## Description
When I explore the cycles distributions for `lrange` test (
`valkey-benchmark -p 9001 -t lrange -d 100 -r 1000000 -n 1000000 -c 50
--threads 4`). I found the `prepareClientToWrite` and
`clientHasPendingReplies` could be reduced to single call outside
instead of called in a loop, ideally we can gain 3% performance. The
corresponding `LRANG_100`, `LRANG_300`, `LRANGE_500`, `LRANGE_600` have
~2% - 3% performance boost, the benchmark test prove it helps.
This patch try to move the `prepareClientToWrite` and its child
`clientHasPendingReplies` out of the loop to reduce the function
overhead.
---------
Signed-off-by: Lipeng Zhu <lipeng.zhu@intel.com>
Update references of copyright being assigned to Salvatore when it was
transferred to Redis Ltd. as per
https://github.com/valkey-io/valkey/issues/544.
---------
Signed-off-by: Pieter Cailliau <pieter@redis.com>
I have validated that these settings closely match the existing coding
style with one major exception on `BreakBeforeBraces`, which will be
`Attach` going forward. The mixed `BreakBeforeBraces` styles in the
current codebase are hard to imitate and also very odd IMHO - see below
```
if (a == 1) { /*Attach */
}
```
```
if (a == 1 ||
b == 2)
{ /* Why? */
}
```
Please do NOT merge just yet. Will add the github action next once the
style is reviewed/approved.
---------
Signed-off-by: Ping Xie <pingxie@google.com>
This includes comments used for module API documentation.
* Strategy for replacement: Regex search: `(//|/\*| \*|#).* ("|\()?(r|R)edis( |\.
|'|\n|,|-|\)|")(?!nor the names of its contributors)(?!Ltd.)(?!Labs)(?!Contributors.)`
* Don't edit copyright comments
* Replace "Redis version X.X" -> "Redis OSS version X.X" to distinguish
from newly licensed repository
* Replace "Redis Object" -> "Object"
* Exclude markdown for now
* Don't edit Lua scripting comments referring to redis.X API
* Replace "Redis Protocol" -> "RESP"
* Replace redis-benchmark, -cli, -server, -check-aof/rdb with "valkey-"
prefix
* Most other places, I use best judgement to either remove "Redis", or
replace with "the server" or "server"
Fixes#148
---------
Signed-off-by: Jacob Murphy <jkmurphy@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Viktor Söderqvist <viktor.soderqvist@est.tech>
We forgot to call quicklistSetOptions after createQuicklistObject,
in the sort store scenario, we will create a quicklist with default
fill or compress options.
This PR adds fill and depth parameters to createQuicklistObject to
specify that options need to be set after creating a quicklist.
This closes#12871.
release notes:
> Fix lists created by SORT STORE to respect list compression and
packing configs.
Fix `signalModifiedKey()` order, call it after key modification
completed, to ensure the state of key eventual consistency.
When a key is modified, Redis calls `signalModifiedKey` to notify other
systems, such as the watch system of transactions and the tracking
system of client side caching. However, in some commands, the
`signalModifiedKey` call happens during the key modification process
instead of after the key modification is completed. This can potentially
cause issues, as systems relying on `signalModifiedKey` may receive the
"write in flight" status of the key rather than its final state.
These commands include:
1. PFADD
2. LSET, LMOVE, LREM
3. ZPOPMIN, ZPOPMAX, BZPOPMIN, BZPOPMAX, ZMPOP, BZMPOP
Currently there is no problem with Redis, but it is better to adjust the
order of `signalModifiedKey()`, to avoid issues in future development on
Redis.
---------
Co-authored-by: zhaozhao.zz <zhaozhao.zz@alibaba-inc.com>
Limit the range of LREM count to -LONG_MAX ~ LONG_MAX.
Before the fix, passing -LONG_MAX would cause an overflow
and would effectively be the same as passing 0. (Because
this condition `toremove && removed == toremove `can never
be satisfied).
This is a minor fix as it shouldn't really affect users,
more like a cleanup.
*TL;DR*
---------------------------------------
Following the discussion over the issue [#7551](https://github.com/redis/redis/issues/7551)
We decided to refactor the client blocking code to eliminate some of the code duplications
and to rebuild the infrastructure better for future key blocking cases.
*In this PR*
---------------------------------------
1. reprocess the command once a client becomes unblocked on key (instead of running
custom code for the unblocked path that's different than the one that would have run if
blocking wasn't needed)
2. eliminate some (now) irrelevant code for handling unblocking lists/zsets/streams etc...
