Enabled TCP keepalive packets to determine if the connection is still
valid, and terminate if needed. It also helps with maintaining idle
connections.
Default to 300 seconds and can be changed by:
CONFIG SET keepalive 300
addresses #145: clients not being cleaned up properly
CLIENT LIST
CLIENT SETNAME name
CLIENT GETNAME
CLIENT KILL [ip:port] [ID client-id] [ADDR ip:port]
The CLIENT LIST command returns
One client connection per line (separated by LF)
Each line is composed of a succession of property=value
fields separated by a space character.
id: an unique 64-bit client ID
addr: address/port of the clien
age: total duration of the connection in seconds
idle: idle time of the connection in seconds
name: the name of the client
Suggested by @UriHendler, closes#139
Using the tile38-cli, the TTL command omitted the ttl value from the
json response.
For example:
127.0.0.1:9851> TTL my ufo
{"ok":true,"elapsed":"5.57µs"}
Is now fixed to show
127.0.0.1:9851> TTL my ufo
{"ok":true,"ttl":-1,"elapsed":"5.57µs"}
Where "ttl" is the remaining time before the object is is deleted.
The value -1 means that the object is available, but does not have
an expiration.
Thanks @phulst for finding this bug. closes#116
JSET key id path value [RAW]
JGET key id path [RAW]
JDEL key id path
Allows for working with JSON strings, for example:
JSET user 901 name Tom
JGET user 901
> '{"name":"Tom"}'
JSET user 901 name.first Tom
JSET user 901 name.last Anderson
> '{"name":{"first":"Tom","last":"Anderson"}'
JDEL user 901 name.last
> '{"name":{"first":"Tom"}'
All commands use the GJSON path syntax, for more information:
Setting JSON: https://github.com/tidwall/sjson
Getting JSON: https://github.com/tidwall/gjson
This addresses an issue #73 that @huangpeizhi discovered while using
Tile38 in production where AOFSHRINK sometimes corrupts the database
causing the server to not start the next time.