This utility provides a way to move the contents of one redis DB to another redis DB. It is inspired by the redis-copy.rb script included in the redis source, but aims to always support all object types and to use the most-efficient methods and commands available to your redis versions:
- if available on both dbs, will use
DUMP
/RESTORE
commands (redis v2.6+) - if available on source db, will use
SCAN
instead ofKEYS
(redis v2.8+)
$ gem install redis-copy
The current options can be grabbed using the --help
flag.
$ redis-copy --help
redis-copy v1.0.0 (with redis-rb 3.0.6)
Usage: redis-copy [options] <source> <destination>
<source> and <destination> must be redis connection uris
like [redis://][<username>:<password>@]<hostname>[:<port>][/<db>]
Specific options:
-p, --pattern PATTERN Only transfer matching keys (default *)
See http://redis.io/commands/keys for more info.
-v, --[no-]verify [PERCENT] Verify percentage of transfers -- VERY SLOW (default 0)
-n, --[no-]allow-nonempty Allow non-empty destination (default false)
-f, --[no-]fail-fast Abort on first failure (default false)
--[no-]pipeline Pipeline redis commands where available (default true)
-r, --require FILENAME Require a script; useful for loading third-party
implementations of key-emitter or copy strategies.
Relative paths *must* begin with `../' or `./'.
-d, --[no-]debug Write debug output (default false)
-t, --[no-]trace Enable backtrace on failure (default false)
--[no-]prompt Prompt for confirmation (default true)
--[no-]dry-run Output configuration and exit
$ redis-copy --no-prompt old.redis.host/9 new.redis.host:6380/3
Source: redis://old.redis.host:6379/9
Destination: redis://new.redis.host:6380/3 (empty)
Key Emitter: Scan
Strategy: DumpRestore
PROGRESS {:success=>1000, :attempt=>1000}
PROGRESS {:success=>2000, :attempt=>2000}
PROGRESS {:success=>3000, :attempt=>3000}
PROGRESS {:success=>4000, :attempt=>4000}
DONE: {:success=>4246, :attempt=>4246}
RedisCopy
uses the implements gem to define interfaces for key-emitter
and copy strategies, so implementations can be supplied by third-parties,
secondary gems, or even a local script; the interface shared examples are even
available on your load-path so you can ensure your implementation adheres to
the interface.
See the existing implementations and their specs for examples, and use the
--require
command-line flag to load up your own. Since implements
treats
last-loaded implementations as inherently better, RedisCopy
will automatically
pick up your implementation and attempt to use it before the bundled
implementations.
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request