3. modify some tests to intercept the error in cases of error on reprocess after unblock (see
details in the notes section below)
4. replace '$' on the client argv with current stream id. Since once we reprocess the stream
XREAD we need to read from the last msg and not wait for new msg in order to prevent
endless block loop.
5. Added statistics to the info "Clients" section to report the:
* `total_blocking_keys` - number of blocking keys
* `total_blocking_keys_on_nokey` - number of blocking keys which have at least 1 client
which would like
to be unblocked on when the key is deleted.
6. Avoid expiring unblocked key during unblock. Previously we used to lookup the unblocked key
which might have been expired during the lookup. Now we lookup the key using NOTOUCH and
NOEXPIRE to avoid deleting it at this point, so propagating commands in blocked.c is no longer needed.
7. deprecated command flags. We decided to remove the CMD_CALL_STATS and CMD_CALL_SLOWLOG
and make an explicit verification in the call() function in order to decide if stats update should take place.
This should simplify the logic and also mitigate existing issues: for example module calls which are
triggered as part of AOF loading might still report stats even though they are called during AOF loading.
*Behavior changes*
---------------------------------------------------
1. As this implementation prevents writing dedicated code handling unblocked streams/lists/zsets,
since we now re-process the command once the client is unblocked some errors will be reported differently.
The old implementation used to issue
``UNBLOCKED the stream key no longer exists``
in the following cases:
- The stream key has been deleted (ie. calling DEL)
- The stream and group existed but the key type was changed by overriding it (ie. with set command)
- The key not longer exists after we swapdb with a db which does not contains this key
- After swapdb when the new db has this key but with different type.
In the new implementation the reported errors will be the same as if the command was processed after effect:
**NOGROUP** - in case key no longer exists, or **WRONGTYPE** in case the key was overridden with a different type.
2. Reprocessing the command means that some checks will be reevaluated once the
client is unblocked.
For example, ACL rules might change since the command originally was executed and
will fail once the client is unblocked.
Another example is OOM condition checks which might enable the command to run and
block but fail the command reprocess once the client is unblocked.
3. One of the changes in this PR is that no command stats are being updated once the
command is blocked (all stats will be updated once the client is unblocked). This implies
that when we have many clients blocked, users will no longer be able to get that information
from the command stats. However the information can still be gathered from the client list.
**Client blocking**
---------------------------------------------------
the blocking on key will still be triggered the same way as it is done today.
in order to block the current client on list of keys, the call to
blockForKeys will still need to be made which will perform the same as it is today:
* add the client to the list of blocked clients on each key
* keep the key with a matching list node (position in the global blocking clients list for that key)
in the client private blocking key dict.
* flag the client with CLIENT_BLOCKED
* update blocking statistics
* register the client on the timeout table
**Key Unblock**
---------------------------------------------------
Unblocking a specific key will be triggered (same as today) by calling signalKeyAsReady.
the implementation in that part will stay the same as today - adding the key to the global readyList.
The reason to maintain the readyList (as apposed to iterating over all clients blocked on the specific key)
is in order to keep the signal operation as short as possible, since it is called during the command processing.
The main change is that instead of going through a dedicated code path that operates the blocked command
we will just call processPendingCommandsAndResetClient.
**ClientUnblock (keys)**
---------------------------------------------------
1. Unblocking clients on keys will be triggered after command is
processed and during the beforeSleep
8. the general schema is:
9. For each key *k* in the readyList:
```
For each client *c* which is blocked on *k*:
in case either:
1. *k* exists AND the *k* type matches the current client blocking type
OR
2. *k* exists and *c* is blocked on module command
OR
3. *k* does not exists and *c* was blocked with the flag
unblock_on_deleted_key
do:
1. remove the client from the list of clients blocked on this key
2. remove the blocking list node from the client blocking key dict
3. remove the client from the timeout list
10. queue the client on the unblocked_clients list
11. *NEW*: call processCommandAndResetClient(c);
```
*NOTE:* for module blocked clients we will still call the moduleUnblockClientByHandle
which will queue the client for processing in moduleUnblockedClients list.
**Process Unblocked clients**
---------------------------------------------------
The process of all unblocked clients is done in the beforeSleep and no change is planned
in that part.
The general schema will be:
For each client *c* in server.unblocked_clients:
* remove client from the server.unblocked_clients
* set back the client readHandler
* continue processing the pending command and input buffer.
