How does one upgrade to a newer version of Redis with zero downtime? Redis slaves are read-only, so it seems like you'd have to take down the master and your site would be read-only for 45 seconds or more while you waited for it to reload the DB.
Is there a way around this?
Redis Team has very good documentation on this
Core Steps:
Setup your new Redis instance as a slave for your current Redis instance. In order to do so you need a different server, or a server that has enough RAM to keep two instances of Redis running at the same time.
If you use a single server, make sure that the slave is started in a different port than the master instance, otherwise the slave will not be able to start at all.
Wait for the replication initial synchronization to complete (check the slave log file).
Make sure using INFO that there are the same number of keys in the master and in the slave. Check with redis-cli that the slave is working as you wish and is replying to your commands.
Configure all your clients in order to use the new instance (that is, the slave).
Once you are sure that the master is no longer receiving any query (you can check this with the MONITOR command), elect the slave to master using the SLAVEOF NO ONE command, and shut down your master.
Full Documentation:
Upgrading or restarting a Redis instance without downtime
When taking the node offline, promote the slave to master using the SLAVEOF command, then when you bring it back online you set it up as a slave and it will copy all data from the online node.
You may also need to make sure your client can handle changed/missing master nodes appropriately.
If you want to get really fancy, you can set up your client to promote a slave if it detects an error writing to the master.
You can use Redis Sentinel for doing this, the sentinel will automatically promote a slave as new master.
you can find more info here http://redis.io/topics/sentinel.
Sentinel is a system used to manage redis servers , it monitors the redis master and slaves continuously, and whenever a master goes down it will automatically promote a slave in to master. and when the old master is UP it will be made as slave of the new master.
Here there will be no downtime or manual configuration of config file is needed.
You can visit above link to find out how to configure sentinel for your redis servers.
Note, you may have to check and set the following config to write to your slave.
("Since Redis 2.6 by default slaves are read-only")
redis-cli config set slave-read-only no
-- Example
-bash-4.1$ redis-cli info
Server
redis_version:2.6.9
-bash-4.1$ redis-cli slaveof admin2.mypersonalsite.com 6379
OK
-bash-4.1$ redis-cli set temp 42
(error) READONLY You can't write against a read only slave.
-bash-4.1$ redis-cli slaveof no one
OK
-bash-4.1$ redis-cli set temp 42
OK
-bash-4.1$ redis-cli get temp
"42"
-bash-4.1$ redis-cli config set slave-read-only no
OK
-bash-4.1$ redis-cli slaveof admin2.mypersonalsite.com 6379
OK
-bash-4.1$ redis-cli set temp 42
OK
-bash-4.1$ redis-cli get temp
"42"
Related
I am trying to limit the allowed privileges for external redis sentinel users by renaming critical commands as follow:
sentinel rename-command mymaster FAILOVER failover-secret
However, the configurations are being ignored, and I still can trigger the renamed command using the original name:
127.0.0.1:26379> sentinel failover mymaster
OK
Redis Version:
Redis server v=6.0.9 sha=00000000:0 malloc=jemalloc-5.1.0 bits=64 build=e874f7259751a389
The best option would be to put this in your Redis server's config file as opposed to setting it via CLI. It sounds like setting it this way either only applies to that connection (so other connections won't have that config change) or it only persists until the server restarts. Putting it in the config file would persist for all connections, and across restarts.
Another option if you're using Redis v6 (or can upgrade to v6) is to create separate users and specify the available commands per user. This option is discussed in this answer.
Question Background:
I deploy a redis cluster in k8s cluster and use Redis-Sentinel to implement ha for redis cluster. My redis cluster structure likes below:
One master
One slave
three sentinel (serve a specific redis cluster)
When i login the container of the one of sentinels, i execute a command:
sentinel sentinels mymaster
Luckly, i get a desirable output. These are two sentinel's infos. After a period of time, i execute "sentinels mymaster" command again, i found that there is a additional sentinel and don't find this instance through IP address or runId。
I know that sentinel discover other sentinels and master and slave through sub the channel of sentinel:hello in redis master.
