Viewing a Parameter Template of a DCS Instance
System default parameter templates vary by Redis version and instance type. A system default parameter template contains default instance parameter configurations. Parameter templates can be customized for parameter configurations, and can be selected in instance creation.
This section describes how to view instance parameter templates on the DCS console.
Procedure
- Log in to the DCS console.
- Click in the upper left corner of the management console and select the region where your instance is located.
- In the navigation pane, choose Parameter Templates.
- Choose the Default Templates or Custom Templates tab.
- View parameter templates.
Currently, you can enter a keyword in the search box to search for a parameter template by template name.
- Click a parameter template. The parameters contained in the template are displayed. For details about the parameters, see Table 1.
Table 1 DCS Redis instance configuration parameters Parameter
Description
Exception Scenario
Value Range
Default Value
active-expire-num
Number of randomly checked keys in regular expired key deletions.
This parameter is not available for DCS Redis 3.0 and 6.0 professional edition instances.
1–1000
20
timeout
The maximum amount of time (in seconds) a connection between a client and the DCS instance can be allowed to remain idle before the connection is terminated. The value 0 indicates that the parameter is disabled. That is, the client is not disconnected when it is idle.
-
0–7200
Unit: second
0
appendfsync
Controls how often fsync() transfers cached data to the disk. Note that some OSs will perform a complete data transfer but some others only make a "best-effort" attempt.
Single-node instances do not have this parameter.
- no: fsync() is never called. The OS will flush data when it is ready. This mode offers the highest performance.
- always: fsync() is called after every write to the AOF. This mode is very slow, but also very safe.
- everysec: fsync() is called once per second. This mode provides a compromise between safety and performance.
no
appendonly
Indicates whether to log each modification of the instance. By default, data is written to disks asynchronously in Redis. If this function is disabled, recently-generated data might be lost in the event of a power failure.
Single-node instances do not have this parameter.
- yes: Logs are enabled, that is, persistence is enabled.
- no: Logs are disabled, that is, persistence is disabled.
- only-replica: Enable persistence only on replica nodes.
NOTE:By default, the appendonly parameter can only be set to yes or no. To set it to only-replica for a basic edition master/standby or cluster DCS Redis 4.0/5.0/6.0 instance, or a professional (performance) edition master/standby one, contact O&M personnel.
yes
client-output-buffer-limit-slave-soft-seconds
When the client-output-buffer-slave-soft-limit parameter is exceeded for more than the value of this parameter, the server drops the connection.
-
0–60
Unit: second
60
client-output-buffer-slave-hard-limit
Hard limit on the output buffer of replica clients. Once the output buffer exceeds the hard limit, the client is immediately disconnected.
-
0–17,179,869,184
Unit: byte
1,717,986,918
client-output-buffer-slave-soft-limit
Soft limit on the output buffer of replica clients. Once the output buffer exceeds the soft limit and continuously remains above the limit for the time specified by the client-output-buffer-limit-slave-soft-seconds parameter, the client is disconnected.
-
0–17,179,869,184
Unit: byte
1,717,986,918
maxmemory-policy
The policy applied when the maxmemory limit is reached. 8 values are available.
-
- volatile-lru: Evict keys by trying to remove the less recently used (LRU) keys first, but only among keys that have an expire set.
- allkeys-lru: Evict keys by trying to remove the LRU keys first.
- volatile-random: Evict keys randomly, but only among keys that have an expire set.
- allkeys-random: Evict keys randomly.
- volatile-ttl: Evict keys with an expire set, and try to evict keys with a shorter time to live (TTL) first.
- noeviction: Do not delete any keys and only return errors when the memory limit was reached.
- volatile-lfu: Evict keys by trying to remove the less frequently used (LFU) keys first, but only among keys that have an expire set.
- allkeys-lfu: Evict keys by trying to remove the LFU keys first.
For details about eviction policies, see the Redis official website.
volatile-lru
NOTE:If the DCS Redis instance is created before July 2020 and this parameter has not been modified, the default value is noeviction. If the instance is created after July 2020, the default value is volatile-lru.
lua-time-limit
Maximum time allowed for executing a Lua script.
-
100–5000
Unit: millisecond
5000
master-read-only
Sets the instance to be read-only. All write operations will fail.
Proxy Cluster instances do not have this parameter.
- yes
- no
no
maxclients
The maximum number of clients allowed to be concurrently connected to a DCS instance.
This parameter specifies the maximum number of connections on a single node (single shard).
- Cluster: Maximum connections per node = Maximum connections of the instance/Shard quantity
- Single-node and master/standby: Maximum connections on a single node = Maximum connections of the instance
Read/Write splitting instances do not support this parameter.
1000–50,000
10,000
proto-max-bulk-len
Maximum size of a single element request.
-
1,048,576–536,870,912
Unit: byte
536,870,912
repl-backlog-size
The replication backlog size. The backlog is a buffer that accumulates replica data when replicas are disconnected from the master. When a replica reconnects, a partial synchronization is performed to synchronize the data that was missed while replicas were disconnected.
-
16,384–1,073,741,824
Unit: byte
1,048,576
repl-backlog-ttl
The amount of time, in seconds, before the backlog buffer is released, starting from the last a replica was disconnected. The value 0 indicates that the backlog is never released.
-
0–604,800
Unit: second
3600
repl-timeout
Replication timeout.
Single-node instances do not have this parameter.
30–3600
Unit: second
60
hash-max-ziplist-entries
The maximum number of hashes that can be encoded using ziplist, a data structure optimized to reduce memory use.