*Some notes regarding the new implementation*
---------------------------------------------------
1. Although it was proposed, it is currently difficult to remove the
read handler from the client while it is blocked.
The reason is that a blocked client should be unblocked when it is
disconnected, or we might consume data into void.
2. While this PR mainly keep the current blocking logic as-is, there
might be some future additions to the infrastructure that we would
like to have:
- allow non-preemptive blocking of client - sometimes we can think
that a new kind of blocking can be expected to not be preempt. for
example lets imagine we hold some keys on disk and when a command
needs to process them it will block until the keys are uploaded.
in this case we will want the client to not disconnect or be
unblocked until the process is completed (remove the client read
handler, prevent client timeout, disable unblock via debug command etc...).
- allow generic blocking based on command declared keys - we might
want to add a hook before command processing to check if any of the
declared keys require the command to block. this way it would be
easier to add new kinds of key-based blocking mechanisms.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Signed-off-by: Ran Shidlansik <ranshid@amazon.com>
Improve memory efficiency of list keys
## Description of the feature
The new listpack encoding uses the old `list-max-listpack-size` config
to perform the conversion, which we can think it of as a node inside a
quicklist, but without 80 bytes overhead (internal fragmentation included)
of quicklist and quicklistNode structs.
For example, a list key with 5 items of 10 chars each, now takes 128 bytes
instead of 208 it used to take.
## Conversion rules
* Convert listpack to quicklist
When the listpack length or size reaches the `list-max-listpack-size` limit,
it will be converted to a quicklist.
* Convert quicklist to listpack
When a quicklist has only one node, and its length or size is reduced to half
of the `list-max-listpack-size` limit, it will be converted to a listpack.
This is done to avoid frequent conversions when we add or remove at the bounding size or length.
## Interface changes
1. add list entry param to listTypeSetIteratorDirection
When list encoding is listpack, `listTypeIterator->lpi` points to the next entry of current entry,
so when changing the direction, we need to use the current node (listTypeEntry->p) to
update `listTypeIterator->lpi` to the next node in the reverse direction.
## Benchmark
### Listpack VS Quicklist with one node
* LPUSH - roughly 0.3% improvement
* LRANGE - roughly 13% improvement
### Both are quicklist
* LRANGE - roughly 3% improvement
* LRANGE without pipeline - roughly 3% improvement
From the benchmark, as we can see from the results
1. When list is quicklist encoding, LRANGE improves performance by <5%.
2. When list is listpack encoding, LRANGE improves performance by ~13%,
the main enhancement is brought by `addListListpackRangeReply()`.
## Memory usage
1M lists(key:0~key:1000000) with 5 items of 10 chars ("hellohello") each.
shows memory usage down by 35.49%, from 214MB to 138MB.
## Note
1. Add conversion callback to support doing some work before conversion
Since the quicklist iterator decompresses the current node when it is released, we can
no longer decompress the quicklist after we convert the list.
The use case is a module that wants to implement a blocking command on a key that
necessarily exists and wants to unblock the client in case the key is deleted (much like
what we implemented for XREADGROUP in #10306)
New module API:
* RedisModule_BlockClientOnKeysWithFlags
Flags:
* REDISMODULE_BLOCK_UNBLOCK_NONE
* REDISMODULE_BLOCK_UNBLOCK_DELETED
### Detailed description of code changes
blocked.c:
1. Both module and stream functions are called whether the key exists or not, regardless of
its type. We do that in order to allow modules/stream to unblock the client in case the key
is no longer present or has changed type (the behavior for streams didn't change, just code
that moved into serveClientsBlockedOnStreamKey)
2. Make sure afterCommand is called in serveClientsBlockedOnKeyByModule, in order to propagate
actions from moduleTryServeClientBlockedOnKey.
3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: call propagatePendingCommands directly after lookupKeyReadWithFlags
to prevent a possible lazy-expire DEL from being mixed with any command propagated by the
preceding functions.
4. blockForKeys: Caller can specifiy that it wants to be awakened if key is deleted.
Minor optimizations (use dictAddRaw).
5. signalKeyAsReady became signalKeyAsReadyLogic which can take a boolean in case the key is deleted.
It will only signal if there's at least one client that awaits key deletion (to save calls to
handleClientsBlockedOnKeys).
Minor optimizations (use dictAddRaw)
db.c:
1. scanDatabaseForDeletedStreams is now scanDatabaseForDeletedKeys and will signalKeyAsReady
for any key that was removed from the database or changed type. It is the responsibility of the code
in blocked.c to ignore or act on deleted/type-changed keys.
