c4fdf09c0 added a test that now fails with valgrind
it fails for two resons:
1) the test samples the used memory and then limits the maxmemory to
that value, but it turns out this is not atomic and on slow machines
the background cron process that clean out old query buffers reduces
the memory so that the setting doesn't cause eviction.
2) the dbsize was tested late, after reading some invalidation messages
by that time more and more keys got evicted, partially draining the
db. this is not the focus of this fix (still a known limitation)
(cherry picked from commit a102b21d178453247078b355a47762bfc121ac20)
The test was trying to wait for the replica to start loading the rdb
from the master before it kills the master, but it was actually waiting
for ROLE to be in "sync" mode, which corresponds to REPL_STATE_TRANSFER
that starts before the actual loading starts.
now instead it waits for the loading flag to be set.
Besides, the test was dependent on the previous configuration of the
servers, relying on the fact the replica is configured to persist
(either RDB of AOF), now it is set explicitly.
(cherry picked from commit 264953871b97bcc3d663cd006578c151a13b48ca)
The RMAPI_FUNC_SUPPORTED was defined in the wrong place on redismodule.h
and was not visible to modules.
(cherry picked from commit 97d647a13920c230a27685992a23679b44b73550)
When client tracking is enabled signalModifiedKey can increase memory usage,
this can cause the loop in performEvictions to keep running since it was measuring
the memory usage impact of signalModifiedKey.
The section that measures the memory impact of the eviction should be just on dbDelete,
excluding keyspace notification, client tracking, and propagation to AOF and replicas.
This resolves part of the problem described in #8069
p.s. fix took 1 minute, test took about 3 hours to write.
(cherry picked from commit c4fdf09c0584a3cee32b92f01b7958c72776aedc)
This PR not only fixes the problem that swapdb does not make the
transaction fail, but also optimizes the FLUSHALL and FLUSHDB command to
set the CLIENT_DIRTY_CAS flag to avoid unnecessary traversal of clients.
FLUSHDB was changed to first iterate on all watched keys, and then on the
clients watching each key.
Instead of iterating though all clients, and for each iterate on watched keys.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
(cherry picked from commit 10f94b0ab12f9315939dcccf39d64b9388c0c7fa)
When a Lua script returns a map to redis (a feature which was added in
redis 6 together with RESP3), it would have returned the value first and
the key second.
If the client was using RESP2, it was getting them out of order, and if
the client was in RESP3, it was getting a map of value => key.
This was happening regardless of the Lua script using redis.setresp(3)
or not.
This also affects a case where the script was returning a map which it got
from from redis by doing something like: redis.setresp(3); return redis.call()
This fix is a breaking change for redis 6.0 users who happened to rely
on the wrong order (either ones that used redis.setresp(3), or ones that
returned a map explicitly).
This commit also includes other two changes in the tests:
1. The test suite now handles RESP3 maps as dicts rather than nested
lists
2. Remove some redundant (duplicate) tests from tracking.tcl
(cherry picked from commit 2017407b4d1d19a91af1e7c0b199f2c1775dbaf9)
Module blocked clients cache the response in a temporary client,
the reply list in this client would be affected by the recent fix
in #7202, but when the reply is later copied into the real client,
it would have bypassed all the checks for output buffer limit, which
would have resulted in both: responding with a partial response to
the client, and also not disconnecting it at all.
(cherry picked from commit 48efc25f749c3620f9245786582ac76cb40e9bf4)
When replica diskless-load type is swapdb in cluster mode, we didn't backup
keys to slots map, so we will lose keys to slots map if fail to sync.
Now we backup keys to slots map at first, and restore it properly when fail.
This commit includes a refactory/cleanup of the backups mechanism (moving it to db.c and re-structuring it a bit).
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
(cherry picked from commit b55a827ea2e19bd6cd48f216e8e6caa34299f9b9)
The bug was introduced by #5021 which only attempted avoid EXIST on an
already expired key from returning 1 on a replica.
Before that commit, dbExists was used instead of
lookupKeyRead (which had an undesired effect to "touch" the LRU/LFU)
Other than that, this commit fixes OBJECT to also come empty handed on
expired keys in replica.
And DEBUG DIGEST-VALUE to behave like DEBUG OBJECT (get the data from
the key regardless of it's expired state)
(cherry picked from commit f8ae991717f10c837c1a76b2954dae56ecb0e6bc)
In redisFork(), we don't set child pid, so updateDictResizePolicy()
doesn't take effect, that isn't friendly for copy-on-write.
The bug was introduced this in redis 6.0: 56258c6
(cherry picked from commit 89c78a980807aa1de0a6d0ccde6042450333a783)
The tests sometimes fail to find a log message.
Recently i added a print that shows the log files that are searched
and it shows that the message was in deed there.
The only reason i can't think of for this seach to fail, is we we
happened to read an incomplete line, which didn't match our pattern and
then on the next iteration we would continue reading from the line after
it.
The fix is to always re-evaluation the previous line.
(cherry picked from commit 4e2e5be201439cae4c0a03cfc8b6a60be4bff625)
This wrong behavior was backed by a test, and also documentation, and dates back to 2010.
But it makes no sense to anyone involved so it was decided to change that.
Note that 20eeddf (invalidate watch on expire on access) was released in 6.0 RC2
and 2d1968f released in in 6.0.0 GA (invalidate watch when key is evicted).
both of which do similar changes.
