7544 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Guy Benoish
290a63dc54 Don't call sdscmp() with shared.maxstring or shared.minstring 2018-03-06 20:14:35 +07:00
Guy Benoish
0888eb4a00 Don't call sdscmp() with shared.maxstring or shared.minstring 2018-03-06 20:14:35 +07:00
pan.liangp
f4eb64cd35 move get clients max buffer calculate into info clients command 2018-03-02 17:16:00 +08:00
pan.liangp
fb23cd0627 move get clients max buffer calculate into info clients command 2018-03-02 17:16:00 +08:00
antirez
84b281209a Stream: update the listpack pointer in streamTrimByLength(). 2018-03-01 17:26:02 +01:00
antirez
c277aaf3b4 Stream: update the listpack pointer in streamTrimByLength(). 2018-03-01 17:26:02 +01:00
antirez
efcbc01fbd Remove warning from lpGet snprintf(). 2018-03-01 15:26:27 +01:00
antirez
8e0fbea741 Remove warning from lpGet snprintf(). 2018-03-01 15:26:27 +01:00
antirez
d63caaa820 redis-cli: fix missed unit in array. Change define name. 2018-03-01 15:06:41 +01:00
antirez
1db665cda9 redis-cli: fix missed unit in array. Change define name. 2018-03-01 15:06:41 +01:00
charsyam
da7f5700cf refactoring-call-aeDeleteFileEvent-twice-in-freeClusterLink 2018-03-01 22:30:39 +09:00
charsyam
ef132d1337 refactoring-call-aeDeleteFileEvent-twice-in-freeClusterLink 2018-03-01 22:30:39 +09:00
charsyam
51a03f6356 fix dlopen leak 2018-03-01 21:22:42 +09:00
charsyam
063e4b44c0 fix dlopen leak 2018-03-01 21:22:42 +09:00
Salvatore Sanfilippo
83b5b5a476
Merge pull request #4714 from charsyam/feature/fix-out-of-index-range
[BugFix] Fix out of array index range for findBigKeys in redis-cli
2018-03-01 03:39:15 -08:00
Salvatore Sanfilippo
38ecac9dd0 Merge pull request #4714 from charsyam/feature/fix-out-of-index-range
[BugFix] Fix out of array index range for findBigKeys in redis-cli
2018-03-01 03:39:15 -08:00
antirez
3a5bf75ede Actually use ae_flags to add AE_BARRIER if needed.
Many thanks to @Plasma that spotted this problem reviewing the code.
2018-02-28 18:03:51 +01:00
antirez
99f94354a6 Actually use ae_flags to add AE_BARRIER if needed.
Many thanks to @Plasma that spotted this problem reviewing the code.
2018-02-28 18:03:51 +01:00
Salvatore Sanfilippo
7a73db7512
Merge pull request #4715 from charsyam/feature/refactoring-make-condition-clear-for-rdb
[BugFix] fix calculation length in rdbSaveAuxField
2018-02-27 10:15:27 -08:00
Salvatore Sanfilippo
c3934db151 Merge pull request #4715 from charsyam/feature/refactoring-make-condition-clear-for-rdb
[BugFix] fix calculation length in rdbSaveAuxField
2018-02-27 10:15:27 -08:00
antirez
92696e49d2 expireIfNeeded() needed a top comment documenting the behavior. 2018-02-27 16:44:43 +01:00
antirez
550181a96b expireIfNeeded() needed a top comment documenting the behavior. 2018-02-27 16:44:43 +01:00
antirez
b00c4ffab5 expireIfNeeded() comment: claim -> pretend. 2018-02-27 16:37:37 +01:00
antirez
4db08588cc expireIfNeeded() comment: claim -> pretend. 2018-02-27 16:37:37 +01:00
charsyam
76386c48b8 refactoring-make-condition-clear-for-rdb 2018-02-27 21:55:20 +09:00
charsyam
7bf2ef9dba refactoring-make-condition-clear-for-rdb 2018-02-27 21:55:20 +09:00
charsyam
6168d5a1a6 fix-out-of-index-range-for-redis-cli-findbigkey 2018-02-27 21:46:19 +09:00
charsyam
aecbdde3c0 fix-out-of-index-range-for-redis-cli-findbigkey 2018-02-27 21:46:19 +09:00
antirez
956350ef89 ae.c: insetad of not firing, on AE_BARRIER invert the sequence.
AE_BARRIER was implemented like:

    - Fire the readable event.
    - Do not fire the writabel event if the readable fired.