2. Use the new signalDeletedKeyAsReady where needed
blockedonkey.c + tcl:
1. Added test of new capabilities (FSL.BPOPGT now requires the key to exist in order to work)
Mainly fix two minor bug
1. When handle BL*POP/BLMOVE commands with blocked clients, we should increment server.dirty.
2. `listPopRangeAndReplyWithKey()` in `serveClientBlockedOnList()` should not repeat calling
`signalModifiedKey()` which has been called when an element was pushed on the list.
(was skipped in all bpop commands, other than blmpop)
Other optimization
add `signal` param for `listElementsRemoved` to skip `signalModifiedKey()` to unify all pop operation.
Unifying all pop operations also prepares us for #11303, so that we can avoid having to deal with the
conversion from quicklist to listpack() in various places when the list shrinks.
Updated the comments for:
info command
lmpopCommand and blmpopCommand
sinterGenericCommand
Fix the missing "key" words in the srandmemberCommand function
For LPOS command, when rank is 0, prompt user that rank could be
positive number or negative number, and add a test for it
Summary of changes:
1. Rename `redisCommand->name` to `redisCommand->declared_name`, it is a
const char * for native commands and SDS for module commands.
2. Store the [sub]command fullname in `redisCommand->fullname` (sds).
3. List subcommands in `ACL CAT`
4. List subcommands in `COMMAND LIST`
5. `moduleUnregisterCommands` now will also free the module subcommands.
6. RM_GetCurrentCommandName returns full command name
Other changes:
1. Add `addReplyErrorArity` and `addReplyErrorExpireTime`
2. Remove `getFullCommandName` function that now is useless.
3. Some cleanups about `fullname` since now it is SDS.
4. Delete `populateSingleCommand` function from server.h that is useless.
5. Added tests to cover this change.
6. Add some module unload tests and fix the leaks
7. Make error messages uniform, make sure they always contain the full command
name and that it's quoted.
7. Fixes some typos
see the history in #9504, fixes#10124
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: guybe7 <guy.benoish@redislabs.com>
It used to return `$-1` in RESP2, now we will return `*-1`.
This is a bug in redis 6.2 when COUNT was added, the `COUNT`
option was introduced in #8179. Fix#10089.
the documentation of [LPOP](https://redis.io/commands/lpop) says
```
When called without the count argument:
Bulk string reply: the value of the first element, or nil when key does not exist.
When called with the count argument:
Array reply: list of popped elements, or nil when key does not exist.
```
The mess:
Some parts use alsoPropagate for late propagation, others using an immediate one (propagate()),
causing edge cases, ugly/hacky code, and the tendency for bugs
The basic idea is that all commands are propagated via alsoPropagate (i.e. added to a list) and the
top-most call() is responsible for going over that list and actually propagating them (and wrapping
them in MULTI/EXEC if there's more than one command). This is done in the new function,
propagatePendingCommands.
Callers to propagatePendingCommands:
1. top-most call() (we want all nested call()s to add to the also_propagate array and just the top-most
one to propagate them) - via `afterCommand`
2. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys: it is out of call() context and it may propagate stuff - via `afterCommand`.
3. handleClientsBlockedOnKeys edge case: if the looked-up key is already expired, we will propagate the
expire but will not unblock any client so `afterCommand` isn't called. in that case, we have to propagate
the deletion explicitly.
4. cron stuff: active-expire and eviction may also propagate stuff
5. modules: the module API allows to propagate stuff from just about anywhere (timers, keyspace notifications,
threads). I could have tried to catch all the out-of-call-context places but it seemed easier to handle it in one
place: when we free the context. in the spirit of what was done in call(), only the top-most freeing of a module
context may cause propagation.
6. modules: when using a thread-safe ctx it's not clear when/if the ctx will be freed. we do know that the module
must lock the GIL before calling RM_Replicate/RM_Call so we propagate the pending commands when
releasing the GIL.
A "known limitation", which were actually a bug, was fixed because of this commit (see propagate.tcl):
When using a mix of RM_Call with `!` and RM_Replicate, the command would propagate out-of-order:
first all the commands from RM_Call, and then the ones from RM_Replicate
Another thing worth mentioning is that if, in the past, a client would issue a MULTI/EXEC with just one
write command the server would blindly propagate the MULTI/EXEC too, even though it's redundant.
not anymore.
