21057 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
antirez
0a051ea1c1 Better target MacOS on __atomic macros conditional compilation. 2016-10-17 16:41:39 +02:00
Pedro Melo
180574ebeb Fixes compilation on MacOS 10.8.5, Clang tags/Apple/clang-421.0.57
Redis fails to compile on MacOS 10.8.5 with Clang 4, version 421.0.57
(based on LLVM 3.1svn).

When compiling zmalloc.c, we get these warnings:

        CC zmalloc.o
    zmalloc.c:109:5: warning: implicit declaration of function '__atomic_add_fetch' is invalid in C99 [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
        update_zmalloc_stat_alloc(zmalloc_size(ptr));
        ^
    zmalloc.c:75:9: note: expanded from macro 'update_zmalloc_stat_alloc'
            atomicIncr(used_memory,__n,used_memory_mutex); \
            ^
    ./atomicvar.h:57:37: note: expanded from macro 'atomicIncr'
    #define atomicIncr(var,count,mutex) __atomic_add_fetch(&var,(count),__ATOMIC_RELAXED)
                                        ^
    zmalloc.c:145:5: warning: implicit declaration of function '__atomic_sub_fetch' is invalid in C99 [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
        update_zmalloc_stat_free(oldsize);
        ^
    zmalloc.c:85:9: note: expanded from macro 'update_zmalloc_stat_free'
            atomicDecr(used_memory,__n,used_memory_mutex); \
            ^
    ./atomicvar.h:58:37: note: expanded from macro 'atomicDecr'
    #define atomicDecr(var,count,mutex) __atomic_sub_fetch(&var,(count),__ATOMIC_RELAXED)
                                        ^
    zmalloc.c:205:9: warning: implicit declaration of function '__atomic_load_n' is invalid in C99 [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
            atomicGet(used_memory,um,used_memory_mutex);
            ^
    ./atomicvar.h:60:14: note: expanded from macro 'atomicGet'
        dstvar = __atomic_load_n(&var,__ATOMIC_RELAXED); \
                 ^
    3 warnings generated.

Also on lazyfree.c:

        CC lazyfree.o
    lazyfree.c:68:13: warning: implicit declaration of function '__atomic_add_fetch' is invalid in C99 [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
                atomicIncr(lazyfree_objects,1,lazyfree_objects_mutex);
                ^
    ./atomicvar.h:57:37: note: expanded from macro 'atomicIncr'
    #define atomicIncr(var,count,mutex) __atomic_add_fetch(&var,(count),__ATOMIC_RELAXED)
                                        ^
    lazyfree.c:111:5: warning: implicit declaration of function '__atomic_sub_fetch' is invalid in C99 [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
        atomicDecr(lazyfree_objects,1,lazyfree_objects_mutex);
        ^
    ./atomicvar.h:58:37: note: expanded from macro 'atomicDecr'
    #define atomicDecr(var,count,mutex) __atomic_sub_fetch(&var,(count),__ATOMIC_RELAXED)
                                        ^
    2 warnings generated.

Then in the linking stage:

        LINK redis-server
    Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
      "___atomic_add_fetch", referenced from:
          _zmalloc in zmalloc.o
          _zcalloc in zmalloc.o
          _zrealloc in zmalloc.o
          _dbAsyncDelete in lazyfree.o
          _emptyDbAsync in lazyfree.o
          _slotToKeyFlushAsync in lazyfree.o
      "___atomic_load_n", referenced from:
          _zmalloc_used_memory in zmalloc.o
          _zmalloc_get_fragmentation_ratio in zmalloc.o
      "___atomic_sub_fetch", referenced from:
          _zrealloc in zmalloc.o
          _zfree in zmalloc.o
          _lazyfreeFreeObjectFromBioThread in lazyfree.o
          _lazyfreeFreeDatabaseFromBioThread in lazyfree.o
          _lazyfreeFreeSlotsMapFromBioThread in lazyfree.o
    ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
    clang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)
    make[1]: *** [redis-server] Error 1
    make: *** [all] Error 2

With this patch, the compilation is sucessful, no warnings.

Running `make test` we get a almost clean bill of health. Test pass with
one exception:

    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 52793) in tests/unit/dump.tcl
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53103) in tests/unit/auth.tcl
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53117) in tests/unit/auth.tcl
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53131) in tests/unit/protocol.tcl
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53145) in tests/unit/protocol.tcl
    [ok]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53160)
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53175) in tests/unit/scan.tcl
    [ok]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53189)
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53221) in tests/unit/type/incr.tcl
    .
    .
    .

