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Flexible non-blocking Redis client with reconnect feature. The client supports subscriptions, transactions and connection via UNIX-socket.

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NAME

AnyEvent::RipeRedis - Flexible non-blocking Redis client

SYNOPSIS

use AnyEvent;
use AnyEvent::RipeRedis;

my $redis = AnyEvent::RipeRedis->new(
  host     => 'localhost',
  port     => 6379,
  password => 'yourpass',
);

my $cv = AE::cv;

$redis->set( 'foo', 'bar',
  sub {
    my $err = $_[1];

    if ( defined $err ) {
      warn $err->message . "\n";
      $cv->send;

      return;
    }

    $redis->get( 'foo',
      sub {
        my $reply = shift;
        my $err   = shift;

        if ( defined $err ) {
          warn $err->message . "\n";
          $cv->send;

          return;
        }

        print "$reply\n";
        $cv->send;
      }
    );
  }
);

$cv->recv;

DESCRIPTION

AnyEvent::RipeRedis is flexible non-blocking Redis client. Supports subscriptions, transactions and can automaticaly restore connection after failure.

Requires Redis 1.2 or higher, and any supported event loop.

CONSTRUCTOR

new( %params )

my $redis = AnyEvent::RipeRedis->new(
  host               => 'localhost',
  port               => 6379,
  password           => 'yourpass',
  database           => 7,
  connection_timeout => 5,
  read_timeout       => 5,
  lazy               => 1,
  reconnect_interval => 5,

  on_connect => sub {
    # handling...
  },

  on_disconnect => sub {
    # handling...
  },

  on_error => sub {
    my $err = shift;

    # error handling...
  },
);
  • host => $host

    Server hostname (default: 127.0.0.1)

  • port => $port

    Server port (default: 6379)

  • password => $password

    If the password is specified, the AUTH command is sent to the server after connection.

  • database => $index

    Database index. If the index is specified, the client switches to the specified database after connection. You can also switch to another database after connection by using SELECT command. The client remembers last selected database after reconnection and switches to it automaticaly.

    The default database index is 0.

  • utf8 => $boolean

    If enabled, all strings will be converted to UTF-8 before sending to the server, and all results will be decoded from UTF-8.

    Enabled by default.

  • connection_timeout => $fractional_seconds

    Specifies connection timeout. If the client could not connect to the server after specified timeout, the on_error callback is called with the E_CANT_CONN error. The timeout specifies in seconds and can contain a fractional part.

      connection_timeout => 10.5,
    

    By default the client use kernel's connection timeout.

  • read_timeout => $fractional_seconds

    Specifies read timeout. If the client could not receive a reply from the server after specified timeout, the client close connection and call the on_error callback with the E_READ_TIMEDOUT error. The timeout is specifies in seconds and can contain a fractional part.

      read_timeout => 3.5,
    

    Not set by default.

  • lazy => $boolean

    If enabled, the connection establishes at time when you will send the first command to the server. By default the connection establishes after calling of the new method.

    Disabled by default.

  • reconnect => $boolean

    If the connection to the server was lost and the parameter reconnect is TRUE (default), the client will try to restore the connection when you execute next command. The client will try to reconnect only once and, if attempt fails, the error object is passed to command callback. If you need several attempts of the reconnection, you must retry a command from the callback as many times, as you need. Such behavior allows to control reconnection procedure.

    Enabled by default.

  • reconnect_interval => $fractional_seconds

    If the parameter is specified, the client will try to reconnect only after this interval. Commands executed between reconnections will be queued.

      reconnect_interval => 5,
    

    Not set by default.

  • handle_params => \%params

    Specifies AnyEvent::Handle parameters.

      handle_params => {
        autocork => 1,
        linger   => 60,
      }
    

    Enabling of the autocork parameter can improve performance. See documentation on AnyEvent::Handle for more information.

  • on_connect => $cb->()

    The on_connect callback is called when the connection is successfully established.

    Not set by default.

  • on_disconnect => $cb->()

    The on_disconnect callback is called when the connection is closed by any reason.

    Not set by default.

  • on_error => $cb->( $err )

    The on_error callback is called when occurred an error, which was affected on entire client (e. g. connection error or authentication error). Also the on_error callback is called on command errors if the command callback is not specified. If the on_error callback is not specified, the client just print an error messages to STDERR.

COMMAND EXECUTION

<command>( [ @args ] [, $cb->( $reply, $err ) ] )

To execute the command you must call specific method with corresponding name. The reply to the command is passed to the callback in first argument. If any error occurred during the command execution, the error object is passed to the callback in second argument. Error object is the instance of the class AnyEvent::RipeRedis::Error.