This commit renames propagate() to propagateNow() in order to cause conflicts in pending PRs.
propagatePendingCommands is the only caller of propagateNow, which is now a static, internal helper function.
Optimizations:
1. alsoPropagate will not add stuff to also_propagate if there's no AOF and replicas
2. alsoPropagate reallocs also_propagagte exponentially, to save calls to memmove
Bugfixes:
1. CONFIG SET can create evictions, sending notifications which can cause to dirty++ with modules.
we need to prevent it from propagating to AOF/replicas
2. We need to set current_client in RM_Call. buggy scenario:
- CONFIG SET maxmemory, eviction notifications, module hook calls RM_Call
- assertion in lookupKey crashes, because current_client has CONFIG SET, which isn't CMD_WRITE
3. minor: in eviction, call propagateDeletion after notification, like active-expire and all commands
(we always send a notification before propagating the command)
This pr is following #9779 .
## Describe of feature
Now when we turn on the `list-compress-depth` configuration, the list will compress
the ziplist between `[list-compress-depth, -list-compress-depth]`.
When we need to use the compressed data, we will first decompress it, then use it,
and finally compress it again.
It's controlled by `quicklistNode->recompress`, which is designed to avoid the need to
re-traverse the entire quicklist for compression after each decompression, we only need
to recompress the quicklsitNode being used.
In order to ensure the correctness of recompressing, we should normally let
quicklistDecompressNodeForUse and quicklistCompress appear in pairs, otherwise,
it may lead to the head and tail being compressed or the middle ziplist not being
compressed correctly, which is exactly the problem this pr needs to solve.
## Solution
1. Reset `quicklistIter` after insert and replace.
The quicklist node will be compressed in `quicklistInsertAfter`, `quicklistInsertBefore`,
`quicklistReplaceAtIndex`, so we can safely reset the quicklistIter to avoid it being used again
2. `quicklistIndex` will return an iterator that can be used to recompress the current node after use.
## Test
1. In the `Stress Tester for #3343-Similar Errors` test, when the server crashes or when
`valgrind` or `asan` error is detected, print violating commands.
2. Add a crash test due to wrongly recompressing after `lrem`.
3. Remove `insert before with 0 elements` and `insert after with 0 elements`,
Now we forbid any operation on an NULL quicklistIter.
Part three of implementing #8702, following #8887 and #9366 .
## Description of the feature
1. Replace the ziplist container of quicklist with listpack.
2. Convert existing quicklist ziplists on RDB loading time. an O(n) operation.
## Interface changes
1. New `list-max-listpack-size` config is an alias for `list-max-ziplist-size`.
2. Replace `debug ziplist` command with `debug listpack`.
## Internal changes
1. Add `lpMerge` to merge two listpacks . (same as `ziplistMerge`)
2. Add `lpRepr` to print info of listpack which is used in debugCommand and `quicklistRepr`. (same as `ziplistRepr`)
3. Replace `QUICKLIST_NODE_CONTAINER_ZIPLIST` with `QUICKLIST_NODE_CONTAINER_PACKED`(following #9357 ).
It represent that a quicklistNode is a packed node, as opposed to a plain node.
4. Remove `createZiplistObject` method, which is never used.
5. Calculate listpack entry size using overhead overestimation in `quicklistAllowInsert`.
We prefer an overestimation, which would at worse lead to a few bytes below the lowest limit of 4k.
## Improvements
1. Calling `lpShrinkToFit` after converting Ziplist to listpack, which was missed at #9366.
2. Optimize `quicklistAppendPlainNode` to avoid memcpy data.
## Bugfix
1. Fix crash in `quicklistRepr` when ziplist is compressed, introduced from #9366.
## Test
1. Add unittest for `lpMerge`.
2. Modify the old quicklist ziplist corrupt dump test.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Moves ZPOP ... 0 fast exit path after type check to reply with
WRONGTYPE. In the past it will return an empty array.
Also now count is not allowed to be negative.
see #9680
before:
```
127.0.0.1:6379> set zset str
OK
127.0.0.1:6379> zpopmin zset 0
(empty array)
127.0.0.1:6379> zpopmin zset -1
(empty array)
```
after:
```
127.0.0.1:6379> set zset str
OK
127.0.0.1:6379> zpopmin zset 0
(error) WRONGTYPE Operation against a key holding the wrong kind of value
127.0.0.1:6379> zpopmin zset -1
(error) ERR value is out of range, must be positive
```
Introduced in #8179, this fixes the command's replies in the 0 count edge case.
