第四章 KubeSphere3.3.0 + Redis7.0.4 + Redis-Cluster 集群部署

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第四章 KubeSphere3.3.0 + Redis7.0.4 + Redis-Cluster 集群部署



前言

Redis 是一个开源(BSD许可)的,内存中的数据结构存储系统,它可以用作数据库、缓存和消息中间件. 它支持多种类型的数据结构,如 字符串(strings), 散列(hashes), 列表(lists), 集合(sets), 有序集合(sorted sets) 与范围查询, bitmaps, hyperloglogs 和 地理空间(geospatial) 索引半径查询. Redis 内置了 复制(replication), LUA脚本(Lua scripting), LRU驱动事件(LRU eviction), 事务(transactions) 和不同级别的 磁盘持久化(persistence), 并通过 Redis哨兵(Sentinel) 和自动 分区(Cluster)提供高可用性(high availability)。官网地址:https://redis.io/。本节内容我使用kubesphere 3.3.0 平台构建 Redis7.0.4 + Redis-Cluster 集群部署。


一、创建redis存储卷

1、执行命令,创建存储卷
[root@k8s-master01 ~]# kubectl apply -f redis-sc.yaml
2、删除存储卷
[root@k8s-master01 ~]# kubectl delete -f redis-sc.yaml
3、命令查询存储卷是否创建成功
方式一:kubectl get sc redis-nfs-storage
方式二:kubectl get sc

[root@k8s-master01 ~]# kubectl get sc redis-nfs-storage 
NAME                PROVISIONER                                   RECLAIMPOLICY   VOLUMEBINDINGMODE   ALLOWVOLUMEEXPANSION   AGE
redis-nfs-storage   k8s-sigs.io/nfs-subdir-external-provisioner   Delete          Immediate           false                  2m34s

redis-sc.yaml 配置:

apiVersion: v1
kind: Namespace
metadata:
  name: redis

---
apiVersion: storage.k8s.io/v1
kind: StorageClass
metadata:
  name: redis-nfs-storage
  annotations:
    storageclass.kubernetes.io/is-default-class: "false"
provisioner: k8s-sigs.io/nfs-subdir-external-provisioner
parameters:
  archiveOnDelete: "true"  ## 删除pv的时候,pv的内容是否要备份

---
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
  name: nfs-client-provisioner
  labels:
    app: nfs-client-provisioner
  # replace with namespace where provisioner is deployed
  namespace: redis
spec:
  replicas: 1
  strategy:
    type: Recreate
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: nfs-client-provisioner
  template:
    metadata:
      labels:
        app: nfs-client-provisioner
    spec:
      serviceAccountName: nfs-client-provisioner
      containers:
        - name: nfs-client-provisioner
          image: registry.cn-hangzhou.aliyuncs.com/lfy_k8s_images/nfs-subdir-external-provisioner:v4.0.2
          # resources:
          #    limits:
          #      cpu: 10m
          #    requests:
          #      cpu: 10m
          volumeMounts:
            - name: nfs-client-root
              mountPath: /persistentvolumes
          env:
            - name: PROVISIONER_NAME
              value: k8s-sigs.io/nfs-subdir-external-provisioner
            - name: NFS_SERVER
              value: 10.0.0.31 ## 指定自己nfs服务器地址
            - name: NFS_PATH  
              value: /nfs/data  ## nfs服务器共享的目录
      volumes:
        - name: nfs-client-root
          nfs:
            server: 10.0.0.31
            path: /nfs/data
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
metadata:
  name: nfs-client-provisioner
  # replace with namespace where provisioner is deployed
  namespace: redis
---
kind: ClusterRole
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
metadata:
  name: nfs-client-provisioner-runner
rules:
  - apiGroups: [""]
    resources: ["nodes"]
    verbs: ["get", "list", "watch"]
  - apiGroups: [""]
    resources: ["persistentvolumes"]
    verbs: ["get", "list", "watch", "create", "delete"]
  - apiGroups: [""]
    resources: ["persistentvolumeclaims"]
    verbs: ["get", "list", "watch", "update"]
  - apiGroups: ["storage.k8s.io"]
    resources: ["storageclasses"]
    verbs: ["get", "list", "watch"]
  - apiGroups: [""]
    resources: ["events"]
    verbs: ["create", "update", "patch"]
---
kind: ClusterRoleBinding
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
metadata:
  name: run-nfs-client-provisioner
subjects:
  - kind: ServiceAccount
    name: nfs-client-provisioner
    # replace with namespace where provisioner is deployed
    namespace: redis
roleRef:
  kind: ClusterRole
  name: nfs-client-provisioner-runner
  apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
---
kind: Role
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
metadata:
  name: leader-locking-nfs-client-provisioner
  # replace with namespace where provisioner is deployed
  namespace: redis
rules:
  - apiGroups: [""]
    resources: ["endpoints"]
    verbs: ["get", "list", "watch", "create", "update", "patch"]
---
kind: RoleBinding
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
metadata:
  name: leader-locking-nfs-client-provisioner
  # replace with namespace where provisioner is deployed
  namespace: redis
subjects:
  - kind: ServiceAccount
    name: nfs-client-provisioner
    # replace with namespace where provisioner is deployed
    namespace: redis
roleRef:
  kind: Role
  name: leader-locking-nfs-client-provisioner
  apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io

二、创建redis应用

2.1、创建应用仓库

提示:用企业空间管理员操作

名称:bitnami
URL:charts.bitnami.com/bitnami
同步间隔: 24小时

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2.1、创建redis应用

在这里插入图片描述

搜索redis,选择redis-cluster

在这里插入图片描述

选择7.0.4版本,如需其他版本,下拉选择即可
开始安装

在这里插入图片描述
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修改 vaule.yaml 配置文件
1、修改存储卷:storageClass: “redis-nfs-storage” ,一共有两处需要修改
2、redis的密码根据需要配置:password: “”
3、创建节点和副本数量,根据自己的需求修改。master主节点的数量应始终大于等于3,否则集群创建将失败

nodes: 6   创建的节点数(3 个主节点和 3 个副本节点)
replicas: 1  每个master的副本数(eplicas 默认设置为 1,每个主节点将有 1 个副本)
4、指定是否要在升级后添加节点
addNodes: true

以下是我的 vaule.yaml,其他配置根据自己的部署修改:

## @section Global parameters
## Global Docker image parameters
## Please, note that this will override the image parameters, including dependencies, configured to use the global value
## Current available global Docker image parameters: imageRegistry, imagePullSecrets and storageClass
##

## @param global.imageRegistry Global Docker image registry
## @param global.imagePullSecrets Global Docker registry secret names as an array
## @param global.storageClass Global StorageClass for Persistent Volume(s)
## @param global.redis.password Redis® password (overrides `password`)
##
global:
  imageRegistry: ""
  ## E.g.
  ## imagePullSecrets:
  ##   - myRegistryKeySecretName
  ##
  imagePullSecrets: []
  storageClass: "redis-nfs-storage"
  redis:
    password: ""

## @section Redis® Cluster Common parameters
##

## @param nameOverride String to partially override common.names.fullname template (will maintain the release name)
##
nameOverride: ""
## @param fullnameOverride String to fully override common.names.fullname template
##
fullnameOverride: ""
## @param clusterDomain Kubernetes Cluster Domain
##
clusterDomain: cluster.local
## @param commonAnnotations Annotations to add to all deployed objects
##
commonAnnotations: {}
## @param commonLabels Labels to add to all deployed objects
##
commonLabels: {}
## @param extraDeploy Array of extra objects to deploy with the release (evaluated as a template)
##
extraDeploy: []

## Enable diagnostic mode in the deployment
##
diagnosticMode:
  ## @param diagnosticMode.enabled Enable diagnostic mode (all probes will be disabled and the command will be overridden)
  ##
  enabled: false
  ## @param diagnosticMode.command Command to override all containers in the deployment
  ##
  command:
    - sleep
  ## @param diagnosticMode.args Args to override all containers in the deployment
  ##
  args:
    - infinity

## Bitnami Redis® image version
## ref: https://hub.docker.com/r/bitnami/redis/tags/
## @param image.registry Redis® cluster image registry
## @param image.repository Redis® cluster image repository
## @param image.tag Redis® cluster image tag (immutable tags are recommended)
## @param image.pullPolicy Redis® cluster image pull policy
## @param image.pullSecrets Specify docker-registry secret names as an array
## @param image.debug Enable image debug mode
##
image:
  registry: docker.io
  repository: bitnami/redis-cluster
  ## Bitnami Redis® image tag
  ## ref: https://github.com/bitnami/bitnami-docker-redis#supported-tags-and-respective-dockerfile-links
  ##
  tag: 7.0.4-debian-11-r1
  ## Specify a imagePullPolicy
  ## Defaults to 'Always' if image tag is 'latest', else set to 'IfNotPresent'
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/images/#pre-pulling-images
  ##
  pullPolicy: IfNotPresent
  ## Optionally specify an array of imagePullSecrets.
  ## Secrets must be manually created in the namespace.
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/pull-image-private-registry/
  ## e.g:
  ## pullSecrets:
  ##   - myRegistryKeySecretName
  ##
  pullSecrets: []
  ## Enable debug mode
  ##
  debug: false
## Network Policy
## @param networkPolicy.enabled Enable NetworkPolicy
## @param networkPolicy.allowExternal The Policy model to apply. Don't require client label for connections
## @param networkPolicy.ingressNSMatchLabels Allow connections from other namespacess. Just set label for namespace and set label for pods (optional).
## @param networkPolicy.ingressNSPodMatchLabels For other namespaces match by pod labels and namespace labels
##
networkPolicy:
  enabled: false
  ## When set to false, only pods with the correct
  ## client label will have network access to the port Redis® is listening
  ## on. When true, Redis® will accept connections from any source
  ## (with the correct destination port).
  ##
  allowExternal: true
  ingressNSMatchLabels: {}
  ingressNSPodMatchLabels: {}

serviceAccount:
  ## @param serviceAccount.create Specifies whether a ServiceAccount should be created
  ##
  create: false
  ## @param serviceAccount.name The name of the ServiceAccount to create
  ## If not set and create is true, a name is generated using the fullname template
  ##
  name: ""
  ## @param serviceAccount.annotations Annotations for Cassandra Service Account
  ##
  annotations: {}
  ## @param serviceAccount.automountServiceAccountToken Automount API credentials for a service account.
  ##
  automountServiceAccountToken: false

rbac:
  ## @param rbac.create Specifies whether RBAC resources should be created
  ##
  create: false
  role:
    ## @param rbac.role.rules Rules to create. It follows the role specification
    ## rules:
    ##  - apiGroups:
    ##    - extensions
    ##    resources:
    ##      - podsecuritypolicies
    ##    verbs:
    ##      - use
    ##    resourceNames:
    ##      - gce.unprivileged
    ##
    rules: []
## Redis® pod Security Context
## @param podSecurityContext.enabled Enable Redis® pod Security Context
## @param podSecurityContext.fsGroup Group ID for the pods
## @param podSecurityContext.runAsUser User ID for the pods
## @param podSecurityContext.sysctls Set namespaced sysctls for the pods
##
podSecurityContext:
  enabled: true
  fsGroup: 1001
  runAsUser: 1001
  ## Uncomment the setting below to increase the net.core.somaxconn value
  ## e.g:
  ## sysctls:
  ##   - name: net.core.somaxconn
  ##     value: "10000"
  ##
  sysctls: []
## @param podDisruptionBudget Limits the number of pods of the replicated application that are down simultaneously from voluntary disruptions
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/disruptions
##
podDisruptionBudget: {}
## @param minAvailable Min number of pods that must still be available after the eviction
##
minAvailable: ""
## @param maxUnavailable Max number of pods that can be unavailable after the eviction
##
maxUnavailable: ""
## Containers Security Context
## @param containerSecurityContext.enabled Enable Containers' Security Context
## @param containerSecurityContext.runAsUser User ID for the containers.
## @param containerSecurityContext.runAsNonRoot Run container as non root
##
containerSecurityContext:
  enabled: true
  runAsUser: 1001
  runAsNonRoot: true
## @param usePassword Use password authentication
##
usePassword: true
## @param password Redis® password (ignored if existingSecret set)
## Defaults to a random 10-character alphanumeric string if not set and usePassword is true
## ref: https://github.com/bitnami/bitnami-docker-redis#setting-the-server-password-on-first-run
##
password: ""
## @param existingSecret Name of existing secret object (for password authentication)
##
existingSecret: ""
## @param existingSecretPasswordKey Name of key containing password to be retrieved from the existing secret
##
existingSecretPasswordKey: ""
## @param usePasswordFile Mount passwords as files instead of environment variables
##
usePasswordFile: false
##
## TLS configuration
##
tls:
  ## @param tls.enabled Enable TLS support for replication traffic
  ##
  enabled: false
  ## @param tls.authClients Require clients to authenticate or not
  ##
  authClients: true
  ## @param tls.autoGenerated Generate automatically self-signed TLS certificates
  ##
  autoGenerated: false
  ## @param tls.existingSecret The name of the existing secret that contains the TLS certificates
  ##
  existingSecret: ""
  ## @param tls.certificatesSecret DEPRECATED. Use tls.existingSecret instead
  ##
  certificatesSecret: ""
  ## @param tls.certFilename Certificate filename
  ##
  certFilename: ""
  ## @param tls.certKeyFilename Certificate key filename
  ##
  certKeyFilename: ""
  ## @param tls.certCAFilename CA Certificate filename
  ##
  certCAFilename: ""
  ## @param tls.dhParamsFilename File containing DH params (in order to support DH based ciphers)
  ##
  dhParamsFilename: ""
## Redis® Service properties for standalone mode.
##
service:
  ## @param service.ports.redis Kubernetes Redis service port
  ##
  ports:
    redis: 6379
  ## Node ports to expose
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/service/#type-nodeport
  ## @param service.nodePorts.redis Node port for Redis
  ##
  nodePorts:
    redis: ""
  ## @param service.extraPorts Extra ports to expose in the service (normally used with the `sidecar` value)
  ##
  extraPorts: []
  ## @param service.annotations Provide any additional annotations which may be required.
  ## This can be used to set the LoadBalancer service type to internal only.
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/service/#internal-load-balancer
  ##
  annotations: {}
  ## @param service.labels Additional labels for redis service
  ##
  labels: {}
  ## @param service.type Service type for default redis service
  ## Setting this to LoadBalancer may require corresponding service annotations for loadbalancer creation to succeed.
  ## Currently supported types are ClusterIP (default) and LoadBalancer
  ##
  type: ClusterIP
  ## @param service.clusterIP Service Cluster IP
  ## e.g.:
  ## clusterIP: None
  ##
  clusterIP: ""
  ## @param service.loadBalancerIP Load balancer IP if `service.type` is `LoadBalancer`
  ## If service.type is LoadBalancer, request a specific static IP address if supported by the cloud provider, otherwise leave blank
  ##
  loadBalancerIP: ""
  ## @param service.loadBalancerSourceRanges Service Load Balancer sources
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/access-application-cluster/configure-cloud-provider-firewall/#restrict-access-for-loadbalancer-service
  ## e.g:
  ## loadBalancerSourceRanges:
  ##   - 10.10.10.0/24
  ##
  loadBalancerSourceRanges: []
  ## @param service.externalTrafficPolicy Service external traffic policy
  ## ref https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/access-application-cluster/create-external-load-balancer/#preserving-the-client-source-ip
  ##
  externalTrafficPolicy: Cluster
  ## @param service.sessionAffinity Session Affinity for Kubernetes service, can be "None" or "ClientIP"
  ## If "ClientIP", consecutive client requests will be directed to the same Pod
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/service/#virtual-ips-and-service-proxies
  ##
  sessionAffinity: None
  ## @param service.sessionAffinityConfig Additional settings for the sessionAffinity
  ## sessionAffinityConfig:
  ##   clientIP:
  ##     timeoutSeconds: 300
  ##
  sessionAffinityConfig: {}
## Enable persistence using Persistent Volume Claims
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/persistent-volumes/
##
persistence:
  ## @param persistence.path Path to mount the volume at, to use other images Redis® images.
  ##
  path: /bitnami/redis/data
  ## @param persistence.subPath The subdirectory of the volume to mount to, useful in dev environments and one PV for multiple services
  ##
  subPath: ""
  ## @param persistence.storageClass Storage class of backing PVC
  ## If defined, storageClassName: <storageClass>
  ## If set to "-", storageClassName: "", which disables dynamic provisioning
  ## If undefined (the default) or set to null, no storageClassName spec is
  ##   set, choosing the default provisioner.  (gp2 on AWS, standard on
  ##   GKE, AWS & OpenStack)
  ##
  storageClass: "redis-nfs-storage"
  ## @param persistence.annotations Persistent Volume Claim annotations
  ##
  annotations: {}
  ## @param persistence.accessModes Persistent Volume Access Modes
  ##
  accessModes:
    - ReadWriteOnce
  ## @param persistence.size Size of data volume
  ##
  size: 8Gi
  ## @param persistence.matchLabels Persistent Volume selectors
  ## https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/persistent-volumes/#selector
  ##
  matchLabels: {}
  ## @param persistence.matchExpressions matchExpressions Persistent Volume selectors
  ##
  matchExpressions: {}

