valkey-cli - Man Page
Valkey CLI
Synopsis
valkey-cli
[Options] [cmd [arg...]]
Description
The Valkey command line interface is used for administration, troubleshooting and experimenting with Valkey.
In interactive mode, valkey-cli
has basic line editing capabilities to provide a familiar typing experience.
To launch the program in special modes, you can use several options, including:
- Simulate a replica and print the replication stream it receives from the primary.
- Check the latency of a Valkey server and display statistics.
- Request ASCII-art spectrogram of latency samples and frequencies.
This topic covers the different aspects of valkey-cli
, starting from the simplest and ending with the more advanced features.
Options
- -h hostname
Server hostname (default: 127.0.0.1).
- -p port
Server port (default: 6379).
- -t timeout
Server connection timeout in seconds (decimals allowed). Default timeout is 0, meaning no limit, depending on the OS.
- -s socket
Server socket (overrides hostname and port).
- -a password
Password to use when connecting to the server. You can also use the
REDISCLI_AUTH
environment variable to pass this password more safely. (If both are used, this argument takes precedence.)- --user username
Used to send ACL style `AUTH username pass'. Needs
-a
.- --pass password
Alias of -a for consistency with the new –user option.
- --askpass
Force user to input password with mask from STDIN. If this argument is used,
-a
and theREDISCLI_AUTH
environment variable will be ignored.- -u uri
Server URI on format
valkey://user:password@host:port/dbnum
. User, password and dbnum are optional. For authentication without a username, use username `default'. For TLS, use the scheme `valkeys'.- -r repeat
Execute specified command N times.
- -i interval
When
-r
is used, waits interval seconds per command. It is possible to specify sub-second times like-i 0.1
. This interval is also used in--scan
and--stat
per cycle. and in--bigkeys
,--memkeys
, and--hotkeys
per 100 cycles.- -n db
Database number.
- -2
Start session in RESP2 protocol mode.
- -3
Start session in RESP3 protocol mode.
- -x
Read last argument from STDIN (see example below).
- -X
Read argument from STDIN (see example below).
- -d delimiter
Delimiter between response bulks for raw formatting (default:
\n
).- -D delimiter
Delimiter between responses for raw formatting (default:
\n
).- -c
Enable cluster mode (follow -ASK and -MOVED redirections).
- -e
Return exit error code when command execution fails.
- -4
Prefer IPv4 over IPv6 on DNS lookup.
- -6
Prefer IPv6 over IPv4 on DNS lookup.’
- --tls
Establish a secure TLS connection.
- --sni host
Server name indication for TLS.
- --cacert file
CA Certificate file to verify with.
- --cacertdir dir
Directory where trusted CA certificates are stored. If neither cacert nor cacertdir are specified, the default system-wide trusted root certs configuration will apply.
- --insecure
Allow insecure TLS connection by skipping cert validation.
- --cert file
Client certificate to authenticate with.
- --key file
Private key file to authenticate with.
- --tls-ciphers list
Sets the list of preferred ciphers (TLSv1.2 and below) in order of preference from highest to lowest separated by colon (“:”). See the ciphers(1ssl) manpage for more information about the syntax of this string.
- --tls-ciphersuites list
Sets the list of preferred ciphersuites (TLSv1.3) in order of preference from highest to lowest separated by colon (“:”). See the ciphers(1ssl) manpage for more information about the syntax of this string, and specifically for TLSv1.3 ciphersuites.
- --raw
Use raw formatting for replies (default when STDOUT is not a tty).
- --no-raw
Force formatted output even when STDOUT is not a tty.
- --quoted-input
Force input to be handled as quoted strings.
- --csv
Output in CSV format.
- --json
Output in JSON format (default RESP3, use -2 if you want to use with RESP2).
- --quoted-json
Same as –json, but produce ASCII-safe quoted strings, not Unicode.
- --show-pushes yes|no
Whether to print RESP3 PUSH messages. Enabled by default when STDOUT is a tty but can be overridden with –show-pushes no.
