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@keyvhq/redis
Advanced tools
Redis storage adapter for Keyv.
TTL functionality is handled directly by Redis so no timestamps are stored and expired keys are cleaned up internally.
npm install --save @keyvhq/core @keyvhq/redis
const KeyvRedis = require('@keyvhq/redis')
const Keyv = require('@keyvhq/core')
const keyv = new Keyv({ store: new KeyvRedis('redis://user:pass@localhost:6379') })
Any valid Redis options will be passed directly through:
const KeyvRedis = require('@keyvhq/redis')
const Keyv = require('@keyvhq/core')
const keyv = new Keyv({
store: new KeyvRedis('redis://user:pass@localhost:6379', {
disable_resubscribing: true
})
})
Or you can reuse a previously declared Redis instance:
const KeyvRedis = require('@keyvhq/redis')
const Keyv = require('@keyvhq/core')
const { Redis } = KeyvRedis
const redis = new Redis('redis://user:pass@localhost:6379')
const keyv = new Keyv({ store: new KeyvRedis(redis) })
@keyvhq/redis © Luke Childs, released under the MIT License.
Maintained by Microlink with help from contributors.
microlink.io · GitHub microlinkhq · X @microlinkhq
FAQs
Redis storage adapter for Keyv
The npm package @keyvhq/redis receives a total of 2,799 weekly downloads. As such, @keyvhq/redis popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @keyvhq/redis demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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