## Init containers parameters:
## volumePermissions: Change the owner of the persist volume mountpoint to RunAsUser:fsGroup
##
volumePermissions:
  ## @param volumePermissions.enabled Enable init container that changes volume permissions in the registry (for cases where the default k8s `runAsUser` and `fsUser` values do not work)
  ##
  enabled: false
  ## @param volumePermissions.image.registry Init container volume-permissions image registry
  ## @param volumePermissions.image.repository Init container volume-permissions image repository
  ## @param volumePermissions.image.tag Init container volume-permissions image tag
  ## @param volumePermissions.image.pullPolicy Init container volume-permissions image pull policy
  ## @param volumePermissions.image.pullSecrets Specify docker-registry secret names as an array
  ##
  image:
    registry: docker.io
    repository: bitnami/bitnami-shell
    tag: 11-debian-11-r16
    pullPolicy: IfNotPresent
    ## Optionally specify an array of imagePullSecrets.
    ## Secrets must be manually created in the namespace.
    ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/pull-image-private-registry/
    ## e.g:
    ## pullSecrets:
    ##   - myRegistryKeySecretName
    ##
    pullSecrets: []
  ## Container resource requests and limits
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/compute-resources/
  ## @param volumePermissions.resources.limits The resources limits for the container
  ## @param volumePermissions.resources.requests The requested resources for the container
  ##
  resources:
    ## Example:
    ## limits:
    ##    cpu: 100m
    ##    memory: 128Mi
    ##
    limits: {}
    ## Examples:
    ## requests:
    ##    cpu: 100m
    ##    memory: 128Mi
    ##
    requests: {}
## PodSecurityPolicy configuration
## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/policy/pod-security-policy/
## @param podSecurityPolicy.create Whether to create a PodSecurityPolicy. WARNING: PodSecurityPolicy is deprecated in Kubernetes v1.21 or later, unavailable in v1.25 or later
##
podSecurityPolicy:
  create: false

## @section Redis&reg; statefulset parameters
##

redis:
  ## @param redis.command Redis&reg; entrypoint string. The command `redis-server` is executed if this is not provided
  ##
  command: []
  ## @param redis.args Arguments for the provided command if needed
  ##
  args: []
  ## @param redis.updateStrategy.type Argo Workflows statefulset strategy type
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/controllers/statefulset/#update-strategies
  ##
  updateStrategy:
    ## StrategyType
    ## Can be set to RollingUpdate or OnDelete
    ##
    type: RollingUpdate
    ## @param redis.updateStrategy.rollingUpdate.partition Partition update strategy
    ## https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/controllers/statefulset/#partitions
    ##
    rollingUpdate:
      partition: 0

  ## @param redis.podManagementPolicy Statefulset Pod management policy, it needs to be Parallel to be able to complete the cluster join
  ## Ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/controllers/statefulset/#pod-management-policies
  ##
  podManagementPolicy: Parallel
  ## @param redis.hostAliases Deployment pod host aliases
  ## https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/add-entries-to-pod-etc-hosts-with-host-aliases/
  ##
  hostAliases: []
  ## @param redis.hostNetwork Host networking requested for this pod. Use the host's network namespace.
  ## https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/generated/kubernetes-api/v1.22/#podspec-v1-core
  ##
  hostNetwork: false
  ## @param redis.useAOFPersistence Whether to use AOF Persistence mode or not
  ## It is strongly recommended to use this type when dealing with clusters
  ## ref: https://redis.io/topics/persistence#append-only-file
  ## ref: https://redis.io/topics/cluster-tutorial#creating-and-using-a-redis-cluster
  ##
  useAOFPersistence: "yes"
  ## @param redis.containerPorts.redis Redis&reg; port
  ## @param redis.containerPorts.bus The busPort should be obtained adding 10000 to the redisPort. By default: 10000 + 6379 = 16379
  ##
  containerPorts:
    redis: 6379
    bus: 16379
  ## @param redis.lifecycleHooks LifecycleHook to set additional configuration before or after startup. Evaluated as a template
  ##
  lifecycleHooks: {}
  ## @param redis.extraVolumes Extra volumes to add to the deployment
  ##
  extraVolumes: []
  ## @param redis.extraVolumeMounts Extra volume mounts to add to the container
  ##
  extraVolumeMounts: []
  ## @param redis.customLivenessProbe Override default liveness probe
  ##
  customLivenessProbe: {}
  ## @param redis.customReadinessProbe Override default readiness probe
  ##
  customReadinessProbe: {}
  ## @param redis.customStartupProbe Custom startupProbe that overrides the default one
  ##
  customStartupProbe: {}
  ## @param redis.initContainers Extra init containers to add to the deployment
  ##
  initContainers: []
  ## @param redis.sidecars Extra sidecar containers to add to the deployment
  ##
  sidecars: []
  ## @param redis.podLabels Additional labels for Redis&reg; pod
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/labels/
  ##
  podLabels: {}
  ## @param redis.priorityClassName Redis&reg; Master pod priorityClassName
  ##
  priorityClassName: ""
  ## @param redis.configmap Additional Redis&reg; configuration for the nodes
  ## ref: https://redis.io/topics/config
  ##
  configmap: ""
  ## @param redis.extraEnvVars An array to add extra environment variables
  ## For example:
  ##  - name: BEARER_AUTH
  ##    value: true
  ##
  extraEnvVars: []
  ## @param redis.extraEnvVarsCM ConfigMap with extra environment variables
  ##
  extraEnvVarsCM: ""
  ## @param redis.extraEnvVarsSecret Secret with extra environment variables
  ##
  extraEnvVarsSecret: ""
  ## @param redis.podAnnotations Redis&reg; additional annotations
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/labels/
  ##
  podAnnotations: {}
  ## Redis&reg; resource requests and limits
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/compute-resources/
  ## @param redis.resources.limits The resources limits for the container
  ## @param redis.resources.requests The requested resources for the container
  ##
  resources:
    ## Example:
    ## limits:
    ##    cpu: 100m
    ##    memory: 128Mi
    ##
    limits: {}
    ## Examples:
    ## requests:
    ##    cpu: 100m
    ##    memory: 128Mi
    ##
    requests: {}
  ## @param redis.schedulerName Use an alternate scheduler, e.g. "stork".
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/administer-cluster/configure-multiple-schedulers/
  ##
  schedulerName: ""
  ## @param redis.shareProcessNamespace Enable shared process namespace in a pod.
  ## If set to false (default), each container will run in separate namespace, redis will have PID=1.
  ## If set to true, the /pause will run as init process and will reap any zombie PIDs,
  ## for example, generated by a custom exec probe running longer than a probe timeoutSeconds.
  ## Enable this only if customLivenessProbe or customReadinessProbe is used and zombie PIDs are accumulating.
  ## Ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/share-process-namespace/
  ##
  shareProcessNamespace: false
  ## Configure extra options for Redis&reg; liveness probes
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/configure-liveness-readiness-probes/#configure-probes)
  ## @param redis.livenessProbe.enabled Enable livenessProbe
  ## @param redis.livenessProbe.initialDelaySeconds Initial delay seconds for livenessProbe
  ## @param redis.livenessProbe.periodSeconds Period seconds for livenessProbe
  ## @param redis.livenessProbe.timeoutSeconds Timeout seconds for livenessProbe
  ## @param redis.livenessProbe.failureThreshold Failure threshold for livenessProbe
  ## @param redis.livenessProbe.successThreshold Success threshold for livenessProbe
  ##
  livenessProbe:
    enabled: true
    initialDelaySeconds: 5
    periodSeconds: 5
    timeoutSeconds: 5
    successThreshold: 1
    failureThreshold: 5
  ## Configure extra options for Redis&reg; readiness probes
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/configure-liveness-readiness-probes/#configure-probes)
  ## @param redis.readinessProbe.enabled Enable readinessProbe
  ## @param redis.readinessProbe.initialDelaySeconds Initial delay seconds for readinessProbe
  ## @param redis.readinessProbe.periodSeconds Period seconds for readinessProbe
  ## @param redis.readinessProbe.timeoutSeconds Timeout seconds for readinessProbe
  ## @param redis.readinessProbe.failureThreshold Failure threshold for readinessProbe
  ## @param redis.readinessProbe.successThreshold Success threshold for readinessProbe
  ##
  readinessProbe:
    enabled: true
    initialDelaySeconds: 5
    periodSeconds: 5
    timeoutSeconds: 1
    successThreshold: 1
    failureThreshold: 5
  ## @param redis.startupProbe.enabled Enable startupProbe
  ## @param redis.startupProbe.path Path to check for startupProbe
  ## @param redis.startupProbe.initialDelaySeconds Initial delay seconds for startupProbe
  ## @param redis.startupProbe.periodSeconds Period seconds for startupProbe
  ## @param redis.startupProbe.timeoutSeconds Timeout seconds for startupProbe
  ## @param redis.startupProbe.failureThreshold Failure threshold for startupProbe
  ## @param redis.startupProbe.successThreshold Success threshold for startupProbe
  ##
  startupProbe:
    enabled: false
    path: /
    initialDelaySeconds: 300
    periodSeconds: 10
    timeoutSeconds: 5
    failureThreshold: 6
    successThreshold: 1
  ## @param redis.podAffinityPreset Redis&reg; pod affinity preset. Ignored if `redis.affinity` is set. Allowed values: `soft` or `hard`
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/scheduling-eviction/assign-pod-node/#inter-pod-affinity-and-anti-affinity
  ##
  podAffinityPreset: ""
  ## @param redis.podAntiAffinityPreset Redis&reg; pod anti-affinity preset. Ignored if `redis.affinity` is set. Allowed values: `soft` or `hard`
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/scheduling-eviction/assign-pod-node/#inter-pod-affinity-and-anti-affinity
  ##
  podAntiAffinityPreset: soft
  ## Redis&reg; node affinity preset
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/scheduling-eviction/assign-pod-node/#node-affinity
  ##
  nodeAffinityPreset:
    ## @param redis.nodeAffinityPreset.type Redis&reg; node affinity preset type. Ignored if `redis.affinity` is set. Allowed values: `soft` or `hard`
    ##
    type: ""
    ## @param redis.nodeAffinityPreset.key Redis&reg; node label key to match Ignored if `redis.affinity` is set.
    ## E.g.
    ## key: "kubernetes.io/e2e-az-name"
    ##
    key: ""
    ## @param redis.nodeAffinityPreset.values Redis&reg; node label values to match. Ignored if `redis.affinity` is set.
    ## E.g.
    ## values:
    ##   - e2e-az1
    ##   - e2e-az2
    ##
    values: []
  ## @param redis.affinity Affinity settings for Redis&reg; pod assignment
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/assign-pod-node/#affinity-and-anti-affinity
  ## Note: redis.podAffinityPreset, redis.podAntiAffinityPreset, and redis.nodeAffinityPreset will be ignored when it's set
  ##
  affinity: {}
  ## @param redis.nodeSelector Node labels for Redis&reg; pods assignment
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/node-selection/
  ##
  nodeSelector: {}
  ## @param redis.tolerations Tolerations for Redis&reg; pods assignment
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/taint-and-toleration/
  ##
  tolerations: []
  ## @param redis.topologySpreadConstraints Pod topology spread constraints for Redis&reg; pod
  ## https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/pod-topology-spread-constraints/
  ## The value is evaluated as a template
  ##
  topologySpreadConstraints: []

## @section Cluster update job parameters
##

## Cluster update job settings
##
updateJob:
  ## @param updateJob.activeDeadlineSeconds Number of seconds the Job to create the cluster will be waiting for the Nodes to be ready.
  ##
  activeDeadlineSeconds: 600
  ## @param updateJob.command Container command (using container default if not set)
  ##
  command: []
  ## @param updateJob.args Container args (using container default if not set)
  ##
  args: []
  ## @param updateJob.hostAliases Deployment pod host aliases
  ## https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/add-entries-to-pod-etc-hosts-with-host-aliases/
  ##
  hostAliases: []
  ## @param updateJob.annotations Job annotations
  ##
  annotations: {}
  ## @param updateJob.podAnnotations Job pod annotations
  ##
  podAnnotations: {}
  ## @param updateJob.podLabels Pod extra labels
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/labels/
  ##
  podLabels: {}
  ## @param updateJob.extraEnvVars An array to add extra environment variables
  ## For example:
  ##  - name: BEARER_AUTH
  ##    value: true
  ##
  extraEnvVars: []
  ## @param updateJob.extraEnvVarsCM ConfigMap containing extra environment variables
  ##
  extraEnvVarsCM: ""
  ## @param updateJob.extraEnvVarsSecret Secret containing extra environment variables
  ##
  extraEnvVarsSecret: ""
  ## @param updateJob.extraVolumes Extra volumes to add to the deployment
  ##
  extraVolumes: []
  ## @param updateJob.extraVolumeMounts Extra volume mounts to add to the container
  ##
  extraVolumeMounts: []
  ## @param updateJob.initContainers Extra init containers to add to the deployment
  ##
  initContainers: []
  ## @param updateJob.podAffinityPreset Update job pod affinity preset. Ignored if `updateJob.affinity` is set. Allowed values: `soft` or `hard`
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/scheduling-eviction/assign-pod-node/#inter-pod-affinity-and-anti-affinity
  ##
  podAffinityPreset: ""
  ## @param updateJob.podAntiAffinityPreset Update job pod anti-affinity preset. Ignored if `updateJob.affinity` is set. Allowed values: `soft` or `hard`
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/scheduling-eviction/assign-pod-node/#inter-pod-affinity-and-anti-affinity
  ##
  podAntiAffinityPreset: soft
  ## Update job node affinity preset
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/scheduling-eviction/assign-pod-node/#node-affinity
  ##
  nodeAffinityPreset:
    ## @param updateJob.nodeAffinityPreset.type Update job node affinity preset type. Ignored if `updateJob.affinity` is set. Allowed values: `soft` or `hard`
    ##
    type: ""
    ## @param updateJob.nodeAffinityPreset.key Update job node label key to match Ignored if `updateJob.affinity` is set.
    ## E.g.
    ## key: "kubernetes.io/e2e-az-name"
    ##
    key: ""
    ## @param updateJob.nodeAffinityPreset.values Update job node label values to match. Ignored if `updateJob.affinity` is set.
    ## E.g.
    ## values:
    ##   - e2e-az1
    ##   - e2e-az2
    ##
    values: []
  ## @param updateJob.affinity Affinity for update job pods assignment
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/assign-pod-node/#affinity-and-anti-affinity
  ## Note: updateJob.podAffinityPreset, updateJob.podAntiAffinityPreset, and updateJob.nodeAffinityPreset will be ignored when it's set
  ##
  affinity: {}
  ## @param updateJob.nodeSelector Node labels for update job pods assignment
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/node-selection/
  ##
  nodeSelector: {}
  ## @param updateJob.tolerations Tolerations for update job pods assignment
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/configuration/taint-and-toleration/
  ##
  tolerations: []
  ## @param updateJob.priorityClassName Priority class name
  ##
  priorityClassName: ""
  ## Container resource requests and limits
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/compute-resources/
  ## We usually recommend not to specify default resources and to leave this as a conscious
  ## choice for the user. This also increases chances charts run on environments with little
  ## resources, such as Minikube. If you do want to specify resources, uncomment the following
  ## lines, adjust them as necessary, and remove the curly braces after 'resources:'.
  ## @param updateJob.resources.limits The resources limits for the container
  ## @param updateJob.resources.requests The requested resources for the container
  ##
  resources:
    ## Example:
    ## limits:
    ##    cpu: 500m
    ##    memory: 1Gi
    ##
    limits: {}
    ## Examples:
    ## requests:
    ##    cpu: 250m
    ##    memory: 256Mi
    ##
    requests: {}

## @section Cluster management parameters
##

## Redis&reg; Cluster settings
##
cluster:
  ## @param cluster.init Enable the initialization of the Redis&reg; Cluster
  ##
  init: true
  ## Number of Redis&reg; nodes to be deployed
  ##
  ## Note:
  ## This is total number of nodes including the replicas. Meaning there will be 3 master and 3 replica
  ## nodes (as replica count is set to 1 by default, there will be 1 replica per master node).
  ## Hence, nodes = numberOfMasterNodes + numberOfMasterNodes * replicas
  ##
  ## @param cluster.nodes The number of master nodes should always be >= 3, otherwise cluster creation will fail
  ##
  nodes: 6
  ## @param cluster.replicas Number of replicas for every master in the cluster
  ## Parameter to be passed as --cluster-replicas to the redis-cli --cluster create
  ## 1 means that we want a replica for every master created
  ##
  replicas: 2
  ## Configuration to access the Redis&reg; Cluster from outside the Kubernetes cluster
  ##
  externalAccess:
    ## @param cluster.externalAccess.enabled Enable access to the Redis
    ##
    enabled: false
    service:
      ## @param cluster.externalAccess.service.type Type for the services used to expose every Pod
      ## At this moment only LoadBalancer is supported
      ##
      type: LoadBalancer
      ## @param cluster.externalAccess.service.port Port for the services used to expose every Pod
      ##
      port: 6379
      ## @param cluster.externalAccess.service.loadBalancerIP Array of load balancer IPs for each Redis&reg; node. Length must be the same as cluster.nodes
      ##
      loadBalancerIP: []
      ## @param cluster.externalAccess.service.loadBalancerSourceRanges Service Load Balancer sources
      ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/access-application-cluster/configure-cloud-provider-firewall/#restrict-access-for-loadbalancer-service
      ## e.g:
      ## loadBalancerSourceRanges:
      ##   - 10.10.10.0/24
      ##
      loadBalancerSourceRanges: []
      ## @param cluster.externalAccess.service.annotations Annotations to add to the services used to expose every Pod of the Redis&reg; Cluster
      ##
      annotations: {}
  ## This section allows to update the Redis&reg; cluster nodes.
  ##
  update:
    ## @param cluster.update.addNodes Boolean to specify if you want to add nodes after the upgrade
    ## Setting this to true a hook will add nodes to the Redis&reg; cluster after the upgrade. currentNumberOfNodes and currentNumberOfReplicas is required
    ##
    addNodes: true
    ## @param cluster.update.currentNumberOfNodes Number of currently deployed Redis&reg; nodes
    ##
    currentNumberOfNodes: 6
    ## @param cluster.update.currentNumberOfReplicas Number of currently deployed Redis&reg; replicas
    ##
    currentNumberOfReplicas: 1
    ## @param cluster.update.newExternalIPs External IPs obtained from the services for the new nodes to add to the cluster
    ##
    newExternalIPs: []

