Created by Stephen McDonald
HOT Redis is a wrapper library for the redis-py client. Rather than calling the Redis commands directly from a client library, HOT Redis provides a wide range of data types that mimic many of the built-in data types provided by Python, such as lists, dicts, sets, and more, as well as many of the classes found throughout the standard library, such as those found in the Queue, threading, and collections modules.
These types are then backed by Redis, allowing objects to be manipulated atomically over the network - the atomic nature of the methods implemented on objects in HOT Redis is one of its core features, and many of these are backed by Lua code executed within Redis, which ensures atomic operations where applicable.
The name HOT Redis originally stood for "Higher Order Types for Redis", but since the implementation doesn't strictly fit the definition, the recursive acronym "HOT Object Toolkit for Redis" should appease the most luscious of bearded necks.
HOT Redis was drawn from the infrastructure behind the Kouio RSS reader, a popular alternative to Google Reader.
The easiest way to install hot-redis
is directly
from PyPi using pip by running the following command:
$ pip install -U hot-redis
Otherwise you can download and install it directly from source:
$ python setup.py install
Each of the types provided by HOT Redis strive to implement the same
method signatures and return values as their Python built-in and
standard library counterparts. The main difference is each type's
__init__
method. Every HOT Redis type's __init__
method will
optionally accept initial
and key
keyword arguments, which are
used for defining an initial value to be stored in Redis for the
object, and the key that should be used, respectively. If no key is
provided, a key will be generated, which can then be accessed via the
key
attribute:
>>> from hot_redis import List >>> my_list = List() >>> my_list.key '93366bdb-90b2-4226-a52a-556f678af40e' >>> my_list_with_key = List(key="foo") >>> my_list_with_key.key 'foo'
Once you've determined a strategy for naming keys, you can then create
HOT Redis objects and interact with them over the network, for example
here is a List
created on a computer we'll refer to as computer A:
>>> list_on_computer_a = List(key="foo", initial=["a", "b", "c"])
then on another computer we'll creatively refer to as computer B:
>>> list_on_computer_b = List(key="foo") >>> list_on_computer_b[:] # Performs: LRANGE foo 0 -1 ['a', 'b', 'c'] >>> list_on_computer_b = ['d', 'e', 'f'] # Performs: RPUSH foo d e f
and back to computer A:
>>> list_on_computer_a[:] # Performs: LRANGE foo 0 -1 ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f'] >>> 'c' in list_on_computer_a # Works like Python lists where expected True >>> list_on_computer_a.reverse() >>> list_on_computer_a[:] ['f', 'e', 'd', 'c', 'b', 'a']
The last interaction here is an interesting one. Python's
list.reverse()
is an in-place reversal of the list, that is, it
modifies the existing list, rather than returning a reversed copy. If
we were to implement this naively, we would first read the list from
Redis, reverse it locally, then store the reversed list back in Redis
again. But what if another client were to modify the list at
approximately the same time? One computer's modification to the list
would certainly overwrite the other's. In this scenario, and many
others, HOT Redis provides its own Lua routine specifically for
reversing the list in-place, within Redis atomically. I wrote in more
detail about this in a blog post, Bitwise Lua Operations in Redis.
By default, HOT Redis attempts to connect to a Redis instance running
locally on the default port 6379. You can configure the default client
by calling the hot_redis.configure
function, prior to instantiating
any HOT Redis objects. The arguments given to configure
are passed
onto the underlying redis-py client:
>>> from hot_redis import configure configure(host='myremotehost', port=6380)
Alternatively, if you wish to use a different client per object, you
can explicitly create a HotClient
instance, and pass it to each
object:
>>> from hot_redis import HotClient, Queue >>> client = HotClient(host="myremotehost", port=6380) >>> my_queue = Queue(client=client)
Basic support for thread-safe transactions are provided using the
Redis MULTI
and EXEC
commands:
>>> from hot_redis import List, Queue, transaction >>> my_list = List(key="foo") >>> my_queue = Queue(key="bar") >>> with transaction(): ... for i in range(20): ... my_list.append(i) ... my_queue.put(i)
In the above example, all of the append
and put
calls are
batched together into a single transaction, that is executed once the
transaction()
context is exited.
The following table is the complete list of types provided by HOT Redis, mapped to their Python counterparts and underlying Redis types, along with any special considerations worth noting.
HOT Redis | Python | Redis | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
List | list | list | |
Set | set | set | |
Dict | dict | hash | |
String | string | string | Mutable - string methods that normally create a new string object in Python will mutate the string stored in Redis |
ImmutableString | string | string | Immutable - behaves like a regular Python string |
Int | int | int | |
Float | float | float | |
Queue | Queue.Queue | list | |
LifoQueue | Queue.LifoQueue | list | |
SetQueue | N/A | list set | Extension of Queue with unique members |
LifoSetQueue | N/A | list set | Extension of LifoQueue with unique members |
BoundedSemaphore | threading.BoundedSemaphore | list | Extension of Queue leveraging Redis' blocking list pop operations with timeouts, while using Queue's maxsize arg to provide BoundedSemaphore's value arg |
Semaphore | threading.Semaphore | list | Extension of BoundedSemaphore without a queue size |
Lock | threading.Lock | list | Extension of BoundedSemaphore with a queue size of 1 |
RLock | threading.RLock | list | Extension of Lock allowing multiple acquire calls |
DefaultDict | collections.DefaultDict | hash | |
MultiSet | collections.Counter | hash |