NAME

    Net::Async::Redis - talk to Redis servers via IO::Async

SYNOPSIS

        use Net::Async::Redis;
        use Future::AsyncAwait;
        use IO::Async::Loop;
        my $loop = IO::Async::Loop->new;
        $loop->add(my $redis = Net::Async::Redis->new);
        (async sub {
         await $redis->connect;
         my $value = await $redis->get('some_key');
         $value ||= await $redis->set(some_key => 'some_value');
         print "Value: $value";
        })->()->get;
    
        # You can also use ->then chaining, see L<Future> for more details
        $redis->connect->then(sub {
            $redis->get('some_key')
        })->then(sub {
            my $value = shift;
            return Future->done($value) if $value;
            $redis->set(some_key => 'some_value')
        })->on_done(sub {
            print "Value: " . shift;
        })->get;
    
        # ... or with Future::AsyncAwait (recommended)
        await $redis->connect;
        my $value = await $redis->get('some_key');
        $value ||= await $redis->set(some_key => 'some_value');
        print "Value: $value";

DESCRIPTION

    Provides client access for dealing with Redis servers.

    See Net::Async::Redis::Commands for the full list of commands, this
    list is autogenerated from the official documentation here:

    https://redis.io/commands

    This is intended to be a near-complete low-level client module for
    asynchronous Redis support. See Net::Async::Redis::Server for a
    (limited) Perl server implementation. It is an unofficial Perl port and
    not endorsed by the Redis server maintainers in any way.

 Supported features

    Current features include:

      * all commands <https://redis.io/commands> as of 6.0 (May 2020), see
      https://redis.io/commands for the methods and parameters

      * pub/sub support <https://redis.io/topics/pubsub>, see
      "Subscriptions"

      * pipelining <https://redis.io/topics/pipelining>, see "Pipelining"

      * transactions <https://redis.io/topics/transactions>, see
      "Transactions"

      * streams <https://redis.io/topics/streams-intro> and consumer
      groups, see "Streams"

 Connecting

    As with any other IO::Async::Notifier-based module, you'll need to add
    this to an IO::Async::Loop:

        my $loop = IO::Async::Loop->new;
        $loop->add(
            my $redis = Net::Async::Redis->new
        );

    then connect to the server:

        $redis->connect
            ->then(sub {
                # You could achieve a similar result by passing client_name in
                # constructor or ->connect parameters
                $redis->client_setname("example client")
            })->get;

 Key-value handling

    One of the most common Redis scenarios is as a key/value store. The
    "get" and "set" methods are typically used here:

     $redis->set(some_key => 'some value')
      ->then(sub {
       $redis->get('some_key')
      })->on_done(sub {
       my ($value) = @_;
       print "Read back value [$value]\n";
      })->retain;

    See the next section for more information on what these methods are
    actually returning.

 Requests and responses

    Requests are implemented as methods on the Net::Async::Redis object.
    These typically return a Future which will resolve once ready:

        my $future = $redis->incr("xyz")
            ->on_done(sub {
                print "result of increment was " . shift . "\n"
            });

    For synchronous code, call ->get on that Future:

        print "Database has " . $redis->dbsize->get . " total keys\n";

    This means you can end up with ->get being called on the result of
    ->get, note that these are two very different methods:

     $redis
      ->get('some key') # this is being called on $redis, and is issuing a GET request
      ->get # this is called on the returned Future, and blocks until the value is ready

    Typical async code would not be expected to use the "get" in Future
    method extensively; often only calling it in one place at the top level
    in the code.

 Error handling

    Since Future is used for deferred results, failure is indicated by a
    failing Future with failure category of redis.

    The "catch" in Future feature may be useful for handling these:

     $redis->lpush(key => $value)
         ->catch(
             redis => sub { warn "probably an incorrect type, cannot push value"; Future->done }
         )->get;

    Note that this module uses Future::AsyncAwait internally.

METHODS

    NOTE: For a full list of the Redis methods supported by this module,
    please see Net::Async::Redis::Commands.

METHODS - Subscriptions

    See https://redis.io/topics/pubsub for more details on this topic.
    There's also more details on the internal implementation in Redis here:
    https://making.pusher.com/redis-pubsub-under-the-hood/.

 psubscribe

    Subscribes to a pattern.

    Example:

     # Subscribe to 'info::*' channels, i.e. any message
     # that starts with the C<info::> prefix, and prints them
     # with a timestamp.
     $redis_connection->psubscribe('info::*')
        ->then(sub {
            my $sub = shift;
            $sub->map('payload')
                ->each(sub {
                 print localtime . ' ' . $_ . "\n";
                })->retain
        })->get;
     # this will block until the subscribe is confirmed. Note that you can't publish on
     # a connection that's handling subscriptions due to Redis protocol restrictions.
     $other_redis_connection->publish('info::example', 'a message here')->get;

    Returns a Future which resolves to a Net::Async::Redis::Subscription
    instance.

 subscribe

    Subscribes to one or more channels.