## @section Metrics sidecar parameters
##

## Prometheus Exporter / Metrics
##
metrics:
  ## @param metrics.enabled Start a side-car prometheus exporter
  ##
  enabled: false
  ## @param metrics.image.registry Redis&reg; exporter image registry
  ## @param metrics.image.repository Redis&reg; exporter image name
  ## @param metrics.image.tag Redis&reg; exporter image tag
  ## @param metrics.image.pullPolicy Redis&reg; exporter image pull policy
  ## @param metrics.image.pullSecrets Specify docker-registry secret names as an array
  ##
  image:
    registry: docker.io
    repository: bitnami/redis-exporter
    tag: 1.43.0-debian-11-r9
    pullPolicy: IfNotPresent
    ## Optionally specify an array of imagePullSecrets.
    ## Secrets must be manually created in the namespace.
    ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/pull-image-private-registry/
    ## e.g:
    ## pullSecrets:
    ##   - myRegistryKeySecretName
    ##
    pullSecrets: []
  ## @param metrics.resources Metrics exporter resource requests and limits
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/compute-resources/
  ##
  resources: {}
  ## @param metrics.extraArgs Extra arguments for the binary; possible values [here](https://github.com/oliver006/redis_exporter
  ## extraArgs:
  ##   check-keys: myKey,myOtherKey
  ##
  extraArgs: {}
  ## @param metrics.podAnnotations [object] Additional annotations for Metrics exporter pod
  ##
  podAnnotations:
    prometheus.io/scrape: "true"
    prometheus.io/port: "9121"
  ## @param metrics.podLabels Additional labels for Metrics exporter pod
  ##
  podLabels: {}
  ## Containers' Security Context - All fields other than `enabled` get added to the metrics container's security context
  ## @param metrics.containerSecurityContext.enabled Enable Metrics Containers' Security Context
  ## @param metrics.containerSecurityContext.allowPrivilegeEscalation Allow Privilege Escalation for metrics container
  ##
  containerSecurityContext:
    enabled: false
    allowPrivilegeEscalation: false
  ## Enable this if you're using https://github.com/coreos/prometheus-operator
  ##
  serviceMonitor:
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.enabled If `true`, creates a Prometheus Operator ServiceMonitor (also requires `metrics.enabled` to be `true`)
    ##
    enabled: false
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.namespace Optional namespace which Prometheus is running in
    ##
    namespace: ""
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.interval How frequently to scrape metrics (use by default, falling back to Prometheus' default)
    ##
    interval: ""
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.scrapeTimeout Timeout after which the scrape is ended
    ## ref: https://github.com/coreos/prometheus-operator/blob/master/Documentation/api.md#endpoint
    ## e.g:
    ## scrapeTimeout: 10s
    ##
    scrapeTimeout: ""
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.selector Prometheus instance selector labels
    ## ref: https://github.com/bitnami/charts/tree/master/bitnami/prometheus-operator#prometheus-configuration
    ## e.g:
    ## selector:
    ##   prometheus: my-prometheus
    ##
    selector: {}
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.labels ServiceMonitor extra labels
    ##
    labels: {}
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.annotations ServiceMonitor annotations
    ##
    annotations: {}
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.jobLabel The name of the label on the target service to use as the job name in prometheus.
    ##
    jobLabel: ""
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.relabelings RelabelConfigs to apply to samples before scraping
    ## ref: https://github.com/coreos/prometheus-operator/blob/master/Documentation/api.md#relabelconfig
    ##
    relabelings: []
    ## @param metrics.serviceMonitor.metricRelabelings MetricRelabelConfigs to apply to samples before ingestion
    ## ref: https://github.com/coreos/prometheus-operator/blob/master/Documentation/api.md#relabelconfig
    ##
    metricRelabelings: []
  ## Custom PrometheusRule to be defined
  ## The value is evaluated as a template, so, for example, the value can depend on .Release or .Chart
  ## ref: https://github.com/coreos/prometheus-operator#customresourcedefinitions
  ## @param metrics.prometheusRule.enabled Set this to true to create prometheusRules for Prometheus operator
  ## @param metrics.prometheusRule.additionalLabels Additional labels that can be used so prometheusRules will be discovered by Prometheus
  ## @param metrics.prometheusRule.namespace namespace where prometheusRules resource should be created
  ## @param metrics.prometheusRule.rules Create specified [rules](https://prometheus.io/docs/prometheus/latest/configuration/alerting_rules/), check values for an example.
  ##
  prometheusRule:
    enabled: false
    additionalLabels: {}
    namespace: ""
    ## These are just examples rules, please adapt them to your needs.
    ## Make sure to constraint the rules to the current postgresql service.
    ##  - alert: RedisDown
    ##    expr: redis_up{service="{{ template "common.names.fullname" . }}-metrics"} == 0
    ##    for: 2m
    ##    labels:
    ##      severity: error
    ##    annotations:
    ##      summary: Redis&reg; instance {{ "{{ $instance }}" }} down
    ##      description: Redis&reg; instance {{ "{{ $instance }}" }} is down.
    ##  - alert: RedisMemoryHigh
    ##    expr: >
    ##       redis_memory_used_bytes{service="{{ template "common.names.fullname" . }}-metrics"} * 100
    ##       /
    ##       redis_memory_max_bytes{service="{{ template "common.names.fullname" . }}-metrics"}
    ##       > 90
    ##    for: 2m
    ##    labels:
    ##      severity: error
    ##    annotations:
    ##      summary: Redis&reg; instance {{ "{{ $instance }}" }} is using too much memory
    ##      description: Redis&reg; instance {{ "{{ $instance }}" }} is using {{ "{{ $value }}" }}% of its available memory.
    ##  - alert: RedisKeyEviction
    ##    expr: increase(redis_evicted_keys_total{service="{{ template "common.names.fullname" . }}-metrics"}[5m]) > 0
    ##    for: 1s
    ##    labels:
    ##      severity: error
    ##    annotations:
    ##      summary: Redis&reg; instance {{ "{{ $instance }}" }} has evicted keys
    ##      description: Redis&reg; instance {{ "{{ $instance }}" }} has evicted {{ "{{ $value }}" }} keys in the last 5 minutes.
    ##
    rules: []
  ## @param metrics.priorityClassName Metrics exporter pod priorityClassName
  ##
  priorityClassName: ""
  ## @param metrics.service.type Kubernetes Service type (redis metrics)
  ## @param metrics.service.loadBalancerIP Use serviceLoadBalancerIP to request a specific static IP, otherwise leave blank
  ## @param metrics.service.annotations Annotations for the services to monitor.
  ## @param metrics.service.labels Additional labels for the metrics service
  ##
  service:
    type: ClusterIP
    ## @param metrics.service.clusterIP Service Cluster IP
    ## e.g.:
    ## clusterIP: None
    ##
    clusterIP: ""
    loadBalancerIP: ""
    annotations: {}
    labels: {}

## @section Sysctl Image parameters
##

## Sysctl InitContainer
## Used to perform sysctl operation to modify Kernel settings (needed sometimes to avoid warnings)
##
sysctlImage:
  ## @param sysctlImage.enabled Enable an init container to modify Kernel settings
  ##
  enabled: false
  ## @param sysctlImage.command sysctlImage command to execute
  ##
  command: []
  ## @param sysctlImage.registry sysctlImage Init container registry
  ## @param sysctlImage.repository sysctlImage Init container repository
  ## @param sysctlImage.tag sysctlImage Init container tag
  ## @param sysctlImage.pullPolicy sysctlImage Init container pull policy
  ## @param sysctlImage.pullSecrets Specify docker-registry secret names as an array
  ##
  registry: docker.io
  repository: bitnami/bitnami-shell
  tag: 11-debian-11-r16
  pullPolicy: IfNotPresent
  ## Optionally specify an array of imagePullSecrets.
  ## Secrets must be manually created in the namespace.
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/pull-image-private-registry/
  ## e.g:
  ## pullSecrets:
  ##   - myRegistryKeySecretName
  ##
  pullSecrets: []
  ## @param sysctlImage.mountHostSys Mount the host `/sys` folder to `/host-sys`
  ##
  mountHostSys: false
  ## Container resource requests and limits
  ## ref: https://kubernetes.io/docs/user-guide/compute-resources/
  ## @param sysctlImage.resources.limits The resources limits for the container
  ## @param sysctlImage.resources.requests The requested resources for the container
  ##
  resources:
    ## Example:
    ## limits:
    ##    cpu: 500m
    ##    memory: 1000Mi
    ##
    limits: {}
    ## Examples:
    ## requests:
    ##    cpu: 100m
    ##    memory: 1128Mi
    ##
    requests: {}

开始安装:
在这里插入图片描述

应用中已经创建:
在这里插入图片描述

工作负载中开创建有状态副本集:
在这里插入图片描述

redis集群创建成功
在这里插入图片描述

修改redis 的 CPU 和 内存配置

在这里插入图片描述

在这里插入图片描述
在这里插入图片描述

2.2、redis写入数据及查询

2.2.1、在节点redis-redis-cluster-0写入数据

打开终端 热输入命令: redis-cli -c -p 6379

$ redis-cli -c -p 6379
127.0.0.1:6379> set a 123
-> Redirected to slot [15495] located at 10.233.81.117:6379
OK
10.233.81.117:6379> get a
"123"
10.233.81.117:6379>

2.2.1、在节点redis-redis-cluster-1 读取数据

打开终端 热输入命令: redis-cli -c -p 6379   /   redis-cli -h ip -c -p 6379

$ redis-cli -c -p 6379
127.0.0.1:6379> get a
-> Redirected to slot [15495] located at 10.233.81.117:6379
"123"
10.233.81.117:6379>

2.3、配置redis外网访问

2.3.1、配置外部访问端口

在这里插入图片描述
在这里插入图片描述
在这里插入图片描述
在这里插入图片描述

将默认生成的配置更改为自己的配置文件路径
在这里插入图片描述

2.3.2 创建ACL用户及权限(当前redis版本:7.0.4;6.0版本以上才设置)

官网地址:https://redis.io/topics/acl

1、ACL规则:

开启和禁用用户:

  • on:激活用户账号
  • off:禁用用户账号。已验证通过的用户的连接仍然可以工作。如果默认用户被标记为off,则新连接将在未进行身份验证的情况下启动,并要求用户使用AUTH选项发送AUTH或HELLO进行身份验证。

权限的添加删除:

  • +<command>
    将指令添加到用户可以调用的指令列表中,可以使用“|”指定允许的子命令(例如+config|get);
  • -<command>
    从用户可执行指令列表移除指令,当前版本不支持“|”指定允许的子命令;
  • +@<category>
    添加该类别中用户要调用的所有指令,有效类别通过调用ACL CAT命令查看完整列表(admin、set、sortedsetd、string、list等)。特殊类别@all表示所有命令,包括当前存在于服务器中的命令,以及将来将通过模块加载的命令;
  • -@<category>
    从用户可调用命令列表里移除该类别;
  • allcommands
    是+@all的别名,将支持未来加载的模块命令;
  • nocommands
    是-@all的别名,禁用所有命令;

可操作键和键权限添加或删除:

  • ∼<pattern>
    将一个键模式添加到命令可以使用的键列表里,~*将允许命令使用所有键,可以设定多个键模式;
  • %R~<pattern>
    添加只读键模式;
  • %W~<pattern>
    添加只写键模式;
  • %RW~<pattern>
    ∼<pattern>的别名;
  • allkeys
    ~*的别名;
  • resetkeys
    清空之前的键模式列表;

2、ACL命令:

127.0.0.1:6379> acl help
1) ACL <subcommand> [<arg> [value] [opt] ...]. Subcommands are:  #语法
2) CAT [<category>]    #当不指定category时候将查询出所有的category,指定category则查询出该类别中全部命令
3)     List all commands that belong to <category>, or all command categories
4)     when no category is specified.
5) DELUSER <username> [<username> ...]    #删除用户列表
6)     Delete a list of users.
7) DRYRUN <username> <command> [<arg> ...]   #查询用户是否有权限执行指定的命令
8)     Returns whether the user can execute the given command without executing the command.
9) GETUSER <username>   # 获取用户详情列表,包括权限、通道、选择器、密码(加密)等
10)     Get the user's details.
11) GENPASS [<bits>]   #生成一个256位的用户密码,也可以通过指定bits设置不同的位数
12)     Generate a secure 256-bit user password. The optional `bits` argument can
13)     be used to specify a different size.
14) LIST    #查询用户列表
15)     Show users details in config file format.
16) LOAD  #重新加载用户的ACL文件
17)     Reload users from the ACL file.
18) LOG [<count> | RESET]    #查询ACL日志,指定count为查询条数,添加 RESET 清空日志
19)     Show the ACL log entries.
20) SAVE  #保存ACL配置文件
21)     Save the current config to the ACL file.
22) SETUSER <username> <attribute> [<attribute> ...]    #创建修改用户ACL属性
23)     Create or modify a user with the specified attributes.
24) USERS     #查询创建的用户名
25)     List all the registered usernames.
26) WHOAMI    #查询当前已经连接的用户名
27)     Return the current connection username.
28) HELP   #打印帮助信息
29)     Prints this help.

3、ACL命令创建用户及授权:

1、用户创建密码和授权

此处我是授的全部的权限,这里可以根据自己的需求给用户创建权限,比如 授权只能设置和获取 以abc开头的key值 :acl setuser jzb on >jzb123456 ~abc* +get (~abc* +set)

127.0.0.1:6379>  acl setuser jzb on >jzb123456 ~* +@all
OK
127.0.0.1:6379> acl list
1) "user default on #c4e97b9e2b67eb61a01a876718ff6420bfc9d6903ecc555985148fd3ac7d8308 ~* &* +@all"
2) "user jzb on #37fc1569f393141f21a8abd869a113c2b0a8d842d5f71d2e1c907c07c8ac07c5 ~* resetchannels +@all"

提示:此方式只能单独设置某一个节点的信息,不能批量设置

2、集群方式创建账户

  • 先在任意的节点创建账号
127.0.0.1:6379>  acl setuser jzb on >jzb123456 ~* +@all
OK
127.0.0.1:6379> acl list
1) "user default on #c4e97b9e2b67eb61a01a876718ff6420bfc9d6903ecc555985148fd3ac7d8308 ~* &* +@all"
2) "user jzb on #37fc1569f393141f21a8abd869a113c2b0a8d842d5f71d2e1c907c07c8ac07c5 ~* resetchannels +@all"
  • 复制 acl list 下的内容到 redis-default.conf中,重新创建副本
    在这里插入图片描述
  • 任意进入一个node节点终端,检查设置是否成功
$ redis-cli
127.0.0.1:6379> acl list
1) "user default on sanitize-payload #c4e97b9e2b67eb61a01a876718ff6420bfc9d6903ecc555985148fd3ac7d8308 ~* &* +@all"
2) "user jzb on #37fc1569f393141f21a8abd869a113c2b0a8d842d5f71d2e1c907c07c8ac07c5 ~* resetchannels +@all"
127.0.0.1:6379> acl getuser jzb
1) "flags"
2) 1) "on"
3) "passwords"
4) 1) "37fc1569f393141f21a8abd869a113c2b0a8d842d5f71d2e1c907c07c8ac07c5"
5) "commands"
6) "+@all"
7) "keys"
8) "~*"
9) "channels"
10) ""
11) "selectors"
12) (empty array)
127.0.0.1:6379>
  • 使用RedisInsight 访问测试
    RedisInsight 使用docker pull redislabs/redisinsight:1.12.1安装
    能正常连接三个主节点,三个从节点:
    在这里插入图片描述
    在这里插入图片描述

2.3.3、redis-default.conf 配置文件

1、redis可以设置IO多线程,默认是不开启多线程
io-threads-do-reads yes
io-threads 4
2、集群模式下,数据库默认是1个,单机模式下支持16个数据库
官方文档:https://redis.io/docs/reference/cluster-spec/
127.0.0.1:6379> select 0
OK
127.0.0.1:6379> select 1
(error) ERR SELECT is not allowed in cluster mode
3、监听地址
bind 0.0.0.0
4、开启 AOF 持久化功能
appendonly yes
5、关闭保护模式,允许远程访问
protected-mode no

redis-default.conf 中的配置可以根据自己的需求修改

# Redis configuration file example.
#
# Note that in order to read the configuration file, Redis must be
# started with the file path as first argument:
#
# ./redis-server /path/to/redis.conf

# Note on units: when memory size is needed, it is possible to specify
# it in the usual form of 1k 5GB 4M and so forth:
#
# 1k => 1000 bytes
# 1kb => 1024 bytes
# 1m => 1000000 bytes
# 1mb => 1024*1024 bytes
# 1g => 1000000000 bytes
# 1gb => 1024*1024*1024 bytes
#
# units are case insensitive so 1GB 1Gb 1gB are all the same.

