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Pieter Noordhuis 5bb2c88e94 Rebuild source when allocator changes
To do so, the Makefile stores the contents of the MALLOC environment
variable in a file named .make-malloc. When the contents of this file
and the MALLOC variable are not equal, it forces a rebuild of the Redis
source tree.

A side-effect of this change is that choosing an allocator can now be
done using the single MALLOC variable instead of USE_TCMALLOC,
USE_JEMALLOC and so forth. These variables continue to work for
backwards compatibility.
2011-11-15 13:09:34 -08:00
deps Rebuild deps/ and src/ when ARCH changes 2011-11-15 12:41:35 -08:00
src Rebuild source when allocator changes 2011-11-15 13:09:34 -08:00
tests Added test to make sure Redis evicts expired keys actively (and not just in a lazy fashion). 2011-11-12 11:27:38 +01:00
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COPYING first commit 2009-03-22 10:30:00 +01:00
Changelog Make log target fixed 2010-07-01 14:45:37 +02:00
INSTALL Small fix in the installation instructions 2011-06-09 09:14:18 -07:00
Makefile top level Makefile now just a proxy. Doing make clean inside src now does a full clean including deps, not just Redis source. Thanks to Pieter for the top level Makefile proxy trick. 2011-07-13 19:15:22 +02:00
README Better installation info inside README file. 2011-10-23 12:29:26 +02:00
TODO a few entries removed from the old TODO list (done) 2011-09-27 16:07:38 +02:00
redis.conf use timeout 0 by default, as this is a common source of problems. 2011-10-31 15:43:09 +01:00
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README

Where to find complete Redis documentation?
-------------------------------------------

This README is just a fast "quick start" document. You can find more detailed
documentation at http://redis.io

Building Redis
--------------

It is as simple as:

    % make

You can run a 32 bit Redis binary using:

    % make 32bit

After building Redis is a good idea to test it, using:

    % make test

NOTE: if after building Redis with a 32 bit target you need to rebuild it
      with a 64 bit target you need to perform a "make clean" in the root
      directory of the Redis distribution.

Allocator
---------

By default Redis compiles and links against jemalloc under Linux, since
glibc malloc() has memory fragmentation problems.

To force a libc malloc() build use:

    % make FORCE_LIBC_MALLOC=yes

In all the other non Linux systems the libc malloc() is used by default.

On Mac OS X you can force a jemalloc based build using the following:

    % make USE_JEMALLOC=yes

Verbose build
-------------

Redis will build with a user friendly colorized output by default.
If you want to see a more verbose output use the following:

    % make V=1

Running Redis
-------------

To run Redis with the default configuration just type:

    % cd src
    % ./redis-server
    
If you want to provide your redis.conf, you have to run it using an additional
parameter (the path of the configuration file):

    % cd src
    % ./redis-server /path/to/redis.conf

Playing with Redis
------------------

You can use redis-cli to play with Redis. Start a redis-server instance,
then in another terminal try the following:

    % cd src
    % ./redis-cli
    redis> ping
    PONG
    redis> set foo bar
    OK
    redis> get foo
    "bar"
    redis> incr mycounter
    (integer) 1
    redis> incr mycounter
    (integer) 2
    redis> 

You can find the list of all the available commands here:

    http://redis.io/commands

Installing Redis
-----------------

In order to install Redis binaries into /usr/local/bin just use:

    % make install

You can use "make PREFIX=/some/other/directory install" if you wish to use a
different destination.

Make install will just install binaries in your system, but will not configure
init scripts and configuration files in the appropriate place. This is not
needed if you want just to play a bit with Redis, but if you are installing
it the proper way for a production system, we have a script doing this
for Ubuntu and Debian systems:

    % cd utils
    % ./install_server

The script will ask you a few questions and will setup everything you need
to run Redis properly as a background daemon that will start again on
system reboots.

You'll be able to stop and start Redis using the script named
/etc/init.d/redis_<portnumber>, for instance /etc/init.d/redis_6379.

Enjoy!