- --stat
Print rolling stats about server: mem, clients, ...
- --latency
Enter a special mode continuously sampling latency. If you use this mode in an interactive session it runs forever displaying real-time stats. Otherwise if
--raw
or--csv
is specified, or if you redirect the output to a non TTY, it samples the latency for 1 second (you can use-i
to change the interval), then produces a single output and exits.- --latency-history
Like
--latency
but tracking latency changes over time. Default time interval is 15 sec. Change it using-i
.- --latency-dist
Shows latency as a spectrum, requires xterm 256 colors. Default time interval is 1 sec. Change it using
-i
.- --lru-test keys
Simulate a cache workload with an 80-20 distribution.
- --replica
Simulate a replica showing commands received from the master.
- --rdb filename
Transfer an RDB dump from remote server to local file. Use filename of “-” to write to stdout.
- --functions-rdb filename
Like
--rdb
but only get the functions (not the keys) when getting the RDB dump file.- --pipe
Transfer raw RESP protocol from stdin to server.
- --pipe-timeout n
In
--pipe
mode, abort with error if after sending all data. no reply is received within n seconds. Default timeout: 30. Use 0 to wait forever.- --bigkeys
Sample keys looking for keys with many elements (complexity).
- --memkeys
Sample keys looking for keys consuming a lot of memory.
- --memkeys-samples n
Sample keys looking for keys consuming a lot of memory. And define number of key elements to sample
- --hotkeys
Sample keys looking for hot keys. only works when maxmemory-policy is
*lfu
.- --scan
List all keys using the SCAN command.
- --pattern pat
Keys pattern when using the
--scan
,--bigkeys
or--hotkeys
options (default:*
).- --count count
Count option when using the
--scan
,--bigkeys
or--hotkeys
(default: 10).- --quoted-pattern pat
Same as
--pattern
, but the specified string can be quoted, in order to pass an otherwise non binary-safe string.- --intrinsic-latency sec
Run a test to measure intrinsic system latency. The test will run for the specified amount of seconds.
- --eval file
Send an EVAL command using the Lua script at file.
- --ldb
Used with
--eval
enable the Server Lua debugger.- --ldb-sync-mode
Like
--ldb
but uses the synchronous Lua debugger, in this mode the server is blocked and script changes are not rolled back from the server memory.- --cluster command [args...] [opts...]
Cluster Manager command and arguments (see below).
- --verbose
Verbose mode.
- --no-auth-warning
Don’t show warning message when using password on command line interface.
- --help
Output help and exit.
- --version
Output version and exit.
Cluster Manager commands
For management of valkey-cluster-tutorial(7) Valkey Cluster, the following syntax is used:
valkey-cli --cluster
command [args...] [opts...]
Command Args -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- create host1:port1 ... hostN:portN --cluster-replicas <arg> check <host:port> or <host> <port> - separated by either colon or space --cluster-search-multiple-owners info <host:port> or <host> <port> - separated by either colon or space fix <host:port> or <host> <port> - separated by either colon or space --cluster-search-multiple-owners --cluster-fix-with-unreachable-masters reshard <host:port> or <host> <port> - separated by either colon or space --cluster-from <arg> --cluster-to <arg> --cluster-slots <arg> --cluster-yes --cluster-timeout <arg> --cluster-pipeline <arg> --cluster-replace rebalance <host:port> or <host> <port> - separated by either colon or space --cluster-weight <node1=w1...nodeN=wN> --cluster-use-empty-masters --cluster-timeout <arg> --cluster-simulate --cluster-pipeline <arg> --cluster-threshold <arg> --cluster-replace add-node new_host:new_port existing_host:existing_port --cluster-slave --cluster-master-id <arg> del-node host:port node_id call host:port command arg arg .. arg --cluster-only-masters --cluster-only-replicas set-timeout host:port milliseconds import host:port --cluster-from <arg> --cluster-from-user <arg> --cluster-from-pass <arg> --cluster-from-askpass --cluster-copy --cluster-replace backup host:port backup_directory help
Command line usage
To run a Valkey command and return a standard output at the terminal, include the command to execute as separate arguments of valkey-cli
:
$ valkey-cli INCR mycounter (integer) 7
The reply of the command is “7”. Since Valkey replies are typed (strings, arrays, integers, nil, errors, etc.), you see the type of the reply between parentheses. This additional information may not be ideal when the output of valkey-cli
must be used as input of another command or redirected into a file.
