redis-rb
A Ruby client library for the Redis key-value store.
A note about versions
Versions 1.0.x target all versions of Redis. You have to use this one if you are using Redis < 1.2.
Version 2.0 is a big refactoring of the previous version and makes little effort to be backwards-compatible when it shouldn't. It does not support Redis' original protocol, favoring the new, binary-safe one. You should be using this version if you're running Redis 1.2+.
Information about Redis
Redis is a key-value store with some interesting features:
- It's fast.
- Keys are strings but values are typed. Currently Redis supports strings, lists, sets, sorted sets and hashes. Atomic operations can be done on all of these types.
See the Redis homepage for more information.
Getting started
You can connect to Redis by instantiating the Redis
class:
require "redis"
redis = Redis.new
This assumes Redis was started with default values listening on localhost
, port 6379. If you need to connect to a remote server or a different port, try:
redis = Redis.new(:host => "10.0.1.1", :port => 6380)
Once connected, you can start running commands against Redis:
>> redis.set "foo", "bar"
=> "OK"
>> redis.get "foo"
=> "bar"
>> redis.sadd "users", "albert"
=> true
>> redis.sadd "users", "bernard"
=> true
>> redis.sadd "users", "charles"
=> true
How many users?
>> redis.scard "users"
=> 3
Is albert
a user?
>> redis.sismember "users", "albert"
=> true
Is isabel
a user?
>> redis.sismember "users", "isabel"
=> false
Handle groups:
>> redis.sadd "admins", "albert"
=> true
>> redis.sadd "admins", "isabel"
=> true
Users who are also admins:
>> redis.sinter "users", "admins"
=> ["albert"]
Users who are not admins:
>> redis.sdiff "users", "admins"
=> ["bernard", "charles"]
Admins who are not users:
>> redis.sdiff "admins", "users"
=> ["isabel"]
All users and admins:
>> redis.sunion "admins", "users"
=> ["albert", "bernard", "charles", "isabel"]
Storing objects
Redis only stores strings as values. If you want to store an object inside a key, you can use a serialization/deseralization mechanism like JSON:
>> redis.set "foo", [1, 2, 3].to_json
=> OK
>> JSON.parse(redis.get("foo"))
=> [1, 2, 3]
Executing multiple commands atomically
You can use MULTI/EXEC
to run arbitrary commands in an atomic fashion:
redis.multi do
redis.set "foo", "bar"
redis.incr "baz"
end
More info
Check the Redis Command Reference or check the tests to find out how to use this client.
Contributing
Fork the project and send pull requests. You can also ask for help at #redis
on Freenode.