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sails-redis
Advanced tools
A lightweight Sails/Waterline adapter for Redis. May be used in a Sails app, or anything using Waterline for the ORM.
This adapter does not support the Semantic or Queryable interfaces. Instead, it simply provides robust, managed access to the underlying Redis client. See the for-sails-0.12 branch of this repo or ryanc1256/sails-redis for examples of conventional adapters that let you use Redis to directly store and query records from your models.
This is an adapter for Sails versions 1.0 and up. If you are using an earlier version of Sails (or Waterline <v0.13), check out the for-sails-0.12 branch. Since this new release of sails-redis is more lightweight, and does not support the same semantic interface as its predecessor, be aware that there are breaking changes in your app when you upgrade. But I think you'll find that this new release is a great way to easily communicate with Redis, with minimal interference and a stable API. If you are interested in upgrading the new, Sails-v1-compatible release of this Redis adapter to support semantic usage (find, create, update, destroy), then please contact Mike or another core maintainer.
Install is through NPM.
$ npm install sails-redis --save
After installing and configuring this adapter (see below), you'll be able to use it to send commands to Redis from your Sails/Node.js app.
For example, in an action:
var categoryId = Product.validate('category', req.param('category'));
sails.getDatastore('cache').leaseConnection(function during(db, proceed) {
db.get('cached_products_for_category_'+categoryId, function (err, cachedData){
if (err) { return proceed(err); }
var cachedProducts;
try {
cachedProducts = JSON.parse(cachedData);
} catch (e) { return proceed(e); }
if (cachedProducts) {
return proceed(undefined, cachedProducts);
}
// IWMIH, there are no cached products for this category.
// So here we might look up the products (Product.find()) to grab them
// from some other database (e.g. mysql), then cache them in Redis.
// (skipping all that to keep this example short)
var newlyCachedProducts = [ /* ... */ ];
// Finally, when finished:
return proceed(undefined, newlyCachedProducts);
});//</ .get() >
}).exec(function (err, products){
if (err) { return res.serverError(err); }
return res.json(products);
});
Note that the leased connection (db
) is just a Redis client instance. No need to connect it/bind event listeners-- it's already hot and ready to go. Any fatal, unexpected errors that would normally be emitted as the "error" event are handled by the underlying driver, and can be optionally handled with custom logic by providing a function for onUnexpectedFailure
.
Need to use a different Redis client, like ioredis? Please have a look at the underlying driver for the latest info/discussion.
This adapter supports standard datastore configuration, as well as some additional low-level options.
For example, in a Sails app, add the config below to your config/datastores.js
file:
cache: {
adapter: 'sails-redis',
url: 'redis://localhost:6379',
// Other available low-level options can also be configured here.
// (see below for more information)
},
Note that you probably shouldn't set Redis as the default datastore for your application (your models wouldn't work!)
Configuration for the underlying Redis client itself is located as an object under the options
. The following options are available:
parser
: which Redis protocol reply parser to use. Defaults to hiredis
if that module is installed.
This may also be set to javascript
.return_buffers
: defaults to false
. If set to true
, then all replies will be sent to callbacks as node Buffer
objects instead of JavaScript Strings.detect_buffers
: default to false
. If set to true
, then replies will be sent to callbacks as node Buffer objects
if any of the input arguments to the original command were Buffer objects.
This option lets you switch between Buffers and Strings on a per-command basis, whereas return_buffers
applies to
every command on a client.socket_nodelay
: defaults to true
. Whether to call setNoDelay() on the TCP stream, which disables the
Nagle algorithm on the underlying socket. Setting this option to false
can result in additional throughput at the
cost of more latency. Most applications will want this set to true
.no_ready_check
: defaults to false
. When a connection is established to the Redis server, the server might still
be loading the database from disk. While loading, the server not respond to any commands. To work around this,
node_redis
has a "ready check" which sends the INFO
command to the server. The response from the INFO
command
indicates whether the server is ready for more commands. When ready, node_redis
emits a ready
event.
Setting no_ready_check
to true
will inhibit this check.enable_offline_queue
: defaults to true
. By default, if there is no active
connection to the redis server, commands are added to a queue and are executed
once the connection has been established. Setting enable_offline_queue
to
false
will disable this feature and the callback will be execute immediately
with an error, or an error will be thrown if no callback is specified.retry_max_delay
: defaults to null
. By default every time the client tries to connect and fails time before
reconnection (delay) almost doubles. This delay normally grows infinitely, but setting retry_max_delay
limits delay
to maximum value, provided in milliseconds.connect_timeout
defaults to false
. By default client will try reconnecting until connected. Setting connect_timeout
limits total time for client to reconnect. Value is provided in milliseconds and is counted once the disconnect occured.max_attempts
defaults to null
. By default client will try reconnecting until connected. Setting max_attempts
limits total amount of reconnects.auth_pass
defaults to null
. By default client will try connecting without auth. If set, client will run redis auth command on connect.For more examples, or if you get stuck or have questions, click here.
To report a bug, click here.
Please observe the guidelines and conventions laid out in the Sails project contribution guide when opening issues or submitting pull requests.
I owe a big thank you to @ryanc1256 for all of his work with the original version of this adapter.
This adapter, like the Sails framework, is free and open-source under the MIT License.
FAQs
A lightweight Redis adapter for Sails / Waterline.
We found that sails-redis demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 5 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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