Full debug log (289MB, uncompressed) available at
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/75548/logs/redis-debug-log-macos-10.8.5.log.xz

Most if not all of the memory leak tests fail. Not sure if this is
related. They are the only ones that fail. I belive they are not related,
but just the memory leak detector is not working properly on 10.8.5.

Signed-off-by: Pedro Melo <melo@simplicidade.org>
2016-10-17 14:58:23 +01:00
Pedro Melo
2000abc86f Fixes compilation on MacOS 10.8.5, Clang tags/Apple/clang-421.0.57
Redis fails to compile on MacOS 10.8.5 with Clang 4, version 421.0.57
(based on LLVM 3.1svn).

When compiling zmalloc.c, we get these warnings:

        CC zmalloc.o
    zmalloc.c:109:5: warning: implicit declaration of function '__atomic_add_fetch' is invalid in C99 [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
        update_zmalloc_stat_alloc(zmalloc_size(ptr));
        ^
    zmalloc.c:75:9: note: expanded from macro 'update_zmalloc_stat_alloc'
            atomicIncr(used_memory,__n,used_memory_mutex); \
            ^
    ./atomicvar.h:57:37: note: expanded from macro 'atomicIncr'
    #define atomicIncr(var,count,mutex) __atomic_add_fetch(&var,(count),__ATOMIC_RELAXED)
                                        ^
    zmalloc.c:145:5: warning: implicit declaration of function '__atomic_sub_fetch' is invalid in C99 [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
        update_zmalloc_stat_free(oldsize);
        ^
    zmalloc.c:85:9: note: expanded from macro 'update_zmalloc_stat_free'
            atomicDecr(used_memory,__n,used_memory_mutex); \
            ^
    ./atomicvar.h:58:37: note: expanded from macro 'atomicDecr'
    #define atomicDecr(var,count,mutex) __atomic_sub_fetch(&var,(count),__ATOMIC_RELAXED)
                                        ^
    zmalloc.c:205:9: warning: implicit declaration of function '__atomic_load_n' is invalid in C99 [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
            atomicGet(used_memory,um,used_memory_mutex);
            ^
    ./atomicvar.h:60:14: note: expanded from macro 'atomicGet'
        dstvar = __atomic_load_n(&var,__ATOMIC_RELAXED); \
                 ^
    3 warnings generated.

Also on lazyfree.c:

        CC lazyfree.o
    lazyfree.c:68:13: warning: implicit declaration of function '__atomic_add_fetch' is invalid in C99 [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
                atomicIncr(lazyfree_objects,1,lazyfree_objects_mutex);
                ^
    ./atomicvar.h:57:37: note: expanded from macro 'atomicIncr'
    #define atomicIncr(var,count,mutex) __atomic_add_fetch(&var,(count),__ATOMIC_RELAXED)
                                        ^
    lazyfree.c:111:5: warning: implicit declaration of function '__atomic_sub_fetch' is invalid in C99 [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
        atomicDecr(lazyfree_objects,1,lazyfree_objects_mutex);
        ^
    ./atomicvar.h:58:37: note: expanded from macro 'atomicDecr'
    #define atomicDecr(var,count,mutex) __atomic_sub_fetch(&var,(count),__ATOMIC_RELAXED)
                                        ^
    2 warnings generated.

Then in the linking stage:

        LINK redis-server
    Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
      "___atomic_add_fetch", referenced from:
          _zmalloc in zmalloc.o
          _zcalloc in zmalloc.o
          _zrealloc in zmalloc.o
          _dbAsyncDelete in lazyfree.o
          _emptyDbAsync in lazyfree.o
          _slotToKeyFlushAsync in lazyfree.o
      "___atomic_load_n", referenced from:
          _zmalloc_used_memory in zmalloc.o
          _zmalloc_get_fragmentation_ratio in zmalloc.o
      "___atomic_sub_fetch", referenced from:
          _zrealloc in zmalloc.o
          _zfree in zmalloc.o
          _lazyfreeFreeObjectFromBioThread in lazyfree.o
          _lazyfreeFreeDatabaseFromBioThread in lazyfree.o
          _lazyfreeFreeSlotsMapFromBioThread in lazyfree.o
    ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
    clang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)
    make[1]: *** [redis-server] Error 1
    make: *** [all] Error 2

With this patch, the compilation is sucessful, no warnings.

