20963 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
antirez
6f20482a86 latencyTimeSeries structure max field type fixed. 2014-07-02 16:14:28 +02:00
antirez
b55b72c3e1 Free labels in freeSparklineSequence(). 2014-07-02 12:49:14 +02:00
antirez
9d4d810861 Free labels in freeSparklineSequence(). 2014-07-02 12:49:14 +02:00
antirez
2127c8e8fa LATENCY LATEST: add the max field. 2014-07-02 12:40:38 +02:00
antirez
1766d91697 LATENCY LATEST: add the max field. 2014-07-02 12:40:38 +02:00
antirez
71c60780e1 Latency monitor trheshold value is now configurable.
This commit adds both support for redis.conf and CONFIG SET/GET.
2014-07-02 12:28:17 +02:00
antirez
e173f7a0e3 Latency monitor trheshold value is now configurable.
This commit adds both support for redis.conf and CONFIG SET/GET.
2014-07-02 12:28:17 +02:00
antirez
fa7679c047 ASCII sparklines generation API. 2014-07-02 10:13:53 +02:00
antirez
cc4df5a6b8 ASCII sparklines generation API. 2014-07-02 10:13:53 +02:00
antirez
acb5c58fbb License added to latency.h. 2014-07-02 10:06:58 +02:00
antirez
ed4980243a License added to latency.h. 2014-07-02 10:06:58 +02:00
antirez
084f154c94 Latency monitor turned off by default.
It is not a good idea to bloat the code with gettimeofday() calls if the
instance is working well, and turning monitoring on at runtime is a
joke.
2014-07-01 17:23:59 +02:00
antirez
b809676a9e Latency monitor turned off by default.
It is not a good idea to bloat the code with gettimeofday() calls if the
instance is working well, and turning monitoring on at runtime is a
joke.
2014-07-01 17:23:59 +02:00
antirez
51116b4638 Latency monitor: more hooks around the code. 2014-07-01 17:19:08 +02:00
antirez
de88bc63d5 Latency monitor: more hooks around the code. 2014-07-01 17:19:08 +02:00
antirez
f765e5a698 Latency monitor: don't add new samples in the same second.
Instead we update the old sample with the new latency if it is greater.
2014-07-01 17:12:09 +02:00
antirez
f35abe2ff5 Latency monitor: don't add new samples in the same second.
Instead we update the old sample with the new latency if it is greater.
2014-07-01 17:12:09 +02:00
antirez
224b5add47 LATENCY LATEST implemented. 2014-07-01 16:17:33 +02:00
antirez
83beaa886c LATENCY LATEST implemented. 2014-07-01 16:17:33 +02:00
antirez
69ba6924c9 Latency monitor: command duration is in useconds. Convert. 2014-07-01 16:09:02 +02:00
antirez
753b707d2a Latency monitor: command duration is in useconds. Convert. 2014-07-01 16:09:02 +02:00
antirez
4ef47b48b0 LATENCY SAMPLES implemented. 2014-07-01 16:07:13 +02:00
antirez
551bee86b4 LATENCY SAMPLES implemented. 2014-07-01 16:07:13 +02:00
antirez
47f819f87d Latency monitor: collect slow commands.
We introduce the distinction between slow and fast commands since those
are two different sources of latency. An O(1) or O(log N) command without
side effects (can't trigger deletion of large objects as a side effect of
its execution) if delayed is a symptom of inherent latency of the system.

A non-fast command (commands that may run large O(N) computations) if
delayed may just mean that the user is executing slow operations.

The advices LATENCY should provide in this two different cases are
different, so we log the two classes of commands in a separated way.
2014-07-01 11:47:08 +02:00
antirez
8612e6de88 Latency monitor: collect slow commands.
We introduce the distinction between slow and fast commands since those
are two different sources of latency. An O(1) or O(log N) command without
side effects (can't trigger deletion of large objects as a side effect of
its execution) if delayed is a symptom of inherent latency of the system.

A non-fast command (commands that may run large O(N) computations) if
delayed may just mean that the user is executing slow operations.