[BREAKING] changes the reply type when count is 0 to an empty array (instead of nil)
Moves LPOP ... 0 fast exit path after type check to reply with WRONGTYPE
Redis lists are stored in quicklist, which is currently a linked list of ziplists.
Ziplists are limited to storing elements no larger than 4GB, so when bigger
items are added they're getting truncated.
This PR changes quicklists so that they're capable of storing large items
in quicklist nodes that are plain string buffers rather than ziplist.
As part of the PR there were few other changes in redis:
1. new DEBUG sub-commands:
- QUICKLIST-PACKED-THRESHOLD - set the threshold of for the node type to
be plan or ziplist. default (1GB)
- QUICKLIST <key> - Shows low level info about the quicklist encoding of <key>
2. rdb format change:
- A new type was added - RDB_TYPE_LIST_QUICKLIST_2 .
- container type (packed / plain) was added to the beginning of the rdb object
(before the actual node list).
3. testing:
- Tests that requires over 100MB will be by default skipped. a new flag was
added to 'runtest' to run the large memory tests (not used by default)
Co-authored-by: sundb <sundbcn@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
The previous code did not check whether COUNT is set.
So we can use `lmpop 2 key1 key2 left count 1 count 2`.
This situation can occur in LMPOP/BLMPOP/ZMPOP/BZMPOP commands.
LMPOP/BLMPOP introduced in #9373, ZMPOP/BZMPOP introduced in #9484.
- fix possible heap corruption in ziplist and listpack resulting by trying to
allocate more than the maximum size of 4GB.
- prevent ziplist (hash and zset) from reaching size of above 1GB, will be
converted to HT encoding, that's not a useful size.
- prevent listpack (stream) from reaching size of above 1GB.
- XADD will start a new listpack if the new record may cause the previous
listpack to grow over 1GB.
- XADD will respond with an error if a single stream record is over 1GB
- List type (ziplist in quicklist) was truncating strings that were over 4GB,
now it'll respond with an error.
Co-authored-by: sundb <sundbcn@gmail.com>
This is similar to the recent addition of LMPOP/BLMPOP (#9373), but zset.
Syntax for the new ZMPOP command:
`ZMPOP numkeys [<key> ...] MIN|MAX [COUNT count]`
Syntax for the new BZMPOP command:
`BZMPOP timeout numkeys [<key> ...] MIN|MAX [COUNT count]`
Some background:
- ZPOPMIN/ZPOPMAX take only one key, and can return multiple elements.
- BZPOPMIN/BZPOPMAX take multiple keys, but return only one element from just one key.
- ZMPOP/BZMPOP can take multiple keys, and can return multiple elements from just one key.
Note that ZMPOP/BZMPOP can take multiple keys, it eventually operates on just on key.
And it will propagate as ZPOPMIN or ZPOPMAX with the COUNT option.
As new commands, if we can not pop any elements, the response like:
- ZMPOP: Return a NIL in both RESP2 and RESP3, unlike ZPOPMIN/ZPOPMAX return emptyarray.
- BZMPOP: Return a NIL in both RESP2 and RESP3 when timeout is reached, like BZPOPMIN/BZPOPMAX.
For the normal response is nested arrays in RESP2 and RESP3:
```
ZMPOP/BZMPOP
1) keyname
2) 1) 1) member1
2) score1
2) 1) member2
2) score2
In RESP2:
1) "myzset"
2) 1) 1) "three"
2) "3"
2) 1) "two"
2) "2"
In RESP3:
1) "myzset"
2) 1) 1) "three"
2) (double) 3
2) 1) "two"
2) (double) 2
```
The `cmd` argument was completely unused, and all the code that bothered to pass it was unnecessary.
This is a prepartion for a future commit that treats subcommands as commands
List functions operating on elements by index:
* RM_ListGet
* RM_ListSet
* RM_ListInsert
* RM_ListDelete
Iteration is done using a simple for loop over indices.
The index based functions use an internal iterator as an optimization.
This is explained in the docs:
```
* Many of the list functions access elements by index. Since a list is in
* essence a doubly-linked list, accessing elements by index is generally an
* O(N) operation. However, if elements are accessed sequentially or with
* indices close together, the functions are optimized to seek the index from
* the previous index, rather than seeking from the ends of the list.
