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Redis 4.x Cookbook

You're reading from   Redis 4.x Cookbook Over 80 hand-picked recipes for effective Redis development and administration

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783988167
Length 382 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Zuofei Wang Zuofei Wang
Author Profile Icon Zuofei Wang
Zuofei Wang
Pengcheng Huang Pengcheng Huang
Author Profile Icon Pengcheng Huang
Pengcheng Huang
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Redis FREE CHAPTER 2. Data Types 3. Data Features 4. Developing with Redis 5. Replication 6. Persistence 7. Setting Up High Availability and Cluster 8. Deploying to a Production Environment 9. Administrating Redis 10. Troubleshooting Redis 11. Extending Redis with Redis Modules 12. The Redis Ecosystem 13. Windows Environment Setup
14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Troubleshooting latency issues


Redis is designed to serve a large number of queries at an extremely fast speed. In most scenarios, there is a strict requirement for the response time between a client and the Redis Server. Therefore, high latency becomes the most fatal problem for the Redis online service. In this recipe, we will see how to measure and detect the latency of Redis, and also give you several possible clues to where the latency issue happens.

Getting ready…

You need to finish setting up the replication of the Redis Server as we described in the Setting up Redis replication recipe in Chapter 5, Replication.

For demonstration purposes, we populate a large amount of data:

for i in `seq 10`
do 
nohup node generator.js hash 1000000 session:${i} & 
done

How to do it...

The first action is to do the baseline latency measurement:

  1. Before you put the Redis service online, run an intrinsic-latency test on the host where the Redis Server is running:
$ bin/redis-cli --intrinsic-latency 60
Max...
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