A fast Golang Valkey client that does auto pipelining and supports server-assisted client-side caching.
package main
import (
"context"
"github.com/valkey-io/valkey-go"
)
func main() {
client, err := valkey.NewClient(valkey.ClientOption{InitAddress: []string{"127.0.0.1:6379"}})
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
defer client.Close()
ctx := context.Background()
// SET key val NX
err = client.Do(ctx, client.B().Set().Key("key").Value("val").Nx().Build()).Error()
// HGETALL hm
hm, err := client.Do(ctx, client.B().Hgetall().Key("hm").Build()).AsStrMap()
}
Check out more examples: Command Response Cheatsheet
client.B()
is the builder entry point to construct a valkey command:
\ Recorded by @FZambia Improving Centrifugo Redis Engine throughput and allocation efficiency with Rueidis Go library
Once a command is built, use either client.Do()
or client.DoMulti()
to send it to valkey.
You ❗️SHOULD NOT❗️ reuse the command to another client.Do()
or client.DoMulti()
call because it has been recycled to the underlying sync.Pool
by default.
To reuse a command, use Pin()
after Build()
and it will prevent the command from being recycled.
All concurrent non-blocking valkey commands (such as GET
, SET
) are automatically pipelined by default,
which reduces the overall round trips and system calls and gets higher throughput. You can easily get the benefit
of pipelining technique by just calling client.Do()
from multiple goroutines concurrently.
For example:
func BenchmarkPipelining(b *testing.B, client valkey.Client) {
// the below client.Do() operations will be issued from
// multiple goroutines and thus will be pipelined automatically.
b.RunParallel(func(pb *testing.PB) {
for pb.Next() {
client.Do(context.Background(), client.B().Get().Key("k").Build()).ToString()
}
})
}
Compared to go-redis, valkey-go has higher throughput across 1, 8, and 64 parallelism settings.
It is even able to achieve ~14x throughput over go-redis in a local benchmark of Macbook Pro 16" M1 Pro 2021. (see parallelism(64)-key(16)-value(64)-10
)
Benchmark source code: https://github.com/rueian/rueidis-benchmark
A benchmark result performed on two GCP n2-highcpu-2 machines also shows that valkey-go can achieve higher throughput with lower latencies: https://github.com/redis/rueidis/pull/93
While auto pipelining maximizes throughput, it relys on additional goroutines to process requests and responses and may add some latencies due to goroutine scheduling and head of line blocking.
You can avoid this by setting DisableAutoPipelining
to ture, then it will switch to connection pooling approach and serve each request with dedicated connection on the same goroutine.
Besides auto pipelining, you can also pipeline commands manually with DoMulti()
:
cmds := make(valkey.Commands, 0, 10)
for i := 0; i < 10; i++ {
cmds = append(cmds, client.B().Set().Key("key").Value("value").Build())
}
for _, resp := range client.DoMulti(ctx, cmds...) {
if err := resp.Error(); err != nil {
panic(err)
}
}
The opt-in mode of server-assisted client-side caching is enabled by default and can be used by calling DoCache()
or DoMultiCache()
with client-side TTLs specified.
client.DoCache(ctx, client.B().Hmget().Key("mk").Field("1", "2").Cache(), time.Minute).ToArray()
client.DoMultiCache(ctx,
valkey.CT(client.B().Get().Key("k1").Cache(), 1*time.Minute),
valkey.CT(client.B().Get().Key("k2").Cache(), 2*time.Minute))
Cached responses, including Redis Nils, will be invalidated either when being notified by valkey servers or when their client-side TTLs are reached. See https://github.com/redis/rueidis/issues/534 for more details.
