redis
#
DescriptionThe Redis protocol support allows APISIX to proxy Redis commands, and provide various features according to the content of the commands, including:
- Redis protocol codec
- Fault injection according to the commands and key
note
This feature requires APISIX to be run on APISIX-Base.
It also requires the data sent from clients are well-formed and sane. Therefore, it should only be used in deployments where both the downstream and upstream are trusted.
#
Granularity of the requestLike other protocols based on the xRPC framework, the Redis implementation here also has the concept of request
.
Each Redis command is considered a request. However, the message subscribed from the server won't be considered a request.
For example, when a Redis client subscribes to channel foo
and receives the message bar
, then it unsubscribes the foo
channel, there are two requests: subscribe foo
and unsubscribe foo
.
#
AttributesName | Type | Required | Default | Valid values | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
faults | array[object] | False | Fault injections which can be applied based on the commands and keys |
Fields under an entry of faults
:
Name | Type | Required | Default | Valid values | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
commands | array[string] | True | ["get", "mget"] | Commands fault is restricted to | |
key | string | False | "blahblah" | Key fault is restricted to | |
delay | number | True | 0.1 | Duration of the delay in seconds |
#
Metricsapisix_redis_commands_total
: Total number of requests for a specific Redis command.Labels Description route matched stream route ID command the Redis command apisix_redis_commands_latency_seconds
: Latency of requests for a specific Redis command.Labels Description route matched stream route ID command the Redis command
#
Example usageAssumed the APISIX is proxying TCP on port 9101
, and the Redis is listening on port 6379
.
Let's create a Stream Route:
curl http://127.0.0.1:9080/apisix/admin/stream_routes/1 -H 'X-API-KEY: edd1c9f034335f136f87ad84b625c8f1' -X PUT -d '
{
"upstream": {
"type": "none",
"nodes": {
"127.0.0.1:6379": 1
}
},
"protocol": {
"name": "redis",
"conf": {
"faults": [{
"commands": ["get", "ping"],
"delay": 5
}]
}
}
}
'
Once you have configured the stream route, as shown above, you can make a request to it:
redis-cli -p 9101
127.0.0.1:9101> ping
PONG
(5.00s)
You can notice that there is a 5 seconds delay for the ping command.