*
* This enables iteration to be done efficiently using a simple for loop:
*
* long n = RM_ValueLength(key);
* for (long i = 0; i < n; i++) {
* RedisModuleString *elem = RedisModule_ListGet(key, i);
* // Do stuff...
* }
```
We want to add COUNT option for BLPOP.
But we can't do it without breaking compatibility due to the command arguments syntax.
So this commit introduce two new commands.
Syntax for the new LMPOP command:
`LMPOP numkeys [<key> ...] LEFT|RIGHT [COUNT count]`
Syntax for the new BLMPOP command:
`BLMPOP timeout numkeys [<key> ...] LEFT|RIGHT [COUNT count]`
Some background:
- LPOP takes one key, and can return multiple elements.
- BLPOP takes multiple keys, but returns one element from just one key.
- LMPOP can take multiple keys and return multiple elements from just one key.
Note that LMPOP/BLMPOP can take multiple keys, it eventually operates on just one key.
And it will propagate as LPOP or RPOP with the COUNT option.
As a new command, it still return NIL if we can't pop any elements.
For the normal response is nested arrays in RESP2 and RESP3, like:
```
LMPOP/BLMPOP
1) keyname
2) 1) element1
2) element2
```
I.e. unlike BLPOP that returns a key name and one element so it uses a flat array,
and LPOP that returns multiple elements with no key name, and again uses a flat array,
this one has to return a nested array, and it does for for both RESP2 and RESP3 (like SCAN does)
Some discuss can see: #766#8824
Until now, giving a negative index seeks from the end of a list and a
positive seeks from the beginning. This change makes it seek from
the nearest end, regardless of the sign of the given index.
quicklistIndex is used by all list commands which operate by index.
LINDEX key 999999 in a list if 1M elements is greately optimized by
this change. Latency is cut by 75%.
LINDEX key -1000000 in a list of 1M elements, likewise.
LRANGE key -1 -1 is affected by this, since LRANGE converts the
indices to positive numbers before seeking.
The tests for corrupt dumps are updated to make sure the corrup
data is seeked in the same direction as before.
Adds: `L/RPOP <key> [count]`
Implements no. 2 of the following strategies:
1. Loop on listTypePop - this would result in multiple calls for memory freeing and allocating (see 769167a079)
2. Iterate the range to build the reply, then call quickListDelRange - this requires two iterations and **is the current choice**
3. Refactor quicklist to have a pop variant of quickListDelRange - probably optimal but more complex
Also:
* There's a historical check for NULL after calling listTypePop that was converted to an assert.
* This refactors common logic shared between LRANGE and the new form of LPOP/RPOP into addListRangeReply (adds test for b/w compat)
* Consequently, it may have made sense to have `LRANGE l -1 -2` and `LRANGE l 9 0` be legit and return a reverse reply. Due to historical reasons that would be, however, a breaking change.
* Added minimal comments to existing commands to adhere to the style, make core dev life easier and get commit karma, naturally.
Fix wrong server dirty increment in
* spopWithCountCommand
* hsetCommand
* ltrimCommand
* pfaddCommand
Some didn't increment the amount of fields (just one per command).
Others had excessive increments.
The test creates keys with various encodings, DUMP them, corrupt the payload
and RESTORES it.
It utilizes the recently added use-exit-on-panic config to distinguish between
asserts and segfaults.
If the restore succeeds, it runs random commands on the key to attempt to
trigger a crash.
It runs in two modes, one with deep sanitation enabled and one without.
In the first one we don't expect any assertions or segfaults, in the second one
we expect assertions, but no segfaults.
We also check for leaks and invalid reads using valgrind, and if we find them
we print the commands that lead to that issue.
Changes in the code (other than the test):
- Replace a few NPD (null pointer deference) flows and division by zero with an
assertion, so that it doesn't fail the test. (since we set the server to use
`exit` rather than `abort` on assertion).
- Fix quite a lot of flows in rdb.c that could have lead to memory leaks in
RESTORE command (since it now responds with an error rather than panic)
- Add a DEBUG flag for SET-SKIP-CHECKSUM-VALIDATION so that the test don't need
to bother with faking a valid checksum
- Remove a pile of code in serverLogObjectDebugInfo which is actually unsafe to
run in the crash report (see comments in the code)
- fix a missing boundary check in lzf_decompress
test suite infra improvements:
- be able to run valgrind checks before the process terminates
- rotate log files when restarting servers
Blocking command should not be used with MULTI, LUA, and RM_Call. This is because,
the caller, who executes the command in this context, expects a reply.
