48 lines
2.2 KiB
Plaintext
48 lines
2.2 KiB
Plaintext
Usage: redis-benchmark [-h <host>] [-p <port>] [-c <clients>] [-n <requests]> [-k <boolean>]
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-h <hostname> Server hostname (default 127.0.0.1)
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-p <port> Server port (default 6379)
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-s <socket> Server socket (overrides host and port)
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-a <password> Password for Redis Auth
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-c <clients> Number of parallel connections (default 50)
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-n <requests> Total number of requests (default 100000)
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-d <size> Data size of SET/GET value in bytes (default 2)
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-dbnum <db> SELECT the specified db number (default 0)
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-k <boolean> 1=keep alive 0=reconnect (default 1)
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-r <keyspacelen> Use random keys for SET/GET/INCR, random values for SADD
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Using this option the benchmark will expand the string __rand_int__
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inside an argument with a 12 digits number in the specified range
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from 0 to keyspacelen-1. The substitution changes every time a command
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is executed. Default tests use this to hit random keys in the
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specified range.
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-P <numreq> Pipeline <numreq> requests. Default 1 (no pipeline).
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-q Quiet. Just show query/sec values
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--csv Output in CSV format
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-l Loop. Run the tests forever
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-t <tests> Only run the comma separated list of tests. The test
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names are the same as the ones produced as output.
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-I Idle mode. Just open N idle connections and wait.
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Examples:
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Run the benchmark with the default configuration against 127.0.0.1:6379:
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$ redis-benchmark
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Use 20 parallel clients, for a total of 100k requests, against 192.168.1.1:
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$ redis-benchmark -h 192.168.1.1 -p 6379 -n 100000 -c 20
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Fill 127.0.0.1:6379 with about 1 million keys only using the SET test:
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$ redis-benchmark -t set -n 1000000 -r 100000000
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Benchmark 127.0.0.1:6379 for a few commands producing CSV output:
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$ redis-benchmark -t ping,set,get -n 100000 --csv
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Benchmark a specific command line:
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$ redis-benchmark -r 10000 -n 10000 eval 'return redis.call("ping")' 0
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Fill a list with 10000 random elements:
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$ redis-benchmark -r 10000 -n 10000 lpush mylist __rand_int__
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On user specified command lines __rand_int__ is replaced with a random integer
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with a range of values selected by the -r option.
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