################################## INCLUDES ###################################

# Include one or more other config files here.  This is useful if you
# have a standard template that goes to all Redis servers but also need
# to customize a few per-server settings.  Include files can include
# other files, so use this wisely.
#
# Note that option "include" won't be rewritten by command "CONFIG REWRITE"
# from admin or Redis Sentinel. Since Redis always uses the last processed
# line as value of a configuration directive, you'd better put includes
# at the beginning of this file to avoid overwriting config change at runtime.
#
# If instead you are interested in using includes to override configuration
# options, it is better to use include as the last line.
#
# Included paths may contain wildcards. All files matching the wildcards will
# be included in alphabetical order.
# Note that if an include path contains a wildcards but no files match it when
# the server is started, the include statement will be ignored and no error will
# be emitted.  It is safe, therefore, to include wildcard files from empty
# directories.
#
# include /path/to/local.conf
# include /path/to/other.conf
# include /path/to/fragments/*.conf
#

################################## MODULES #####################################

# Load modules at startup. If the server is not able to load modules
# it will abort. It is possible to use multiple loadmodule directives.
#
# loadmodule /path/to/my_module.so
# loadmodule /path/to/other_module.so

################################## NETWORK #####################################

# By default, if no "bind" configuration directive is specified, Redis listens
# for connections from all available network interfaces on the host machine.
# It is possible to listen to just one or multiple selected interfaces using
# the "bind" configuration directive, followed by one or more IP addresses.
# Each address can be prefixed by "-", which means that redis will not fail to
# start if the address is not available. Being not available only refers to
# addresses that does not correspond to any network interface. Addresses that
# are already in use will always fail, and unsupported protocols will always BE
# silently skipped.
#
# Examples:
#
# bind 192.168.1.100 10.0.0.1     # listens on two specific IPv4 addresses
# bind 127.0.0.1 ::1              # listens on loopback IPv4 and IPv6
# bind * -::*                     # like the default, all available interfaces
#
# ~~~ WARNING ~~~ If the computer running Redis is directly exposed to the
# internet, binding to all the interfaces is dangerous and will expose the
# instance to everybody on the internet. So by default we uncomment the
# following bind directive, that will force Redis to listen only on the
# IPv4 and IPv6 (if available) loopback interface addresses (this means Redis
# will only be able to accept client connections from the same host that it is
# running on).
#
# IF YOU ARE SURE YOU WANT YOUR INSTANCE TO LISTEN TO ALL THE INTERFACES
# COMMENT OUT THE FOLLOWING LINE.
#
# You will also need to set a password unless you explicitly disable protected
# mode.
# ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
# bind 127.0.0.1 -::1
bind 0.0.0.0

# By default, outgoing connections (from replica to master, from Sentinel to
# instances, cluster bus, etc.) are not bound to a specific local address. In
# most cases, this means the operating system will handle that based on routing
# and the interface through which the connection goes out.
#
# Using bind-source-addr it is possible to configure a specific address to bind
# to, which may also affect how the connection gets routed.
#
# Example:
#
# bind-source-addr 10.0.0.1

# Protected mode is a layer of security protection, in order to avoid that
# Redis instances left open on the internet are accessed and exploited.
#
# When protected mode is on and the default user has no password, the server
# only accepts local connections from the IPv4 address (127.0.0.1), IPv6 address
# (::1) or Unix domain sockets.
#
# By default protected mode is enabled. You should disable it only if
# you are sure you want clients from other hosts to connect to Redis
# even if no authentication is configured.
# protected-mode yes
protected-mode no

# Redis uses default hardened security configuration directives to reduce the
# attack surface on innocent users. Therefore, several sensitive configuration
# directives are immutable, and some potentially-dangerous commands are blocked.
#
# Configuration directives that control files that Redis writes to (e.g., 'dir'
# and 'dbfilename') and that aren't usually modified during runtime
# are protected by making them immutable.
#
# Commands that can increase the attack surface of Redis and that aren't usually
# called by users are blocked by default.
#
# These can be exposed to either all connections or just local ones by setting
# each of the configs listed below to either of these values:
#
# no    - Block for any connection (remain immutable)
# yes   - Allow for any connection (no protection)
# local - Allow only for local connections. Ones originating from the
#         IPv4 address (127.0.0.1), IPv6 address (::1) or Unix domain sockets.
#
# enable-protected-configs no
# enable-debug-command no
# enable-module-command no

# Accept connections on the specified port, default is 6379 (IANA #815344).
# If port 0 is specified Redis will not listen on a TCP socket.
port 6379

# TCP listen() backlog.
#
# In high requests-per-second environments you need a high backlog in order
# to avoid slow clients connection issues. Note that the Linux kernel
# will silently truncate it to the value of /proc/sys/net/core/somaxconn so
# make sure to raise both the value of somaxconn and tcp_max_syn_backlog
# in order to get the desired effect.
tcp-backlog 511

# Unix socket.
#
# Specify the path for the Unix socket that will be used to listen for
# incoming connections. There is no default, so Redis will not listen
# on a unix socket when not specified.
#
# unixsocket /run/redis.sock
# unixsocketperm 700

# Close the connection after a client is idle for N seconds (0 to disable)
timeout 0

# TCP keepalive.
#
# If non-zero, use SO_KEEPALIVE to send TCP ACKs to clients in absence
# of communication. This is useful for two reasons:
#
# 1) Detect dead peers.
# 2) Force network equipment in the middle to consider the connection to be
#    alive.
#
# On Linux, the specified value (in seconds) is the period used to send ACKs.
# Note that to close the connection the double of the time is needed.
# On other kernels the period depends on the kernel configuration.
#
# A reasonable value for this option is 300 seconds, which is the new
# Redis default starting with Redis 3.2.1.
tcp-keepalive 300

# Apply OS-specific mechanism to mark the listening socket with the specified
# ID, to support advanced routing and filtering capabilities.
#
# On Linux, the ID represents a connection mark.
# On FreeBSD, the ID represents a socket cookie ID.
# On OpenBSD, the ID represents a route table ID.
#
# The default value is 0, which implies no marking is required.
# socket-mark-id 0

################################# TLS/SSL #####################################

# By default, TLS/SSL is disabled. To enable it, the "tls-port" configuration
# directive can be used to define TLS-listening ports. To enable TLS on the
# default port, use:
#
# port 0
# tls-port 6379

# Configure a X.509 certificate and private key to use for authenticating the
# server to connected clients, masters or cluster peers.  These files should be
# PEM formatted.
#
# tls-cert-file redis.crt
# tls-key-file redis.key
#
# If the key file is encrypted using a passphrase, it can be included here
# as well.
#
# tls-key-file-pass secret

# Normally Redis uses the same certificate for both server functions (accepting
# connections) and client functions (replicating from a master, establishing
# cluster bus connections, etc.).
#
# Sometimes certificates are issued with attributes that designate them as
# client-only or server-only certificates. In that case it may be desired to use
# different certificates for incoming (server) and outgoing (client)
# connections. To do that, use the following directives:
#
# tls-client-cert-file client.crt
# tls-client-key-file client.key
#
# If the key file is encrypted using a passphrase, it can be included here
# as well.
#
# tls-client-key-file-pass secret

# Configure a DH parameters file to enable Diffie-Hellman (DH) key exchange,
# required by older versions of OpenSSL (<3.0). Newer versions do not require
# this configuration and recommend against it.
#
# tls-dh-params-file redis.dh

# Configure a CA certificate(s) bundle or directory to authenticate TLS/SSL
# clients and peers.  Redis requires an explicit configuration of at least one
# of these, and will not implicitly use the system wide configuration.
#
# tls-ca-cert-file ca.crt
# tls-ca-cert-dir /etc/ssl/certs

# By default, clients (including replica servers) on a TLS port are required
# to authenticate using valid client side certificates.
#
# If "no" is specified, client certificates are not required and not accepted.
# If "optional" is specified, client certificates are accepted and must be
# valid if provided, but are not required.
#
# tls-auth-clients no
# tls-auth-clients optional

# By default, a Redis replica does not attempt to establish a TLS connection
# with its master.
#
# Use the following directive to enable TLS on replication links.
#
# tls-replication yes

# By default, the Redis Cluster bus uses a plain TCP connection. To enable
# TLS for the bus protocol, use the following directive:
#
# tls-cluster yes

# By default, only TLSv1.2 and TLSv1.3 are enabled and it is highly recommended
# that older formally deprecated versions are kept disabled to reduce the attack surface.
# You can explicitly specify TLS versions to support.
# Allowed values are case insensitive and include "TLSv1", "TLSv1.1", "TLSv1.2",
# "TLSv1.3" (OpenSSL >= 1.1.1) or any combination.
# To enable only TLSv1.2 and TLSv1.3, use:
#
# tls-protocols "TLSv1.2 TLSv1.3"

# Configure allowed ciphers.  See the ciphers(1ssl) manpage for more information
# about the syntax of this string.
#
# Note: this configuration applies only to <= TLSv1.2.
#
# tls-ciphers DEFAULT:!MEDIUM

# Configure allowed TLSv1.3 ciphersuites.  See the ciphers(1ssl) manpage for more
# information about the syntax of this string, and specifically for TLSv1.3
# ciphersuites.
#
# tls-ciphersuites TLS_CHACHA20_POLY1305_SHA256

# When choosing a cipher, use the server's preference instead of the client
# preference. By default, the server follows the client's preference.
#
# tls-prefer-server-ciphers yes

# By default, TLS session caching is enabled to allow faster and less expensive
# reconnections by clients that support it. Use the following directive to disable
# caching.
#
# tls-session-caching no

# Change the default number of TLS sessions cached. A zero value sets the cache
# to unlimited size. The default size is 20480.
#
# tls-session-cache-size 5000

# Change the default timeout of cached TLS sessions. The default timeout is 300
# seconds.
#
# tls-session-cache-timeout 60

################################# GENERAL #####################################

# By default Redis does not run as a daemon. Use 'yes' if you need it.
# Note that Redis will write a pid file in /var/run/redis.pid when daemonized.
# When Redis is supervised by upstart or systemd, this parameter has no impact.
daemonize no

# If you run Redis from upstart or systemd, Redis can interact with your
# supervision tree. Options:
#   supervised no      - no supervision interaction
#   supervised upstart - signal upstart by putting Redis into SIGSTOP mode
#                        requires "expect stop" in your upstart job config
#   supervised systemd - signal systemd by writing READY=1 to $NOTIFY_SOCKET
#                        on startup, and updating Redis status on a regular
#                        basis.
#   supervised auto    - detect upstart or systemd method based on
#                        UPSTART_JOB or NOTIFY_SOCKET environment variables
# Note: these supervision methods only signal "process is ready."
#       They do not enable continuous pings back to your supervisor.
#
# The default is "no". To run under upstart/systemd, you can simply uncomment
# the line below:
#
# supervised auto

# If a pid file is specified, Redis writes it where specified at startup
# and removes it at exit.
#
# When the server runs non daemonized, no pid file is created if none is
# specified in the configuration. When the server is daemonized, the pid file
# is used even if not specified, defaulting to "/var/run/redis.pid".
#
# Creating a pid file is best effort: if Redis is not able to create it
# nothing bad happens, the server will start and run normally.
#
# Note that on modern Linux systems "/run/redis.pid" is more conforming
# and should be used instead.
pidfile /opt/bitnami/redis/tmp/redis_6379.pid

# Specify the server verbosity level.
# This can be one of:
# debug (a lot of information, useful for development/testing)
# verbose (many rarely useful info, but not a mess like the debug level)
# notice (moderately verbose, what you want in production probably)
# warning (only very important / critical messages are logged)
loglevel notice

# Specify the log file name. Also the empty string can be used to force
# Redis to log on the standard output. Note that if you use standard
# output for logging but daemonize, logs will be sent to /dev/null
logfile ""

# To enable logging to the system logger, just set 'syslog-enabled' to yes,
# and optionally update the other syslog parameters to suit your needs.
# syslog-enabled no

# Specify the syslog identity.
# syslog-ident redis

# Specify the syslog facility. Must be USER or between LOCAL0-LOCAL7.
# syslog-facility local0

# To disable the built in crash log, which will possibly produce cleaner core
# dumps when they are needed, uncomment the following:
#
# crash-log-enabled no

# To disable the fast memory check that's run as part of the crash log, which
# will possibly let redis terminate sooner, uncomment the following:
#
# crash-memcheck-enabled no

# Set the number of databases. The default database is DB 0, you can select
# a different one on a per-connection basis using SELECT <dbid> where
# dbid is a number between 0 and 'databases'-1
databases 16

# By default Redis shows an ASCII art logo only when started to log to the
# standard output and if the standard output is a TTY and syslog logging is
# disabled. Basically this means that normally a logo is displayed only in
# interactive sessions.
#
# However it is possible to force the pre-4.0 behavior and always show a
# ASCII art logo in startup logs by setting the following option to yes.
always-show-logo yes

# By default, Redis modifies the process title (as seen in 'top' and 'ps') to
# provide some runtime information. It is possible to disable this and leave
# the process name as executed by setting the following to no.
set-proc-title yes

# When changing the process title, Redis uses the following template to construct
# the modified title.
#
# Template variables are specified in curly brackets. The following variables are
# supported:
#
# {title}           Name of process as executed if parent, or type of child process.
# {listen-addr}     Bind address or '*' followed by TCP or TLS port listening on, or
#                   Unix socket if only that's available.
# {server-mode}     Special mode, i.e. "[sentinel]" or "[cluster]".
# {port}            TCP port listening on, or 0.
# {tls-port}        TLS port listening on, or 0.
# {unixsocket}      Unix domain socket listening on, or "".
# {config-file}     Name of configuration file used.
#
proc-title-template "{title} {listen-addr} {server-mode}"

################################ SNAPSHOTTING  ################################

# Save the DB to disk.
#
# save <seconds> <changes> [<seconds> <changes> ...]
#
# Redis will save the DB if the given number of seconds elapsed and it
# surpassed the given number of write operations against the DB.
#
# Snapshotting can be completely disabled with a single empty string argument
# as in following example:
#
# save ""
#
# Unless specified otherwise, by default Redis will save the DB:
#   * After 3600 seconds (an hour) if at least 1 change was performed
#   * After 300 seconds (5 minutes) if at least 100 changes were performed
#   * After 60 seconds if at least 10000 changes were performed
#
# You can set these explicitly by uncommenting the following line.
#
# save 3600 1 300 100 60 10000
save 900 1
save 300 10
save 60 10000
# By default Redis will stop accepting writes if RDB snapshots are enabled
# (at least one save point) and the latest background save failed.
# This will make the user aware (in a hard way) that data is not persisting
# on disk properly, otherwise chances are that no one will notice and some
# disaster will happen.
#
# If the background saving process will start working again Redis will
# automatically allow writes again.
#
# However if you have setup your proper monitoring of the Redis server
# and persistence, you may want to disable this feature so that Redis will
# continue to work as usual even if there are problems with disk,
# permissions, and so forth.
stop-writes-on-bgsave-error yes

# Compress string objects using LZF when dump .rdb databases?
# By default compression is enabled as it's almost always a win.
# If you want to save some CPU in the saving child set it to 'no' but
# the dataset will likely be bigger if you have compressible values or keys.
rdbcompression yes

# Since version 5 of RDB a CRC64 checksum is placed at the end of the file.
# This makes the format more resistant to corruption but there is a performance
# hit to pay (around 10%) when saving and loading RDB files, so you can disable it
# for maximum performances.
#
# RDB files created with checksum disabled have a checksum of zero that will
# tell the loading code to skip the check.
rdbchecksum yes

# Enables or disables full sanitization checks for ziplist and listpack etc when
# loading an RDB or RESTORE payload. This reduces the chances of a assertion or
# crash later on while processing commands.
# Options:
#   no         - Never perform full sanitization
#   yes        - Always perform full sanitization
#   clients    - Perform full sanitization only for user connections.
#                Excludes: RDB files, RESTORE commands received from the master
#                connection, and client connections which have the
#                skip-sanitize-payload ACL flag.
# The default should be 'clients' but since it currently affects cluster
# resharding via MIGRATE, it is temporarily set to 'no' by default.
#
# sanitize-dump-payload no

# The filename where to dump the DB
dbfilename dump.rdb

# Remove RDB files used by replication in instances without persistence
# enabled. By default this option is disabled, however there are environments
# where for regulations or other security concerns, RDB files persisted on
# disk by masters in order to feed replicas, or stored on disk by replicas
# in order to load them for the initial synchronization, should be deleted
# ASAP. Note that this option ONLY WORKS in instances that have both AOF
# and RDB persistence disabled, otherwise is completely ignored.
#
# An alternative (and sometimes better) way to obtain the same effect is
# to use diskless replication on both master and replicas instances. However
# in the case of replicas, diskless is not always an option.
rdb-del-sync-files no

# The working directory.
#
# The DB will be written inside this directory, with the filename specified
# above using the 'dbfilename' configuration directive.
#
# The Append Only File will also be created inside this directory.
#
# Note that you must specify a directory here, not a file name.
dir /bitnami/redis/data

################################# REPLICATION #################################

# Master-Replica replication. Use replicaof to make a Redis instance a copy of
# another Redis server. A few things to understand ASAP about Redis replication.
#
#   +------------------+      +---------------+
#   |      Master      | ---> |    Replica    |
#   | (receive writes) |      |  (exact copy) |
#   +------------------+      +---------------+
#
# 1) Redis replication is asynchronous, but you can configure a master to
#    stop accepting writes if it appears to be not connected with at least
#    a given number of replicas.
# 2) Redis replicas are able to perform a partial resynchronization with the
#    master if the replication link is lost for a relatively small amount of
#    time. You may want to configure the replication backlog size (see the next
#    sections of this file) with a sensible value depending on your needs.
# 3) Replication is automatic and does not need user intervention. After a
#    network partition replicas automatically try to reconnect to masters
#    and resynchronize with them.
#
# replicaof <masterip> <masterport>

# If the master is password protected (using the "requirepass" configuration
# directive below) it is possible to tell the replica to authenticate before
# starting the replication synchronization process, otherwise the master will
# refuse the replica request.
# 设置集群节点间访问密码,和requirepass 一致
#masterauth 123456
#
# However this is not enough if you are using Redis ACLs (for Redis version
# 6 or greater), and the default user is not capable of running the PSYNC
# command and/or other commands needed for replication. In this case it's
# better to configure a special user to use with replication, and specify the
# masteruser configuration as such:
#
# masteruser <username>
#
# When masteruser is specified, the replica will authenticate against its
# master using the new AUTH form: AUTH <username> <password>.

