summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/doc/Speed.html
blob: 47e77761f0dffda6df4afd4928b6b3a472fda043 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38

<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN">
<html>
    <head>
        <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="style.css" />
    </head>
    <body>
        <div id="page">
        
            <div id='header'>
            <a href="index.html">
            <img style="border:none" alt="Redis Documentation" src="redis.png">
            </a>
            </div>
        
            <div id="pagecontent">
                <div class="index">
<!-- This is a (PRE) block.  Make sure it's left aligned or your toc title will be off. -->
<b>Speed: Contents</b><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#Speed (ROUGH DRAFT)">Speed (ROUGH DRAFT)</a><br>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<a href="#TODO">TODO</a>
                </div>
                
                <h1 class="wikiname">Speed</h1>

                <div class="summary">
                    
                </div>

                <div class="narrow">
                    
<h1><a name="Speed (ROUGH DRAFT)">Speed (ROUGH DRAFT)</a></h1><h2><a name="TODO">TODO</a></h2><ul><li> Written in ANSI C</li><li> Pipelining</li><li> MultiBulkCommands</li><li> epoll &gt;= 1.1</li><li> Benchmarks</li></ul>
Redis takes the whole dataset in memory and <a href="Persistence.html">writes asynchronously to disk</a> in order to be very fast, you have the best of both worlds: hyper-speed and <a href="Persistence.html">persistence</a> for your data.<br/><br/>Establishing a new connection to a Redis Server is <i>simple</i> and <i>fast</i> nothing more that a TCP three way handshake. There is no authentication or other handshake involved (<a href="http://groups.google.com/group/redis-db/browse_thread/thread/1adb93f0b6a1460a" target="_blank">Google Group: Can we use connection pool in Redis?</a>) You can read more about the way Redis clients communicate with servers in the <a href="ProtocolSpecification.html">Protocol Specification</a>.<br/><br/>On most commodity hardware it takes about 45 seconds to restore a 2 GB database, without fancy RAID. This can give you some kind of feeling about the order of magnitude of the time needed to load data when you restart the server, so restarting a server is fast too.<br/><br/>Also <a href="Replication.html">Replication</a> is fast, benchamarks will give you the the same order of magnitude a restart does (<a href="http://groups.google.com/group/redis-db/browse_thread/thread/3ab1c8b2126f1b8/29bdb6c5973f0388?lnk=gst&q=replication+#29bdb6c5973f0388" target="_blank">Google Group: Replication speed benchmak</a>)
                </div>
        
            </div>
        </div>
    </body>
</html>