Redic
Lightweight Redis Client
Description
Lightweight Redis Client inspired by redigo, a Redis client library for golang.
Usage
# Accepts a Redis URL and defaults to "redis://127.0.0.1:6379".
redis = Redic.new
# Processes the command and returns the response.
redis.call("SET", "foo", "bar")
assert_equal "bar", redis.call("GET", "foo")
# Pipelining is implemented by buffering commands,
# then calling Redic#commit
redis.queue("SET", "foo", "bar")
redis.queue("GET", "foo")
assert_equal ["OK", "bar"], redis.commit
You can provide the password and the database to be selected. The
format for Redis URLs is redis://user:pass@host:port/db
. As
Redis only needs a password for authentication, the user can be
omitted:
# Connect to localhost:6380 using "bar" as password and use the
# database 2. Both AUTH and SELECT commands are issued after
# connecting. The user part of the URL is not provided.
redis = Redic.new("redis://:bar@localhost:6380/2")
It is also possible to configure a timeout for the connection. The default timeout is 10 seconds.
# Timeout expressed in microseconds.
redis = Redic.new(REDIS_URL, 2_000_000)
redis.timeout == 2_000_000 #=> true
A client can be re-configured, forcing the next connection to be established with the new details:
redis = Redic.new("redis://localhost:6379")
redis.configure("redis://localhost:6380")
Here's one final example using both a Redis URL and a timeout:
# It's recommended to store the REDIS_URL as an environment
# variable. Use `fetch` to retrieve values that must be present,
# as it raises an error if the value is not found.
REDIS_URL = ENV.fetch("REDIS_URL")
REDIS_TIMEOUT = ENV.fetch("REDIS_TIMEOUT")
redis = Redic.new(REDIS_URL, REDIS_TIMEOUT)
Both the initializer and the configure
method accept a URL
and
a timeout
.
In order to close the connection, call quit
:
redis = Redic.new("redis://localhost:6379")
redis.quit
With that command, "QUIT"
is sent to Redis and the socket is closed.
Differences with redis-rb
Redic uses hiredis for the connection and for parsing the replies. There are no alternative connection drivers. Unlike redis-rb it doesn't define all the Redis commands, and instead it acts as a transport layer. The lock provided is smaller than that of redis-rb, as it only wraps the writing and reading from the connection. So even if both clients are thread-safe by default, the peformance of a smaller lock is marginally better.
Limitations
When a client enters a subscribed mode, further reads to retrieve the messages are not thread safe. It is very important to take this into account and to create a different client if you need to send different operations while a client is subscribed to a channel.
# Example of pub/sub usage.
c1 = Redic.new
c2 = Redic.new
# After this command, the client is no longer thread safe.
c1.call("SUBSCRIBE", "foo")
# That's why we need to publish from a different connection.
c2.call("PUBLISH", "foo")
# Note that this operation is not thread safe.
assert_equal ["message", "foo", "value1"], c1.client.read
You can wrap thread unsafe operations in a mutex:
redis = Redic.new
mutex = Mutex.new
mutex.synchronize do
redis.call("MONITOR")
# Display every command sent to Redis.
loop do
puts redis.client.read
end
end
Installation
You can install it using rubygems.
$ gem install redic