X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/redis.git/blobdiff_plain/8fb13ce816b85ac414921ecca420671bf74a3eea..12ebe2ac17a26ecf263f90b2acdf03db29b00223:/doc/README.html
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+++ b/doc/README.html
@@ -26,11 +26,42 @@
- = Introduction =
Redis is a database. To be specific, Redis is a database implementing a dictionary, where every key is associated with a value. For example I can set the key "surname_1992" to the string "Smith".
-What makes Redis different from many other key-value stores, is that every single value has a type. The following types are supported:
-The type of a value determines what operations (called commands) are available for the value itself.
-For example you can append elements to a list stored at the key "mylist" using the LPUSH or RPUSH command in O(1). Later you'll be able to get a range of elements with LRANGE or trim the list with LTRIM. Sets are very flexible too, it is possible to add and remove elements from Sets (unsorted collections of strings), and then ask for server-side intersection, union, difference of Sets. Each command is performed through server-side atomic operations.
-Please refer to the
Command Reference to see the full list of operations associated to these data types.
In other words, you can look at Redis as a data structures server. A Redis user is virtually provided with an interface to
Abstract Data Types, saving her from the responsibility to implement concrete data structures and algorithms. Indeed both algorithms and data structures in Redis are properly choosed in order to obtain the best performance.
Redis loads and mantains the whole dataset into memory, but the dataset is persistent, since at the same time it is saved on disk, so that when the server is restarted data can be loaded back in memory.
There are two kind of persistence supported: the first one is called snapshotting. In this mode Redis, from time to time, writes a dump on disk asynchronously. The dataset is loaded from the dump every time the server is (re)started.
Redis can be configured to save the dataset when a certain number of changes is reached and after a given number of seconds elapses. For example, you can configure Redis to save after 1000 changes and at most 60 seconds since the last save. You can specify any combination for these numbers.
Because data is written asynchronously, when a system crash occurs, the last few queries can get lost (that is acceptable in many applications but not in all). In order to make this a non issue Redis supports another, safer persistence mode, called
Append Only File, where every command received altering the dataset (so not a read-only command, but a write command) is written on an append only file ASAP. This commands are
replayed when the server is restarted in order to rebuild the dataset in memory.
Redis Append Only File supports a very handy feature: the server is able to safely rebuild the append only file in background in a non-blocking fashion when it gets too long. You can find
more details in the Append Only File HOWTO.
Whatever will be the persistence mode you'll use Redis supports master-slave replications if you want to stay really safe or if you need to scale to huge amounts of reads.
Redis Replication is trivial to setup. So trivial that all you need to do in order to configure a Redis server to be a slave of another one, with automatic synchronization if the link will go down and so forth, is the following config line:
slaveof 192.168.1.100 6379
.
We provide a Replication Howto if you want to know more about this feature.
Redis can be used as a
memcached on steroids because is as fast as memcached but with a number of features more. Like memcached, Redis also supports setting timeouts to keys so that this key will be automatically removed when a given amount of time passes.
All these features allow to use Redis as the sole DB for your scalable application without the need of any relational database.
We wrote a simple Twitter clone in PHP + Redis to show a real world example, the link points to an article explaining the design and internals in very simple words.
Redis supports multiple databases with commands to atomically move keys from one database to the other. By default DB 0 is selected for every new connection, but using the SELECT command it is possible to select a different database. The MOVE operation can move an item from one DB to another atomically. This can be used as a base for locking free algorithms together with the 'RANDOMKEY' commands.
To really get a feeling about what Redis is and how it works please try reading
A fifteen minutes introduction to Redis data types.
To know a bit more about how Redis works
internally continue reading.
(note, you can skip this section if you are only interested in "formal" doc.)
Later in this document you can find detailed information about Redis commands,
+ = Introduction =
Redis is an extremely fast and powerful key-value store database and server implemented in ANSI C. Redis offers many different ways to do one straightforward thing: store a value ("antirez") to a key ("redis"). While the format of keys must always be simple strings, the power is with the values, which support the following data types:
+Each value type has an associated list of commands which can operate on them, and the
The Redis Command Reference contains an up to date list of these commands, organized primarily by data type. The Redis source also includes a
Redis command line interface which allows you to interact directly with the server, and is the means by which this introduction will provide examples. Once you walk through the
Redis Quick Start Guide to get your instance of Redis running, you can follow along.
One of the most powerful aspects of Redis is the wide range of commands which are optimized to work with specific data value types and executed as atomic server-side operations. The
List type is a great example - Redis implements O(1) operations such as
LPUSH or
RPUSH, which have accompanying
LPOP and
RPOP methods:
+redis> lpush programming_languages C
+OK
+redis> lpush programming_languages Ruby
+OK
+redis> rpush programming_languages Python
+OK
+redis> rpop programming_languages
+Python
+redis> lpop programming_languages
+Ruby
+
More complex operations are available for each data type as well. Continuing with lists, you can get a range of elements with
LRANGE (O(start+n)) or trim the list with
LTRIM (O(n)):
+redis> lpush cities NYC
+OK
+redis> lpush cities SF
+OK
+redis> lpush cities Tokyo
+OK
+redis> lpush cities London
+OK
+redis> lpush cities Paris
+OK
+redis> lrange cities 0 2
+1. Paris
+2. London
+3. Tokyo
+redis> ltrim cities 0 1
+OK
+redis> lpop cities
+Paris
+redis> lpop cities
+London
+redis> lpop cities
+(nil)
+
You can also add and remove elements from a set, and perform intersections, unions, and differences.