The command callback is optional. If it is not specified and any error occurred, the on_error callback of the client is called.

The full list of the Redis commands can be found here: http://redis.io/commands.

$redis->get( 'foo',
  sub {
    my $reply = shift;
    my $err   = shift;

    if ( defined $err ) {
      my $err_msg  = $err->message;
      my $err_code = $err->code;

      # error handling...

      return;
    }

    print "$reply\n";
  }
);

$redis->lrange( 'list', 0, -1,
  sub {
    my $reply = shift;
    my $err   = shift;

    if ( defined $err ) {
      my $err_msg  = $err->message;
      my $err_code = $err->code;

      # error handling...

      return;
    }

    foreach my $value ( @{$reply}  ) {
      print "$value\n";
    }
  }
);

$redis->incr( 'counter' );

You can execute multi-word commands like this:

$redis->client_getname(
  sub {
    my $reply = shift;
    my $err   = shift;

    if ( defined $err ) {
      my $err_msg  = $err->message;
      my $err_code = $err->code;

      # error handling...

      return;
    }

    print "$reply\n";
  }
);

execute( $command, [ @args ] [, $cb->( $reply, $err ) ] )

An alternative method to execute commands. In some cases it can be more convenient.

$redis->execute( 'get', 'foo',
  sub {
    my $reply = shift;
    my $err   = shift;

    if ( defined $err ) {
      my $err_msg  = $err->message;
      my $err_code = $err->code;

      return;
    }

    print "$reply\n";
  }
);

TRANSACTIONS

The detailed information about the Redis transactions can be found here: http://redis.io/topics/transactions.

multi( [ $cb->( $reply, $err ) ] )

Marks the start of a transaction block. Subsequent commands will be queued for atomic execution using EXEC.

exec( [ $cb->( $reply, $err ) ] )

Executes all previously queued commands in a transaction and restores the connection state to normal. When using WATCH, EXEC will execute commands only if the watched keys were not modified.

If during a transaction at least one command fails, to the callback will be passed error object, and the reply will be contain nested error objects for every failed command.

$redis->multi();
$redis->set( 'foo', 'string' );
$redis->incr('foo');    # causes an error
$redis->exec(
  sub {
    my $reply = shift;
    my $err   = shift;

    if ( defined $err ) {
      my $err_msg  = $err->message();
      my $err_code = $err->code();

      if ( defined $reply ) {
        foreach my $nested_reply ( @{$reply} ) {
          if ( ref($nested_reply) eq 'AnyEvent::RipeRedis::Error' ) {
            my $nested_err_msg  = $nested_reply->message();
            my $nested_err_code = $nested_reply->code();

            # error handling...
          }
        }

        return;
      }

      # error handling...

      return;
    }

    # reply handling...
  },
);

discard( [ $cb->( $reply, $err ) ] )

Flushes all previously queued commands in a transaction and restores the connection state to normal.

If WATCH was used, DISCARD unwatches all keys.

watch( @keys [, $cb->( $reply, $err ) ] )

Marks the given keys to be watched for conditional execution of a transaction.

unwatch( [ $cb->( $reply, $err ) ] )

Forget about all watched keys.

SUBSCRIPTIONS

Once the client enters the subscribed state it is not supposed to issue any other commands, except for additional SUBSCRIBE, PSUBSCRIBE, UNSUBSCRIBE, PUNSUBSCRIBE and QUIT commands.

The detailed information about Redis Pub/Sub can be found here: http://redis.io/topics/pubsub

subscribe( @channels, ( $cb->( $msg, $channel ) | \%cbs ) )

Subscribes the client to the specified channels.

Method can accept two callbacks: on_reply and on_message. The on_reply callback is called when subscription to all specified channels will be activated. In first argument to the callback is passed the number of channels we are currently subscribed. If subscription to specified channels was lost, the on_reply callback is called with the error object in the second argument.

The on_message callback is called on every published message. If the subscribe method is called with one callback, this callback will be act as on_message callback.

$redis->subscribe( qw( foo bar ),
  { on_reply => sub {
      my $channels_num = shift;
      my $err          = shift;

      if ( defined $err ) {
        # error handling...

        return;
      }

      # reply handling...
    },

    on_message => sub {
      my $msg     = shift;
      my $channel = shift;

      # message handling...
    },
  }
);

$redis->subscribe( qw( foo bar ),
  sub {
    my $msg     = shift;
    my $channel = shift;

    # message handling...
  }
);

psubscribe( @patterns, ( $cb->( $msg, $pattern, $channel ) | \%cbs ) )

Subscribes the client to the given patterns. See subscribe() method for details.