Server-assisted client-side caching can dramatically boost latencies and throughput just like having a valkey replica right inside your application. For example:
Benchmark source code: https://github.com/rueian/rueidis-benchmark
Use CacheTTL()
to check the remaining client-side TTL in seconds:
client.DoCache(ctx, client.B().Get().Key("k1").Cache(), time.Minute).CacheTTL() == 60
Use IsCacheHit()
to verify if the response came from the client-side memory:
client.DoCache(ctx, client.B().Get().Key("k1").Cache(), time.Minute).IsCacheHit() == true
If the OpenTelemetry is enabled by the valkeyotel.NewClient(option)
, then there are also two metrics instrumented:
valkey.MGetCache
and valkey.JsonMGetCache
are handy helpers fetching multiple keys across different slots through the client-side caching.
They will first group keys by slot to build MGET
or JSON.MGET
commands respectively and then send requests with only cache missed keys to valkey nodes.
Although the default is opt-in mode, you can use broadcast mode by specifying your prefixes in ClientOption.ClientTrackingOptions
:
client, err := valkey.NewClient(valkey.ClientOption{
InitAddress: []string{"127.0.0.1:6379"},
ClientTrackingOptions: []string{"PREFIX", "prefix1:", "PREFIX", "prefix2:", "BCAST"},
})
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
client.DoCache(ctx, client.B().Get().Key("prefix1:1").Cache(), time.Minute).IsCacheHit() == false
client.DoCache(ctx, client.B().Get().Key("prefix1:1").Cache(), time.Minute).IsCacheHit() == true
Please make sure that commands passed to DoCache()
and DoMultiCache()
are covered by your prefixes.
Otherwise, their client-side cache will not be invalidated by valkey.
Cache-Aside is a widely used caching strategy. valkeyaside can help you cache data into your client-side cache backed by Valkey. For example:
client, err := valkeyaside.NewClient(valkeyaside.ClientOption{
ClientOption: valkey.ClientOption{InitAddress: []string{"127.0.0.1:6379"}},
})
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
val, err := client.Get(context.Background(), time.Minute, "mykey", func(ctx context.Context, key string) (val string, err error) {
if err = db.QueryRowContext(ctx, "SELECT val FROM mytab WHERE id = ?", key).Scan(&val); err == sql.ErrNoRows {
val = "_nil_" // cache nil to avoid penetration.
err = nil // clear err in case of sql.ErrNoRows.
}
return
})
// ...
Please refer to the full example at valkeyaside.
Some Valkey providers don't support client-side caching, ex. Google Cloud Memorystore.
You can disable client-side caching by setting ClientOption.DisableCache
to true
.
This will also fall back client.DoCache()
and client.DoMultiCache()
to client.Do()
and client.DoMulti()
.
client.Do()
, client.DoMulti()
, client.DoCache()
, and client.DoMultiCache()
can return early if the context is canceled or the deadline is reached.
ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(context.Background(), time.Second)
defer cancel()
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Set().Key("key").Value("val").Nx().Build()).Error() == context.DeadlineExceeded
Please note that though operations can return early, the command is likely sent already.
To receive messages from channels, client.Receive()
should be used. It supports SUBSCRIBE
, PSUBSCRIBE
, and Valkey 7.0's SSUBSCRIBE
:
err = client.Receive(context.Background(), client.B().Subscribe().Channel("ch1", "ch2").Build(), func(msg valkey.PubSubMessage) {
// Handle the message. Note that if you want to call another `client.Do()` here, you need to do it in another goroutine or the `client` will be blocked.
})
The provided handler will be called with the received message.
It is important to note that client.Receive()
will keep blocking until returning a value in the following cases:
nil
when receiving any unsubscribe/punsubscribe message related to the provided subscribe
command, including sunsubscribe
messages caused by slot migrations.valkey.ErrClosing
when the client is closed manually.ctx.Err()
when the ctx
is done.err
when the provided subscribe
command fails.While the client.Receive()
call is blocking, the Client
is still able to accept other concurrent requests,
and they are sharing the same TCP connection. If your message handler may take some time to complete, it is recommended
to use the client.Receive()
inside a client.Dedicated()
for not blocking other concurrent requests.
The client.Receive()
requires users to provide a subscription command in advance.