The advices LATENCY should provide in this two different cases are
different, so we log the two classes of commands in a separated way.
2014-07-01 11:47:08 +02:00
antirez
eabdfb3e30 Latency monitor: basic samples collection. 2014-07-01 11:30:15 +02:00
antirez
d7a07a2012 Latency monitor: basic samples collection. 2014-07-01 11:30:15 +02:00
antirez
3513d5a237 Fix Solaris compilation due to ctime_r() call.
Introduced in Redis 2.8.10 because of a change in Sentinel.
This closes issue #1837.
2014-06-30 16:29:12 +02:00
antirez
0afb7a48c0 Fix Solaris compilation due to ctime_r() call.
Introduced in Redis 2.8.10 because of a change in Sentinel.
This closes issue #1837.
2014-06-30 16:29:12 +02:00
antirez
ff58279939 DEBUG CMDKEYS moved to COMMAND GETKEYS. 2014-06-27 12:22:15 +02:00
antirez
683f41adf2 DEBUG CMDKEYS moved to COMMAND GETKEYS. 2014-06-27 12:22:15 +02:00
antirez
eba4d1f447 COMMAND COUNT subcommand added. 2014-06-27 12:11:15 +02:00
antirez
885b6fc577 COMMAND COUNT subcommand added. 2014-06-27 12:11:15 +02:00
antirez
5839ec2d57 COMMAND: fix argument parsing.
This fixes detection of wrong subcommand (that resulted in the default
all-commands output instead) and allows COMMAND INFO to be called
without arguments (resulting into an empty array) which is useful in
programmtically generated calls like the following (in Ruby):

    redis.commands("command","info",*mycommands)

Note: mycommands may be empty.
2014-06-27 12:05:54 +02:00
antirez
a92ae77740 COMMAND: fix argument parsing.
This fixes detection of wrong subcommand (that resulted in the default
all-commands output instead) and allows COMMAND INFO to be called
without arguments (resulting into an empty array) which is useful in
programmtically generated calls like the following (in Ruby):

    redis.commands("command","info",*mycommands)

Note: mycommands may be empty.
2014-06-27 12:05:54 +02:00
antirez
b986ddad53 COMMANDS command renamed COMMAND. 2014-06-27 12:01:29 +02:00
antirez
7fd0149d34 COMMANDS command renamed COMMAND. 2014-06-27 12:01:29 +02:00
antirez
0e1854107a COMMANDS command: remove static + aesthetic changes.
Static was removed since it is needed in order to get symbols in stack
traces. Minor changes in the source code were operated to make it more
similar to the existing Redis code base.
2014-06-27 11:59:48 +02:00
antirez
9bf6921f3d COMMANDS command: remove static + aesthetic changes.
Static was removed since it is needed in order to get symbols in stack
traces. Minor changes in the source code were operated to make it more
similar to the existing Redis code base.
2014-06-27 11:59:48 +02:00
Matt Stancliff
9d8ffbf747 Cluster: Add COMMANDS command
COMMANDS returns a nested multibulk reply for each
command in the command table.  The reply for each
command contains:
  - command name
  - arity
  - array of command flags
  - start key position
  - end key position
  - key offset step
  - optional: if the keys are not deterministic and
    Redis uses an internal key evaluation function,
    the 6th field appears and is defined as a status
    reply of: REQUIRES ARGUMENT PARSING

Cluster clients need to know where the keys are in each
command to implement proper routing to cluster nodes.

Redis commands can have multiple keys, keys at offset steps, or other
issues where you can't always assume the first element after
the command name is the cluster routing key.

Using the information exposed by COMMANDS, client implementations
can have live, accurate key extraction details for all commands.

Also implements COMMANDS INFO [commands...] to return only a
specific set of commands instead of all 160+ commands live in Redis.
2014-06-27 11:54:26 +02:00
Matt Stancliff
183458f76a Cluster: Add COMMANDS command
COMMANDS returns a nested multibulk reply for each
command in the command table.  The reply for each
command contains:
  - command name
  - arity
  - array of command flags
  - start key position
  - end key position
  - key offset step
  - optional: if the keys are not deterministic and
    Redis uses an internal key evaluation function,
    the 6th field appears and is defined as a status
    reply of: REQUIRES ARGUMENT PARSING

Cluster clients need to know where the keys are in each
command to implement proper routing to cluster nodes.

Redis commands can have multiple keys, keys at offset steps, or other
issues where you can't always assume the first element after
the command name is the cluster routing key.

Using the information exposed by COMMANDS, client implementations
can have live, accurate key extraction details for all commands.

