + for the time needed to perform the version upgrade. -This Redis version is not intended for production environments. +There are also a few API differences, that are unlikely to cause problems, +but it is better to keep them in mind: + +* SORT now will refuse to sort in numerical mode elements that can't be parsed + as numbers. +* EXPIREs now all have millisecond resolution (but this is very unlikely to + break code that was not conceived exploting the previous resolution error + in some way.) +* INFO output is a bit different now, and contains empty lines and comments + starting with '#'. All the major clients should be already fixed to work + with the new INFO format. + +--------- +CHANGELOG +--------- + +What's new in Redis 2.6.0 +========================= + +UPGRADE URGENCY: We suggest new users to start with 2.6.0, and old users to + upgrade after some testing of the application with the new + Redis version. + +* Server side Lua scripting, see http://redis.io/commands/eval +* Virtual Memory removed (was deprecated in 2.4) +* Hardcoded limits about max number of clients removed. +* AOF low level semantics is generally more sane, and especially when used + in slaves. +* Milliseconds resolution expires, also added new commands with milliseconds + precision (PEXPIRE, PTTL, ...). +* Clinets max output buffer soft and hard limits. You can specifiy different + limits for different classes of clients (normal,pubsub,slave). +* AOF is now able to rewrite aggregate data types using variadic commands, + often producing an AOF that is faster to save, load, and is smaller in size. +* Every redis.conf directive is now accepted as a command line option for the + redis-server binary, with the same name and number of arguments. +* Hash table seed randomization for protection against collisions attacks. +* Performances improved when writing large objects to Redis. +* Significant parts of the core refactored or rewritten. New internal APIs + and core changes allowed to develop Redis Cluster on top of the new code, + however for 2.6 all the cluster code was removed, and will be released with + Redis 3.0 when it is more complete and stable. +* Redis ASCII art logo added at startup. +* Crash report on memory violation or failed asserts improved significantly + to make debugging of hard to catch bugs simpler. +* redis-benchmark improvements: ability to run selected tests, + CSV output, faster, better help. +* redis-cli improvements: --eval for comfortable development of Lua scripts. +* SHUTDOWN now supports two optional arguments: "SAVE" and "NOSAVE". +* INFO output split into sections, the command is now able to just show + pecific sections. +* New statistics about how many time a command was called, and how much + execution time it used (INFO commandstats). +* More predictable SORT behavior in edge cases. +* INCRBYFLOAT and HINCRBYFLOAT commands. + +-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- + +Credits: Where not specified the implementation and design are done by +Salvatore Sanfilippo and Pieter Noordhuis. Thanks to VMware for making all +this possible. Also many thanks to all the other contributors and the amazing +community we have. + +See commit messages for more credits. Cheers, Salvatore