Running `make test` we get a almost clean bill of health. Test pass with
one exception:

    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 52793) in tests/unit/dump.tcl
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53103) in tests/unit/auth.tcl
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53117) in tests/unit/auth.tcl
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53131) in tests/unit/protocol.tcl
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53145) in tests/unit/protocol.tcl
    [ok]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53160)
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53175) in tests/unit/scan.tcl
    [ok]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53189)
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53221) in tests/unit/type/incr.tcl
    .
    .
    .

Full debug log (289MB, uncompressed) available at
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/75548/logs/redis-debug-log-macos-10.8.5.log.xz

Most if not all of the memory leak tests fail. Not sure if this is
related. They are the only ones that fail. I belive they are not related,
but just the memory leak detector is not working properly on 10.8.5.

Signed-off-by: Pedro Melo <melo@simplicidade.org>
2016-10-17 14:58:23 +01:00
Pedro Melo
5d5ce20ee6 Fixes compilation on MacOS 10.8.5, Clang tags/Apple/clang-421.0.57
Redis fails to compile on MacOS 10.8.5 with Clang 4, version 421.0.57
(based on LLVM 3.1svn).

When compiling zmalloc.c, we get these warnings:

        CC zmalloc.o
    zmalloc.c:109:5: warning: implicit declaration of function '__atomic_add_fetch' is invalid in C99 [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
        update_zmalloc_stat_alloc(zmalloc_size(ptr));
        ^
    zmalloc.c:75:9: note: expanded from macro 'update_zmalloc_stat_alloc'
            atomicIncr(used_memory,__n,used_memory_mutex); \
            ^
    ./atomicvar.h:57:37: note: expanded from macro 'atomicIncr'
    #define atomicIncr(var,count,mutex) __atomic_add_fetch(&var,(count),__ATOMIC_RELAXED)
                                        ^
    zmalloc.c:145:5: warning: implicit declaration of function '__atomic_sub_fetch' is invalid in C99 [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
        update_zmalloc_stat_free(oldsize);
        ^
    zmalloc.c:85:9: note: expanded from macro 'update_zmalloc_stat_free'
            atomicDecr(used_memory,__n,used_memory_mutex); \
            ^
    ./atomicvar.h:58:37: note: expanded from macro 'atomicDecr'
    #define atomicDecr(var,count,mutex) __atomic_sub_fetch(&var,(count),__ATOMIC_RELAXED)
                                        ^
    zmalloc.c:205:9: warning: implicit declaration of function '__atomic_load_n' is invalid in C99 [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
            atomicGet(used_memory,um,used_memory_mutex);
            ^
    ./atomicvar.h:60:14: note: expanded from macro 'atomicGet'
        dstvar = __atomic_load_n(&var,__ATOMIC_RELAXED); \
                 ^
    3 warnings generated.

Also on lazyfree.c:

        CC lazyfree.o
    lazyfree.c:68:13: warning: implicit declaration of function '__atomic_add_fetch' is invalid in C99 [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
                atomicIncr(lazyfree_objects,1,lazyfree_objects_mutex);
                ^
    ./atomicvar.h:57:37: note: expanded from macro 'atomicIncr'
    #define atomicIncr(var,count,mutex) __atomic_add_fetch(&var,(count),__ATOMIC_RELAXED)
                                        ^
    lazyfree.c:111:5: warning: implicit declaration of function '__atomic_sub_fetch' is invalid in C99 [-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
        atomicDecr(lazyfree_objects,1,lazyfree_objects_mutex);
        ^
    ./atomicvar.h:58:37: note: expanded from macro 'atomicDecr'
    #define atomicDecr(var,count,mutex) __atomic_sub_fetch(&var,(count),__ATOMIC_RELAXED)
                                        ^
    2 warnings generated.

Then in the linking stage:

        LINK redis-server
    Undefined symbols for architecture x86_64:
      "___atomic_add_fetch", referenced from:
          _zmalloc in zmalloc.o
          _zcalloc in zmalloc.o
          _zrealloc in zmalloc.o
          _dbAsyncDelete in lazyfree.o
          _emptyDbAsync in lazyfree.o
          _slotToKeyFlushAsync in lazyfree.o
      "___atomic_load_n", referenced from:
          _zmalloc_used_memory in zmalloc.o
          _zmalloc_get_fragmentation_ratio in zmalloc.o
      "___atomic_sub_fetch", referenced from:
          _zrealloc in zmalloc.o
          _zfree in zmalloc.o
          _lazyfreeFreeObjectFromBioThread in lazyfree.o
          _lazyfreeFreeDatabaseFromBioThread in lazyfree.o
          _lazyfreeFreeSlotsMapFromBioThread in lazyfree.o
    ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture x86_64
    clang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)
    make[1]: *** [redis-server] Error 1
    make: *** [all] Error 2

With this patch, the compilation is sucessful, no warnings.

