Redix

Superfast, pipelined, resilient Redis client for Elixir.

Redix is a Redis client written in pure Elixir with focus on speed, correctness and resiliency (that is, being able to automatically reconnect to Redis in case of network errors).

Installation

Add the :redix dependency to your mix.exs file:

defp dependencies do
  [{:redix, ">= 0.0.0"}]
end

Then run $ mix deps.get to install it.

Why

As for the why you would want to use Redix over the more battle-tested redo or eredis Erlang clients, well, it's pure Elixir :). Also, it appears to be slightly faster than the above-metioned clients (see the section about speed). It surely lacks on battle-testing, but we can make up for that by using it a lot!

Usage

Redix is very simple in that it doesn't wrap Redis commands with Elixir functions: it only provides two functions (with their bang! variants), command/3 and pipeline/3. A Redis command is expressed as a list of strings making up the command and its arguments.

Connections are started via start_link/0, start_link/1 or start_link/2. These functions accept Redix-specific options as well as all the options accepted by GenServer.start_link/3 (e.g., :name for registering the connection process under a name).

{:ok, conn} = Redix.start_link
{:ok, conn} = Redix.start_link(host: "example.com", port: 5000)
{:ok, conn} = Redix.start_link("redis://localhost:6379/3", name: :redix)

Commands can be sent using Redix.command/2-3:

Redix.command(conn, ~w(SET mykey foo))
#=> {:ok, "OK"}
Redix.command(conn, ~w(GET mykey))
#=> {:ok, "foo"}

Pipelines are just lists of commands sent all at once to Redis for which Redis replies with a list of responses. They can be used in Redix via Redix.pipeline/2-3:

Redix.pipeline(conn, [~w(INCR foo), ~w(INCR foo), ~w(INCR foo 2)])
#=> {:ok, [1, 2, 4]}

command/2-3 and pipeline/2-3 always return {:ok, result} or {:error, reason}. If you want to access the result directly and raise in case there's an error, bang! variants are provided:

Redix.command!(conn, ["PING"])
#=> "PONG"

Redix.pipeline!(conn, [~w(SET mykey foo), ~w(GET mykey)])
#=> ["OK", "foo"]

A note about Redis errors: in the non-bang functions, they're returned as Redix.Error structs with a :message field which contains the original error message.

Redix.command(conn, ~w(FOO))
#=> {:error, %Redix.Error{message: "ERR unknown command 'FOO'"}}

# pipeline/2 returns {:ok, _} instead of {:error, _} even if there are errors in
# the list of responses so that it doesn't have to walk the entire list of
# responses.
Redix.pipeline(conn, [~w(PING), ~w(FOO)])
#=> {:ok, ["PONG", %Redix.Error{message: "ERR unknown command 'FOO'"}]}

In command!/2-3, they're raised as exceptions:

Redix.command!(conn, ~w(FOO))
#=> ** (Redix.Error) ERR unknown command 'FOO'

command!/2-3 and pipeline!/2-3 raise Redix.NetworkError in case there's an error related to the Redis connection (e.g., the connection is closed while Redix is waiting to reconnect).

Transactions are supported naturally as they're just made up of commands:

Redix.command(conn, ~w(MULTI))
#=> {:ok, "OK"}
Redix.command(conn, ~w(INCR counter))
#=> {:ok, "QUEUED"}
Redix.command(conn, ~w(INCR counter))
#=> {:ok, "QUEUED"}
Redix.command(conn, ~w(EXEC))
#=> {:ok, [1, 2]}

Resiliency

Redix takes full advantage of the connection library by James Fish to provide a resilient behaviour when dealing with the network connection to Redis. For example, if the connection to Redis drops, Redix will automatically try to reconnect to it periodically at a given "backoff" interval (which is configurable). Look at the documentation for the Redix module for more information on the available options and on the exact behaviour.

Speed

I'm by no means a benchmarking expert, but I ran some benchmarks (out of curiosity) against Redis clients for Erlang like redo and eredis. You can find these benchmarks in the ./bench directory. I used benchfella to make them.

It appears from the benchmarks that:

For now, I'm quite happy with these benchmarks and hope we can make them even better in the future.

Contributing

Clone the repository and run $ mix test to make sure everything is working. For tests to pass, you must have a Redis server running on localhost, port 6379.

License

MIT © 2015 Andrea Leopardi, see the license file.