embedded-redis

Redis embedded server for Java integration testing

Fork Notes

This repository clones from kstyrc original repository. The aim is to release some long waiting fixes.

Source Website: github.com/ozimov/embedded-redis

Latest Release: 0.7.2
Latest Artifact: it.ozimov:embedded-redis
Continuous Integration:
Maven Central
Build Status codecov.io Codacy Badge

codecov.io

Maven dependency

Maven Central:

<dependency>
  <groupId>it.ozimov</groupId>
  <artifactId>embedded-redis</artifactId>
  <version>0.7.2</version>
</dependency>

Usage

Running RedisServer is as simple as:

RedisServer redisServer = new RedisServer(6379);
redisServer.start();
// do some work
redisServer.stop();

You can also provide RedisServer with your own executable:

// 1) given explicit file (os-independence broken!)
RedisServer redisServer = new RedisServer("/path/to/your/redis", 6379);

// 2) given os-independent matrix
RedisExecProvider customProvider = RedisExecProvider.defaultProvider()
  .override(OS.UNIX, "/path/to/unix/redis")
  .override(OS.WINDOWS, Architecture.x86, "/path/to/windows/redis")
  .override(OS.Windows, Architecture.x86_64, "/path/to/windows/redis")
  .override(OS.MAC_OS_X, Architecture.x86, "/path/to/macosx/redis")
  .override(OS.MAC_OS_X, Architecture.x86_64, "/path/to/macosx/redis")
  
RedisServer redisServer = new RedisServer(customProvider, 6379);

You can also use fluent API to create RedisServer:

RedisServer redisServer = RedisServer.builder()
  .redisExecProvider(customRedisProvider)
  .port(6379)
  .slaveOf("locahost", 6378)
  .configFile("/path/to/your/redis.conf")
  .build();

Or even create simple redis.conf file from scratch:

RedisServer redisServer = RedisServer.builder()
  .redisExecProvider(customRedisProvider)
  .port(6379)
  .setting("bind 127.0.0.1") // good for local development on Windows to prevent security popups
  .slaveOf("locahost", 6378)
  .setting("daemonize no")
  .setting("appendonly no")
  .setting("maxmemory 128M")
  .build();

Setting up a cluster

Our Embedded Redis has support for HA Redis clusters with Sentinels and master-slave replication

Using ephemeral ports

A simple redis integration test with Redis cluster on ephemeral ports, with setup similar to that from production would look like this:

public class SomeIntegrationTestThatRequiresRedis {
  private RedisCluster cluster;
  private Set<String> jedisSentinelHosts;

  @Before
  public void setup() throws Exception {
    //creates a cluster with 3 sentinels, quorum size of 2 and 3 replication groups, each with one master and one slave
    cluster = RedisCluster.builder().ephemeral().sentinelCount(3).quorumSize(2)
                    .replicationGroup("master1", 1)
                    .replicationGroup("master2", 1)
                    .replicationGroup("master3", 1)
                    .build();
    cluster.start();

    //retrieve ports on which sentinels have been started, using a simple Jedis utility class
    jedisSentinelHosts = JedisUtil.sentinelHosts(cluster);
  }
  
  @Test
  public void test() throws Exception {
    // testing code that requires redis running
    JedisSentinelPool pool = new JedisSentinelPool("master1", jedisSentinelHosts);
  }
  
  @After
  public void tearDown() throws Exception {
    cluster.stop();
  }
}

Retrieving ports

The above example starts Redis cluster on ephemeral ports, which you can later get with cluster.ports(), which will return a list of all ports of the cluster. You can also get ports of sentinels with cluster.sentinelPorts() or servers with cluster.serverPorts(). JedisUtil class contains utility methods for use with Jedis client.

Using predefined ports

You can also start Redis cluster on predefined ports and even mix both approaches:

public class SomeIntegrationTestThatRequiresRedis {
  private RedisCluster cluster;

  @Before
  public void setup() throws Exception {
    final List<Integer> sentinels = Arrays.asList(26739, 26912);
    final List<Integer> group1 = Arrays.asList(6667, 6668);
    final List<Integer> group2 = Arrays.asList(6387, 6379);
    //creates a cluster with 3 sentinels, quorum size of 2 and 3 replication groups, each with one master and one slave
    cluster = RedisCluster.builder().sentinelPorts(sentinels).quorumSize(2)
                    .serverPorts(group1).replicationGroup("master1", 1)
                    .serverPorts(group2).replicationGroup("master2", 1)
                    .ephemeralServers().replicationGroup("master3", 1)
                    .build();
    cluster.start();
  }
//(...)

The above will create and start a cluster with sentinels on ports 26739, 26912, first replication group on 6667, 6668, second replication group on 6387, 6379 and third replication group on ephemeral ports.

Redis version

When not provided with the desired redis executable, RedisServer runs os-dependent executable enclosed in jar. Currently is uses:

However, you should provide RedisServer with redis executable if you need specific version.

License

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0

Contributors

Changelog

0.6

  • Support JDK 6 +

0.5

  • OS detection fix
  • redis binary per OS/arch pair
  • Updated to 2.8.19 binary for Windows

0.4

  • Updated for Java 8
  • Added Sentinel support
  • Ability to create arbitrary clusters on arbitrary (ephemeral) ports
  • Updated to latest guava
  • Throw an exception if redis has not been started
  • Redis errorStream logged to System.out

0.3

  • Fluent API for RedisServer creation

0.2

  • Initial decent release