There is an alternative Dedicatedclient.SetPubSubHooks()
that allows users to subscribe/unsubscribe channels later.
c, cancel := client.Dedicate()
defer cancel()
wait := c.SetPubSubHooks(valkey.PubSubHooks{
OnMessage: func(m valkey.PubSubMessage) {
// Handle the message. Note that if you want to call another `c.Do()` here, you need to do it in another goroutine or the `c` will be blocked.
}
})
c.Do(ctx, c.B().Subscribe().Channel("ch").Build())
err := <-wait // disconnected with err
If the hooks are not nil, the above wait
channel is guaranteed to be closed when the hooks will not be called anymore,
and produce at most one error describing the reason. Users can use this channel to detect disconnection.
To do a CAS Transaction (WATCH
+ MULTI
+ EXEC
), a dedicated connection should be used because there should be no
unintentional write commands between WATCH
and EXEC
. Otherwise, the EXEC
may not fail as expected.
client.Dedicated(func(c valkey.DedicatedClient) error {
// watch keys first
c.Do(ctx, c.B().Watch().Key("k1", "k2").Build())
// perform read here
c.Do(ctx, c.B().Mget().Key("k1", "k2").Build())
// perform write with MULTI EXEC
c.DoMulti(
ctx,
c.B().Multi().Build(),
c.B().Set().Key("k1").Value("1").Build(),
c.B().Set().Key("k2").Value("2").Build(),
c.B().Exec().Build(),
)
return nil
})
Or use Dedicate()
and invoke cancel()
when finished to put the connection back to the pool.
c, cancel := client.Dedicate()
defer cancel()
c.Do(ctx, c.B().Watch().Key("k1", "k2").Build())
// do the rest CAS operations with the `client` who occupies a connection
However, occupying a connection is not good in terms of throughput. It is better to use Lua script to perform optimistic locking instead.
The NewLuaScript
or NewLuaScriptReadOnly
will create a script which is safe for concurrent usage.
When calling the script.Exec
, it will try sending EVALSHA
first and fall back to EVAL
if the server returns NOSCRIPT
.
script := valkey.NewLuaScript("return {KEYS[1],KEYS[2],ARGV[1],ARGV[2]}")
// the script.Exec is safe for concurrent call
list, err := script.Exec(ctx, client, []string{"k1", "k2"}, []string{"a1", "a2"}).ToArray()
client.DoStream()
and client.DoMultiStream()
can be used to send large valkey responses to an io.Writer
directly without allocating them to the memory. They work by first sending commands to a dedicated connection acquired from a pool,
then directly copying the response values to the given io.Writer
, and finally recycling the connection.
s := client.DoMultiStream(ctx, client.B().Get().Key("a{slot1}").Build(), client.B().Get().Key("b{slot1}").Build())
for s.HasNext() {
n, err := s.WriteTo(io.Discard)
if valkey.IsValkeyNil(err) {
// ...
}
}
Note that these two methods will occupy connections until all responses are written to the given io.Writer
.
This can take a long time and hurt performance. Use the normal Do()
and DoMulti()
instead unless you want to avoid allocating memory for a large valkey response.
Also note that these two methods only work with string
, integer
, and float
valkey responses. And DoMultiStream
currently
does not support pipelining keys across multiple slots when connecting to a valkey cluster.
Each underlying connection in valkey allocates a ring buffer for pipelining.
Its size is controlled by the ClientOption.RingScaleEachConn
and the default value is 10 which results into each ring of size 2^10.
If you have many valkey connections, you may find that they occupy quite an amount of memory.
In that case, you may consider reducing ClientOption.RingScaleEachConn
to 8 or 9 at the cost of potential throughput degradation.
You may also consider setting the value of ClientOption.PipelineMultiplex
to -1
, which will let valkey use only 1 connection for pipelining to each valkey node.
You can create a new valkey client using NewClient
and provide several options.