$redis->psubscribe( qw( foo_* bar_* ),
  { on_reply => sub {
      my $channels_num = shift;
      my $err          = shift;

      if ( defined $err ) {
        # error handling...

        return;
      }

      # reply handling...
    },

    on_message => sub {
      my $msg     = shift;
      my $pattern = shift;
      my $channel = shift;

      # message handling...
    },
  }
);

$redis->psubscribe( qw( foo_* bar_* ),
  sub {
    my $msg     = shift;
    my $pattern = shift;
    my $channel = shift;

    # message handling...
  }
);

publish( $channel, $message [, $cb->( $reply, $err ) ] )

Posts a message to the given channel.

unsubscribe( [ @channels ] [, $cb->( $reply, $err ) ] )

Unsubscribes the client from the given channels, or from all of them if none is given. In first argument to the callback is passed the number of channels we are currently subscribed or zero if we were unsubscribed from all channels.

$redis->unsubscribe( qw( foo bar ),
  sub {
    my $channels_num = shift;
    my $err          = shift;

    if ( defined $err ) {
      # error handling...

      return;
    }

    # reply handling...
  }
);

punsubscribe( [ @patterns ] [, $cb->( $reply, $err ) ] )

Unsubscribes the client from the given patterns, or from all of them if none is given. See unsubscribe() method for details.

$redis->punsubscribe( qw( foo_* bar_* ),
  sub {
    my $channels_num = shift;
    my $err          = shift;

    if ( defined $err ) {
      # error handling...

      return;
    }

    # reply handling...
  }
);

CONNECTION VIA UNIX-SOCKET

Redis 2.2 and higher support connection via UNIX domain socket. To connect via a UNIX-socket in the parameter host you have to specify unix/, and in the parameter port you have to specify the path to the socket.

my $redis = AnyEvent::RipeRedis->new(
  host => 'unix/',
  port => '/tmp/redis.sock',
);

LUA SCRIPTS EXECUTION

Redis 2.6 and higher support execution of Lua scripts on the server side. To execute a Lua script you can send one of the commands EVAL or EVALSHA, or use the special method eval_cached().

eval_cached( $script, $keys_num [, @keys ] [, @args ] [, $cb->( $reply, $err ) ] ] );

When you call the eval_cached() method, the client first generate a SHA1 hash for a Lua script and cache it in memory. Then the client optimistically send the EVALSHA command under the hood. If the E_NO_SCRIPT error will be returned, the client send the EVAL command.

If you call the eval_cached() method with the same Lua script, client don not generate a SHA1 hash for this script repeatedly, it gets a hash from the cache instead.

$redis->eval_cached( 'return { KEYS[1], KEYS[2], ARGV[1], ARGV[2] }',
    2, 'key1', 'key2', 'first', 'second',
  sub {
    my $reply = shift;
    my $err   = shift;

    if ( defined $err ) {
      # error handling...

      return;
    }

    foreach my $value ( @{$reply}  ) {
      print "$value\n";
    }
  }
);

Be care, passing a different Lua scripts to eval_cached() method every time cause memory leaks.

If Lua script returns multi-bulk reply with at least one error reply, to the callback will be passed error object, and the reply will be contain nested error objects.

$redis->eval_cached( "return { 'foo', redis.error_reply( 'Error.' ) }", 0,
  sub {
    my $reply = shift;
    my $err   = shift;

    if ( defined $err ) {
      my $err_msg  = $err->message;
      my $err_code = $err->code;

      if ( defined $reply ) {
        foreach my $nested_reply ( @{$reply} ) {
          if ( ref($nested_reply) eq 'AnyEvent::RipeRedis::Error' ) {
            my $nested_err_msg  = $nested_reply->message();
            my $nested_err_code = $nested_reply->code();

            # error handling...
          }
        }
      }

      # error handling...

      return;
    }

    # reply handling...
  }
);

ERROR CODES

Every error object, passed to callback, contain error code, which can be used for programmatic handling of errors. AnyEvent::RipeRedis provides constants for error codes. They can be imported and used in expressions.

use AnyEvent::RipeRedis qw( :err_codes );
  • E_CANT_CONN

    Can't connect to the server. All operations were aborted.

  • E_LOADING_DATASET

    Redis is loading the dataset in memory.

  • E_IO

    Input/Output operation error. The connection to the Redis server was closed and all operations were aborted.