-
1–10,000
512
hash-max-ziplist-value
The largest value allowed for a hash encoded using ziplist, a special data structure optimized for memory use.
-
1–10,000
64
set-max-intset-entries
When a set is composed entirely of strings and number of integer elements is less than this parameter value, the set is encoded using intset, a data structure optimized for memory use.
-
1–10,000
512
zset-max-ziplist-entries
The maximum number of sorted sets that can be encoded using ziplist, a data structure optimized to reduce memory use.
-
1–10,000
128
zset-max-ziplist-value
The largest value allowed for a sorted set encoded using ziplist, a special data structure optimized for memory use.
-
1–10,000
64
latency-monitor-threshold
The minimum amount of latency that will be logged as latency spikes
If this parameter is set to 0, latency monitoring is disabled. If this parameter is set to a value greater than 0, all events blocking the server for a time greater than the configured value will be logged.
To obtain statistics data, and configure and enable latency monitoring, run the LATENCY command.
NOTE:The latency-monitor-threshold parameter is usually used for fault location. After locating faults based on the latency information collected, change the value of latency-monitor-threshold to 0 to avoid unnecessary latency.
Proxy Cluster instances do not have this parameter.
0–86,400,000
Unit: millisecond
0
notify-keyspace-events
Controls which keyspace events notifications are enabled for. If this parameter is configured, the Redis Pub/Sub feature will allow clients to receive an event notification when a Redis data set is modified. This parameter is disabled only when it is left blank.
Proxy Cluster instances do not have this parameter.
A combination of different values can be used to enable notifications for multiple event types. Possible values include:
K: Keyspace events, published with the __keyspace@*__ prefix
E: Keyevent events, published with __keyevent@*__ prefix
g: Generic commands (non-type specific) such as DEL, EXPIRE, and RENAME
$: String commands
l: List commands
s: Set commands
h: Hash commands
z: Sorted set commands
x: Expired events (events generated every time a key expires)
e: Evicted events (events generated when a key is evicted from maxmemory)
A: an alias for "g$lshzxe"
The parameter value must contain either K or E. A cannot be used together with any of the characters in "g$lshzxe". For example, the value Kl means that Redis will notify Pub/Sub clients about keyspace events and list commands. The value AKE means Redis will notify Pub/Sub clients about all events.
Ex
slowlog-log-slower-than
Slow queries cover scheduled commands whose execution is delayed. slowlog-log-slower-than is the maximum time allowed for command execution. If this threshold is exceeded, Redis will record the query.
-
0–1,000,000
Unit: microsecond
10,000
proxy-slowlog-log-slower-than
Slow queries of a proxy cover scheduled commands whose execution is delayed. proxy-slowlog-log-slower-than is the maximum time allowed for command execution. If this threshold is exceeded, the proxy will record the query.
Currently, only Proxy Cluster and read/write splitting instances in the CN East-Shanghai2 and CN South-Guangzhou regions.
30,000–2,000,000
Unit: microsecond
256,000
slowlog-max-len
The maximum allowed number of slow queries that can be logged. Slow query log consumes memory, but you can reclaim this memory by running the SLOWLOG RESET command.
-
0–1000
128
proxy-slowlog-max-len
The maximum allowed number of slow queries of a proxy that can be logged. Slow query log consumes memory, but you can reclaim this memory by running the SLOWLOG RESET command.
Currently, only Proxy Cluster and read/write splitting instances in the CN East-Shanghai2 and CN South-Guangzhou regions.
0–1000
128
auto-kill-timeout-lua-process
When this parameter is enabled, processes running the lua script are killed when their execution times out. However, scripts with write operations are not killed, but their nodes automatically restart (if persistence has been enabled for the instance) without saving the write operations.
Single-node instances and DCS Redis 3.0 instances do not have this parameter.
- yes: enabled
- no: disabled
no
dispatch-pubsub-to-fixed-shard
This parameter specifies whether pub/sub channels are on the shard of slot 0. When this parameter is enabled, the pub/sub processing logic is consistent with that of single-node instances. You are advised to enable this parameter if you do not depend heavily on pub/sub. If you depend heavily on pub/sub, use the default configuration to allocate subscriptions to all shards.
Only Proxy Cluster instances have this parameter.
- yes: Enable this parameter to allocate subscription channels to the shard of slot 0.
- no: Disable this parameter to allocate channels to the shard of each channel-hashed slot.
no
readonly-lua-route-to-slave-enabled
If enabled, read-only Lua scripts of read-only users are executed and routed to the standby node.
Only read/write splitting instances support this parameter.
- yes: enabled
- no: disabled
no
cluster-sentinel-enabled
To support Sentinels for the instance.
Only Proxy Cluster instances have this parameter.
- yes: enabled
- no: disabled
no
scan-support-wr-split
The SCAN command is executed on the master node when this parameter is disabled, or is executed on the standby node otherwise.
Only Proxy Cluster instances have this parameter.
Proxy Cluster instances created earlier may not support this parameter. In this case, contact technical support to upgrade instances.
- yes: enabled
- no: disabled
no
- The default values and value ranges of the maxclients, reserved-memory-percent, client-output-buffer-slave-soft-limit, and client-output-buffer-slave-hard-limit parameters are related to the instance specifications. Therefore, these parameters are not displayed in the parameter template.
- For more information about the parameters described in Table 1, visit https://redis.io/topics/memory-optimization.
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