From 378218d746b04039827f53a2e92e32f19be02ca6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: antirez Date: Mon, 17 Sep 2018 15:29:01 +0200 Subject: Sentinel: document how to undo a renamed command. --- sentinel.conf | 7 ++++++- 1 file changed, 6 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'sentinel.conf') diff --git a/sentinel.conf b/sentinel.conf index e428ad933..bc9a705ac 100644 --- a/sentinel.conf +++ b/sentinel.conf @@ -230,10 +230,15 @@ sentinel deny-scripts-reconfig yes # instead of the normal ones. For example if the master "mymaster", and the # associated replicas, have "CONFIG" all renamed to "GUESSME", I could use: # -# sentinel rename-command mymaster CONFIG GUESSME +# SENTINEL rename-command mymaster CONFIG GUESSME # # After such configuration is set, every time Sentinel would use CONFIG it will # use GUESSME instead. Note that there is no actual need to respect the command # case, so writing "config guessme" is the same in the example above. # # SENTINEL SET can also be used in order to perform this configuration at runtime. +# +# In order to set a command back to its original name (undo the renaming), it +# is possible to just rename a command to itsef: +# +# SENTINEL rename-command mymaster CONFIG CONFIG -- cgit v1.2.1