Today, LUA and MULTI have a special (and different) treatment to blocking commands:
LUA - Most commands are marked with no-script flag which are checked when executing
and command from LUA, commands that are not marked (like XREAD) verify that their
blocking mode is not used inside LUA (by checking the CLIENT_LUA client flag).
MULTI - Command that is going to block, first verify that the client is not inside
multi (by checking the CLIENT_MULTI client flag). If the client is inside multi, they
return a result which is a match to the empty key with no timeout (for example blpop
inside MULTI will act as lpop)
For modules that perform RM_Call with blocking command, the returned results type is
REDISMODULE_REPLY_UNKNOWN and the caller can not really know what happened.
Disadvantages of the current state are:
No unified approach, LUA, MULTI, and RM_Call, each has a different treatment
Module can not safely execute blocking command (and get reply or error).
Though It is true that modules are not like LUA or MULTI and should be smarter not
to execute blocking commands on RM_Call, sometimes you want to execute a command base
on client input (for example if you create a module that provides a new scripting
language like javascript or python).
While modules (on modules command) can check for REDISMODULE_CTX_FLAGS_LUA or
REDISMODULE_CTX_FLAGS_MULTI to know not to block the client, there is no way to
check if the command came from another module using RM_Call. So there is no way
for a module to know not to block another module RM_Call execution.
This commit adds a way to unify the treatment for blocking clients by introducing
a new CLIENT_DENY_BLOCKING client flag. On LUA, MULTI, and RM_Call the new flag
turned on to signify that the client should not be blocked. A blocking command
verifies that the flag is turned off before blocking. If a blocking command sees
that the CLIENT_DENY_BLOCKING flag is on, it's not blocking and return results
which are matches to empty key with no timeout (as MULTI does today).
The new flag is checked on the following commands:
List blocking commands: BLPOP, BRPOP, BRPOPLPUSH, BLMOVE,
Zset blocking commands: BZPOPMIN, BZPOPMAX
Stream blocking commands: XREAD, XREADGROUP
SUBSCRIBE, PSUBSCRIBE, MONITOR
In addition, the new flag is turned on inside the AOF client, we do not want to
block the AOF client to prevent deadlocks and commands ordering issues (and there
is also an existing assert in the code that verifies it).
To keep backward compatibility on LUA, all the no-script flags on existing commands
were kept untouched. In addition, a LUA special treatment on XREAD and XREADGROUP was kept.
To keep backward compatibility on MULTI (which today allows SUBSCRIBE, and PSUBSCRIBE).
We added a special treatment on those commands to allow executing them on MULTI.
The only backward compatibility issue that this PR introduces is that now MONITOR
is not allowed inside MULTI.
Tests were added to verify blocking commands are not blocking the client on LUA, MULTI,
or RM_Call. Tests were added to verify the module can check for CLIENT_DENY_BLOCKING flag.
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: Itamar Haber <itamar@redislabs.com>
Syntax:
COPY <key> <new-key> [DB <dest-db>] [REPLACE]
No support for module keys yet.
Co-authored-by: tmgauss
Co-authored-by: Itamar Haber <itamar@redislabs.com>
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
BLPOP when there are elements in the list works in the same way as LPOP
does. Due to this they also does the same repetitive action and logic
for the same is written at two different places. This is a bad code
practice as the one needs the context to change the BLPOP list pop code
as well when the LPOP code gets changed.
Separated the generic logic from LPOP to a function that is being used
by the BLPOP code as well.
Adding [B]LMOVE <src> <dst> RIGHT|LEFT RIGHT|LEFT. deprecating [B]RPOPLPUSH.
Note that when receiving a BRPOPLPUSH we'll still propagate an RPOPLPUSH,
but on BLMOVE RIGHT LEFT we'll propagate an LMOVE
improvement to existing tests
- Replace "after 1000" with "wait_for_condition" when wait for
clients to block/unblock.
- Add a pre-existing element to target list on basic tests so
that we can check if the new element was added to the correct
side of the list.
- check command stats on the replica to make sure the right
command was replicated
Co-authored-by: Oran Agra <oran@redislabs.com>
When calling to LPOS command when RANK is higher than matches,
the return value is non valid response. For example:
```
LPUSH l a
:1
LPOS l b RANK 5 COUNT 10
*-4
```
It may break client-side parser.
Now, we count how many replies were replied in the array.
```
LPUSH l a
:1
LPOS l b RANK 5 COUNT 10
*0
```