valkey-cli
only shows additional information for human readability when it detects the standard output is a tty, or terminal. For all other outputs it will auto-enable the raw output mode, as in the following example:
$ valkey-cli INCR mycounter > /tmp/output.txt $ cat /tmp/output.txt 8
Note that (integer)
is omitted from the output because valkey-cli
detects the output is no longer written to the terminal. You can force raw output even on the terminal with the --raw
option:
$ valkey-cli --raw INCR mycounter 9
You can force human readable output when writing to a file or in pipe to other commands by using --no-raw
.
String quoting and escaping
When valkey-cli
parses a command, whitespace characters automatically delimit the arguments. In interactive mode, a newline sends the command for parsing and execution. To input string values that contain whitespaces or non-printable characters, you can use quoted and escaped strings.
Quoted string values are enclosed in double ("
) or single ('
) quotation marks. Escape sequences are used to put nonprintable characters in character and string literals.
An escape sequence contains a backslash (\
) symbol followed by one of the escape sequence characters.
Doubly-quoted strings support the following escape sequences:
\"
- double-quote\n
- newline\r
- carriage return\t
- horizontal tab\b
- backspace\a
- alert\\
- backslash\xhh
- any ASCII character represented by a hexadecimal number (hh)
Single quotes assume the string is literal, and allow only the following escape sequences: * \'
- single quote * \\
- backslash
For example, to return Hello World
on two lines:
127.0.0.1:6379> SET mykey "Hello\nWorld" OK 127.0.0.1:6379> GET mykey Hello World
When you input strings that contain single or double quotes, as you might in passwords, for example, escape the string, like so:
127.0.0.1:6379> AUTH some_admin_user ">^8T>6Na{u|jp>+v\"55\@_;OU(OR]7mbAYGqsfyu48(j'%hQH7;v*f1H${*gD(Se'"
Host, port, password, and database
By default, valkey-cli
connects to the server at the address 127.0.0.1 with port 6379. You can change the port using several command line options. To specify a different host name or an IP address, use the -h
option. In order to set a different port, use -p
.
$ valkey-cli -h valkey15.example.com -p 6390 PING PONG
If your instance is password protected, the -a <password>
option will perform authentication saving the need of explicitly using the AUTH
command:
$ valkey-cli -a myUnguessablePazzzzzword123 PING PONG
NOTE: For security reasons, provide the password to valkey-cli
automatically via the REDISCLI_AUTH
environment variable.
Finally, it’s possible to send a command that operates on a database number other than the default number zero by using the -n <dbnum>
option:
$ valkey-cli FLUSHALL OK $ valkey-cli -n 1 INCR a (integer) 1 $ valkey-cli -n 1 INCR a (integer) 2 $ valkey-cli -n 2 INCR a (integer) 1
Some or all of this information can also be provided by using the -u <uri>
option and the URI pattern valkey://user:password@host:port/dbnum
:
$ valkey-cli -u valkey://LJenkins:p%40ssw0rd@valkey-16379.example.com:16379/0 PING PONG
NOTE: User, password and dbnum are optional. For authentication without a username, use username default
. For TLS, use the scheme valkeys
.
SSL/TLS
By default, valkey-cli
uses a plain TCP connection to connect to Valkey. You may enable SSL/TLS using the --tls
option, along with --cacert
or --cacertdir
to configure a trusted root certificate bundle or directory.
If the target server requires authentication using a client side certificate, you can specify a certificate and a corresponding private key using --cert
and --key
.