However this may lead to the writable event to never be called if the
readable event is always fired. There is an alterantive, we can just
invert the sequence of the calls in case AE_BARRIER is set. This commit
does that.
2018-02-27 13:06:42 +01:00
antirez
b745b98f3d ae.c: insetad of not firing, on AE_BARRIER invert the sequence.
AE_BARRIER was implemented like:

    - Fire the readable event.
    - Do not fire the writabel event if the readable fired.

However this may lead to the writable event to never be called if the
readable event is always fired. There is an alterantive, we can just
invert the sequence of the calls in case AE_BARRIER is set. This commit
does that.
2018-02-27 13:06:42 +01:00
antirez
75987431f0 AOF: fix a bug that may prevent proper fsyncing when fsync=always.
In case the write handler is already installed, it could happen that we
serve the reply of a query in the same event loop cycle we received it,
preventing beforeSleep() from guaranteeing that we do the AOF fsync
before sending the reply to the client.

The AE_BARRIER mechanism, introduced in a previous commit, prevents this
problem. This commit makes actual use of this new feature to fix the
bug.
2018-02-27 13:06:42 +01:00
antirez
5a57c953c9 AOF: fix a bug that may prevent proper fsyncing when fsync=always.
In case the write handler is already installed, it could happen that we
serve the reply of a query in the same event loop cycle we received it,
preventing beforeSleep() from guaranteeing that we do the AOF fsync
before sending the reply to the client.

The AE_BARRIER mechanism, introduced in a previous commit, prevents this
problem. This commit makes actual use of this new feature to fix the
bug.
2018-02-27 13:06:42 +01:00
antirez
533d0e0375 Cluster: improve crash-recovery safety after failover auth vote.
Add AE_BARRIER to the writable event loop so that slaves requesting
votes can't be served before we re-enter the event loop in the next
iteration, so clusterBeforeSleep() will fsync to disk in time.
Also add the call to explicitly fsync, given that we modified the last
vote epoch variable.
2018-02-27 13:06:42 +01:00
antirez
61da5a9da8 Cluster: improve crash-recovery safety after failover auth vote.
Add AE_BARRIER to the writable event loop so that slaves requesting
votes can't be served before we re-enter the event loop in the next
iteration, so clusterBeforeSleep() will fsync to disk in time.
Also add the call to explicitly fsync, given that we modified the last
vote epoch variable.
2018-02-27 13:06:42 +01:00
antirez
548e478e40 ae.c: introduce the concept of read->write barrier.
AOF fsync=always, and certain Redis Cluster bus operations, require to
fsync data on disk before replying with an acknowledge.
In such case, in order to implement Group Commits, we want to be sure
that queries that are read in a given cycle of the event loop, are never
served to clients in the same event loop iteration. This way, by using
the event loop "before sleep" callback, we can fsync the information
just one time before returning into the event loop for the next cycle.
This is much more efficient compared to calling fsync() multiple times.

Unfortunately because of a bug, this was not always guaranteed: the
actual way the events are installed was the sole thing that could
control. Normally this problem is hard to trigger when AOF is enabled
with fsync=always, because we try to flush the output buffers to the
socekt directly in the beforeSleep() function of Redis. However if the
output buffers are full, we actually install a write event, and in such
a case, this bug could happen.

This change to ae.c modifies the event loop implementation to make this
concept explicit. Write events that are registered with:

    AE_WRITABLE|AE_BARRIER

Are guaranteed to never fire after the readable event was fired for the
same file descriptor. In this way we are sure that data is persisted to
disk before the client performing the operation receives an
acknowledged.

