iam use redis for get online user i just want to check if some user was online or not
first add user to onlines
sadd online_users user_a
(integer) 1
check if user_a is online
sismember online_users user_a
(integer) 1
my question its how to check for multi user if they are online some thing like
add soem users
sadd online_users user_a
(integer) 1
sadd online_users user_b
(integer) 1
sadd online_users user_c
(integer) 1
now i want to check for three users if they are online
sismember online_users {user_a,user_b,user_c}
i dont know if this right but i want for multi user check return data like
{0,1,0} = {offline,online,offline}
The best way to do this is to compare two sets.
1 - hold your 'contacts' in the 1st redis set
SADD contacts:your_id user_1 user_2 user_3 user_4
2- make another set of all connected users
SADD connected user_1 user_2 user_3 user_6 user_78
then use the command SINTER, it will give you the intersection between these two sets which means all of your contacts that are connected
SINTER connected contacts:your_id
just remember to keep the set 'connected' well updated... which is another story
hope this helps.
You'll have to call SISMEMBER for each user independently. In order to streamline the flow and make it more efficient, consider using Lua scripting. For example:
~$ redis-cli SADD online_users user_a user_b user_c
(integer) 3
~$ redis-cli --eval sismmember.lua online_users , user_a user_b user_c foo
1) (integer) 1
2) (integer) 1
3) (integer) 1
4) (integer) 0
~$ cat sismmember.lua
local rep = {}
local ele = table.remove(ARGV,1)
while (ele) do
rep[#rep+1] = redis.call('SISMEMBER',KEYS[1],ele)
ele = table.remove(ARGV,1)
end
return rep
~$
After redis v6.2.0, we can use SMISMEMBER to check if multiple keys are present in a set
SMISMEMBER online_users user1 user2
response will be
1) (integer) 1
2) (integer) 0
ref: https://redis.io/commands/smismember
Related
I need to create a set in Redis:
redis> SADD myset "Hello"
(integer) 1
redis> SADD myset "World"
(integer) 1
redis> SADD myset "World"
(integer) 0
redis> SMEMBERS myset
1) "World"
2) "Hello"
But I need to set expire time for the key myset.
In other words I need a command kind of expire sadd myset... (like SETEX for string values).
Is there any way to execute these commands per one request to Redis server?
There is no built-in command to do this. What you may do is; using transactions. As it is stated in the documentation;
All the commands in a transaction are serialized and executed sequentially. It can never happen that a request issued by another client is served in the middle of the execution of a Redis transaction. This guarantees that the commands are executed as a single isolated operation.
127.0.0.1:6379> MULTI
OK
127.0.0.1:6379> SADD mynewset a b c d e f g
QUEUED
127.0.0.1:6379> SADD mynewset f g h j k l
QUEUED
127.0.0.1:6379> EXPIRE mynewset 86400
QUEUED
127.0.0.1:6379> EXEC
1) (integer) 7
2) (integer) 4
3) (integer) 1
127.0.0.1:6379> TTL mynewset
(integer) 86394
127.0.0.1:6379>
There is also the possibility of using a Lua script to tie the two commands together:
127.0.0.1:6379> EVAL "redis.call('SADD', KEYS[1], unpack(ARGV)) redis.call('EXPIRE', KEYS[1], 3600)" 1 myset a b c d e
(nil)
127.0.0.1:6379> SMEMBERS myset
1) "c"
2) "d"
3) "a"
4) "b"
5) "e"
127.0.0.1:6379> TTL myset
(integer) 3596
I have a redis hash store that looks like Item:<id>, with attribute name. I want to filter the hash store by a prefix for name attribute.
What I'm trying to do is store the name (lowercased) in a separate Z-set called Item:::name while setting the score to 0. By doing this, I'm successfully able to get the desired result using ZRANGEBYLEX however I'm unable to map the results back to the original Items. How should I go about implementing something like this?
I've seen multiple autocomplete examples for Redis which require the same functionality but without linking the words back to an actual Item (hash in this case)
In sorted sets the member can't be duplicated, it has to be unique. So different users with the same name will cause problem.
My suggestion requires application layer coding to parse response array and executing hash commands (it will be like secondary indexes);
127.0.0.1:6379> HSET user:1 name jack
(integer) 1
127.0.0.1:6379> HSET user:2 name john
(integer) 1
127.0.0.1:6379> HSET user:3 name keanu
(integer) 1
127.0.0.1:6379> HSET user:4 name jack
(integer) 1
127.0.0.1:6379> ZADD item:names 0 jack::user:1 0 john::user:2 0 keanu::user:3 0 jack::user:4
(integer) 4
127.0.0.1:6379> ZRANGE item:names 0 -1 WITHSCORES
1) "jack::user:1"
2) "0"
3) "jack::user:4"
4) "0"
5) "john::user:2"
6) "0"
7) "keanu::user:3"
8) "0"
127.0.0.1:6379> ZRANGEBYLEX item:names [jack [jo
1) "jack::user:1"
2) "jack::user:4"
At the end you will have name::hash-key formatted array elements. At application layer if you separate each element to two substrings by using ::(any other string such as !!! or || etc) you will have user:1 and user:4.
