Radix is a minimalistic Redis client for Go. It is broken up into small, single-purpose packages for ease of use.
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redis - A wrapper around a single, non-thread-safe redis connection. Supports normal commands/response as well as pipelining.
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pool - a simple, automatically expanding/cleaning connection pool. If you have multiple go-routines using the same redis instance you'll need this.
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pubsub - a simple wrapper providing convenient access to Redis Pub/Sub functionality.
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sentinel - a client for redis sentinel which acts as a connection pool for a cluster of redis nodes. A sentinel client connects to a sentinel instance and any master redis instances that instance is monitoring. If a master becomes unavailable, the sentinel client will automatically start distributing connections from the slave chosen by the sentinel instance.
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cluster - a client for a redis cluster which automatically handles interacting with a redis cluster, transparently handling redirects and pooling. This client keeps a mapping of slots to nodes internally, and automatically keeps it up-to-date.
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util - a package containing a number of helper methods for doing common tasks with the radix package, such as SCANing either a single redis instance or every one in a cluster, or executing server-side lua
go get github.com/mediocregopher/radix.v2/...
go test github.com/mediocregopher/radix.v2/...
The test action assumes you have the following running:
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A redis server listening on port 6379
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A redis cluster node listening on port 7000, handling slots 0 through 8191
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A redis cluster node listening on port 7001, handling slots 8192 through 16383
The slot number are particularly important as the tests for the cluster package do some trickery which depends on certain keys being assigned to certain nodes
V1 of radix was started by fzzy and can be found here. Some time in 2014 I took over the project and reached a point where I couldn't make improvements that I wanted to make due to past design decisions (mostly my own). So I've started V2, which has redesigned some core aspects of the api and hopefully made things easier to use and faster.
Here are some of the major changes since V1:
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Combining resp and redis packages
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Reply is now Resp
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Hash is now Map
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Append is now PipeAppend, GetReply is now PipeResp
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PipelineQueueEmptyError is now ErrPipelineEmpty
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Significant changes to pool, making it easier to use
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More functionality in cluster
Unless otherwise noted, the source files are distributed under the MIT License found in the LICENSE.txt file.