3 library(redis_streams): Using Redis streams
A Redis stream is a set of messages consisting of key-value pairs that are identified by a time and sequence number. Streams are powerful objects that can roughly be used for three purposes:
- Maintain and query a log of events, i.e., a timeline.
- Provide an alternative to Redis' publish/subscribe API that ensures messages get delivered by all clients even if they are offline at the moment an event is published.
- Distribute messages over a group of clients. This mode assigns messages to clients in a round-robin fashion. Clients confirm a specific message is handled. Living clients can inspect the stream for possibly dead clients and migrate the pending messages to other clients.
This library abstracts the latter two scenarios. The main predicates are
- xadd/4 to add to a stream
- xlisten/3 to read and broadcast messages from a stream
- xlisten_group/5 to act as a consumer in a consumer group.
- xstream_set(+Redis, +Key, +Option)
- Set an option on for Key on Redis. Currently
supports:
- maxlen(+Count)
- Make xadd/4 add a
MAXLEN ~
Count option to theXADD
command, capping the length of the stream. See also Redis as a message brokering system (section 1.3)
- [det]xadd(+Redis, +Key, ?Id, +Data:dict)
- Add a message to a the stream Key on Redis. The
length of the stream can be capped using the xstream_set/3
option
maxlen(Count)
. If Id is unbound, generating the id is left to the server and Id is unified with the returned id. The returned id is a string consisting of the time stamp in milliseconds and a sequence number. See Redis docs for details. - xlisten(+Redis, +Streams, +Options)
- Listen using
XREAD
on one or more Streams on the server Redis. For each message that arrives, call broadcast/1, where Data is a dict representing the message.broadcast(redis(Redis, Stream, Id, Data))
Options:
- count(+Count)
- Process at most Count messages per stream for each request.
- start(+Start)
- Normally either
0
to start get all messages from the epoch or$
to get messages starting with the last. Default is$
. - starts(+List)
- May be used as an alternative to the start/1 option to specify the start for each stream. This may be used to restart listening if the application remembers the last processed id.
Note that this predicate does not terminate. It is normally executed in a thread. The following call listens to the streams
key1
andkey2
on the default Redis server. Usingreconnect(true)
, the client will try to re-establish a connection if the collection got lost.?- redis_connect(default, C, [reconnect(true)]), thread_create(xlisten(C, [key1, key2], [start($)]), _, [detached(true)]).
Redis is either a Redis server name (see redis_server/3) or an open connection. If it is a server name, a new connection is opened that is closed if xlisten/3 completes. - See also
- redis_subscribe/2 implements the classical pub/sub system of Redis that does not have any memory.
- xlisten_group(+Redis, +Group, +Consumer, +Streams, +Options)
- Listen as Consumer to Group. This is similar to xlisten/3,
with the following differences:
- Instead of using broadcast/1, broadcast_request/1
is used and the message is only considered processed if broadcast_request/1
succeeds. If the message is handled with success, an
XACK
is sent to the server.
Options processed:
- block(+Seconds)
- Causes
XREADGROUP
to return with timeout when no messages arrive within Seconds. On a timeout, xidle_group/5 is called which will try to handle messages to other consumers pending longer than Seconds. Choosing the time depends on the application. Notably:- Using a time shorter than the required processing time will make the
job migrate from consumer to consumer until
max_deliveries(Count)
is exceeded. Note that the original receiver does not notice that the job is claimed and thus multiple consumers may ultimately answer the message. - Using a too long time causes an unnecessarily long delay if a node fails.
- Using a time shorter than the required processing time will make the
job migrate from consumer to consumer until
- max_deliveries(+Count)
- Re-deliver (using
XCLAIM
) a message max Count times. Exceeding this calls xhook/2. Default Count is3
. - max_claim(+Count)
- Do not claim more than Count messages during a single idle
action. Default is
10
.
- Instead of using broadcast/1, broadcast_request/1
is used and the message is only considered processed if broadcast_request/1
succeeds. If the message is handled with success, an
- xconsumer_stop(+Leave)
- May be called from a consumer listener to stop the consumer. This
predicate throws the exception
redis(stop(Leave))
, which is caught by xlisten_group/5. - [multifile]xhook(+Stream, +Event)
- This multifile predicate is called on certain stream events. Defined
events are:
- delivery_failed(Id, Group, Delivered)
- A message was delivered more than specified by max_deliveries/1
of xlisten_group/5. Id
is the message id, Group the group and
Delivered the current delivery count. If the hooks fails, the
message is acknowledged using
XACK
. From introduction to streams:"So once the deliveries counter reaches a given large number that you chose, it is probably wiser to put such messages in another stream and send a notification to the system administrator. This is basically the way that Redis streams implement the concept of the dead letter."
Index
- ?
- redis/1
- redis/2
- redis/3
- redis_array_dict/3
- redis_connect/1
- redis_connect/3
- redis_current_command/2
- redis_current_command/3
- redis_current_subscription/2
- redis_disconnect/1
- redis_disconnect/2
- redis_get_hash/3
- redis_get_list/3
- redis_get_list/4
- redis_hscan/4
- redis_property/2
- redis_read/2
- redis_scan/3
- redis_server/3
- redis_set_hash/3
- redis_set_list/3
- redis_sscan/4
- redis_subscribe/2
- redis_subscribe/4
- redis_unsubscribe/2
- redis_write/2
- redis_zscan/4
- xadd/4
- xconsumer_stop/1
- xhook/2
- xlisten/3
- xlisten_group/5
- xstream_set/3