127.0.0.1:6379> HGETALL user:1
1) "name"
2) "jack"
127.0.0.1:6379> HGETALL user:4
1) "name"
2) "jack"
127.0.0.1:6379>
I have a large set of ids (around 100000) which I want to store in redis.
I am looking for the most optimal way through which I can check if a given list of ids, what are the ids that are part of my set.
If I use a redis set, I can use SISMEMBER to check if a id is part of my set, but in this case I want to check if, given a list of ids, which one is part of my set.
Example:
redis> SADD myset "1"
(integer) 1
redis> SADD myset "2"
(integer) 2
redis> MYCOMMAND myset "[1,2,4,5]"
(list) 1, 2
Does anything of this sort exist already ?
thanks !
I am new to sorted sets in Redis (3.0.2). I basically want to update my value in sorted sets of Redis based on unique key. As of now "zadd" each time keeps on adding new values to a specific key.
As of now:
127.0.0.1:6379> zadd xyz 1 "abc"
(integer) 1
127.0.0.1:6379> zadd xyz 1 "newabc"
(integer) 1
127.0.0.1:6379> zrange xyz 0 -1
1) "abc"
2) "newabc"
Required Output: (It should over write the xyz key's value from "abc" to "newabc"
127.0.0.1:6379> zadd xyz 1 "abc"
(integer) 1
127.0.0.1:6379> zadd xyz 1 "newabc"
(integer) 1
127.0.0.1:6379> zrange xyz 0 -1
1) "newabc"
A sorted set in Redis is a set when we talk about the element, while multiple different elements can coexist with the same score.
If you want that output, you'll need to design a different data model, and since I don't know your actual issue or what's your goal in your project, I won't be able to provide a clear solution.
I'm planning to start using hashes insead of regular keys. But I can't find any information about multi get for hash-keys in Redis wiki. Is this kind of command is supported by Redis?
Thank you.
You can query hashes or any keys in pipeline, i.e. in one request to your redis instance. Actual implementation depends on your client, but with redis-py it'd look like this:
pipe = conn.pipeline()
pipe.hgetall('foo')
pipe.hgetall('bar')
pipe.hgetall('zar')
hash1, hash2, hash3 = pipe.execute()
Client will issue one request with 3 commands. This is the same technique that is used to add multiple values to a set at once.
Read more at http://redis.io/topics/pipelining
No MHGETALL but you can Lua it:
local r = {}
for _, v in pairs(KEYS) do
r[#r+1] = redis.call('HGETALL', v)
end
return r
If SORT let you use multiple GETs with the -> syntax, and all your hashes had the same fields, you could get them in a bulk reply by putting their names into a set and sorting that.
SORT names_of_hashes GET *->field1 *->field2 *->field3 *->etc
But it doesn't look like you can do that with the hash access. Plus you'd have to turn the return list back into hashes yourself.
UPDATE: Redis seems to let you fetch multiple fields if you name your hashes nicely:
redis> hset hash:1 name fish
(integer) 1
redis> hset hash:2 name donkey
(integer) 1
redis> hset hash:3 name horse
(integer) 1
redis> hset hash:1 type fish
(integer) 1
redis> hset hash:2 type mammal
(integer) 1
redis> hset hash:3 type mammal
(integer) 1
redis> sadd animals 1
(integer) 1
redis> sadd animals 2
(integer) 1
redis> sadd animals 3
(integer) 1
redis> sort animals get # get hash:*->name get hash:*->type
1. "1"
2. "fish"
3. "fish"
4. "2"
5. "donkey"
6. "mammal"
7. "3"
8. "horse"
9. "mammal"
There is no command to do it on one shot, but there is a way to do it "nicely", using a list (or sorted set) where you would store you hashKeys, and then retrieve them as bulk using multi.
In PHP:
$redis->zAdd("myHashzSet", 1, "myHashKey:1");
$redis->zAdd("myHashzSet", 2, "myHashKey:2");
$redis->zAdd("myHashzSet", 3, "myHashKey:3");
$members = $redis->zRange("myHashzSet", 0, -1);
$redis->multi();
foreach($members as $hashKey) {
$redis->hGetAll($hashKey);
}
$results = $redis->exec();
I recommand using a sorted set, where you use the score as an ID for your hash, it allows to take advantages of all score based command.
Redis has a HMGET command, which returns the values of several hash keys with one command.