27273 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
antirez
a141f24268 Diskless replication: read report from child. 2014-10-15 11:36:03 +02:00
antirez
7a1e0d9898 Diskless replication: read report from child. 2014-10-15 11:36:03 +02:00
antirez
c2d1a98b0c Diskless replication: child writes report to parent. 2014-10-15 09:46:49 +02:00
antirez
fbe7545545 Diskless replication: child writes report to parent. 2014-10-15 09:46:49 +02:00
antirez
4da83fb43b redis-cli: add missing newline in error message. 2014-10-15 09:21:02 +02:00
antirez
93eed9ae01 redis-cli: add missing newline in error message. 2014-10-15 09:21:02 +02:00
antirez
32f90ad730 rio.c fdset target: tolerate (and report) a subset of FDs in error.
Fdset target is used when we want to write an RDB file directly to
slave's sockets. In this setup as long as there is a single slave that
is still receiving our payload, we want to continue sennding instead of
aborting. However rio calls should abort of no FD is ok.

Also we want the errors reported so that we can signal the parent who is
ok and who is broken, so there is a new set integers with the state of
each fd. Zero is ok, non-zero is the errno of the failure, if avaialble,
or a generic EIO.
2014-10-14 17:19:42 +02:00
antirez
2a436aaeab rio.c fdset target: tolerate (and report) a subset of FDs in error.
Fdset target is used when we want to write an RDB file directly to
slave's sockets. In this setup as long as there is a single slave that
is still receiving our payload, we want to continue sennding instead of
aborting. However rio calls should abort of no FD is ok.

Also we want the errors reported so that we can signal the parent who is
ok and who is broken, so there is a new set integers with the state of
each fd. Zero is ok, non-zero is the errno of the failure, if avaialble,
or a generic EIO.
2014-10-14 17:19:42 +02:00
antirez
316c2d0ebc Diskless replication: parent-child pipe and a few TODOs. 2014-10-14 15:29:07 +02:00
antirez
1cd0d26c63 Diskless replication: parent-child pipe and a few TODOs. 2014-10-14 15:29:07 +02:00
antirez
1900d091d7 Diskless replication: RDB -> slaves transfer draft implementation. 2014-10-14 10:11:29 +02:00
antirez
75f0cd6520 Diskless replication: RDB -> slaves transfer draft implementation. 2014-10-14 10:11:29 +02:00
antirez
4179f67af3 rio.c: draft implementation of fdset target implemented. 2014-10-10 17:44:06 +02:00
antirez
850ea57c37 rio.c: draft implementation of fdset target implemented. 2014-10-10 17:44:06 +02:00
antirez
12a6b1c0e4 rio.c refactoring before adding a new target. 2014-10-10 16:36:09 +02:00
antirez
29db3227ab rio.c refactoring before adding a new target. 2014-10-10 16:36:09 +02:00
antirez
766cd4bc15 Add some comments in syncCommand() to clarify RDB target. 2014-10-10 16:25:58 +02:00
antirez
16546f5aca Add some comments in syncCommand() to clarify RDB target. 2014-10-10 16:25:58 +02:00
Matt Stancliff
c3d2758a14 Lua: Add bitop
A few people have written custom C commands because bit
manipulation isn't exposed through Lua.  Let's give
them Mike Pall's bitop.

This adds bitop 1.0.2 (2012-05-08) from http://bitop.luajit.org/

bitop is imported as "bit" into the global namespace.

New Lua commands: bit.tobit, bit.tohex, bit.bnot, bit.band, bit.bor, bit.bxor,
bit.lshift, bit.rshift, bit.arshift, bit.rol, bit.ror, bit.bswap

Verification of working (the asserts would abort on error, so (nil) is correct):
127.0.0.1:6379> eval "assert(bit.tobit(1) == 1); assert(bit.band(1) == 1); assert(bit.bxor(1,2) == 3); assert(bit.bor(1,2,4,8,16,32,64,128) == 255)" 0
(nil)
127.0.0.1:6379> eval 'assert(0x7fffffff == 2147483647, "broken hex literals"); assert(0xffffffff == -1 or 0xffffffff == 2^32-1, "broken hex literals"); assert(tostring(-1) == "-1", "broken tostring()"); assert(tostring(0xffffffff) == "-1" or tostring(0xffffffff) == "4294967295", "broken tostring()")' 0
(nil)

Tests also integrated into the scripting tests and can be run with:
./runtest --single unit/scripting

Tests are excerpted from `bittest.lua` included in the bitop distribution.
2014-10-09 11:51:30 -04:00
Matt Stancliff
3fecb96122 Lua: Add bitop
A few people have written custom C commands because bit
manipulation isn't exposed through Lua.  Let's give
them Mike Pall's bitop.

This adds bitop 1.0.2 (2012-05-08) from http://bitop.luajit.org/

bitop is imported as "bit" into the global namespace.

