We noticed that `sendCommand()` takes different arguments for clusters vs clients, and I wanted to document the differences. I think I got it correct, but please review closely just to be sure.
7.5 KiB
Clustering
Basic Example
Connecting to a cluster is a bit different. Create the client by specifying some (or all) of the nodes in your cluster and then use it like a regular client instance:
import { createCluster } from 'redis';
const cluster = await createCluster({
rootNodes: [{
url: 'redis://10.0.0.1:30001'
}, {
url: 'redis://10.0.0.2:30002'
}]
})
.on('error', err => console.log('Redis Cluster Error', err))
.connect();
await cluster.set('key', 'value');
const value = await cluster.get('key');
await cluster.close();
createCluster configuration
See the client configuration page for the
rootNodesanddefaultsconfiguration schemas.
| Property | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|
| rootNodes | An array of root nodes that are part of the cluster, which will be used to get the cluster topology. Each element in the array is a client configuration object. There is no need to specify every node in the cluster: 3 should be enough to reliably connect and obtain the cluster configuration from the server | |
| defaults | The default configuration values for every client in the cluster. Use this for example when specifying an ACL user to connect with | |
| useReplicas | false |
When true, distribute load by executing readonly commands (such as GET, GEOSEARCH, etc.) across all cluster nodes. When false, only use master nodes |
| minimizeConnections | false |
When true, .connect() will only discover the cluster topology, without actually connecting to all the nodes. Useful for short-term or Pub/Sub-only connections. |
| maxCommandRedirections | 16 |
The maximum number of times a command will be redirected due to MOVED or ASK errors |
| nodeAddressMap | Defines the node address mapping | |
| modules | Included Redis Modules | |
| scripts | Script definitions (see Lua Scripts) | |
| functions | Function definitions (see Functions) |
Usage
Most redis commands are the same as with individual clients.
Unsupported Redis Commands
If you want to run commands and/or use arguments that Node Redis doesn't know about (yet!) use .sendCommand().
When clustering, sendCommand takes 3 arguments to help with routing to the correct redis node:
firstKey: the key that is being operated on, orundefinedto route to a random node.isReadOnly: determines if the command needs to go to the master or may go to a replica.args: the command and all arguments (including the key), as an array of strings.
await cluster.sendCommand("key", false, ["SET", "key", "value", "NX"]); // 'OK'
await cluster.sendCommand("key", true, ["HGETALL", "key"]); // ['key1', 'field1', 'key2', 'field2']
Auth with password and username
Specifying the password in the URL or a root node will only affect the connection to that specific node. In case you want to set the password for all the connections being created from a cluster instance, use the defaults option.
createCluster({
rootNodes: [{
url: 'redis://10.0.0.1:30001'
}, {
url: 'redis://10.0.0.2:30002'
}],
defaults: {
username: 'username',
password: 'password'
}
});
Node Address Map
A mapping between the addresses in the cluster (see CLUSTER SHARDS) and the addresses the client should connect to.
Useful when the cluster is running on a different network to the client.
const rootNodes = [{
url: 'external-host-1.io:30001'
}, {
url: 'external-host-2.io:30002'
}];
// Use either a static mapping:
createCluster({
rootNodes,
nodeAddressMap: {
'10.0.0.1:30001': {
host: 'external-host.io',
port: 30001
},
'10.0.0.2:30002': {
host: 'external-host.io',
port: 30002
}
}
});
// or create the mapping dynamically, as a function:
createCluster({
rootNodes,
nodeAddressMap(address) {
const indexOfDash = address.lastIndexOf('-'),
indexOfDot = address.indexOf('.', indexOfDash),
indexOfColons = address.indexOf(':', indexOfDot);
return {
host: `external-host-${address.substring(indexOfDash + 1, indexOfDot)}.io`,
port: Number(address.substring(indexOfColons + 1))
};
}
});
This is a common problem when using ElastiCache. See Accessing ElastiCache from outside AWS for more information on that.
Command Routing
Commands that operate on Redis Keys
Commands such as GET, SET, etc. are routed by the first key specified. For example MGET 1 2 3 will be routed by the key 1.
Server Commands
Admin commands such as MEMORY STATS, FLUSHALL, etc. are not attached to the cluster, and must be executed on a specific node via .getSlotMaster().
"Forwarded Commands"
Certain commands (e.g. PUBLISH) are forwarded to other cluster nodes by the Redis server. The client sends these commands to a random node in order to spread the load across the cluster.