# When a replica loses its connection with the master, or when the replication
# is still in progress, the replica can act in two different ways:
#
# 1) if replica-serve-stale-data is set to 'yes' (the default) the replica will
#    still reply to client requests, possibly with out of date data, or the
#    data set may just be empty if this is the first synchronization.
#
# 2) If replica-serve-stale-data is set to 'no' the replica will reply with error
#    "MASTERDOWN Link with MASTER is down and replica-serve-stale-data is set to 'no'"
#    to all data access commands, excluding commands such as:
#    INFO, REPLICAOF, AUTH, SHUTDOWN, REPLCONF, ROLE, CONFIG, SUBSCRIBE,
#    UNSUBSCRIBE, PSUBSCRIBE, PUNSUBSCRIBE, PUBLISH, PUBSUB, COMMAND, POST,
#    HOST and LATENCY.
#
replica-serve-stale-data yes

# You can configure a replica instance to accept writes or not. Writing against
# a replica instance may be useful to store some ephemeral data (because data
# written on a replica will be easily deleted after resync with the master) but
# may also cause problems if clients are writing to it because of a
# misconfiguration.
#
# Since Redis 2.6 by default replicas are read-only.
#
# Note: read only replicas are not designed to be exposed to untrusted clients
# on the internet. It's just a protection layer against misuse of the instance.
# Still a read only replica exports by default all the administrative commands
# such as CONFIG, DEBUG, and so forth. To a limited extent you can improve
# security of read only replicas using 'rename-command' to shadow all the
# administrative / dangerous commands.
replica-read-only yes

# Replication SYNC strategy: disk or socket.
#
# New replicas and reconnecting replicas that are not able to continue the
# replication process just receiving differences, need to do what is called a
# "full synchronization". An RDB file is transmitted from the master to the
# replicas.
#
# The transmission can happen in two different ways:
#
# 1) Disk-backed: The Redis master creates a new process that writes the RDB
#                 file on disk. Later the file is transferred by the parent
#                 process to the replicas incrementally.
# 2) Diskless: The Redis master creates a new process that directly writes the
#              RDB file to replica sockets, without touching the disk at all.
#
# With disk-backed replication, while the RDB file is generated, more replicas
# can be queued and served with the RDB file as soon as the current child
# producing the RDB file finishes its work. With diskless replication instead
# once the transfer starts, new replicas arriving will be queued and a new
# transfer will start when the current one terminates.
#
# When diskless replication is used, the master waits a configurable amount of
# time (in seconds) before starting the transfer in the hope that multiple
# replicas will arrive and the transfer can be parallelized.
#
# With slow disks and fast (large bandwidth) networks, diskless replication
# works better.
repl-diskless-sync no

# When diskless replication is enabled, it is possible to configure the delay
# the server waits in order to spawn the child that transfers the RDB via socket
# to the replicas.
#
# This is important since once the transfer starts, it is not possible to serve
# new replicas arriving, that will be queued for the next RDB transfer, so the
# server waits a delay in order to let more replicas arrive.
#
# The delay is specified in seconds, and by default is 5 seconds. To disable
# it entirely just set it to 0 seconds and the transfer will start ASAP.
repl-diskless-sync-delay 5

# When diskless replication is enabled with a delay, it is possible to let
# the replication start before the maximum delay is reached if the maximum
# number of replicas expected have connected. Default of 0 means that the
# maximum is not defined and Redis will wait the full delay.
repl-diskless-sync-max-replicas 0

# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# WARNING: RDB diskless load is experimental. Since in this setup the replica
# does not immediately store an RDB on disk, it may cause data loss during
# failovers. RDB diskless load + Redis modules not handling I/O reads may also
# cause Redis to abort in case of I/O errors during the initial synchronization
# stage with the master. Use only if you know what you are doing.
# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#
# Replica can load the RDB it reads from the replication link directly from the
# socket, or store the RDB to a file and read that file after it was completely
# received from the master.
#
# In many cases the disk is slower than the network, and storing and loading
# the RDB file may increase replication time (and even increase the master's
# Copy on Write memory and replica buffers).
# However, parsing the RDB file directly from the socket may mean that we have
# to flush the contents of the current database before the full rdb was
# received. For this reason we have the following options:
#
# "disabled"    - Don't use diskless load (store the rdb file to the disk first)
# "on-empty-db" - Use diskless load only when it is completely safe.
# "swapdb"      - Keep current db contents in RAM while parsing the data directly
#                 from the socket. Replicas in this mode can keep serving current
#                 data set while replication is in progress, except for cases where
#                 they can't recognize master as having a data set from same
#                 replication history.
#                 Note that this requires sufficient memory, if you don't have it,
#                 you risk an OOM kill.
repl-diskless-load disabled

# Master send PINGs to its replicas in a predefined interval. It's possible to
# change this interval with the repl_ping_replica_period option. The default
# value is 10 seconds.
#
# repl-ping-replica-period 10

# The following option sets the replication timeout for:
#
# 1) Bulk transfer I/O during SYNC, from the point of view of replica.
# 2) Master timeout from the point of view of replicas (data, pings).
# 3) Replica timeout from the point of view of masters (REPLCONF ACK pings).
#
# It is important to make sure that this value is greater than the value
# specified for repl-ping-replica-period otherwise a timeout will be detected
# every time there is low traffic between the master and the replica. The default
# value is 60 seconds.
#
# repl-timeout 60

# Disable TCP_NODELAY on the replica socket after SYNC?
#
# If you select "yes" Redis will use a smaller number of TCP packets and
# less bandwidth to send data to replicas. But this can add a delay for
# the data to appear on the replica side, up to 40 milliseconds with
# Linux kernels using a default configuration.
#
# If you select "no" the delay for data to appear on the replica side will
# be reduced but more bandwidth will be used for replication.
#
# By default we optimize for low latency, but in very high traffic conditions
# or when the master and replicas are many hops away, turning this to "yes" may
# be a good idea.
repl-disable-tcp-nodelay no

# Set the replication backlog size. The backlog is a buffer that accumulates
# replica data when replicas are disconnected for some time, so that when a
# replica wants to reconnect again, often a full resync is not needed, but a
# partial resync is enough, just passing the portion of data the replica
# missed while disconnected.
#
# The bigger the replication backlog, the longer the replica can endure the
# disconnect and later be able to perform a partial resynchronization.
#
# The backlog is only allocated if there is at least one replica connected.
#
# repl-backlog-size 1mb

# After a master has no connected replicas for some time, the backlog will be
# freed. The following option configures the amount of seconds that need to
# elapse, starting from the time the last replica disconnected, for the backlog
# buffer to be freed.
#
# Note that replicas never free the backlog for timeout, since they may be
# promoted to masters later, and should be able to correctly "partially
# resynchronize" with other replicas: hence they should always accumulate backlog.
#
# A value of 0 means to never release the backlog.
#
# repl-backlog-ttl 3600

# The replica priority is an integer number published by Redis in the INFO
# output. It is used by Redis Sentinel in order to select a replica to promote
# into a master if the master is no longer working correctly.
#
# A replica with a low priority number is considered better for promotion, so
# for instance if there are three replicas with priority 10, 100, 25 Sentinel
# will pick the one with priority 10, that is the lowest.
#
# However a special priority of 0 marks the replica as not able to perform the
# role of master, so a replica with priority of 0 will never be selected by
# Redis Sentinel for promotion.
#
# By default the priority is 100.
replica-priority 100

# The propagation error behavior controls how Redis will behave when it is
# unable to handle a command being processed in the replication stream from a master
# or processed while reading from an AOF file. Errors that occur during propagation
# are unexpected, and can cause data inconsistency. However, there are edge cases
# in earlier versions of Redis where it was possible for the server to replicate or persist
# commands that would fail on future versions. For this reason the default behavior
# is to ignore such errors and continue processing commands.
#
# If an application wants to ensure there is no data divergence, this configuration
# should be set to 'panic' instead. The value can also be set to 'panic-on-replicas'
# to only panic when a replica encounters an error on the replication stream. One of
# these two panic values will become the default value in the future once there are
# sufficient safety mechanisms in place to prevent false positive crashes.
#
# propagation-error-behavior ignore

# Replica ignore disk write errors controls the behavior of a replica when it is
# unable to persist a write command received from its master to disk. By default,
# this configuration is set to 'no' and will crash the replica in this condition.
# It is not recommended to change this default, however in order to be compatible
# with older versions of Redis this config can be toggled to 'yes' which will just
# log a warning and execute the write command it got from the master.
#
# replica-ignore-disk-write-errors no

# -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# By default, Redis Sentinel includes all replicas in its reports. A replica
# can be excluded from Redis Sentinel's announcements. An unannounced replica
# will be ignored by the 'sentinel replicas <master>' command and won't be
# exposed to Redis Sentinel's clients.
#
# This option does not change the behavior of replica-priority. Even with
# replica-announced set to 'no', the replica can be promoted to master. To
# prevent this behavior, set replica-priority to 0.
#
# replica-announced yes

# It is possible for a master to stop accepting writes if there are less than
# N replicas connected, having a lag less or equal than M seconds.
#
# The N replicas need to be in "online" state.
#
# The lag in seconds, that must be <= the specified value, is calculated from
# the last ping received from the replica, that is usually sent every second.
#
# This option does not GUARANTEE that N replicas will accept the write, but
# will limit the window of exposure for lost writes in case not enough replicas
# are available, to the specified number of seconds.
#
# For example to require at least 3 replicas with a lag <= 10 seconds use:
#
# min-replicas-to-write 3
# min-replicas-max-lag 10
#
# Setting one or the other to 0 disables the feature.
#
# By default min-replicas-to-write is set to 0 (feature disabled) and
# min-replicas-max-lag is set to 10.

# A Redis master is able to list the address and port of the attached
# replicas in different ways. For example the "INFO replication" section
# offers this information, which is used, among other tools, by
# Redis Sentinel in order to discover replica instances.
# Another place where this info is available is in the output of the
# "ROLE" command of a master.
#
# The listed IP address and port normally reported by a replica is
# obtained in the following way:
#
#   IP: The address is auto detected by checking the peer address
#   of the socket used by the replica to connect with the master.
#
#   Port: The port is communicated by the replica during the replication
#   handshake, and is normally the port that the replica is using to
#   listen for connections.
#
# However when port forwarding or Network Address Translation (NAT) is
# used, the replica may actually be reachable via different IP and port
# pairs. The following two options can be used by a replica in order to
# report to its master a specific set of IP and port, so that both INFO
# and ROLE will report those values.
#
# There is no need to use both the options if you need to override just
# the port or the IP address.
#
# replica-announce-ip 5.5.5.5
# replica-announce-port 1234

############################### KEYS TRACKING #################################

# Redis implements server assisted support for client side caching of values.
# This is implemented using an invalidation table that remembers, using
# a radix key indexed by key name, what clients have which keys. In turn
# this is used in order to send invalidation messages to clients. Please
# check this page to understand more about the feature:
#
#   https://redis.io/topics/client-side-caching
#
# When tracking is enabled for a client, all the read only queries are assumed
# to be cached: this will force Redis to store information in the invalidation
# table. When keys are modified, such information is flushed away, and
# invalidation messages are sent to the clients. However if the workload is
# heavily dominated by reads, Redis could use more and more memory in order
# to track the keys fetched by many clients.
#
# For this reason it is possible to configure a maximum fill value for the
# invalidation table. By default it is set to 1M of keys, and once this limit
# is reached, Redis will start to evict keys in the invalidation table
# even if they were not modified, just to reclaim memory: this will in turn
# force the clients to invalidate the cached values. Basically the table
# maximum size is a trade off between the memory you want to spend server
# side to track information about who cached what, and the ability of clients
# to retain cached objects in memory.
#
# If you set the value to 0, it means there are no limits, and Redis will
# retain as many keys as needed in the invalidation table.
# In the "stats" INFO section, you can find information about the number of
# keys in the invalidation table at every given moment.
#
# Note: when key tracking is used in broadcasting mode, no memory is used
# in the server side so this setting is useless.
#
# tracking-table-max-keys 1000000

################################## SECURITY ###################################

# Warning: since Redis is pretty fast, an outside user can try up to
# 1 million passwords per second against a modern box. This means that you
# should use very strong passwords, otherwise they will be very easy to break.
# Note that because the password is really a shared secret between the client
# and the server, and should not be memorized by any human, the password
# can be easily a long string from /dev/urandom or whatever, so by using a
# long and unguessable password no brute force attack will be possible.

# Redis ACL users are defined in the following format:
#
#   user <username> ... acl rules ...
user default on #c4e97b9e2b67eb61a01a876718ff6420bfc9d6903ecc555985148fd3ac7d8308 ~* &* +@all
user jzb on #37fc1569f393141f21a8abd869a113c2b0a8d842d5f71d2e1c907c07c8ac07c5 ~* resetchannels +@all

#
# For example:
#
#   user worker +@list +@connection ~jobs:* on >ffa9203c493aa99
#
# The special username "default" is used for new connections. If this user
# has the "nopass" rule, then new connections will be immediately authenticated
# as the "default" user without the need of any password provided via the
# AUTH command. Otherwise if the "default" user is not flagged with "nopass"
# the connections will start in not authenticated state, and will require
# AUTH (or the HELLO command AUTH option) in order to be authenticated and
# start to work.
#
# The ACL rules that describe what a user can do are the following:
#
#  on           Enable the user: it is possible to authenticate as this user.
#  off          Disable the user: it's no longer possible to authenticate
#               with this user, however the already authenticated connections
#               will still work.
#  skip-sanitize-payload    RESTORE dump-payload sanitization is skipped.
#  sanitize-payload         RESTORE dump-payload is sanitized (default).
#  +<command>   Allow the execution of that command.
#               May be used with `|` for allowing subcommands (e.g "+config|get")
#  -<command>   Disallow the execution of that command.
#               May be used with `|` for blocking subcommands (e.g "-config|set")
#  +@<category> Allow the execution of all the commands in such category
#               with valid categories are like @admin, @set, @sortedset, ...
#               and so forth, see the full list in the server.c file where
#               the Redis command table is described and defined.
#               The special category @all means all the commands, but currently
#               present in the server, and that will be loaded in the future
#               via modules.
#  +<command>|first-arg  Allow a specific first argument of an otherwise
#                        disabled command. It is only supported on commands with
#                        no sub-commands, and is not allowed as negative form
#                        like -SELECT|1, only additive starting with "+". This
#                        feature is deprecated and may be removed in the future.
#  allcommands  Alias for +@all. Note that it implies the ability to execute
#               all the future commands loaded via the modules system.
#  nocommands   Alias for -@all.
#  ~<pattern>   Add a pattern of keys that can be mentioned as part of
#               commands. For instance ~* allows all the keys. The pattern
#               is a glob-style pattern like the one of KEYS.
#               It is possible to specify multiple patterns.
# %R~<pattern>  Add key read pattern that specifies which keys can be read
#               from.
# %W~<pattern>  Add key write pattern that specifies which keys can be
#               written to.
#  allkeys      Alias for ~*
#  resetkeys    Flush the list of allowed keys patterns.
#  &<pattern>   Add a glob-style pattern of Pub/Sub channels that can be
#               accessed by the user. It is possible to specify multiple channel
#               patterns.
#  allchannels  Alias for &*
#  resetchannels            Flush the list of allowed channel patterns.
#  ><password>  Add this password to the list of valid password for the user.
#               For example >mypass will add "mypass" to the list.
#               This directive clears the "nopass" flag (see later).
#  <<password>  Remove this password from the list of valid passwords.
#  nopass       All the set passwords of the user are removed, and the user
#               is flagged as requiring no password: it means that every
#               password will work against this user. If this directive is
#               used for the default user, every new connection will be
#               immediately authenticated with the default user without
#               any explicit AUTH command required. Note that the "resetpass"
#               directive will clear this condition.
#  resetpass    Flush the list of allowed passwords. Moreover removes the
#               "nopass" status. After "resetpass" the user has no associated
#               passwords and there is no way to authenticate without adding
#               some password (or setting it as "nopass" later).
#  reset        Performs the following actions: resetpass, resetkeys, off,
#               -@all. The user returns to the same state it has immediately
#               after its creation.
# (<options>)   Create a new selector with the options specified within the
#               parentheses and attach it to the user. Each option should be
#               space separated. The first character must be ( and the last
#               character must be ).
# clearselectors            Remove all of the currently attached selectors.
#                           Note this does not change the "root" user permissions,
#                           which are the permissions directly applied onto the
#                           user (outside the parentheses).
#
# ACL rules can be specified in any order: for instance you can start with
# passwords, then flags, or key patterns. However note that the additive
# and subtractive rules will CHANGE MEANING depending on the ordering.
# For instance see the following example:
#
#   user alice on +@all -DEBUG ~* >somepassword
#
# This will allow "alice" to use all the commands with the exception of the
# DEBUG command, since +@all added all the commands to the set of the commands
# alice can use, and later DEBUG was removed. However if we invert the order
# of two ACL rules the result will be different:
#
#   user alice on -DEBUG +@all ~* >somepassword
#
# Now DEBUG was removed when alice had yet no commands in the set of allowed
# commands, later all the commands are added, so the user will be able to
# execute everything.
#
# Basically ACL rules are processed left-to-right.
#
# The following is a list of command categories and their meanings:
# * keyspace - Writing or reading from keys, databases, or their metadata
#     in a type agnostic way. Includes DEL, RESTORE, DUMP, RENAME, EXISTS, DBSIZE,
#     KEYS, EXPIRE, TTL, FLUSHALL, etc. Commands that may modify the keyspace,
#     key or metadata will also have `write` category. Commands that only read
#     the keyspace, key or metadata will have the `read` category.
# * read - Reading from keys (values or metadata). Note that commands that don't
#     interact with keys, will not have either `read` or `write`.
# * write - Writing to keys (values or metadata)
# * admin - Administrative commands. Normal applications will never need to use
#     these. Includes REPLICAOF, CONFIG, DEBUG, SAVE, MONITOR, ACL, SHUTDOWN, etc.
# * dangerous - Potentially dangerous (each should be considered with care for
#     various reasons). This includes FLUSHALL, MIGRATE, RESTORE, SORT, KEYS,
#     CLIENT, DEBUG, INFO, CONFIG, SAVE, REPLICAOF, etc.
# * connection - Commands affecting the connection or other connections.
#     This includes AUTH, SELECT, COMMAND, CLIENT, ECHO, PING, etc.
# * blocking - Potentially blocking the connection until released by another
#     command.
# * fast - Fast O(1) commands. May loop on the number of arguments, but not the
#     number of elements in the key.
# * slow - All commands that are not Fast.
# * pubsub - PUBLISH / SUBSCRIBE related
# * transaction - WATCH / MULTI / EXEC related commands.
# * scripting - Scripting related.
# * set - Data type: sets related.
# * sortedset - Data type: zsets related.
# * list - Data type: lists related.
# * hash - Data type: hashes related.
# * string - Data type: strings related.
# * bitmap - Data type: bitmaps related.
# * hyperloglog - Data type: hyperloglog related.
# * geo - Data type: geo related.
# * stream - Data type: streams related.
#
# For more information about ACL configuration please refer to
# the Redis web site at https://redis.io/topics/acl