Running `make test` we get a almost clean bill of health. Test pass with
one exception:

    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 52793) in tests/unit/dump.tcl
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53103) in tests/unit/auth.tcl
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53117) in tests/unit/auth.tcl
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53131) in tests/unit/protocol.tcl
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53145) in tests/unit/protocol.tcl
    [ok]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53160)
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53175) in tests/unit/scan.tcl
    [ok]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53189)
    [err]: Check for memory leaks (pid 53221) in tests/unit/type/incr.tcl
    .
    .
    .

Full debug log (289MB, uncompressed) available at
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/75548/logs/redis-debug-log-macos-10.8.5.log.xz

Most if not all of the memory leak tests fail. Not sure if this is
related. They are the only ones that fail. I belive they are not related,
but just the memory leak detector is not working properly on 10.8.5.

Signed-off-by: Pedro Melo <melo@simplicidade.org>
2016-10-17 14:58:23 +01:00
antirez
cc6fcdd0ee SWAPDB command.
This new command swaps two Redis databases, so that immediately all the
clients connected to a given DB will see the data of the other DB, and
the other way around. Example:

    SWAPDB 0 1

This will swap DB 0 with DB 1. All the clients connected with DB 0 will
immediately see the new data, exactly like all the clients connected
with DB 1 will see the data that was formerly of DB 0.

MOTIVATION AND HISTORY
---

The command was recently demanded by Pedro Melo, but was suggested in
the past multiple times, and always refused by me.

The reason why it was asked: Imagine you have clients operating in DB 0.
At the same time, you create a new version of the dataset in DB 1.
When the new version of the dataset is available, you immediately want
to swap the two views, so that the clients will transparently use the
new version of the data. At the same time you'll likely destroy the
DB 1 dataset (that contains the old data) and start to build a new
version, to repeat the process.

This is an interesting pattern, but the reason why I always opposed to
implement this, was that FLUSHDB was a blocking command in Redis before
Redis 4.0 improvements. Now we have FLUSHDB ASYNC that releases the
old data in O(1) from the point of view of the client, to reclaim memory
incrementally in a different thread.

At this point, the pattern can really be supported without latency
spikes, so I'm providing this implementation for the users to comment.
In case a very compelling argument will be made against this new command
it may be removed.

BEHAVIOR WITH BLOCKING OPERATIONS
---

If a client is blocking for a list in a given DB, after the swap it will
still be blocked in the same DB ID, since this is the most logical thing
to do: if I was blocked for a list push to list "foo", even after the
swap I want still a LPUSH to reach the key "foo" in the same DB in order
to unblock.

However an interesting thing happens when a client is, for instance,
blocked waiting for new elements in list "foo" of DB 0. Then the DB
0 and 1 are swapped with SWAPDB. However the DB 1 happened to have
a list called "foo" containing elements. When this happens, this
implementation can correctly unblock the client.

It is possible that there are subtle corner cases that are not covered
in the implementation, but since the command is self-contained from the
POV of the implementation and the Redis core, it cannot cause anything
bad if not used.

Tests and documentation are yet to be provided.
2016-10-14 15:28:04 +02:00
antirez
c7a4e694ad SWAPDB command.
This new command swaps two Redis databases, so that immediately all the
clients connected to a given DB will see the data of the other DB, and
the other way around. Example:

    SWAPDB 0 1

This will swap DB 0 with DB 1. All the clients connected with DB 0 will
immediately see the new data, exactly like all the clients connected
with DB 1 will see the data that was formerly of DB 0.

MOTIVATION AND HISTORY
---

The command was recently demanded by Pedro Melo, but was suggested in
the past multiple times, and always refused by me.

The reason why it was asked: Imagine you have clients operating in DB 0.
At the same time, you create a new version of the dataset in DB 1.
When the new version of the dataset is available, you immediately want
to swap the two views, so that the clients will transparently use the
new version of the data. At the same time you'll likely destroy the
DB 1 dataset (that contains the old data) and start to build a new
version, to repeat the process.