  • E_CONN_CLOSED_BY_REMOTE_HOST

    The connection closed by remote host. All operations were aborted.

  • E_CONN_CLOSED_BY_CLIENT

    Connection closed by client prematurely. Uncompleted operations were aborted.

  • E_NO_CONN

    No connection to the Redis server. Connection was lost by any reason on previous operation.

  • E_OPRN_ERROR

    Operation error. For example, wrong number of arguments for a command.

  • E_UNEXPECTED_DATA

    The client received unexpected reply from the server. The connection to the Redis server was closed and all operations were aborted.

  • E_READ_TIMEDOUT

    Read timed out. The connection to the Redis server was closed and all operations were aborted.

Error codes available since Redis 2.6.

  • E_NO_SCRIPT

    No matching script. Use the EVAL command.

  • E_BUSY

    Redis is busy running a script. You can only call SCRIPT KILL or SHUTDOWN NOSAVE.

  • E_NOT_BUSY

    No scripts in execution right now.

  • E_MASTER_DOWN

    Link with MASTER is down and slave-serve-stale-data is set to 'no'.

  • E_MISCONF

    Redis is configured to save RDB snapshots, but is currently not able to persist on disk. Commands that may modify the data set are disabled. Please check Redis logs for details about the error.

  • E_READONLY

    You can't write against a read only slave.

  • E_OOM

    Command not allowed when used memory > 'maxmemory'.

  • E_EXEC_ABORT

    Transaction discarded because of previous errors.

Error codes available since Redis 2.8.

  • E_NO_AUTH

    Authentication required.

  • E_WRONG_TYPE

    Operation against a key holding the wrong kind of value.

  • E_NO_REPLICAS

    Not enough good slaves to write.

  • E_BUSY_KEY

    Target key name already exists.

Error codes available since Redis 3.0.

  • E_CROSS_SLOT

    Keys in request don't hash to the same slot.

  • E_TRY_AGAIN

    Multiple keys request during rehashing of slot.

  • E_ASK

    Redirection required. For more information see: http://redis.io/topics/cluster-spec

  • E_MOVED

    Redirection required. For more information see: http://redis.io/topics/cluster-spec

  • E_CLUSTER_DOWN

    The cluster is down or hash slot not served.

DISCONNECTION

When the connection to the server is no longer needed you can close it in three ways: call the method disconnect(), send the QUIT command or you can just "forget" any references to an AnyEvent::RipeRedis object, but in this case the client object is destroyed without calling any callbacks, including the on_disconnect callback, to avoid an unexpected behavior.

disconnect()

The method for synchronous disconnection. All uncompleted operations will be aborted.

quit( [ $cb->( $reply, $err ) ] )

The method for asynchronous disconnection.

OTHER METHODS

info( [ $section ] [, $cb->( $reply, $err ) ] )

Gets and parses information and statistics about the server. The result is passed to callback as a hash reference.

More information about INFO command can be found here: http://redis.io/commands/info

host()

Gets current host of the client.

port()

Gets current port of the client.

select( $index, [, $cb->( $reply, $err ) ] )

Selects the database by numeric index.

database()

Gets selected database index.

utf8( [ $boolean ] )

Enables or disables UTF-8 mode.

connection_timeout( [ $fractional_seconds ] )

Gets or sets the connection_timeout of the client. The undef value resets the connection_timeout to default value.

read_timeout( [ $fractional_seconds ] )

Gets or sets the read_timeout of the client.

reconnect( [ $boolean ] )

Enables or disables reconnection mode of the client.

reconnect_interval( [ $fractional_seconds ] )

Gets or sets reconnect_interval of the client.

on_connect( [ $callback ] )

Gets or sets the on_connect callback.

on_disconnect( [ $callback ] )

Gets or sets the on_disconnect callback.

on_error( [ $callback ] )

Gets or sets the on_error callback.

SEE ALSO

AnyEvent::RipeRedis::Cluster, AnyEvent, Redis::hiredis, Redis, RedisDB

AUTHOR

Eugene Ponizovsky, ponizovsky@gmail.com

Sponsored by SMS Online, dev.opensource@sms-online.com

Special thanks

  • Alexey Shrub
  • Vadim Vlasov
  • Konstantin Uvarin
  • Ivan Kruglov

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright (c) 2012-2017, Eugene Ponizovsky, SMS Online. All rights reserved.

This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

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Flexible non-blocking Redis client with reconnect feature. The client supports subscriptions, transactions and connection via UNIX-socket.

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