This is hopefully usually harmles.
The server.ready_keys will usually be empty so the code after releasing
the GIL will soon be done.
The only case where it'll actually process things is when a module
releases a client (or module) blocked on a key, by triggering this NOT
from within a command (e.g. a timer event).
This bug was introduced in redis 6.0.9, see #7903
(cherry picked from commit f5604de4c8962db75a770dafff3b0ac830b6c4d1)
Fix: When oom-score-adj-values is provided in the config file after
oom-score-adj yes, it'll take an immediate action, before
readOOMScoreAdj was acquired, resulting in an error (out of range score
due to uninitialized value. delay the reaction the real call is made by
main().
Since the values are clamped to -1000..1000, and they're
applied as an offset from the value at startup (which may be -1000), we
need to allow the offsets to reach to +2000 so that a value of +1000 is
achievable in case the value at startup was -1000.
Adding an option for absolute values rather than relative ones.
(cherry picked from commit f08fd95c6686467ecd46116dab150d47563aed1c)
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 168dcb549c3d5253fc69d6150ce98f8eb9ca0c99)
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: e70fbad
(cherry picked from commit 16e3af9d23bb4791a7571f889aad8f2c85546521)
When using a system with no malloc_usable_size(), zmalloc_size() assumed
that the heap allocator always returns blocks that are long-padded.
This may not always be the case, and will result with zmalloc_size()
returning a size that is bigger than allocated. At least in one case
this leads to out of bound write, process crash and a potential security
vulnerability.
Effectively this does not affect the vast majority of users, who use
jemalloc or glibc.
This problem along with a (different) fix was reported by Drew DeVault.
(cherry picked from commit 05a086617dc52d07868604e1a0fa922e5b9ce67c)
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 35eb8ec6f3f6a2deab49ff70b0e9a8587adfd6de)