New Lua commands: bit.tobit, bit.tohex, bit.bnot, bit.band, bit.bor, bit.bxor,
bit.lshift, bit.rshift, bit.arshift, bit.rol, bit.ror, bit.bswap

Verification of working (the asserts would abort on error, so (nil) is correct):
127.0.0.1:6379> eval "assert(bit.tobit(1) == 1); assert(bit.band(1) == 1); assert(bit.bxor(1,2) == 3); assert(bit.bor(1,2,4,8,16,32,64,128) == 255)" 0
(nil)
127.0.0.1:6379> eval 'assert(0x7fffffff == 2147483647, "broken hex literals"); assert(0xffffffff == -1 or 0xffffffff == 2^32-1, "broken hex literals"); assert(tostring(-1) == "-1", "broken tostring()"); assert(tostring(0xffffffff) == "-1" or tostring(0xffffffff) == "4294967295", "broken tostring()")' 0
(nil)

Tests also integrated into the scripting tests and can be run with:
./runtest --single unit/scripting

Tests are excerpted from `bittest.lua` included in the bitop distribution.
2014-10-09 11:51:30 -04:00
antirez
18eb24c644 Merge branch 'unstable' of github.com:/antirez/redis into unstable 2014-10-09 11:26:51 +02:00
antirez
5ba47b50ae Merge branch 'unstable' of github.com:/antirez/redis into unstable 2014-10-09 11:26:51 +02:00
antirez
11157624cb 02_upload_tarball.sh: let me exit before updating site. 2014-10-09 11:26:32 +02:00
antirez
da838544ae 02_upload_tarball.sh: let me exit before updating site. 2014-10-09 11:26:32 +02:00
antirez
d08db92ab1 Fix DEBUG POPULATE warning for lack of casting. 2014-10-09 11:17:27 +02:00
antirez
591b69c745 Fix DEBUG POPULATE warning for lack of casting. 2014-10-09 11:17:27 +02:00
antirez
d91fe789ef Cluster: process gossip section only for known nodes.
With the exception of nodes sending MEET packets: we have to trust them
since they can send us MEET packets only when the cluster is initially
created or because sysadmin manual action.
2014-10-08 16:58:12 +02:00
antirez
5f6950caa8 Cluster: process gossip section only for known nodes.
With the exception of nodes sending MEET packets: we have to trust them
since they can send us MEET packets only when the cluster is initially
created or because sysadmin manual action.
2014-10-08 16:58:12 +02:00
antirez
724d69e7cf Cluster: fix logic to detect we are among a minority.
In the cluster evaluation function we are supposed to set the cluster
state as "fail" if we are among a minority, however the code was not
detecting to be into a minority partition if exactly half the masters
were reachable, which is a minority.
2014-10-08 16:27:07 +02:00
antirez
36e34a656a Cluster: fix logic to detect we are among a minority.
In the cluster evaluation function we are supposed to set the cluster
state as "fail" if we are among a minority, however the code was not
detecting to be into a minority partition if exactly half the masters
were reachable, which is a minority.
2014-10-08 16:27:07 +02:00
antirez
46d25757c4 Cluster test: helpers/onlydots.tcl: detect EOF and exit. 2014-10-08 10:17:01 +02:00
antirez
908be1dbeb Cluster test: helpers/onlydots.tcl: detect EOF and exit. 2014-10-08 10:17:01 +02:00
antirez
c6a0f01831 Cluster test: less console-spammy resharding test. 2014-10-08 10:12:40 +02:00
antirez
5b47783d77 Cluster test: less console-spammy resharding test. 2014-10-08 10:12:40 +02:00
antirez
d052e6dbcb Define different types of RDB childs.
We need to remember what is the saving strategy of the current RDB child
process, since the configuration may be modified at runtime via CONFIG
SET and still we'll need to understand, when the child exists, what to
do and for what goal the process was initiated: to create an RDB file
on disk or to write stuff directly to slave's sockets.
2014-10-08 09:09:01 +02:00
antirez
2df8341c75 Define different types of RDB childs.
We need to remember what is the saving strategy of the current RDB child
process, since the configuration may be modified at runtime via CONFIG
SET and still we'll need to understand, when the child exists, what to
do and for what goal the process was initiated: to create an RDB file
on disk or to write stuff directly to slave's sockets.
2014-10-08 09:09:01 +02:00
antirez
7e4728b545 RDB file creation refactored to target non-disk target. 2014-10-07 12:56:23 +02:00
antirez
8beb98574a RDB file creation refactored to target non-disk target. 2014-10-07 12:56:23 +02:00
antirez
2a7e45a64c Cluster: nodes.conf added to git ignore list. 2014-10-07 09:52:40 +02:00
antirez
034ca98678 Cluster: nodes.conf added to git ignore list. 2014-10-07 09:52:40 +02:00
antirez
1730b49ad7 Cluster: more chatty slaves when failover is stalled. 2014-10-07 09:51:55 +02:00
antirez
edb3987a06 Cluster: more chatty slaves when failover is stalled. 2014-10-07 09:51:55 +02:00
antirez
4b89fb5347 Linenoise README updated to match source code. 2014-10-06 09:49:44 +02:00
antirez
e4b0c8ec50 Linenoise README updated to match source code. 2014-10-06 09:49:44 +02:00
Salvatore Sanfilippo
df989ce8fa Merge pull request #1902 from mattsta/comment-fixes
ALL comment fixes
2014-10-06 09:44:54 +02:00
Salvatore Sanfilippo
3c6f9ac37c Merge pull request #1902 from mattsta/comment-fixes
ALL comment fixes
2014-10-06 09:44:54 +02:00
antirez
41f59ee225 Test: check that INCR object sharing works as expected. 2014-10-03 12:28:56 +01:00
antirez
389ec305b3 Test: check that INCR object sharing works as expected. 2014-10-03 12:28:56 +01:00
antirez
1c6a304605 INCR: Modify incremented object in-place when possible.
However we don't try to do this if the integer is already inside a range
representable with a shared integer.

The performance gain appears to be around ~15% in micro benchmarks,
however in the long run this also helps to improve locality, so should
have more, hard to measure, benefits.
2014-10-03 12:11:13 +01:00
antirez
16559b4615 INCR: Modify incremented object in-place when possible.
However we don't try to do this if the integer is already inside a range
representable with a shared integer.

The performance gain appears to be around ~15% in micro benchmarks,
however in the long run this also helps to improve locality, so should
have more, hard to measure, benefits.
2014-10-03 12:11:13 +01:00