valkey-io / valkey-py

Valkey Python client based on a fork of redis-py
MIT License
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valkey-py

The Python interface to the Valkey key-value store.

CI docs MIT licensed pypi pre-release codecov

Installation | Usage | Advanced Topics | Contributing


Installation

Start a valkey via docker:

docker run -p 6379:6379 -it valkey/valkey:latest

To install valkey-py, simply:

$ pip install valkey

For faster performance, install valkey with hiredis support, this provides a compiled response parser, and for most cases requires zero code changes. By default, if hiredis >= 1.0 is available, valkey-py will attempt to use it for response parsing.

$ pip install "valkey[hiredis]"

Usage

Basic Example

>>> import valkey
>>> r = valkey.Valkey(host='localhost', port=6379, db=0)
>>> r.set('foo', 'bar')
True
>>> r.get('foo')
b'bar'

The above code connects to localhost on port 6379, sets a value in Redis, and retrieves it. All responses are returned as bytes in Python, to receive decoded strings, set decode_responses=True. For this, and more connection options, see these examples.

Migration from redis-py

You are encouraged to use the new class names, but to allow for a smooth transition alias are available:

>>> import valkey as redis
>>> r = redis.Redis(host='localhost', port=6379, db=0)
>>> r.set('foo', 'bar')
True
>>> r.get('foo')
b'bar'

RESP3 Support

To enable support for RESP3 change your connection object to include protocol=3

>>> import valkey
>>> r = valkey.Valkey(host='localhost', port=6379, db=0, protocol=3)

Connection Pools

By default, valkey-py uses a connection pool to manage connections. Each instance of a Valkey class receives its own connection pool. You can however define your own valkey.ConnectionPool.

>>> pool = valkey.ConnectionPool(host='localhost', port=6379, db=0)
>>> r = valkey.Valkey(connection_pool=pool)

Alternatively, you might want to look at Async connections, or Cluster connections, or even Async Cluster connections.

Valkey Commands

There is built-in support for all of the out-of-the-box Valkey commands. They are exposed using the raw Redis command names (HSET, HGETALL, etc.) except where a word (i.e. del) is reserved by the language. The complete set of commands can be found here, or the documentation.

Advanced Topics

The official Valkey command documentation does a great job of explaining each command in detail. valkey-py attempts to adhere to the official command syntax. There are a few exceptions:

For more details, please see the documentation on advanced topics page.

Pipelines

The following is a basic example of a Valkey pipeline, a method to optimize round-trip calls, by batching Valkey commands, and receiving their results as a list.

>>> pipe = r.pipeline()
>>> pipe.set('foo', 5)
>>> pipe.set('bar', 18.5)
>>> pipe.set('blee', "hello world!")
>>> pipe.execute()
[True, True, True]

PubSub

The following example shows how to utilize Valkey Pub/Sub to subscribe to specific channels.

>>> r = valkey.Valkey(...)
>>> p = r.pubsub()
>>> p.subscribe('my-first-channel', 'my-second-channel', ...)
>>> p.get_message()
{'pattern': None, 'type': 'subscribe', 'channel': b'my-second-channel', 'data': 1}

Author

valkey-py can be found here, or downloaded from pypi. It was created as a fork of redis-py

Special thanks to:

Valkey