Question:
how to check the message published from redis sentinel to redis master? I have opened log for master and set the log level to debug.
You can see the Sentinel's activity (when it discovers a sentinel, a replica, failsover to a new master, etc.) in the sentinel log file, not the master. If a sentinel is running on a host, it will be in the same directory the master or replica log file is. For me on CentOS it's /var/log/redis/sentinel.log.
I started two redis node separately with original redis.conf, which I don't want to edit it, however I want to use redis command, such as slaveof, to config redis nodes dynamically.
If redis nodes without 'auth', i.e. no "requirepass" in the redis.conf, the following command on the slave redis node will work:
redis-server --slaveof redis-master 6379
where redis-master is the hostname of the redis master node.
But this will not work if the master is encrypted. I've went through the redis official docs, nothing helps. Before I go for antirez, I want to hear from you here.
You can set the masterauth config to specify the master's password.
start redis-cli to connect to the slave instance.
set masterauth config: config set masterauth master-password
set master: slaveof redis-master master-port
I have a redis sentinel configuration with one master, two slaves and 3 sentinels running. I noticed that at some point the sentinels may switch the master electing one of the slaves as master. This is causing problems to an application which is connecting to the master node as a standalone client(I'm working on changing the code to use sentinels). I wanted to know if it is possible to switch the master by connecting to the sentinel client i.e. through 'redis-cli'
Can somebody let me know if there is a command that I can use to switch the master IP?
The client applications should use a client library that supports sentinel in the case where a redis master goes down and the sentinels select a new master. Not sure how beneficial it is to have sentinel setup if your client applications are not taking advantage of it. A client application that supports sentinel will query sentinel for the master ip and should be somewhat tolerant to faults occurring with the master connection. You can trigger a manual failover like the other answer states:
redis-cli -h {sentinel-ip} -p {26379 or sentinel port} sentinel failover {mastername}
But you will not be able to pick which node it fails over to. You can control a configuration value slave_priority in the redis.conf file so that it prefers a node over the rest. A description of the slave priority can be found here: https://redis.io/topics/sentinel
You can manually trigger a failover by running:
redis-cli -a {password} -p {sentinel_port} SENTINEL failover {cluster_name}
If you are using Lettuce Client you can use masterSlaveStatefulConnection and pass the sentinel URI it will perform auto discovery in the background and will refresh the master node internally.
https://github.com/lettuce-io/lettuce-core/wiki/Master-Replica
Hi i have create a cluster Redis with sentinel composed by 3 aws instances, i have configured sentinel to have an HA redis cluster and work, but if i simulate a crash of master (shutdown of master instance), sentinel installed on slaves, not locate sentinel of master and the election fail.
My sentinel configuration is:
sentinel monitor master ip-master 6379 2
sentinel down-after-milliseconds master 5000
sentinel failover-timeout master 10000
sentinel parallel-syncs master 1
Same file to all instaces
There are issues when running sentinel on the same node as the master and attempting to trigger a failover. Try it w/o running Sentinel on the master. Ultimately this means not running Sentinel on the same nodes as the Redis instances.
In your case your dead-node simulation is showing why you should not run Sentinel on the same node as Redis: If the node dies you lose one of your sentinels. In theory it should still work but as you and others have seen it isn't certain to work. I have some theories why but I've not yet confirmed them.
In a sense Sentinel is partly a monitoring system. Running a monitoring solution on the same nodes as are being monitored is generally unadvisable anyway, so you should be using off-node sentinels anyway. As Sentinel is resource efficient you don't necessarily need dedicated machines or large VMs. Indeed if you have a static set of application servers (where your client code runs), you should run Sentinel there, keeping in mind you want 3 minimum and a quorum of 50%+1.
recent redis version introduced the "protected-mode" option, which defaults to yes.
with protected-mode set to yes, redis instances, without a password set will not allow remote clients to execute commands.
this also affects sentinels master election.
try it with setting "protected-mode no" in the sentinels. this will allow them to talk to each other.
If you don't want to set protected-mode as no. you'd better set masterauth myredis in redis.conf and use sentinel auth-pass mymaster myredis in sentinel.conf