However note that this semantics does not provide all the guarantees
that one may believe are automatically provided. Take the example of the
blocking list operations in Redis.

With AOF and fsync=always we could have:

    Client A doing: BLPOP myqueue 0
    Client B doing: RPUSH myqueue a b c

In this scenario, Client A will get the "a" elements immediately after
the Client B RPUSH will be executed, even before the operation is persisted.
However when Client B will get the acknowledge, it can be sure that
"b,c" are already safe on disk inside the list.

What to note here is that it cannot be assumed that Client A receiving
the element is a guaranteed that the operation succeeded from the point
of view of Client B.

This is due to the fact that the barrier exists within the same socket,
and not between different sockets. However in the case above, the
element "a" was not going to be persisted regardless, so it is a pretty
synthetic argument.
2018-02-27 13:06:42 +01:00
antirez
6c7d27c711 ae.c: introduce the concept of read->write barrier.
AOF fsync=always, and certain Redis Cluster bus operations, require to
fsync data on disk before replying with an acknowledge.
In such case, in order to implement Group Commits, we want to be sure
that queries that are read in a given cycle of the event loop, are never
served to clients in the same event loop iteration. This way, by using
the event loop "before sleep" callback, we can fsync the information
just one time before returning into the event loop for the next cycle.
This is much more efficient compared to calling fsync() multiple times.

Unfortunately because of a bug, this was not always guaranteed: the
actual way the events are installed was the sole thing that could
control. Normally this problem is hard to trigger when AOF is enabled
with fsync=always, because we try to flush the output buffers to the
socekt directly in the beforeSleep() function of Redis. However if the
output buffers are full, we actually install a write event, and in such
a case, this bug could happen.

This change to ae.c modifies the event loop implementation to make this
concept explicit. Write events that are registered with:

    AE_WRITABLE|AE_BARRIER

Are guaranteed to never fire after the readable event was fired for the
same file descriptor. In this way we are sure that data is persisted to
disk before the client performing the operation receives an
acknowledged.

However note that this semantics does not provide all the guarantees
that one may believe are automatically provided. Take the example of the
blocking list operations in Redis.

With AOF and fsync=always we could have:

    Client A doing: BLPOP myqueue 0
    Client B doing: RPUSH myqueue a b c

In this scenario, Client A will get the "a" elements immediately after
the Client B RPUSH will be executed, even before the operation is persisted.
However when Client B will get the acknowledge, it can be sure that
"b,c" are already safe on disk inside the list.

What to note here is that it cannot be assumed that Client A receiving
the element is a guaranteed that the operation succeeded from the point
of view of Client B.

This is due to the fact that the barrier exists within the same socket,
and not between different sockets. However in the case above, the
element "a" was not going to be persisted regardless, so it is a pretty
synthetic argument.
2018-02-27 13:06:42 +01:00
Salvatore Sanfilippo
d8830200b4
Merge pull request #3828 from oranagra/sdsnewlen_pr
add SDS_NOINIT option to sdsnewlen to avoid unnecessary memsets.
2018-02-27 04:04:32 -08:00
Salvatore Sanfilippo
3f379e3d70 Merge pull request #3828 from oranagra/sdsnewlen_pr
add SDS_NOINIT option to sdsnewlen to avoid unnecessary memsets.
2018-02-27 04:04:32 -08:00
antirez
813960dbdd Fix ziplist prevlen encoding description. See #4705. 2018-02-23 12:19:35 +01:00
antirez
ac49eb0c8a Fix ziplist prevlen encoding description. See #4705. 2018-02-23 12:19:35 +01:00
gechunlin
d4e6d1086f
Update object.c 2018-02-22 20:57:54 -06:00
gechunlin
c857ac5840 Update object.c 2018-02-22 20:57:54 -06:00
Oran Agra
5def65008f Fix zrealloc to behave similarly to je_realloc when size is 0
According to C11, the behavior of realloc with size 0 is now deprecated.
it can either behave as free(ptr) and return NULL, or return a valid pointer.
but in zmalloc it can lead to zmalloc_oom_handler and panic.
and that can affect modules that use it.