    Returns a Future which resolves to a Net::Async::Redis::Subscription
    instance.

    Example:

     # Subscribe to 'notifications' channel,
     # print the first 5 messages, then unsubscribe
     $redis->subscribe('notifications')
        ->then(sub {
            my $sub = shift;
            $sub->events
                ->map('payload')
                ->take(5)
                ->say
                ->completed
        })->then(sub {
            $redis->unsubscribe('notifications')
        })->get

METHODS - Transactions

 multi

    Executes the given code in a Redis MULTI transaction.

    This will cause each of the requests to be queued on the server, then
    applied in a single atomic transaction.

    Note that the commands will resolve only after the transaction is
    committed: for example, when the "set" command is issued, Redis will
    return QUEUED. This information is not used as the result - we only
    pass through the immediate response if there was an error. The Future
    representing the response will be marked as done once the EXEC command
    is applied and we have the results back.

    Example:

     $redis->multi(sub {
      my $tx = shift;
      $tx->incr('some::key')->on_done(sub { print "Final value for incremented key was " . shift . "\n"; });
      $tx->set('other::key => 'test data')
     })->then(sub {
      my ($success, $failure) = @_;
      return Future->fail("Had $failure failures, expecting everything to succeed") if $failure;
      print "$success succeeded\m";
      return Future->done;
     })->retain;

METHODS - Clientside caching

    Enable clientside caching by passing a true value for
    client_side_caching_enabled in "configure" or "new". This is currently
    experimental, and only operates on "get" in Net::Async::Redis::Commands
    requests.

    See https://redis.io/topics/client-side-caching for more details on
    this feature.

METHODS - Generic

 keys

 watch_keyspace

    A convenience wrapper around the keyspace notifications API.

    Provides the necessary setup to establish a PSUBSCRIBE subscription on
    the __keyspace@*__ namespace, setting the configuration required for
    this to start emitting events, and then calls $code with each event.

    Note that this will switch the connection into pubsub mode, so it will
    no longer be available for any other activity.

    Resolves to a Ryu::Source instance.

 endpoint

    The string describing the remote endpoint.

 local_endpoint

    A string describing the local endpoint, usually host:port.

 connect

    Connects to the Redis server.

    Will use the "configure"d parameters if available, but as a convenience
    can be passed additional parameters which will then be applied as if
    you had called "configure" with those beforehand. This also means that
    they will be preserved for subsequent "connect" calls.

 connected

    Establishes a connection if needed, otherwise returns an
    immediately-available Future instance.

 on_message

    Called for each incoming message.

    Passes off the work to "handle_pubsub_message" or the next queue item,
    depending on whether we're dealing with subscriptions at the moment.

 stream

    Represents the IO::Async::Stream instance for the active Redis
    connection.

 pipeline_depth

    Number of requests awaiting responses before we start queuing. This
    defaults to an arbitrary value of 100 requests.

    Note that this does not apply when in transaction (MULTI) mode.

    See https://redis.io/topics/pipelining for more details on this
    concept.

METHODS - Deprecated

    This are still supported, but no longer recommended.

METHODS - Internal

 notify_close

    Called when the socket is closed.

 command_label

    Generate a label for the given command list.

 stream_read_len

    Defines the buffer size when reading from a Redis connection.

    Defaults to 1MB, reduce this if you're dealing with a lot of
    connections and want to minimise memory usage. Alternatively, if you're
    reading large amounts of data and spend too much time in needless
    epoll_wait calls, try a larger value.

 stream_write_len

    The buffer size when writing to Redis connections, in bytes. Defaults
    to 1MB.

    See "stream_read_len".

SEE ALSO

    Some other Redis implementations on CPAN:

      * Mojo::Redis2 - nonblocking, using the Mojolicious framework,
      actively maintained

      * MojoX::Redis - changelog mentions that this was obsoleted by
      Mojo::Redis, although there have been new versions released since
      then

      * RedisDB - another synchronous (blocking) implementation, handles
      pub/sub and autoreconnect

      * Cache::Redis - wrapper around RedisDB

      * Redis::Fast - wraps hiredis, faster than Redis

      * Redis::Jet - also XS-based, docs mention very early development
      stage but appears to support pipelining and can handle newer commands
      via ->command.

      * Redis - synchronous (blocking) implementation, handles pub/sub and
      autoreconnect

AUTHOR

    Tom Molesworth <TEAM@cpan.org>

CONTRIBUTORS

    With thanks to the following for contributing patches, bug reports,
    tests and feedback:

      * BINARY@cpan.org

      * PEVANS@cpan.org

      * @eyadof

      * Nael Alolwani

LICENSE

    Copyright Tom Molesworth and others 2015-2020. Licensed under the same
    terms as Perl itself.