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* add cas/cad commands
* feat(command): Add SetIFDEQ, SetIFDNE and *Get cmds
Decided to move the *Get argument as a separate methods, since the
response will be always the previous value, but in the case where
the previous value is `OK` there result may be ambiguous.
* fix tests
* matchValue to be interface{}
* Only Args approach for DelEx
* use uint64 for digest, add example
* test only for 8.4
Redis Digest & Optimistic Locking Example
This example demonstrates how to use Redis DIGEST command and digest-based optimistic locking with go-redis.
What is Redis DIGEST?
The DIGEST command (Redis 8.4+) returns a 64-bit xxh3 hash of a key's value. This hash can be used for:
- Optimistic locking: Update values only if they haven't changed
- Change detection: Detect if a value was modified
- Conditional operations: Delete or update based on expected content
Features Demonstrated
- Basic Digest Usage: Get digest from Redis and verify with client-side calculation
- Optimistic Locking with SetIFDEQ: Update only if digest matches (value unchanged)
- Change Detection with SetIFDNE: Update only if digest differs (value changed)
- Conditional Delete: Delete only if digest matches expected value
- Client-Side Digest Generation: Calculate digests without fetching from Redis
Requirements
- Redis 8.4+ (for DIGEST command support)
- Go 1.18+
Installation
cd example/digest-optimistic-locking
go mod tidy
Running the Example
# Make sure Redis 8.4+ is running on localhost:6379
redis-server
# In another terminal, run the example
go run .
Expected Output
=== Redis Digest & Optimistic Locking Example ===
1. Basic Digest Usage
---------------------
Key: user:1000:name
Value: Alice
Digest: 7234567890123456789 (0x6478a1b2c3d4e5f6)
Client-calculated digest: 7234567890123456789 (0x6478a1b2c3d4e5f6)
✓ Digests match!
2. Optimistic Locking with SetIFDEQ
------------------------------------
Initial value: 100
Current digest: 0x1234567890abcdef
✓ Update successful! New value: 150
✓ Correctly rejected update with wrong digest
3. Detecting Changes with SetIFDNE
-----------------------------------
Initial value: v1.0.0
Old digest: 0xabcdef1234567890
✓ Value changed! Updated to: v2.0.0
✓ Correctly rejected: current value matches the digest
4. Conditional Delete with DelExArgs
-------------------------------------
Created session: session:abc123
Expected digest: 0x9876543210fedcba
✓ Correctly refused to delete (wrong digest)
✓ Successfully deleted with correct digest
✓ Session deleted
5. Client-Side Digest Generation
---------------------------------
Current price: $29.99
Expected digest (calculated client-side): 0xfedcba0987654321
✓ Price updated successfully to $24.99
Binary data example:
Binary data digest: 0x1122334455667788
✓ Binary digest matches!
=== All examples completed successfully! ===
How It Works
Digest Calculation
Redis uses the xxh3 hashing algorithm. To calculate digests client-side, use github.com/zeebo/xxh3:
import "github.com/zeebo/xxh3"
// For strings
digest := xxh3.HashString("myvalue")
// For binary data
digest := xxh3.Hash([]byte{0x01, 0x02, 0x03})
Optimistic Locking Pattern
// 1. Read current value and get its digest
currentValue := rdb.Get(ctx, "key").Val()
currentDigest := rdb.Digest(ctx, "key").Val()
// 2. Perform business logic
newValue := processValue(currentValue)
// 3. Update only if value hasn't changed
result := rdb.SetIFDEQ(ctx, "key", newValue, currentDigest, 0)
if result.Err() == redis.Nil {
// Value was modified by another client - retry or handle conflict
}
Client-Side Digest (No Extra Round Trip)
// If you know the expected current value, calculate digest client-side
expectedValue := "100"
expectedDigest := xxh3.HashString(expectedValue)
// Update without fetching digest from Redis first
result := rdb.SetIFDEQ(ctx, "counter", "150", expectedDigest, 0)
Use Cases
1. Distributed Counter with Conflict Detection
// Multiple clients can safely update a counter
currentValue := rdb.Get(ctx, "counter").Val()
currentDigest := rdb.Digest(ctx, "counter").Val()
newValue := incrementCounter(currentValue)
// Only succeeds if no other client modified it
if rdb.SetIFDEQ(ctx, "counter", newValue, currentDigest, 0).Err() == redis.Nil {
// Retry with new value
}
2. Session Management
// Delete session only if it contains expected data
sessionData := "user:1234:active"
expectedDigest := xxh3.HashString(sessionData)
deleted := rdb.DelExArgs(ctx, "session:xyz", redis.DelExArgs{
Mode: "IFDEQ",
MatchDigest: expectedDigest,
}).Val()
3. Configuration Updates
// Update config only if it changed
oldConfig := loadOldConfig()
oldDigest := xxh3.HashString(oldConfig)
newConfig := loadNewConfig()
// Only update if config actually changed
result := rdb.SetIFDNE(ctx, "config", newConfig, oldDigest, 0)
if result.Err() != redis.Nil {
fmt.Println("Config updated!")
}
Advantages Over WATCH/MULTI/EXEC
- Simpler: Single command instead of transaction
- Faster: No transaction overhead
- Client-side digest: Can calculate expected digest without fetching from Redis
- Works with any command: Not limited to transactions
Learn More
- Redis DIGEST command
- Redis SET command with IFDEQ/IFDNE
- xxh3 hashing algorithm
- github.com/zeebo/xxh3
Comparison: XXH3 vs XXH64
Note: Redis uses XXH3, not XXH64. If you have github.com/cespare/xxhash/v2 in your project, it implements XXH64 which produces different hash values. You must use github.com/zeebo/xxh3 for Redis DIGEST operations.
See XXHASH_LIBRARY_COMPARISON.md for detailed comparison.