Also implements COMMANDS INFO [commands...] to return only a
specific set of commands instead of all 160+ commands live in Redis.
2014-06-27 11:54:26 +02:00
antirez
1c94889182 No more trailing spaces in Redis source code. 2014-06-26 18:48:40 +02:00
antirez
95b1979c32 No more trailing spaces in Redis source code. 2014-06-26 18:48:40 +02:00
antirez
9b8711e7af CLIENT KILL: don't kill the master as a normal client.
Technically the problem is due to the client type API that does not
return a special value for the master, however fixing it locally in the
CLIENT KILL command is better currently because otherwise we would
introduce a new output buffer limit class as a side effect.
2014-06-26 18:43:09 +02:00
antirez
97f1fc65cf CLIENT KILL: don't kill the master as a normal client.
Technically the problem is due to the client type API that does not
return a special value for the master, however fixing it locally in the
CLIENT KILL command is better currently because otherwise we would
introduce a new output buffer limit class as a side effect.
2014-06-26 18:43:09 +02:00
Matt Stancliff
cd867afdd6 Allow __powerpc__ to define HAVE_ATOMIC too
From mailing list post https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/redis-db/D3k7KmJmYgM

In the file “config.h”, the definition HAVE_ATOMIC is used to indicate
if an architecture on which redis is implemented supports atomic
synchronization primitives.  Powerpc  supports atomic synchronization
primitives, however, it is not listed as one of the architectures
supported in config.h. This patch  adds the __powerpc__ to the list of
architectures supporting these primitives. The improvement of redis
due to the atomic synchronization on powerpc is significant,
around 30% to 40%, over the default implementation using pthreads.

This proposal adds __powerpc__ to the list of architectures designated
to support atomic builtins.
2014-06-26 08:55:47 -04:00
Matt Stancliff
a3e7a665ad Allow __powerpc__ to define HAVE_ATOMIC too
From mailing list post https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/redis-db/D3k7KmJmYgM

In the file “config.h”, the definition HAVE_ATOMIC is used to indicate
if an architecture on which redis is implemented supports atomic
synchronization primitives.  Powerpc  supports atomic synchronization
primitives, however, it is not listed as one of the architectures
supported in config.h. This patch  adds the __powerpc__ to the list of
architectures supporting these primitives. The improvement of redis
due to the atomic synchronization on powerpc is significant,
around 30% to 40%, over the default implementation using pthreads.

This proposal adds __powerpc__ to the list of architectures designated
to support atomic builtins.
2014-06-26 08:55:47 -04:00
Matt Stancliff
9b4ceffa17 Allow atomic memory count update with C11 builtins
From mailing list post https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/redis-db/QLjiQe4D7LA

In zmalloc.c the following primitives are currently used
to synchronize access to single global variable:
__sync_add_and_fetch
__sync_sub_and_fetch

In some architectures such as powerpc these primitives are overhead
intensive. More efficient C11 __atomic builtins are available with
newer GCC versions, see
http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.8.2/gcc/_005f_005fatomic-Builtins.html#_005f_005fatomic-Builtins

By substituting the following  __atomic… builtins:
__atomic_add_fetch
__atomic_sub_fetch

the performance improvement on certain architectures such as powerpc can be significant,
around 10% to 15%, over the implementation using __sync builtins while there is only slight uptick on
Intel architectures because it was already enforcing Intel Strongly ordered memory semantics.

The selection of __atomic built-ins can be predicated on the definition of ATOMIC_RELAXED
which Is available on in gcc 4.8.2 and later versions.
2014-06-26 08:52:53 -04:00
Matt Stancliff
a953c88381 Allow atomic memory count update with C11 builtins
From mailing list post https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/redis-db/QLjiQe4D7LA

In zmalloc.c the following primitives are currently used
to synchronize access to single global variable:
__sync_add_and_fetch
__sync_sub_and_fetch

In some architectures such as powerpc these primitives are overhead
intensive. More efficient C11 __atomic builtins are available with
newer GCC versions, see
http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-4.8.2/gcc/_005f_005fatomic-Builtins.html#_005f_005fatomic-Builtins

By substituting the following  __atomic… builtins:
__atomic_add_fetch
__atomic_sub_fetch

the performance improvement on certain architectures such as powerpc can be significant,
around 10% to 15%, over the implementation using __sync builtins while there is only slight uptick on
Intel architectures because it was already enforcing Intel Strongly ordered memory semantics.

The selection of __atomic built-ins can be predicated on the definition of ATOMIC_RELAXED
which Is available on in gcc 4.8.2 and later versions.
2014-06-26 08:52:53 -04:00
Matt Stancliff
02980ccb6f Use predefined macro for used_memory() update 2014-06-26 08:51:13 -04:00