Redis can also be looked at as a data structures server. A Redis user is virtually provided with an interface to
Abstract Data Types, saving them from the responsibility of implementing concrete data structures and algorithms -- indeed both algorithms and data structures in Redis are properly chosen in order to obtain the best performance.
Redis loads and mantains the whole dataset into memory, but the dataset is persistent, since at the same time it is saved on disk, so that when the server is restarted data can be loaded back in memory.
There are two kinds of persistence supported: the first one is called snapshotting. In this mode Redis periodically writes to disk asynchronously. The dataset is loaded from the dump every time the server is (re)started.
Redis can be configured to save the dataset when a certain number of changes is reached and after a given number of seconds elapses. For example, you can configure Redis to save after 1000 changes and at most 60 seconds since the last save. You can specify any combination for these numbers.
Because data is written asynchronously, when a system crash occurs, the last few queries can get lost (that is acceptable in many applications but not in all). In order to make this a non issue Redis supports another, safer persistence mode, called
Append Only File, where every command received altering the dataset (so not a read-only command, but a write command) is written on an append only file ASAP. This commands are
replayed when the server is restarted in order to rebuild the dataset in memory.
Redis Append Only File supports a very handy feature: the server is able to safely rebuild the append only file in background in a non-blocking fashion when it gets too long. You can find
more details in the Append Only File HOWTO.
Whatever will be the persistence mode you'll use Redis supports master-slave replications if you want to stay really safe or if you need to scale to huge amounts of reads.
Redis Replication is trivial to setup. So trivial that all you need to do in order to configure a Redis server to be a slave of another one, with automatic synchronization if the link will go down and so forth, is the following config line:
slaveof 192.168.1.100 6379
.
We provide a Replication Howto if you want to know more about this feature.
Redis can be used as a
memcached on steroids because is as fast as memcached but with a number of features more. Like memcached, Redis also supports setting timeouts to keys so that this key will be automatically removed when a given amount of time passes.
All these features allow to use Redis as the sole DB for your scalable application without the need of any relational database.
We wrote a simple Twitter clone in PHP + Redis to show a real world example, the link points to an article explaining the design and internals in very simple words.
Redis supports multiple databases with commands to atomically move keys from one database to the other. By default DB 0 is selected for every new connection, but using the SELECT command it is possible to select a different database. The MOVE operation can move an item from one DB to another atomically. This can be used as a base for locking free algorithms together with the 'RANDOMKEY' commands.
To really get a feeling about what Redis is and how it works please try reading
A fifteen minutes introduction to Redis data types.
To know a bit more about how Redis works
internally continue reading.
(note, you can skip this section if you are only interested in "formal" doc.)
Later in this document you can find detailed information about Redis commands,
the protocol specification, and so on. This kind of documentation is useful
but... if you are new to Redis it is also BORING! The Redis protocol is designed
so that is both pretty efficient to be parsed by computers, but simple enough
@@ -40,7 +71,7 @@ feeling about it, and how it works.
To start just compile redis with 'm
The server will start and log stuff on the standard output, if you want
it to log more edit redis.conf, set the loglevel to debug, and restart it.
You can specify a configuration file as unique parameter:
./redis-server /etc/redis.conf
This is NOT required. The server will start even without a configuration file
-using a default built-in configuration.
Now let's try to set a key to a given value:
+using a default built-in configuration.
Now let's try to set a key to a given value:
$ telnet localhost 6379
Trying 127.0.0.1...
Connected to localhost.
@@ -59,17 +90,17 @@ the point of view of both the server and client but allows us to play with
Redis with the telnet command easily.
The last line of the chat between server and client is "+OK". This means
our key was added without problems. Actually SET can never fail but
the "+OK" sent lets us know that the server received everything and
-the command was actually executed.
Let's try to get the key content now:
+the command was actually executed.
Let's try to get the key content now:
GET foo
$3
bar
Ok that's very similar to 'set', just the other way around. We sent "get foo",
the server replied with a first line that is just the $ character follwed by
the number of bytes the value stored at key contained, followed by the actual
-bytes. Again "\r\n" are appended both to the bytes count and the actual data. In Redis slang this is called a bulk reply.
What about requesting a non existing key?
+bytes. Again "\r\n" are appended both to the bytes count and the actual data. In Redis slang this is called a bulk reply.
What about requesting a non existing key?
GET blabla
$-1
-
When the key does not exist instead of the length, just the "$-1" string is sent. Since a -1 length of a bulk reply has no meaning it is used in order to specifiy a 'nil' value and distinguish it from a zero length value. Another way to check if a given key exists or not is indeed the EXISTS command:
+
When the key does not exist instead of the length, just the "$-1" string is sent. Since a -1 length of a bulk reply has no meaning it is used in order to specifiy a 'nil' value and distinguish it from a zero length value. Another way to check if a given key exists or not is indeed the EXISTS command:
EXISTS nokey
:0
EXISTS foo