// Connect to a single valkey node:
client, err := valkey.NewClient(valkey.ClientOption{
InitAddress: []string{"127.0.0.1:6379"},
})
// Connect to a valkey cluster
client, err := valkey.NewClient(valkey.ClientOption{
InitAddress: []string{"127.0.0.1:7001", "127.0.0.1:7002", "127.0.0.1:7003"},
ShuffleInit: true,
})
// Connect to a valkey cluster and use replicas for read operations
client, err := valkey.NewClient(valkey.ClientOption{
InitAddress: []string{"127.0.0.1:7001", "127.0.0.1:7002", "127.0.0.1:7003"},
SendToReplicas: func(cmd valkey.Completed) bool {
return cmd.IsReadOnly()
},
})
// Connect to sentinels
client, err := valkey.NewClient(valkey.ClientOption{
InitAddress: []string{"127.0.0.1:26379", "127.0.0.1:26380", "127.0.0.1:26381"},
Sentinel: valkey.SentinelOption{
MasterSet: "my_master",
},
})
You can use ParseURL
or MustParseURL
to construct a ClientOption
.
The provided URL must be started with either redis://
, rediss://
or unix://
.
Currently supported url parameters are db
, dial_timeout
, write_timeout
, addr
, protocol
, client_cache
, client_name
, max_retries
, and master_set
.
// connect to a valkey cluster
client, err = valkey.NewClient(valkey.MustParseURL("redis://127.0.0.1:7001?addr=127.0.0.1:7002&addr=127.0.0.1:7003"))
// connect to a valkey node
client, err = valkey.NewClient(valkey.MustParseURL("redis://127.0.0.1:6379/0"))
// connect to a valkey sentinel
client, err = valkey.NewClient(valkey.MustParseURL("redis://127.0.0.1:26379/0?master_set=my_master"))
If you want to construct commands that are absent from the command builder, you can use client.B().Arbitrary()
:
// This will result in [ANY CMD k1 k2 a1 a2]
client.B().Arbitrary("ANY", "CMD").Keys("k1", "k2").Args("a1", "a2").Build()
[]byte
, and Vector Similarity SearchThe command builder treats all the parameters as Valkey strings, which are binary safe. This means that users can store []byte
directly into Valkey without conversion. And the valkey.BinaryString
helper can convert []byte
to string
without copying. For example:
client.B().Set().Key("b").Value(valkey.BinaryString([]byte{...})).Build()
Treating all the parameters as Valkey strings also means that the command builder doesn't do any quoting, conversion automatically for users.
When working with RedisJSON, users frequently need to prepare JSON strings in Valkey strings. And valkey.JSON
can help:
client.B().JsonSet().Key("j").Path("$.myStrField").Value(valkey.JSON("str")).Build()
// equivalent to
client.B().JsonSet().Key("j").Path("$.myStrField").Value(`"str"`).Build()
When working with vector similarity search, users can use valkey.VectorString32
and valkey.VectorString64
to build queries:
cmd := client.B().FtSearch().Index("idx").Query("*=>[KNN 5 @vec $V]").
Params().Nargs(2).NameValue().NameValue("V", valkey.VectorString64([]float64{...})).
Dialect(2).Build()
n, resp, err := client.Do(ctx, cmd).AsFtSearch()
While the command builder is developer-friendly, the response parser is a little unfriendly. Developers must know what type of Valkey response will be returned from the server beforehand and which parser they should use.
Error Handling: If an incorrect parser function is chosen, an errParse will be returned. Here's an example using ToArray which demonstrates this scenario:
// Attempt to parse the response. If a parsing error occurs, check if the error is a parse error and handle it.
// Normally, you should fix the code by choosing the correct parser function.