Getting input from other programs
There are two ways you can use valkey-cli
in order to receive input from other commands via the standard input. One is to use the target payload as the last argument from stdin. For example, in order to set the Valkey key net_services
to the content of the file /etc/services
from a local file system, use the -x
option:
$ valkey-cli -x SET net_services < /etc/services OK $ valkey-cli GETRANGE net_services 0 50 "#\n# Network services, Internet style\n#\n# Note that "
In the first line of the above session, valkey-cli
was executed with the -x
option and a file was redirected to the CLI’s standard input as the value to satisfy the SET net_services
command phrase. This is useful for scripting.
A different approach is to feed valkey-cli
a sequence of commands written in a text file:
$ cat /tmp/commands.txt SET item:3374 100 INCR item:3374 APPEND item:3374 xxx GET item:3374 $ cat /tmp/commands.txt | valkey-cli OK (integer) 101 (integer) 6 "101xxx"
All the commands in commands.txt
are executed consecutively by valkey-cli
as if they were typed by the user in interactive mode. Strings can be quoted inside the file if needed, so that it’s possible to have single arguments with spaces, newlines, or other special characters:
$ cat /tmp/commands.txt SET arg_example "This is a single argument" STRLEN arg_example $ cat /tmp/commands.txt | valkey-cli OK (integer) 25
Continuously run the same command
It is possible to execute a single command a specified number of times with a user-selected pause between executions. This is useful in different contexts - for example when we want to continuously monitor some key content or INFO
field output, or when we want to simulate some recurring write event, such as pushing a new item into a list every 5 seconds.
This feature is controlled by two options: -r <count>
and -i <delay>
. The -r
option states how many times to run a command and -i
sets the delay between the different command calls in seconds (with the ability to specify values such as 0.1 to represent 100 milliseconds).
By default the interval (or delay) is set to 0, so commands are just executed ASAP:
$ valkey-cli -r 5 INCR counter_value (integer) 1 (integer) 2 (integer) 3 (integer) 4 (integer) 5
To run the same command indefinitely, use -1
as the count value. To monitor over time the RSS memory size it’s possible to use the following command:
$ valkey-cli -r -1 -i 1 INFO | grep rss_human used_memory_rss_human:2.71M used_memory_rss_human:2.73M used_memory_rss_human:2.73M used_memory_rss_human:2.73M ... a new line will be printed each second ...
Mass insertion of data using valkey-cli
Mass insertion using valkey-cli
is covered in a separate page as it is a worthwhile topic itself. Please refer to our valkey-mass-insertion(7) mass insertion guide.
CSV output
A CSV (Comma Separated Values) output feature exists within valkey-cli
to export data from Valkey to an external program.
$ valkey-cli LPUSH mylist a b c d (integer) 4 $ valkey-cli --csv LRANGE mylist 0 -1 "d","c","b","a"
Note that the --csv
flag will only work on a single command, not the entirety of a DB as an export.
Running Lua scripts
The valkey-cli
has extensive support for using the debugging facility of Lua scripting, available with Valkey 3.2 onwards. For this feature, refer to the valkey-ldb(7) Valkey Lua debugger documentation.
Even without using the debugger, valkey-cli
can be used to run scripts from a file as an argument:
$ cat /tmp/script.lua return server.call('SET',KEYS[1],ARGV[1]) $ valkey-cli --eval /tmp/script.lua location:hastings:temp , 23 OK
The Valkey EVAL
command takes the list of keys the script uses, and the other non key arguments, as different arrays. When calling EVAL
you provide the number of keys as a number.
When calling valkey-cli
with the --eval
option above, there is no need to specify the number of keys explicitly. Instead it uses the convention of separating keys and arguments with a comma. This is why in the above call you see location:hastings:temp , 23
as arguments.
So location:hastings:temp
will populate the KEYS
array, and 23
the ARGV
array.
The --eval
option is useful when writing simple scripts. For more complex work, the Lua debugger is recommended. It is possible to mix the two approaches, since the debugger can also execute scripts from an external file.