This is an interesting pattern, but the reason why I always opposed to
implement this, was that FLUSHDB was a blocking command in Redis before
Redis 4.0 improvements. Now we have FLUSHDB ASYNC that releases the
old data in O(1) from the point of view of the client, to reclaim memory
incrementally in a different thread.

At this point, the pattern can really be supported without latency
spikes, so I'm providing this implementation for the users to comment.
In case a very compelling argument will be made against this new command
it may be removed.

BEHAVIOR WITH BLOCKING OPERATIONS
---

If a client is blocking for a list in a given DB, after the swap it will
still be blocked in the same DB ID, since this is the most logical thing
to do: if I was blocked for a list push to list "foo", even after the
swap I want still a LPUSH to reach the key "foo" in the same DB in order
to unblock.

However an interesting thing happens when a client is, for instance,
blocked waiting for new elements in list "foo" of DB 0. Then the DB
0 and 1 are swapped with SWAPDB. However the DB 1 happened to have
a list called "foo" containing elements. When this happens, this
implementation can correctly unblock the client.

It is possible that there are subtle corner cases that are not covered
in the implementation, but since the command is self-contained from the
POV of the implementation and the Redis core, it cannot cause anything
bad if not used.

Tests and documentation are yet to be provided.
2016-10-14 15:28:04 +02:00
antirez
a89f98b802 SWAPDB command.
This new command swaps two Redis databases, so that immediately all the
clients connected to a given DB will see the data of the other DB, and
the other way around. Example:

    SWAPDB 0 1

This will swap DB 0 with DB 1. All the clients connected with DB 0 will
immediately see the new data, exactly like all the clients connected
with DB 1 will see the data that was formerly of DB 0.

MOTIVATION AND HISTORY
---

The command was recently demanded by Pedro Melo, but was suggested in
the past multiple times, and always refused by me.

The reason why it was asked: Imagine you have clients operating in DB 0.
At the same time, you create a new version of the dataset in DB 1.
When the new version of the dataset is available, you immediately want
to swap the two views, so that the clients will transparently use the
new version of the data. At the same time you'll likely destroy the
DB 1 dataset (that contains the old data) and start to build a new
version, to repeat the process.

This is an interesting pattern, but the reason why I always opposed to
implement this, was that FLUSHDB was a blocking command in Redis before
Redis 4.0 improvements. Now we have FLUSHDB ASYNC that releases the
old data in O(1) from the point of view of the client, to reclaim memory
incrementally in a different thread.

At this point, the pattern can really be supported without latency
spikes, so I'm providing this implementation for the users to comment.
In case a very compelling argument will be made against this new command
it may be removed.

BEHAVIOR WITH BLOCKING OPERATIONS
---

If a client is blocking for a list in a given DB, after the swap it will
still be blocked in the same DB ID, since this is the most logical thing
to do: if I was blocked for a list push to list "foo", even after the
swap I want still a LPUSH to reach the key "foo" in the same DB in order
to unblock.

However an interesting thing happens when a client is, for instance,
blocked waiting for new elements in list "foo" of DB 0. Then the DB
0 and 1 are swapped with SWAPDB. However the DB 1 happened to have
a list called "foo" containing elements. When this happens, this
implementation can correctly unblock the client.

It is possible that there are subtle corner cases that are not covered
in the implementation, but since the command is self-contained from the
POV of the implementation and the Redis core, it cannot cause anything
bad if not used.