// For instance, use ToString() if the expected response is a string, or ToArray() if the expected response is an array as follows:
if err := client.Do(ctx, client.B().Get().Key("k").Build()).ToArray(); IsParseErr(err) {
fmt.Println("Parsing error:", err)
}
It is hard to remember what type of message will be returned and which parsing to use. So, here are some common examples:
// GET
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Get().Key("k").Build()).ToString()
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Get().Key("k").Build()).AsInt64()
// MGET
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Mget().Key("k1", "k2").Build()).ToArray()
// SET
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Set().Key("k").Value("v").Build()).Error()
// INCR
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Incr().Key("k").Build()).AsInt64()
// HGET
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Hget().Key("k").Field("f").Build()).ToString()
// HMGET
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Hmget().Key("h").Field("a", "b").Build()).ToArray()
// HGETALL
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Hgetall().Key("h").Build()).AsStrMap()
// EXPIRE
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Expire().Key("k").Seconds(1).Build()).AsInt64()
// HEXPIRE
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Hexpire().Key("h").Seconds(1).Fields().Numfields(2).Field("f1", "f2").Build()).AsIntSlice()
// ZRANGE
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Zrange().Key("k").Min("1").Max("2").Build()).AsStrSlice()
// ZRANK
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Zrank().Key("k").Member("m").Build()).AsInt64()
// ZSCORE
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Zscore().Key("k").Member("m").Build()).AsFloat64()
// ZRANGE
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Zrange().Key("k").Min("0").Max("-1").Build()).AsStrSlice()
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Zrange().Key("k").Min("0").Max("-1").Withscores().Build()).AsZScores()
// ZPOPMIN
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Zpopmin().Key("k").Build()).AsZScore()
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Zpopmin().Key("myzset").Count(2).Build()).AsZScores()
// SCARD
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Scard().Key("k").Build()).AsInt64()
// SMEMBERS
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Smembers().Key("k").Build()).AsStrSlice()
// LINDEX
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Lindex().Key("k").Index(0).Build()).ToString()
// LPOP
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Lpop().Key("k").Build()).ToString()
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Lpop().Key("k").Count(2).Build()).AsStrSlice()
// SCAN
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Scan().Cursor(0).Build()).AsScanEntry()
// FT.SEARCH
client.Do(ctx, client.B().FtSearch().Index("idx").Query("@f:v").Build()).AsFtSearch()
// GEOSEARCH
client.Do(ctx, client.B().Geosearch().Key("k").Fromlonlat(1, 1).Bybox(1).Height(1).Km().Build()).AsGeosearch()
DecodeSliceOfJSON is useful when you would like to scan the results of an array into a slice of a specific struct.
type User struct {
Name string `json:"name"`
}
// Set some values
if err = client.Do(ctx, client.B().Set().Key("user1").Value(`{"name": "name1"}`).Build()).Error(); err != nil {
return err
}
if err = client.Do(ctx, client.B().Set().Key("user2").Value(`{"name": "name2"}`).Build()).Error(); err != nil {
return err
}
// Scan MGET results into []*User
var users []*User // or []User is also scannable
if err := valkey.DecodeSliceOfJSON(client.Do(ctx, client.B().Mget().Key("user1", "user2").Build()), &users); err != nil {
return err
}
for _, user := range users {
fmt.Printf("%+v\n", user)
}
/*
&{name:name1}
&{name:name2}
*/
Please make sure that all values in the result have the same JSON structures.
// Set a pure string value
if err = client.Do(ctx, client.B().Set().Key("user1").Value("userName1").Build()).Error(); err != nil {
return err
}
// Bad
users := make([]*User, 0)
if err := valkey.DecodeSliceOfJSON(client.Do(ctx, client.B().Mget().Key("user1").Build()), &users); err != nil {
return err
}
// -> Error: invalid character 'u' looking for the beginning of the value
// in this case, use client.Do(ctx, client.B().Mget().Key("user1").Build()).AsStrSlice()
Contributions are welcome, including issues, pull requests, and discussions. Contributions mean a lot to us and help us improve this library and the community!
Command builders are generated based on the definitions in ./hack/cmds by running:
go generate
Please use the ./dockertest.sh script for running test cases locally. And please try your best to have 100% test coverage on code changes.