It looks like both glibc allocator and jemalloc behave like so:
  realloc(malloc(32),0) returns NULL
  realloc(NULL,0) returns a valid pointer

This commit changes zmalloc to behave the same
2018-02-21 11:04:13 +02:00
antirez
ffde73c57d Track number of logically expired keys still in memory.
This commit adds two new fields in the INFO output, stats section:

expired_stale_perc:0.34
expired_time_cap_reached_count:58

The first field is an estimate of the number of keys that are yet in
memory but are already logically expired. They reason why those keys are
yet not reclaimed is because the active expire cycle can't spend more
time on the process of reclaiming the keys, and at the same time nobody
is accessing such keys. However as the active expire cycle runs, while
it will eventually have to return to the caller, because of time limit
or because there are less than 25% of keys logically expired in each
given database, it collects the stats in order to populate this INFO
field.

Note that expired_stale_perc is a running average, where the current
sample accounts for 5% and the history for 95%, so you'll see it
changing smoothly over time.

The other field, expired_time_cap_reached_count, counts the number
of times the expire cycle had to stop, even if still it was finding a
sizeable number of keys yet to expire, because of the time limit.
This allows people handling operations to understand if the Redis
server, during mass-expiration events, is able to collect keys fast
enough usually. It is normal for this field to increment during mass
expires, but normally it should very rarely increment. When instead it
constantly increments, it means that the current workloads is using
a very important percentage of CPU time to expire keys.

This feature was created thanks to the hints of Rashmi Ramesh and
Bart Robinson from Twitter. In private email exchanges, they noted how
it was important to improve the observability of this parameter in the
Redis server. Actually in big deployments, the amount of keys that are
yet to expire in each server, even if they are logically expired, may
account for a very big amount of wasted memory.
2018-02-19 11:12:49 +01:00
antirez
ee84fc714a Track number of logically expired keys still in memory.
This commit adds two new fields in the INFO output, stats section:

expired_stale_perc:0.34
expired_time_cap_reached_count:58

The first field is an estimate of the number of keys that are yet in
memory but are already logically expired. They reason why those keys are
yet not reclaimed is because the active expire cycle can't spend more
time on the process of reclaiming the keys, and at the same time nobody
is accessing such keys. However as the active expire cycle runs, while
it will eventually have to return to the caller, because of time limit
or because there are less than 25% of keys logically expired in each
given database, it collects the stats in order to populate this INFO
field.

Note that expired_stale_perc is a running average, where the current
sample accounts for 5% and the history for 95%, so you'll see it
changing smoothly over time.

The other field, expired_time_cap_reached_count, counts the number
of times the expire cycle had to stop, even if still it was finding a
sizeable number of keys yet to expire, because of the time limit.
This allows people handling operations to understand if the Redis
server, during mass-expiration events, is able to collect keys fast
enough usually. It is normal for this field to increment during mass
expires, but normally it should very rarely increment. When instead it
constantly increments, it means that the current workloads is using
a very important percentage of CPU time to expire keys.

This feature was created thanks to the hints of Rashmi Ramesh and
Bart Robinson from Twitter. In private email exchanges, they noted how
it was important to improve the observability of this parameter in the
Redis server. Actually in big deployments, the amount of keys that are
yet to expire in each server, even if they are logically expired, may
account for a very big amount of wasted memory.
2018-02-19 11:12:49 +01:00
antirez
aa57481d8c Remove non semantical spaces from module.c. 2018-02-15 21:41:03 +01:00
antirez
f4395e232b Remove non semantical spaces from module.c. 2018-02-15 21:41:03 +01:00
Salvatore Sanfilippo
7830f8492f
Merge pull request #4479 from dvirsky/notify
Keyspace notifications API for modules
2018-02-15 21:36:32 +01:00
Salvatore Sanfilippo
1d0a91aecb Merge pull request #4479 from dvirsky/notify
Keyspace notifications API for modules
2018-02-15 21:36:32 +01:00
antirez
f4dc736cca Fix typo in notifyKeyspaceEvent() comment. 2018-02-15 21:33:06 +01:00