# ACL LOG
#
# The ACL Log tracks failed commands and authentication events associated
# with ACLs. The ACL Log is useful to troubleshoot failed commands blocked
# by ACLs. The ACL Log is stored in memory. You can reclaim memory with
# ACL LOG RESET. Define the maximum entry length of the ACL Log below.
acllog-max-len 128

# Using an external ACL file
#
# Instead of configuring users here in this file, it is possible to use
# a stand-alone file just listing users. The two methods cannot be mixed:
# if you configure users here and at the same time you activate the external
# ACL file, the server will refuse to start.
#
# The format of the external ACL user file is exactly the same as the
# format that is used inside redis.conf to describe users.
#
# aclfile /etc/redis/users.acl

# IMPORTANT NOTE: starting with Redis 6 "requirepass" is just a compatibility
# layer on top of the new ACL system. The option effect will be just setting
# the password for the default user. Clients will still authenticate using
# AUTH <password> as usually, or more explicitly with AUTH default <password>
# if they follow the new protocol: both will work.
#
# The requirepass is not compatible with aclfile option and the ACL LOAD
# command, these will cause requirepass to be ignored.
#
#requirepass 123456

# New users are initialized with restrictive permissions by default, via the
# equivalent of this ACL rule 'off resetkeys -@all'. Starting with Redis 6.2, it
# is possible to manage access to Pub/Sub channels with ACL rules as well. The
# default Pub/Sub channels permission if new users is controlled by the
# acl-pubsub-default configuration directive, which accepts one of these values:
#
# allchannels: grants access to all Pub/Sub channels
# resetchannels: revokes access to all Pub/Sub channels
#
# From Redis 7.0, acl-pubsub-default defaults to 'resetchannels' permission.
#
# acl-pubsub-default resetchannels

# Command renaming (DEPRECATED).
#
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------
# WARNING: avoid using this option if possible. Instead use ACLs to remove
# commands from the default user, and put them only in some admin user you
# create for administrative purposes.
# ------------------------------------------------------------------------
#
# It is possible to change the name of dangerous commands in a shared
# environment. For instance the CONFIG command may be renamed into something
# hard to guess so that it will still be available for internal-use tools
# but not available for general clients.
#
# Example:
#
# rename-command CONFIG b840fc02d524045429941cc15f59e41cb7be6c52
#
# It is also possible to completely kill a command by renaming it into
# an empty string:
#
# rename-command CONFIG ""
#
# Please note that changing the name of commands that are logged into the
# AOF file or transmitted to replicas may cause problems.

################################### CLIENTS ####################################

# Set the max number of connected clients at the same time. By default
# this limit is set to 10000 clients, however if the Redis server is not
# able to configure the process file limit to allow for the specified limit
# the max number of allowed clients is set to the current file limit
# minus 32 (as Redis reserves a few file descriptors for internal uses).
#
# Once the limit is reached Redis will close all the new connections sending
# an error 'max number of clients reached'.
#
# IMPORTANT: When Redis Cluster is used, the max number of connections is also
# shared with the cluster bus: every node in the cluster will use two
# connections, one incoming and another outgoing. It is important to size the
# limit accordingly in case of very large clusters.
#
# maxclients 10000

############################## MEMORY MANAGEMENT ################################

# Set a memory usage limit to the specified amount of bytes.
# When the memory limit is reached Redis will try to remove keys
# according to the eviction policy selected (see maxmemory-policy).
#
# If Redis can't remove keys according to the policy, or if the policy is
# set to 'noeviction', Redis will start to reply with errors to commands
# that would use more memory, like SET, LPUSH, and so on, and will continue
# to reply to read-only commands like GET.
#
# This option is usually useful when using Redis as an LRU or LFU cache, or to
# set a hard memory limit for an instance (using the 'noeviction' policy).
#
# WARNING: If you have replicas attached to an instance with maxmemory on,
# the size of the output buffers needed to feed the replicas are subtracted
# from the used memory count, so that network problems / resyncs will
# not trigger a loop where keys are evicted, and in turn the output
# buffer of replicas is full with DELs of keys evicted triggering the deletion
# of more keys, and so forth until the database is completely emptied.
#
# In short... if you have replicas attached it is suggested that you set a lower
# limit for maxmemory so that there is some free RAM on the system for replica
# output buffers (but this is not needed if the policy is 'noeviction').
#
# maxmemory <bytes>

# MAXMEMORY POLICY: how Redis will select what to remove when maxmemory
# is reached. You can select one from the following behaviors:
#
# volatile-lru -> Evict using approximated LRU, only keys with an expire set.
# allkeys-lru -> Evict any key using approximated LRU.
# volatile-lfu -> Evict using approximated LFU, only keys with an expire set.
# allkeys-lfu -> Evict any key using approximated LFU.
# volatile-random -> Remove a random key having an expire set.
# allkeys-random -> Remove a random key, any key.
# volatile-ttl -> Remove the key with the nearest expire time (minor TTL)
# noeviction -> Don't evict anything, just return an error on write operations.
#
# LRU means Least Recently Used
# LFU means Least Frequently Used
#
# Both LRU, LFU and volatile-ttl are implemented using approximated
# randomized algorithms.
#
# Note: with any of the above policies, when there are no suitable keys for
# eviction, Redis will return an error on write operations that require
# more memory. These are usually commands that create new keys, add data or
# modify existing keys. A few examples are: SET, INCR, HSET, LPUSH, SUNIONSTORE,
# SORT (due to the STORE argument), and EXEC (if the transaction includes any
# command that requires memory).
#
# The default is:
#
# maxmemory-policy noeviction

# LRU, LFU and minimal TTL algorithms are not precise algorithms but approximated
# algorithms (in order to save memory), so you can tune it for speed or
# accuracy. By default Redis will check five keys and pick the one that was
# used least recently, you can change the sample size using the following
# configuration directive.
#
# The default of 5 produces good enough results. 10 Approximates very closely
# true LRU but costs more CPU. 3 is faster but not very accurate.
#
# maxmemory-samples 5

# Eviction processing is designed to function well with the default setting.
# If there is an unusually large amount of write traffic, this value may need to
# be increased.  Decreasing this value may reduce latency at the risk of
# eviction processing effectiveness
#   0 = minimum latency, 10 = default, 100 = process without regard to latency
#
# maxmemory-eviction-tenacity 10

# Starting from Redis 5, by default a replica will ignore its maxmemory setting
# (unless it is promoted to master after a failover or manually). It means
# that the eviction of keys will be just handled by the master, sending the
# DEL commands to the replica as keys evict in the master side.
#
# This behavior ensures that masters and replicas stay consistent, and is usually
# what you want, however if your replica is writable, or you want the replica
# to have a different memory setting, and you are sure all the writes performed
# to the replica are idempotent, then you may change this default (but be sure
# to understand what you are doing).
#
# Note that since the replica by default does not evict, it may end using more
# memory than the one set via maxmemory (there are certain buffers that may
# be larger on the replica, or data structures may sometimes take more memory
# and so forth). So make sure you monitor your replicas and make sure they
# have enough memory to never hit a real out-of-memory condition before the
# master hits the configured maxmemory setting.
#
# replica-ignore-maxmemory yes

# Redis reclaims expired keys in two ways: upon access when those keys are
# found to be expired, and also in background, in what is called the
# "active expire key". The key space is slowly and interactively scanned
# looking for expired keys to reclaim, so that it is possible to free memory
# of keys that are expired and will never be accessed again in a short time.
#
# The default effort of the expire cycle will try to avoid having more than
# ten percent of expired keys still in memory, and will try to avoid consuming
# more than 25% of total memory and to add latency to the system. However
# it is possible to increase the expire "effort" that is normally set to
# "1", to a greater value, up to the value "10". At its maximum value the
# system will use more CPU, longer cycles (and technically may introduce
# more latency), and will tolerate less already expired keys still present
# in the system. It's a tradeoff between memory, CPU and latency.
#
# active-expire-effort 1

############################# LAZY FREEING ####################################

# Redis has two primitives to delete keys. One is called DEL and is a blocking
# deletion of the object. It means that the server stops processing new commands
# in order to reclaim all the memory associated with an object in a synchronous
# way. If the key deleted is associated with a small object, the time needed
# in order to execute the DEL command is very small and comparable to most other
# O(1) or O(log_N) commands in Redis. However if the key is associated with an
# aggregated value containing millions of elements, the server can block for
# a long time (even seconds) in order to complete the operation.
#
# For the above reasons Redis also offers non blocking deletion primitives
# such as UNLINK (non blocking DEL) and the ASYNC option of FLUSHALL and
# FLUSHDB commands, in order to reclaim memory in background. Those commands
# are executed in constant time. Another thread will incrementally free the
# object in the background as fast as possible.
#
# DEL, UNLINK and ASYNC option of FLUSHALL and FLUSHDB are user-controlled.
# It's up to the design of the application to understand when it is a good
# idea to use one or the other. However the Redis server sometimes has to
# delete keys or flush the whole database as a side effect of other operations.
# Specifically Redis deletes objects independently of a user call in the
# following scenarios:
#
# 1) On eviction, because of the maxmemory and maxmemory policy configurations,
#    in order to make room for new data, without going over the specified
#    memory limit.
# 2) Because of expire: when a key with an associated time to live (see the
#    EXPIRE command) must be deleted from memory.
# 3) Because of a side effect of a command that stores data on a key that may
#    already exist. For example the RENAME command may delete the old key
#    content when it is replaced with another one. Similarly SUNIONSTORE
#    or SORT with STORE option may delete existing keys. The SET command
#    itself removes any old content of the specified key in order to replace
#    it with the specified string.
# 4) During replication, when a replica performs a full resynchronization with
#    its master, the content of the whole database is removed in order to
#    load the RDB file just transferred.
#
# In all the above cases the default is to delete objects in a blocking way,
# like if DEL was called. However you can configure each case specifically
# in order to instead release memory in a non-blocking way like if UNLINK
# was called, using the following configuration directives.

lazyfree-lazy-eviction no
lazyfree-lazy-expire no
lazyfree-lazy-server-del no
replica-lazy-flush no

# It is also possible, for the case when to replace the user code DEL calls
# with UNLINK calls is not easy, to modify the default behavior of the DEL
# command to act exactly like UNLINK, using the following configuration
# directive:

lazyfree-lazy-user-del no

# FLUSHDB, FLUSHALL, SCRIPT FLUSH and FUNCTION FLUSH support both asynchronous and synchronous
# deletion, which can be controlled by passing the [SYNC|ASYNC] flags into the
# commands. When neither flag is passed, this directive will be used to determine
# if the data should be deleted asynchronously.

lazyfree-lazy-user-flush no

################################ THREADED I/O #################################

# Redis is mostly single threaded, however there are certain threaded
# operations such as UNLINK, slow I/O accesses and other things that are
# performed on side threads.
#
# Now it is also possible to handle Redis clients socket reads and writes
# in different I/O threads. Since especially writing is so slow, normally
# Redis users use pipelining in order to speed up the Redis performances per
# core, and spawn multiple instances in order to scale more. Using I/O
# threads it is possible to easily speedup two times Redis without resorting
# to pipelining nor sharding of the instance.
#
# By default threading is disabled, we suggest enabling it only in machines
# that have at least 4 or more cores, leaving at least one spare core.
# Using more than 8 threads is unlikely to help much. We also recommend using
# threaded I/O only if you actually have performance problems, with Redis
# instances being able to use a quite big percentage of CPU time, otherwise
# there is no point in using this feature.
#
# So for instance if you have a four cores boxes, try to use 2 or 3 I/O
# threads, if you have a 8 cores, try to use 6 threads. In order to
# enable I/O threads use the following configuration directive:
#
# io-threads 4
#
# Setting io-threads to 1 will just use the main thread as usual.
# When I/O threads are enabled, we only use threads for writes, that is
# to thread the write(2) syscall and transfer the client buffers to the
# socket. However it is also possible to enable threading of reads and
# protocol parsing using the following configuration directive, by setting
# it to yes:
#
# io-threads-do-reads no
#
# Usually threading reads doesn't help much.
#
# NOTE 1: This configuration directive cannot be changed at runtime via
# CONFIG SET. Also, this feature currently does not work when SSL is
# enabled.
#
# NOTE 2: If you want to test the Redis speedup using redis-benchmark, make
# sure you also run the benchmark itself in threaded mode, using the
# --threads option to match the number of Redis threads, otherwise you'll not
# be able to notice the improvements.

############################ KERNEL OOM CONTROL ##############################

# On Linux, it is possible to hint the kernel OOM killer on what processes
# should be killed first when out of memory.
#
# Enabling this feature makes Redis actively control the oom_score_adj value
# for all its processes, depending on their role. The default scores will
# attempt to have background child processes killed before all others, and
# replicas killed before masters.
#
# Redis supports these options:
#
# no:       Don't make changes to oom-score-adj (default).
# yes:      Alias to "relative" see below.
# absolute: Values in oom-score-adj-values are written as is to the kernel.
# relative: Values are used relative to the initial value of oom_score_adj when
#           the server starts and are then clamped to a range of -1000 to 1000.
#           Because typically the initial value is 0, they will often match the
#           absolute values.
oom-score-adj no

# When oom-score-adj is used, this directive controls the specific values used
# for master, replica and background child processes. Values range -2000 to
# 2000 (higher means more likely to be killed).
#
# Unprivileged processes (not root, and without CAP_SYS_RESOURCE capabilities)
# can freely increase their value, but not decrease it below its initial
# settings. This means that setting oom-score-adj to "relative" and setting the
# oom-score-adj-values to positive values will always succeed.
oom-score-adj-values 0 200 800


#################### KERNEL transparent hugepage CONTROL ######################

# Usually the kernel Transparent Huge Pages control is set to "madvise" or
# or "never" by default (/sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/enabled), in which
# case this config has no effect. On systems in which it is set to "always",
# redis will attempt to disable it specifically for the redis process in order
# to avoid latency problems specifically with fork(2) and CoW.
# If for some reason you prefer to keep it enabled, you can set this config to
# "no" and the kernel global to "always".

disable-thp yes

############################## APPEND ONLY MODE ###############################

# By default Redis asynchronously dumps the dataset on disk. This mode is
# good enough in many applications, but an issue with the Redis process or
# a power outage may result into a few minutes of writes lost (depending on
# the configured save points).
#
# The Append Only File is an alternative persistence mode that provides
# much better durability. For instance using the default data fsync policy
# (see later in the config file) Redis can lose just one second of writes in a
# dramatic event like a server power outage, or a single write if something
# wrong with the Redis process itself happens, but the operating system is
# still running correctly.
#
# AOF and RDB persistence can be enabled at the same time without problems.
# If the AOF is enabled on startup Redis will load the AOF, that is the file
# with the better durability guarantees.
#
# Please check https://redis.io/topics/persistence for more information.
# 开启aof
appendonly yes

# The base name of the append only file.
#
# Redis 7 and newer use a set of append-only files to persist the dataset
# and changes applied to it. There are two basic types of files in use:
#
# - Base files, which are a snapshot representing the complete state of the
#   dataset at the time the file was created. Base files can be either in
#   the form of RDB (binary serialized) or AOF (textual commands).
# - Incremental files, which contain additional commands that were applied
#   to the dataset following the previous file.
#
# In addition, manifest files are used to track the files and the order in
# which they were created and should be applied.
#
# Append-only file names are created by Redis following a specific pattern.
# The file name's prefix is based on the 'appendfilename' configuration
# parameter, followed by additional information about the sequence and type.
#
# For example, if appendfilename is set to appendonly.aof, the following file
# names could be derived:
#
# - appendonly.aof.1.base.rdb as a base file.
# - appendonly.aof.1.incr.aof, appendonly.aof.2.incr.aof as incremental files.
# - appendonly.aof.manifest as a manifest file.

appendfilename "appendonly.aof"

# For convenience, Redis stores all persistent append-only files in a dedicated
# directory. The name of the directory is determined by the appenddirname
# configuration parameter.

appenddirname "appendonlydir"

# The fsync() call tells the Operating System to actually write data on disk
# instead of waiting for more data in the output buffer. Some OS will really flush
# data on disk, some other OS will just try to do it ASAP.
#
# Redis supports three different modes:
#
# no: don't fsync, just let the OS flush the data when it wants. Faster.
# always: fsync after every write to the append only log. Slow, Safest.
# everysec: fsync only one time every second. Compromise.
#
# The default is "everysec", as that's usually the right compromise between
# speed and data safety. It's up to you to understand if you can relax this to
# "no" that will let the operating system flush the output buffer when
# it wants, for better performances (but if you can live with the idea of
# some data loss consider the default persistence mode that's snapshotting),
# or on the contrary, use "always" that's very slow but a bit safer than
# everysec.
#
# More details please check the following article:
# http://antirez.com/post/redis-persistence-demystified.html
#
# If unsure, use "everysec".

