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161 lines
6.4 KiB
Plaintext
161 lines
6.4 KiB
Plaintext
Starting in Anope 1.9.9, Anope has Redis database support (https://redis.io/).
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This document explains the data structure used by Anope, and explains how
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keyspace notification works.
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This is not a tutorial on how to use Redis, see https://redis.io/documentation
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for that.
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Table of Contents
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-----------------
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1) Data structure
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2) Keyspace notifications
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3) Examples of modifying, deleting, and creating objects
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1) Data structure
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There are 4 key namespaces in Anope, they are:
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id - The keys in id are used to atomically create object ids for new
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objects. For example, if I were to create a new BotInfo I would first:
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> INCR id:BotInfo
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To get the object ID of the new object.
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ids - The keys in ids contain a set of all object ids of the given type.
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For example:
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> SMEMBERS ids:BotInfo
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Returns "1", "2", "3", "4", "5", "6", "7", "8" because I have 8 bots that
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have IDs 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8, respectively.
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hash - The keys in hash are the actual objects, stored as hashes. For
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example, if I had just looked up all BotInfo ids and wanted to iterate
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over all of them, I would start by:
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> HGETALL hash:BotInfo:1
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Which gets all keys and values from the hash of type BotInfo with id 1.
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This may return:
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"nick" -> "BotServ"
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"user" -> "services"
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"host" -> "services.anope.org"
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"created" -> "1368704765"
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value - The keys in value only exist to aid looking up object IDs. They
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are sets of object IDs and are used to map key+value pairs to objects.
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For example:
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> SMEMBERS value:NickAlias:nick:Adam
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Returns a set of object ids of NickAlias objects that have the key
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'nick' set to the value 'Adam' in its hash. Clearly this can only
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ever contain at most one object, since it is not possible to have
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more than one registered nick with the same name, but other keys
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will contain more than one, such as:
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> SMEMBERS value:NickCore:email:adam@anope.org
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Which would return all accounts with the email "adam@anope.org".
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> SMEMBERS value:ChanAccess:mask:Adam
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Which would return all access entries set on the account "Adam".
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Behavior similar to SQL's AND, can be achieved using the
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SINTER command, which does set intersection on one or more sets.
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2) Keyspace notifications
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Redis 2.7 (unstable) and 2.8 (stable) and newer support keyspace notifications
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(https://redis.io/topics/notifications). This allows Redis to notify Anope of
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any external changes to objects in the database. Once notified, Anope will
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immediately update the object. Otherwise, Anope keeps all objects in memory
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and will not regularly read from the database once started.
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You can use this to modify objects in Redis and have them immediately reflected
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back into Anope. Additionally you can use this feature to run multiple Anope
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instances simultaneously from the same database (see also, Redis database
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replication).
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To use keyspace notifications you MUST execute
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> CONFIG SET notify-keyspace-events KA
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OK
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or set notify-keyspace-events in redis.conf properly. Anope always executes
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CONFIG SET when it first connects.
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If you do not enable keyspace events properly Anope will be UNABLE to see any
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object modifications you do.
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The key space ids and value are managed entirely by Anope, you do
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not (and should not) modify them. Once you modify the object (hash), Anope will
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update them for you to correctly reflect any changes made to the object.
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Finally, always use atomic operations. If you are inserting a new object with
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multiple commands, or inserting multiple objects at once, specifically if the
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objects depend on each other, you MUST use a transaction.
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3) Examples of modifying, deleting, and creating objects
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These examples will ONLY work if you meet the criteria in section 2.
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If I want to change the email account 'Adam' to 'Adam@anope.org', I would execute the following:
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> SMEMBERS value:NickCore:display:Adam
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Which returns a value of "1", which is the object id I want to modify.
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Now to change the email:
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> HSET hash:NickCore:1 email Adam@anope.org
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You can now see this in NickServ's INFO command:
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-NickServ- Email address: Adam@anope.org
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If I want to drop the account "Adam", I would execute the following:
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> SMEMBERS value:NickCore:display:Adam
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Which returns a value of "1". I would then check:
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> SMEMBERS value:NickAlias:nc:Adam
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To see what nicknames depend on this account to exist, as I will
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have to remove those too. This returns the values "2", and "3".
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Finally, I can drop the nick using a transaction via:
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> MULTI
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OK
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> DEL hash:NickAlias:2
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QUEUED
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> DEL hash:NickAlias:3
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QUEUED
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> DEL hash:NickCore:1
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QUEUED
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> EXEC
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Or alternatively simply:
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> DEL hash:NickAlias:2 hash:NickAlias:3 hash:NickCore:1
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If I wanted to create a BotServ bot, I would execute the following:
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redis 127.0.0.1:6379> INCR id:BotInfo
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Which returns a new object ID for me, in this example it will be "8".
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Now I can create the object:
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HMSET hash:BotInfo:8 nick redis user redis host services.anope.org realname "Services for IRC Networks"
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Note if you are using HSET instead of HMSET you will need to use a transaction, as shown in the above example.
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If you are watching your services logs you will immediately see:
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USERS: redis!redis@services.anope.org (Services for IRC Networks) connected to the network (services.anope.org)
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And the bot redis will be in BotServ's bot list.
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Notice how ids:BotInfo and the value keys are updated automatically.
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