(cherry picked from commit 556acefe7556443b6d1741d804add92047bf4a8b)
This cleans up and simplifies the API by passing the command name as the
first argument. Previously the command name was specified explicitly,
but was still included in the argv.
(cherry picked from commit 056a43e1a615080cf9ba405be0538a6a979c821e)
* Introduce a new API's: RM_GetContextFlagsAll, and
RM_GetKeyspaceNotificationFlagsAll that will return the
full flags mask of each feature. The module writer can
check base on this value if the Flags he needs are
supported or not.
* For each flag, introduce a new value on redismodule.h,
this value represents the LAST value and should be there
as a reminder to update it when a new value is added,
also it will be used in the code to calculate the full
flags mask (assuming flags are incrementally increasing).
In addition, stated that the module writer should not use
the LAST flag directly and he should use the GetFlagAll API's.
* Introduce a new API: RM_IsSubEventSupported, that returns for a given
event and subevent, whether or not the subevent supported.
* Introduce a new macro RMAPI_FUNC_SUPPORTED(func) that returns whether
or not a function API is supported by comparing it to NULL.
* Introduce a new API: int RM_GetServerVersion();, that will return the
current Redis version in the format 0x00MMmmpp; e.g. 0x00060008;
* Changed unstable version from 999.999.999 to 255.255.255
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: Yossi Gottlieb <yossigo@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit adc3183cd2b54238424895e4298548df4526f8c3)
This API function makes it possible to retrieve the X.509 certificate
used by clients to authenticate TLS connections.
(cherry picked from commit 0aec98dce2acbd280ad8ff4feac631e8afa833b1)
The main motivation here is to provide a way for modules to create a
single, global context that can be used for logging.
Currently, it is possible to obtain a thread-safe context that is not
attached to any blocked client by using `RM_GetThreadSafeContext`.
However, the attached context is not linked to the module identity so
log messages produced are not tagged with the module name.
Ideally we'd fix this in `RM_GetThreadSafeContext` itself but as it
doesn't accept the current context as an argument there's no way to do
that in a backwards compatible manner.
(cherry picked from commit 907da0580b57013c9e5c38b27f351597c72e4e25)
This is essentially the same as calling COMMAND GETKEYS but provides a
more efficient interface that can be used in every context (i.e. not a
Redis command).
(cherry picked from commit 7d117d7591656e947f526f5d5f8a022b88b38ad9)
I suppose that it was overlooked, since till recently none of the blocked commands were readonly.
other changes:
- add test for the above.
- add better support for additional (and deferring) clients for
cluster tests
- improve a test which left the client in MULTI state.
(cherry picked from commit 216c1106099f7c66c991a5a811c8fbacbb0ab17c)
track and report memory used by clients argv.
this is very usaful in case clients started sending a command and didn't
complete it. in which case the first args of the command are already
trimmed from the query buffer.
in an effort to avoid cache misses and overheads while keeping track of
these, i avoid calling sdsZmallocSize and instead use the sdslen /
bulk-len which can at least give some insight into the problem.
This memory is now added to the total clients memory usage, as well as
the client list.
(cherry picked from commit bea40e6a41e31a52e9e6efee77ea5a4bd873b759)
PROBLEM:
[$rd1 read] reads invalidation messages one by one, so it's never going to see the second invalidation message produced after INCR b, whether or not it exists. Adding another read will block incase no invalidation message is produced.
FIX:
We switch the order of "INCR a" and "INCR b" - now "INCR b" comes first. We still only read the first invalidation message produces. If an invalidation message is wrongly produces for b - then it will be produced before that of a, since "INCR b" comes before "INCR a".
Co-authored-by: Nitai Caro <caronita@amazon.com>
(cherry picked from commit 8fb89a572892e600146bd933c4f8f99d46a519c7)
Before this commit, we would have continued to add replies to the reply buffer even if client
output buffer limit is reached, so the used memory would keep increasing over the configured limit.
What's more, we shouldn’t write any reply to the client if it is set 'CLIENT_CLOSE_ASAP' flag
because that doesn't conform to its definition and we will close all clients flagged with
'CLIENT_CLOSE_ASAP' in ‘beforeSleep’.
Because of code execution order, before this, we may firstly write to part of the replies to
the socket before disconnecting it, but in fact, we may can’t send the full replies to clients
since OS socket buffer is limited. But this unexpected behavior makes some commands work well,
for instance ACL DELUSER, if the client deletes the current user, we need to send reply to client
and close the connection, but before, we close the client firstly and write the reply to reply
buffer. secondly, we shouldn't do this despite the fact it works well in most cases.
We add a flag 'CLIENT_CLOSE_AFTER_COMMAND' to mark clients, this flag means we will close the
client after executing commands and send all entire replies, so that we can write replies to
reply buffer during executing commands, send replies to clients, and close them later.
We also fix some implicit problems. If client output buffer limit is enforced in 'multi/exec',
all commands will be executed completely in redis and clients will not read any reply instead of
partial replies. Even more, if the client executes 'ACL deluser' the using user in 'multi/exec',
it will not read the replies after 'ACL deluser' just like before executing 'client kill' itself
in 'multi/exec'.
We added some tests for output buffer limit breach during multi-exec and using a pipeline of
many small commands rather than one with big response.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
(cherry picked from commit 57709c4bc663ddcb9313777c551a92dabf07095e)