# appendfsync always
appendfsync everysec
# appendfsync no

# When the AOF fsync policy is set to always or everysec, and a background
# saving process (a background save or AOF log background rewriting) is
# performing a lot of I/O against the disk, in some Linux configurations
# Redis may block too long on the fsync() call. Note that there is no fix for
# this currently, as even performing fsync in a different thread will block
# our synchronous write(2) call.
#
# In order to mitigate this problem it's possible to use the following option
# that will prevent fsync() from being called in the main process while a
# BGSAVE or BGREWRITEAOF is in progress.
#
# This means that while another child is saving, the durability of Redis is
# the same as "appendfsync no". In practical terms, this means that it is
# possible to lose up to 30 seconds of log in the worst scenario (with the
# default Linux settings).
#
# If you have latency problems turn this to "yes". Otherwise leave it as
# "no" that is the safest pick from the point of view of durability.

no-appendfsync-on-rewrite no

# Automatic rewrite of the append only file.
# Redis is able to automatically rewrite the log file implicitly calling
# BGREWRITEAOF when the AOF log size grows by the specified percentage.
#
# This is how it works: Redis remembers the size of the AOF file after the
# latest rewrite (if no rewrite has happened since the restart, the size of
# the AOF at startup is used).
#
# This base size is compared to the current size. If the current size is
# bigger than the specified percentage, the rewrite is triggered. Also
# you need to specify a minimal size for the AOF file to be rewritten, this
# is useful to avoid rewriting the AOF file even if the percentage increase
# is reached but it is still pretty small.
#
# Specify a percentage of zero in order to disable the automatic AOF
# rewrite feature.

auto-aof-rewrite-percentage 100
auto-aof-rewrite-min-size 64mb

# An AOF file may be found to be truncated at the end during the Redis
# startup process, when the AOF data gets loaded back into memory.
# This may happen when the system where Redis is running
# crashes, especially when an ext4 filesystem is mounted without the
# data=ordered option (however this can't happen when Redis itself
# crashes or aborts but the operating system still works correctly).
#
# Redis can either exit with an error when this happens, or load as much
# data as possible (the default now) and start if the AOF file is found
# to be truncated at the end. The following option controls this behavior.
#
# If aof-load-truncated is set to yes, a truncated AOF file is loaded and
# the Redis server starts emitting a log to inform the user of the event.
# Otherwise if the option is set to no, the server aborts with an error
# and refuses to start. When the option is set to no, the user requires
# to fix the AOF file using the "redis-check-aof" utility before to restart
# the server.
#
# Note that if the AOF file will be found to be corrupted in the middle
# the server will still exit with an error. This option only applies when
# Redis will try to read more data from the AOF file but not enough bytes
# will be found.
aof-load-truncated yes

# Redis can create append-only base files in either RDB or AOF formats. Using
# the RDB format is always faster and more efficient, and disabling it is only
# supported for backward compatibility purposes.
aof-use-rdb-preamble yes

# Redis supports recording timestamp annotations in the AOF to support restoring
# the data from a specific point-in-time. However, using this capability changes
# the AOF format in a way that may not be compatible with existing AOF parsers.
aof-timestamp-enabled no

################################ SHUTDOWN #####################################

# Maximum time to wait for replicas when shutting down, in seconds.
#
# During shut down, a grace period allows any lagging replicas to catch up with
# the latest replication offset before the master exists. This period can
# prevent data loss, especially for deployments without configured disk backups.
#
# The 'shutdown-timeout' value is the grace period's duration in seconds. It is
# only applicable when the instance has replicas. To disable the feature, set
# the value to 0.
#
# shutdown-timeout 10

# When Redis receives a SIGINT or SIGTERM, shutdown is initiated and by default
# an RDB snapshot is written to disk in a blocking operation if save points are configured.
# The options used on signaled shutdown can include the following values:
# default:  Saves RDB snapshot only if save points are configured.
#           Waits for lagging replicas to catch up.
# save:     Forces a DB saving operation even if no save points are configured.
# nosave:   Prevents DB saving operation even if one or more save points are configured.
# now:      Skips waiting for lagging replicas.
# force:    Ignores any errors that would normally prevent the server from exiting.
#
# Any combination of values is allowed as long as "save" and "nosave" are not set simultaneously.
# Example: "nosave force now"
#
# shutdown-on-sigint default
# shutdown-on-sigterm default

################ NON-DETERMINISTIC LONG BLOCKING COMMANDS #####################

# Maximum time in milliseconds for EVAL scripts, functions and in some cases
# modules' commands before Redis can start processing or rejecting other clients.
#
# If the maximum execution time is reached Redis will start to reply to most
# commands with a BUSY error.
#
# In this state Redis will only allow a handful of commands to be executed.
# For instance, SCRIPT KILL, FUNCTION KILL, SHUTDOWN NOSAVE and possibly some
# module specific 'allow-busy' commands.
#
# SCRIPT KILL and FUNCTION KILL will only be able to stop a script that did not
# yet call any write commands, so SHUTDOWN NOSAVE may be the only way to stop
# the server in the case a write command was already issued by the script when
# the user doesn't want to wait for the natural termination of the script.
#
# The default is 5 seconds. It is possible to set it to 0 or a negative value
# to disable this mechanism (uninterrupted execution). Note that in the past
# this config had a different name, which is now an alias, so both of these do
# the same:
lua-time-limit 5000
# busy-reply-threshold 5000

################################ REDIS CLUSTER  ###############################

# Normal Redis instances can't be part of a Redis Cluster; only nodes that are
# started as cluster nodes can. In order to start a Redis instance as a
# cluster node enable the cluster support uncommenting the following:
#
cluster-enabled yes

# Every cluster node has a cluster configuration file. This file is not
# intended to be edited by hand. It is created and updated by Redis nodes.
# Every Redis Cluster node requires a different cluster configuration file.
# Make sure that instances running in the same system do not have
# overlapping cluster configuration file names.
#
cluster-config-file /bitnami/redis/data/nodes.conf

# Cluster node timeout is the amount of milliseconds a node must be unreachable
# for it to be considered in failure state.
# Most other internal time limits are a multiple of the node timeout.
#
# cluster-node-timeout 15000

# The cluster port is the port that the cluster bus will listen for inbound connections on. When set
# to the default value, 0, it will be bound to the command port + 10000. Setting this value requires
# you to specify the cluster bus port when executing cluster meet.
# cluster-port 0

# A replica of a failing master will avoid to start a failover if its data
# looks too old.
#
# There is no simple way for a replica to actually have an exact measure of
# its "data age", so the following two checks are performed:
#
# 1) If there are multiple replicas able to failover, they exchange messages
#    in order to try to give an advantage to the replica with the best
#    replication offset (more data from the master processed).
#    Replicas will try to get their rank by offset, and apply to the start
#    of the failover a delay proportional to their rank.
#
# 2) Every single replica computes the time of the last interaction with
#    its master. This can be the last ping or command received (if the master
#    is still in the "connected" state), or the time that elapsed since the
#    disconnection with the master (if the replication link is currently down).
#    If the last interaction is too old, the replica will not try to failover
#    at all.
#
# The point "2" can be tuned by user. Specifically a replica will not perform
# the failover if, since the last interaction with the master, the time
# elapsed is greater than:
#
#   (node-timeout * cluster-replica-validity-factor) + repl-ping-replica-period
#
# So for example if node-timeout is 30 seconds, and the cluster-replica-validity-factor
# is 10, and assuming a default repl-ping-replica-period of 10 seconds, the
# replica will not try to failover if it was not able to talk with the master
# for longer than 310 seconds.
#
# A large cluster-replica-validity-factor may allow replicas with too old data to failover
# a master, while a too small value may prevent the cluster from being able to
# elect a replica at all.
#
# For maximum availability, it is possible to set the cluster-replica-validity-factor
# to a value of 0, which means, that replicas will always try to failover the
# master regardless of the last time they interacted with the master.
# (However they'll always try to apply a delay proportional to their
# offset rank).
#
# Zero is the only value able to guarantee that when all the partitions heal
# the cluster will always be able to continue.
#
# cluster-replica-validity-factor 10

# Cluster replicas are able to migrate to orphaned masters, that are masters
# that are left without working replicas. This improves the cluster ability
# to resist to failures as otherwise an orphaned master can't be failed over
# in case of failure if it has no working replicas.
#
# Replicas migrate to orphaned masters only if there are still at least a
# given number of other working replicas for their old master. This number
# is the "migration barrier". A migration barrier of 1 means that a replica
# will migrate only if there is at least 1 other working replica for its master
# and so forth. It usually reflects the number of replicas you want for every
# master in your cluster.
#
# Default is 1 (replicas migrate only if their masters remain with at least
# one replica). To disable migration just set it to a very large value or
# set cluster-allow-replica-migration to 'no'.
# A value of 0 can be set but is useful only for debugging and dangerous
# in production.
#
# cluster-migration-barrier 1

# Turning off this option allows to use less automatic cluster configuration.
# It both disables migration to orphaned masters and migration from masters
# that became empty.
#
# Default is 'yes' (allow automatic migrations).
#
# cluster-allow-replica-migration yes

# By default Redis Cluster nodes stop accepting queries if they detect there
# is at least a hash slot uncovered (no available node is serving it).
# This way if the cluster is partially down (for example a range of hash slots
# are no longer covered) all the cluster becomes, eventually, unavailable.
# It automatically returns available as soon as all the slots are covered again.
#
# However sometimes you want the subset of the cluster which is working,
# to continue to accept queries for the part of the key space that is still
# covered. In order to do so, just set the cluster-require-full-coverage
# option to no.
#
# cluster-require-full-coverage yes

# This option, when set to yes, prevents replicas from trying to failover its
# master during master failures. However the replica can still perform a
# manual failover, if forced to do so.
#
# This is useful in different scenarios, especially in the case of multiple
# data center operations, where we want one side to never be promoted if not
# in the case of a total DC failure.
#
# cluster-replica-no-failover no

# This option, when set to yes, allows nodes to serve read traffic while the
# cluster is in a down state, as long as it believes it owns the slots.
#
# This is useful for two cases.  The first case is for when an application
# doesn't require consistency of data during node failures or network partitions.
# One example of this is a cache, where as long as the node has the data it
# should be able to serve it.
#
# The second use case is for configurations that don't meet the recommended
# three shards but want to enable cluster mode and scale later. A
# master outage in a 1 or 2 shard configuration causes a read/write outage to the
# entire cluster without this option set, with it set there is only a write outage.
# Without a quorum of masters, slot ownership will not change automatically.
#
# cluster-allow-reads-when-down no

# This option, when set to yes, allows nodes to serve pubsub shard traffic while
# the cluster is in a down state, as long as it believes it owns the slots.
#
# This is useful if the application would like to use the pubsub feature even when
# the cluster global stable state is not OK. If the application wants to make sure only
# one shard is serving a given channel, this feature should be kept as yes.
#
# cluster-allow-pubsubshard-when-down yes

# Cluster link send buffer limit is the limit on the memory usage of an individual
# cluster bus link's send buffer in bytes. Cluster links would be freed if they exceed
# this limit. This is to primarily prevent send buffers from growing unbounded on links
# toward slow peers (E.g. PubSub messages being piled up).
# This limit is disabled by default. Enable this limit when 'mem_cluster_links' INFO field
# and/or 'send-buffer-allocated' entries in the 'CLUSTER LINKS` command output continuously increase.
# Minimum limit of 1gb is recommended so that cluster link buffer can fit in at least a single
# PubSub message by default. (client-query-buffer-limit default value is 1gb)
#
# cluster-link-sendbuf-limit 0

# Clusters can configure their announced hostname using this config. This is a common use case for
# applications that need to use TLS Server Name Indication (SNI) or dealing with DNS based
# routing. By default this value is only shown as additional metadata in the CLUSTER SLOTS
# command, but can be changed using 'cluster-preferred-endpoint-type' config. This value is
# communicated along the clusterbus to all nodes, setting it to an empty string will remove
# the hostname and also propagate the removal.
#
# cluster-announce-hostname ""

# Clusters can advertise how clients should connect to them using either their IP address,
# a user defined hostname, or by declaring they have no endpoint. Which endpoint is
# shown as the preferred endpoint is set by using the cluster-preferred-endpoint-type
# config with values 'ip', 'hostname', or 'unknown-endpoint'. This value controls how
# the endpoint returned for MOVED/ASKING requests as well as the first field of CLUSTER SLOTS.
# If the preferred endpoint type is set to hostname, but no announced hostname is set, a '?'
# will be returned instead.
#
# When a cluster advertises itself as having an unknown endpoint, it's indicating that
# the server doesn't know how clients can reach the cluster. This can happen in certain
# networking situations where there are multiple possible routes to the node, and the
# server doesn't know which one the client took. In this case, the server is expecting
# the client to reach out on the same endpoint it used for making the last request, but use
# the port provided in the response.
#
# cluster-preferred-endpoint-type ip

# In order to setup your cluster make sure to read the documentation
# available at https://redis.io web site.

########################## CLUSTER DOCKER/NAT support  ########################

# In certain deployments, Redis Cluster nodes address discovery fails, because
# addresses are NAT-ted or because ports are forwarded (the typical case is
# Docker and other containers).
#
# In order to make Redis Cluster working in such environments, a static
# configuration where each node knows its public address is needed. The
# following four options are used for this scope, and are:
#
# * cluster-announce-ip
# * cluster-announce-port
# * cluster-announce-tls-port
# * cluster-announce-bus-port
#
# Each instructs the node about its address, client ports (for connections
# without and with TLS) and cluster message bus port. The information is then
# published in the header of the bus packets so that other nodes will be able to
# correctly map the address of the node publishing the information.
#
# If cluster-tls is set to yes and cluster-announce-tls-port is omitted or set
# to zero, then cluster-announce-port refers to the TLS port. Note also that
# cluster-announce-tls-port has no effect if cluster-tls is set to no.
#
# If the above options are not used, the normal Redis Cluster auto-detection
# will be used instead.
#
# Note that when remapped, the bus port may not be at the fixed offset of
# clients port + 10000, so you can specify any port and bus-port depending
# on how they get remapped. If the bus-port is not set, a fixed offset of
# 10000 will be used as usual.
#
# Example:
#
# cluster-announce-ip 10.1.1.5
# cluster-announce-tls-port 6379
# cluster-announce-port 0
# cluster-announce-bus-port 6380

################################## SLOW LOG ###################################

# The Redis Slow Log is a system to log queries that exceeded a specified
# execution time. The execution time does not include the I/O operations
# like talking with the client, sending the reply and so forth,
# but just the time needed to actually execute the command (this is the only
# stage of command execution where the thread is blocked and can not serve
# other requests in the meantime).
#
# You can configure the slow log with two parameters: one tells Redis
# what is the execution time, in microseconds, to exceed in order for the
# command to get logged, and the other parameter is the length of the
# slow log. When a new command is logged the oldest one is removed from the
# queue of logged commands.