Tests and documentation are yet to be provided.
2016-10-14 15:28:04 +02:00
antirez
8b65d03e17 Modules: use RedisModule_AbortBlock() in the example. 2016-10-13 17:00:45 +02:00
antirez
a3b3ca7c21 Modules: use RedisModule_AbortBlock() in the example. 2016-10-13 17:00:45 +02:00
antirez
0d55b08656 Modules: use RedisModule_AbortBlock() in the example. 2016-10-13 17:00:45 +02:00
antirez
68269e1a6a Modules: AbortBlock() API implemented. 2016-10-13 16:57:40 +02:00
antirez
95c17c0cb2 Modules: AbortBlock() API implemented. 2016-10-13 16:57:40 +02:00
antirez
a7af7a1f8e Modules: AbortBlock() API implemented. 2016-10-13 16:57:40 +02:00
antirez
f58b319bb0 Modules: blocking API documented. 2016-10-13 16:57:28 +02:00
antirez
58601c8f7d Modules: blocking API documented. 2016-10-13 16:57:28 +02:00
antirez
6b22a3f9f2 Modules: blocking API documented. 2016-10-13 16:57:28 +02:00
antirez
6c2eb95417 module.c: trim comment to 80 cols. 2016-10-13 12:48:36 +02:00
antirez
553aa0e259 module.c: trim comment to 80 cols. 2016-10-13 12:48:36 +02:00
antirez
f34ceb42c0 module.c: trim comment to 80 cols. 2016-10-13 12:48:36 +02:00
antirez
26e751995f Example modules: remove warnings about types and not used args. 2016-10-13 12:43:18 +02:00
antirez
870274bea8 Example modules: remove warnings about types and not used args. 2016-10-13 12:43:18 +02:00
antirez
626270fc82 Example modules: remove warnings about types and not used args. 2016-10-13 12:43:18 +02:00
jybaek
b0ab71a79e Remove Duplicate Processing 2016-10-13 15:17:07 +09:00
jybaek
c76b9b644c Remove Duplicate Processing 2016-10-13 15:17:07 +09:00
jybaek
834a914b39 Remove Duplicate Processing 2016-10-13 15:17:07 +09:00
yyoshiki41
d8c7926f98 Refactor redis-trib.rb 2016-10-10 01:13:20 +09:00
yyoshiki41
16f65068b0 Refactor redis-trib.rb 2016-10-10 01:13:20 +09:00
yyoshiki41
8e814916c3 Refactor redis-trib.rb 2016-10-10 01:13:20 +09:00
antirez
d683d7b16e Modules: blocking command example added. 2016-10-07 16:35:06 +02:00
antirez
7dde8bf3ab Modules: blocking command example added. 2016-10-07 16:35:06 +02:00
antirez
33223ded21 Modules: blocking command example added. 2016-10-07 16:35:06 +02:00
antirez
e677fca2c3 Modules: fixes to the blocking commands API: examples now works. 2016-10-07 16:34:40 +02:00
antirez
34599691b3 Modules: fixes to the blocking commands API: examples now works. 2016-10-07 16:34:40 +02:00
antirez
7ac5f45831 Modules: fixes to the blocking commands API: examples now works. 2016-10-07 16:34:40 +02:00
antirez
7bc2b181c8 Modules: RM_Milliseconds() API added. 2016-10-07 16:34:19 +02:00
antirez
f156038db8 Modules: RM_Milliseconds() API added. 2016-10-07 16:34:19 +02:00
antirez
5a1a9e13f2 Modules: RM_Milliseconds() API added. 2016-10-07 16:34:19 +02:00
antirez
59949257af Modules: blocking commands WIP: API exported, a first example. 2016-10-07 13:48:14 +02:00
antirez
ffb00fbcbe Modules: blocking commands WIP: API exported, a first example. 2016-10-07 13:48:14 +02:00
antirez
e102e93c9d Modules: blocking commands WIP: API exported, a first example. 2016-10-07 13:48:14 +02:00
antirez
4eec3f7d02 Modules: introduce warning suppression macro for unused args. 2016-10-07 13:10:31 +02:00
antirez
3aa816e61a Modules: introduce warning suppression macro for unused args. 2016-10-07 13:10:31 +02:00
antirez
2371a8b3b3 Modules: introduce warning suppression macro for unused args. 2016-10-07 13:10:31 +02:00
antirez
c26eb7976a Enable warning in example modules Makefile. 2016-10-07 13:07:13 +02:00
antirez
3879923db8 Enable warning in example modules Makefile. 2016-10-07 13:07:13 +02:00
antirez
c10a839e82 Enable warning in example modules Makefile. 2016-10-07 13:07:13 +02:00
antirez
2ae6258ba7 Module: API to block clients with threading support.
Just a draft to align the main ideas, never executed code. Compiles.
2016-10-07 11:55:35 +02:00
antirez
8fadfe52a2 Module: API to block clients with threading support.
Just a draft to align the main ideas, never executed code. Compiles.
2016-10-07 11:55:35 +02:00
antirez
925752a13d Module: API to block clients with threading support.
Just a draft to align the main ideas, never executed code. Compiles.
2016-10-07 11:55:35 +02:00
antirez
3398c93043 Fix typos in GetContextFromIO API declaration. 2016-10-06 18:26:04 +02:00