# The following time is expressed in microseconds, so 1000000 is equivalent
# to one second. Note that a negative number disables the slow log, while
# a value of zero forces the logging of every command.
slowlog-log-slower-than 10000

# There is no limit to this length. Just be aware that it will consume memory.
# You can reclaim memory used by the slow log with SLOWLOG RESET.
slowlog-max-len 128

################################ LATENCY MONITOR ##############################

# The Redis latency monitoring subsystem samples different operations
# at runtime in order to collect data related to possible sources of
# latency of a Redis instance.
#
# Via the LATENCY command this information is available to the user that can
# print graphs and obtain reports.
#
# The system only logs operations that were performed in a time equal or
# greater than the amount of milliseconds specified via the
# latency-monitor-threshold configuration directive. When its value is set
# to zero, the latency monitor is turned off.
#
# By default latency monitoring is disabled since it is mostly not needed
# if you don't have latency issues, and collecting data has a performance
# impact, that while very small, can be measured under big load. Latency
# monitoring can easily be enabled at runtime using the command
# "CONFIG SET latency-monitor-threshold <milliseconds>" if needed.
latency-monitor-threshold 0

################################ LATENCY TRACKING ##############################

# The Redis extended latency monitoring tracks the per command latencies and enables
# exporting the percentile distribution via the INFO latencystats command,
# and cumulative latency distributions (histograms) via the LATENCY command.
#
# By default, the extended latency monitoring is enabled since the overhead
# of keeping track of the command latency is very small.
# latency-tracking yes

# By default the exported latency percentiles via the INFO latencystats command
# are the p50, p99, and p999.
# latency-tracking-info-percentiles 50 99 99.9

############################# EVENT NOTIFICATION ##############################

# Redis can notify Pub/Sub clients about events happening in the key space.
# This feature is documented at https://redis.io/topics/notifications
#
# For instance if keyspace events notification is enabled, and a client
# performs a DEL operation on key "foo" stored in the Database 0, two
# messages will be published via Pub/Sub:
#
# PUBLISH __keyspace@0__:foo del
# PUBLISH __keyevent@0__:del foo
#
# It is possible to select the events that Redis will notify among a set
# of classes. Every class is identified by a single character:
#
#  K     Keyspace events, published with __keyspace@<db>__ prefix.
#  E     Keyevent events, published with __keyevent@<db>__ prefix.
#  g     Generic commands (non-type specific) like DEL, EXPIRE, RENAME, ...
#  $     String commands
#  l     List commands
#  s     Set commands
#  h     Hash commands
#  z     Sorted set commands
#  x     Expired events (events generated every time a key expires)
#  e     Evicted events (events generated when a key is evicted for maxmemory)
#  n     New key events (Note: not included in the 'A' class)
#  t     Stream commands
#  d     Module key type events
#  m     Key-miss events (Note: It is not included in the 'A' class)
#  A     Alias for g$lshzxetd, so that the "AKE" string means all the events
#        (Except key-miss events which are excluded from 'A' due to their
#         unique nature).
#
#  The "notify-keyspace-events" takes as argument a string that is composed
#  of zero or multiple characters. The empty string means that notifications
#  are disabled.
#
#  Example: to enable list and generic events, from the point of view of the
#           event name, use:
#
#  notify-keyspace-events Elg
#
#  Example 2: to get the stream of the expired keys subscribing to channel
#             name __keyevent@0__:expired use:
#
#  notify-keyspace-events Ex
#
#  By default all notifications are disabled because most users don't need
#  this feature and the feature has some overhead. Note that if you don't
#  specify at least one of K or E, no events will be delivered.
notify-keyspace-events ""

############################### ADVANCED CONFIG ###############################

# Hashes are encoded using a memory efficient data structure when they have a
# small number of entries, and the biggest entry does not exceed a given
# threshold. These thresholds can be configured using the following directives.
hash-max-listpack-entries 512
hash-max-listpack-value 64

# Lists are also encoded in a special way to save a lot of space.
# The number of entries allowed per internal list node can be specified
# as a fixed maximum size or a maximum number of elements.
# For a fixed maximum size, use -5 through -1, meaning:
# -5: max size: 64 Kb  <-- not recommended for normal workloads
# -4: max size: 32 Kb  <-- not recommended
# -3: max size: 16 Kb  <-- probably not recommended
# -2: max size: 8 Kb   <-- good
# -1: max size: 4 Kb   <-- good
# Positive numbers mean store up to _exactly_ that number of elements
# per list node.
# The highest performing option is usually -2 (8 Kb size) or -1 (4 Kb size),
# but if your use case is unique, adjust the settings as necessary.
list-max-listpack-size -2

# Lists may also be compressed.
# Compress depth is the number of quicklist ziplist nodes from *each* side of
# the list to *exclude* from compression.  The head and tail of the list
# are always uncompressed for fast push/pop operations.  Settings are:
# 0: disable all list compression
# 1: depth 1 means "don't start compressing until after 1 node into the list,
#    going from either the head or tail"
#    So: [head]->node->node->...->node->[tail]
#    [head], [tail] will always be uncompressed; inner nodes will compress.
# 2: [head]->[next]->node->node->...->node->[prev]->[tail]
#    2 here means: don't compress head or head->next or tail->prev or tail,
#    but compress all nodes between them.
# 3: [head]->[next]->[next]->node->node->...->node->[prev]->[prev]->[tail]
# etc.
list-compress-depth 0

# Sets have a special encoding in just one case: when a set is composed
# of just strings that happen to be integers in radix 10 in the range
# of 64 bit signed integers.
# The following configuration setting sets the limit in the size of the
# set in order to use this special memory saving encoding.
set-max-intset-entries 512

# Similarly to hashes and lists, sorted sets are also specially encoded in
# order to save a lot of space. This encoding is only used when the length and
# elements of a sorted set are below the following limits:
zset-max-listpack-entries 128
zset-max-listpack-value 64

# HyperLogLog sparse representation bytes limit. The limit includes the
# 16 bytes header. When an HyperLogLog using the sparse representation crosses
# this limit, it is converted into the dense representation.
#
# A value greater than 16000 is totally useless, since at that point the
# dense representation is more memory efficient.
#
# The suggested value is ~ 3000 in order to have the benefits of
# the space efficient encoding without slowing down too much PFADD,
# which is O(N) with the sparse encoding. The value can be raised to
# ~ 10000 when CPU is not a concern, but space is, and the data set is
# composed of many HyperLogLogs with cardinality in the 0 - 15000 range.
hll-sparse-max-bytes 3000

# Streams macro node max size / items. The stream data structure is a radix
# tree of big nodes that encode multiple items inside. Using this configuration
# it is possible to configure how big a single node can be in bytes, and the
# maximum number of items it may contain before switching to a new node when
# appending new stream entries. If any of the following settings are set to
# zero, the limit is ignored, so for instance it is possible to set just a
# max entries limit by setting max-bytes to 0 and max-entries to the desired
# value.
stream-node-max-bytes 4096
stream-node-max-entries 100

# Active rehashing uses 1 millisecond every 100 milliseconds of CPU time in
# order to help rehashing the main Redis hash table (the one mapping top-level
# keys to values). The hash table implementation Redis uses (see dict.c)
# performs a lazy rehashing: the more operation you run into a hash table
# that is rehashing, the more rehashing "steps" are performed, so if the
# server is idle the rehashing is never complete and some more memory is used
# by the hash table.
#
# The default is to use this millisecond 10 times every second in order to
# actively rehash the main dictionaries, freeing memory when possible.
#
# If unsure:
# use "activerehashing no" if you have hard latency requirements and it is
# not a good thing in your environment that Redis can reply from time to time
# to queries with 2 milliseconds delay.
#
# use "activerehashing yes" if you don't have such hard requirements but
# want to free memory asap when possible.
activerehashing yes

# The client output buffer limits can be used to force disconnection of clients
# that are not reading data from the server fast enough for some reason (a
# common reason is that a Pub/Sub client can't consume messages as fast as the
# publisher can produce them).
#
# The limit can be set differently for the three different classes of clients:
#
# normal -> normal clients including MONITOR clients
# replica -> replica clients
# pubsub -> clients subscribed to at least one pubsub channel or pattern
#
# The syntax of every client-output-buffer-limit directive is the following:
#
# client-output-buffer-limit <class> <hard limit> <soft limit> <soft seconds>
#
# A client is immediately disconnected once the hard limit is reached, or if
# the soft limit is reached and remains reached for the specified number of
# seconds (continuously).
# So for instance if the hard limit is 32 megabytes and the soft limit is
# 16 megabytes / 10 seconds, the client will get disconnected immediately
# if the size of the output buffers reach 32 megabytes, but will also get
# disconnected if the client reaches 16 megabytes and continuously overcomes
# the limit for 10 seconds.
#
# By default normal clients are not limited because they don't receive data
# without asking (in a push way), but just after a request, so only
# asynchronous clients may create a scenario where data is requested faster
# than it can read.
#
# Instead there is a default limit for pubsub and replica clients, since
# subscribers and replicas receive data in a push fashion.
#
# Note that it doesn't make sense to set the replica clients output buffer
# limit lower than the repl-backlog-size config (partial sync will succeed
# and then replica will get disconnected).
# Such a configuration is ignored (the size of repl-backlog-size will be used).
# This doesn't have memory consumption implications since the replica client
# will share the backlog buffers memory.
#
# Both the hard or the soft limit can be disabled by setting them to zero.
client-output-buffer-limit normal 0 0 0
client-output-buffer-limit replica 256mb 64mb 60
client-output-buffer-limit pubsub 32mb 8mb 60

# Client query buffers accumulate new commands. They are limited to a fixed
# amount by default in order to avoid that a protocol desynchronization (for
# instance due to a bug in the client) will lead to unbound memory usage in
# the query buffer. However you can configure it here if you have very special
# needs, such us huge multi/exec requests or alike.
#
# client-query-buffer-limit 1gb

# In some scenarios client connections can hog up memory leading to OOM
# errors or data eviction. To avoid this we can cap the accumulated memory
# used by all client connections (all pubsub and normal clients). Once we
# reach that limit connections will be dropped by the server freeing up
# memory. The server will attempt to drop the connections using the most
# memory first. We call this mechanism "client eviction".
#
# Client eviction is configured using the maxmemory-clients setting as follows:
# 0 - client eviction is disabled (default)
#
# A memory value can be used for the client eviction threshold,
# for example:
# maxmemory-clients 1g
#
# A percentage value (between 1% and 100%) means the client eviction threshold
# is based on a percentage of the maxmemory setting. For example to set client
# eviction at 5% of maxmemory:
# maxmemory-clients 5%

# In the Redis protocol, bulk requests, that are, elements representing single
# strings, are normally limited to 512 mb. However you can change this limit
# here, but must be 1mb or greater
#
# proto-max-bulk-len 512mb

# Redis calls an internal function to perform many background tasks, like
# closing connections of clients in timeout, purging expired keys that are
# never requested, and so forth.
#
# Not all tasks are performed with the same frequency, but Redis checks for
# tasks to perform according to the specified "hz" value.
#
# By default "hz" is set to 10. Raising the value will use more CPU when
# Redis is idle, but at the same time will make Redis more responsive when
# there are many keys expiring at the same time, and timeouts may be
# handled with more precision.
#
# The range is between 1 and 500, however a value over 100 is usually not
# a good idea. Most users should use the default of 10 and raise this up to
# 100 only in environments where very low latency is required.
hz 10

# Normally it is useful to have an HZ value which is proportional to the
# number of clients connected. This is useful in order, for instance, to
# avoid too many clients are processed for each background task invocation
# in order to avoid latency spikes.
#
# Since the default HZ value by default is conservatively set to 10, Redis
# offers, and enables by default, the ability to use an adaptive HZ value
# which will temporarily raise when there are many connected clients.
#
# When dynamic HZ is enabled, the actual configured HZ will be used
# as a baseline, but multiples of the configured HZ value will be actually
# used as needed once more clients are connected. In this way an idle
# instance will use very little CPU time while a busy instance will be
# more responsive.
dynamic-hz yes

# When a child rewrites the AOF file, if the following option is enabled
# the file will be fsync-ed every 4 MB of data generated. This is useful
# in order to commit the file to the disk more incrementally and avoid
# big latency spikes.
aof-rewrite-incremental-fsync yes

# When redis saves RDB file, if the following option is enabled
# the file will be fsync-ed every 4 MB of data generated. This is useful
# in order to commit the file to the disk more incrementally and avoid
# big latency spikes.
rdb-save-incremental-fsync yes

# Redis LFU eviction (see maxmemory setting) can be tuned. However it is a good
# idea to start with the default settings and only change them after investigating
# how to improve the performances and how the keys LFU change over time, which
# is possible to inspect via the OBJECT FREQ command.
#
# There are two tunable parameters in the Redis LFU implementation: the
# counter logarithm factor and the counter decay time. It is important to
# understand what the two parameters mean before changing them.
#
# The LFU counter is just 8 bits per key, it's maximum value is 255, so Redis
# uses a probabilistic increment with logarithmic behavior. Given the value
# of the old counter, when a key is accessed, the counter is incremented in
# this way:
#
# 1. A random number R between 0 and 1 is extracted.
# 2. A probability P is calculated as 1/(old_value*lfu_log_factor+1).
# 3. The counter is incremented only if R < P.
#
# The default lfu-log-factor is 10. This is a table of how the frequency
# counter changes with a different number of accesses with different
# logarithmic factors:
#
# +--------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+
# | factor | 100 hits   | 1000 hits  | 100K hits  | 1M hits    | 10M hits   |
# +--------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+
# | 0      | 104        | 255        | 255        | 255        | 255        |
# +--------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+
# | 1      | 18         | 49         | 255        | 255        | 255        |
# +--------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+
# | 10     | 10         | 18         | 142        | 255        | 255        |
# +--------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+
# | 100    | 8          | 11         | 49         | 143        | 255        |
# +--------+------------+------------+------------+------------+------------+
#
# NOTE: The above table was obtained by running the following commands:
#
#   redis-benchmark -n 1000000 incr foo
#   redis-cli object freq foo
#
# NOTE 2: The counter initial value is 5 in order to give new objects a chance
# to accumulate hits.
#
# The counter decay time is the time, in minutes, that must elapse in order
# for the key counter to be divided by two (or decremented if it has a value
# less <= 10).
#
# The default value for the lfu-decay-time is 1. A special value of 0 means to
# decay the counter every time it happens to be scanned.
#
# lfu-log-factor 10
# lfu-decay-time 1

########################### ACTIVE DEFRAGMENTATION #######################
#
# What is active defragmentation?
# -------------------------------
#
# Active (online) defragmentation allows a Redis server to compact the
# spaces left between small allocations and deallocations of data in memory,
# thus allowing to reclaim back memory.
#
# Fragmentation is a natural process that happens with every allocator (but
# less so with Jemalloc, fortunately) and certain workloads. Normally a server
# restart is needed in order to lower the fragmentation, or at least to flush
# away all the data and create it again. However thanks to this feature
# implemented by Oran Agra for Redis 4.0 this process can happen at runtime
# in a "hot" way, while the server is running.
#
# Basically when the fragmentation is over a certain level (see the
# configuration options below) Redis will start to create new copies of the
# values in contiguous memory regions by exploiting certain specific Jemalloc
# features (in order to understand if an allocation is causing fragmentation
# and to allocate it in a better place), and at the same time, will release the
# old copies of the data. This process, repeated incrementally for all the keys
# will cause the fragmentation to drop back to normal values.
#
# Important things to understand:
#
# 1. This feature is disabled by default, and only works if you compiled Redis
#    to use the copy of Jemalloc we ship with the source code of Redis.
#    This is the default with Linux builds.
#
# 2. You never need to enable this feature if you don't have fragmentation
#    issues.
#
# 3. Once you experience fragmentation, you can enable this feature when
#    needed with the command "CONFIG SET activedefrag yes".
#
# The configuration parameters are able to fine tune the behavior of the
# defragmentation process. If you are not sure about what they mean it is
# a good idea to leave the defaults untouched.

# Active defragmentation is disabled by default
# activedefrag no

# Minimum amount of fragmentation waste to start active defrag
# active-defrag-ignore-bytes 100mb

# Minimum percentage of fragmentation to start active defrag
# active-defrag-threshold-lower 10

# Maximum percentage of fragmentation at which we use maximum effort
# active-defrag-threshold-upper 100

# Minimal effort for defrag in CPU percentage, to be used when the lower
# threshold is reached
# active-defrag-cycle-min 1

# Maximal effort for defrag in CPU percentage, to be used when the upper
# threshold is reached
# active-defrag-cycle-max 25

# Maximum number of set/hash/zset/list fields that will be processed from
# the main dictionary scan
# active-defrag-max-scan-fields 1000

# Jemalloc background thread for purging will be enabled by default
jemalloc-bg-thread yes

# It is possible to pin different threads and processes of Redis to specific
# CPUs in your system, in order to maximize the performances of the server.
# This is useful both in order to pin different Redis threads in different
# CPUs, but also in order to make sure that multiple Redis instances running
# in the same host will be pinned to different CPUs.
#
# Normally you can do this using the "taskset" command, however it is also
# possible to this via Redis configuration directly, both in Linux and FreeBSD.
#
# You can pin the server/IO threads, bio threads, aof rewrite child process, and
# the bgsave child process. The syntax to specify the cpu list is the same as
# the taskset command:
#
# Set redis server/io threads to cpu affinity 0,2,4,6:
# server_cpulist 0-7:2
#
# Set bio threads to cpu affinity 1,3:
# bio_cpulist 1,3
#
# Set aof rewrite child process to cpu affinity 8,9,10,11:
# aof_rewrite_cpulist 8-11
#
# Set bgsave child process to cpu affinity 1,10,11
# bgsave_cpulist 1,10-11

# In some cases redis will emit warnings and even refuse to start if it detects
# that the system is in bad state, it is possible to suppress these warnings
# by setting the following config which takes a space delimited list of warnings
# to suppress
#
# ignore-warnings ARM64-COW-BUG


三、总结

至此,关于使用KubeSphere3.3.0 管理平台搭建Redis集群l到这里就结束了。作者制作不易,别忘了点赞、关注、加收藏哦,我们下期见。。。


四、其他文章传送门

第一章 KubeSphere 3.3.0 + Seata 1.5.2 + Nacos 2.1.0 (nacos集群模式)
第二章 KubeSphere3.3.0 + Nacos 2.1.0 (集群部署)
第三章 KubeSphere3.3.0 + Sentinel 1.8.4 + Nacos 2.1.0 集群部署
第四章 KubeSphere3.3.0 + Redis7.0.4 + Redis-Cluster 集群部署
第五章 KubeSphere3.3.0 + MySQL8.0.25 集群部署
第六章 KubeSphere3.3.0 安装部署 + KubeKey2.2.1(kk)创建集群
第七章 KubeSphere3.3.0 + MySQL8.0 单节点部署
第八章 KubeSphere3.3.0 + Redis7.0.4 单节点部署
第九章 KubeSphere3.3.0 + Nacos2.1.0 单节点部署
第十章 KubeSphere3.3.0 + FastDFS6.0.8 部署
第十一章 KubeSphere3.4.1 + MinIO:2024.3.15 部署

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