Interactive Mode
We have explored how to use the Valkey CLI as a command line program. This is useful for scripts and certain types of testing, however most people will spend the majority of time in valkey-cli
using its interactive mode.
In interactive mode the user types Valkey commands at the prompt. The command is sent to the server, processed, and the reply is parsed back and rendered into a simpler form to read.
Nothing special is needed for running the valkey-cli
in interactive mode - just execute it without any arguments
$ valkey-cli 127.0.0.1:6379> PING PONG
The string 127.0.0.1:6379>
is the prompt. It displays the connected Valkey server instance’s hostname and port.
The prompt updates as the connected server changes or when operating on a database different from the database number zero:
127.0.0.1:6379> SELECT 2 OK 127.0.0.1:6379[2]> DBSIZE (integer) 1 127.0.0.1:6379[2]> SELECT 0 OK 127.0.0.1:6379> DBSIZE (integer) 503
Handling connections and reconnections
Using the CONNECT
command in interactive mode makes it possible to connect to a different instance, by specifying the hostname and port we want to connect to:
127.0.0.1:6379> CONNECT metal 6379 metal:6379> PING PONG
As you can see the prompt changes accordingly when connecting to a different server instance. If a connection is attempted to an instance that is unreachable, the valkey-cli
goes into disconnected mode and attempts to reconnect with each new command:
127.0.0.1:6379> CONNECT 127.0.0.1 9999 Could not connect to Valkey at 127.0.0.1:9999: Connection refused not connected> PING Could not connect to Valkey at 127.0.0.1:9999: Connection refused not connected> PING Could not connect to Valkey at 127.0.0.1:9999: Connection refused
Generally after a disconnection is detected, valkey-cli
always attempts to reconnect transparently; if the attempt fails, it shows the error and enters the disconnected state. The following is an example of disconnection and reconnection:
127.0.0.1:6379> INFO SERVER Could not connect to Valkey at 127.0.0.1:6379: Connection refused not connected> PING PONG 127.0.0.1:6379> (now we are connected again)
When a reconnection is performed, valkey-cli
automatically re-selects the last database number selected. However, all other states about the connection is lost, such as within a MULTI/EXEC transaction:
$ valkey-cli 127.0.0.1:6379> MULTI OK 127.0.0.1:6379> PING QUEUED ( here the server is manually restarted ) 127.0.0.1:6379> EXEC (error) ERR EXEC without MULTI
This is usually not an issue when using the valkey-cli
in interactive mode for testing, but this limitation should be known.
Editing, history, completion and hints
Because valkey-cli
uses the “linenoise” line editing library shipped with Valkey, it has line editing capabilities without depending on libreadline
or other optional libraries.
Command execution history can be accessed in order to avoid retyping commands by pressing the arrow keys (up and down). The history is preserved between restarts of the CLI, in a file named .valkeycli_history
inside the user home directory, as specified by the HOME
environment variable. It is possible to use a different history filename by setting the REDISCLI_HISTFILE
environment variable, and disable it by setting it to /dev/null
.
The valkey-cli
is also able to perform command-name completion by pressing the TAB key, as in the following example:
127.0.0.1:6379> Z<TAB> 127.0.0.1:6379> ZADD<TAB> 127.0.0.1:6379> ZCARD<TAB>
Once Valkey command name has been entered at the prompt, the valkey-cli
will display syntax hints. Like command history, this behavior can be turned on and off via the valkey-cli
preferences.
Preferences
There are two ways to customize valkey-cli
behavior. The file .valkeyclirc
in the home directory is loaded by the CLI on startup. You can override the file’s default location by setting the REDISCLI_RCFILE
environment variable to an alternative path. Preferences can also be set during a CLI session, in which case they will last only the duration of the session.
To set preferences, use the special :set
command. The following preferences can be set, either by typing the command in the CLI or adding it to the .valkeyclirc
file:
:set hints
- enables syntax hints:set nohints
- disables syntax hints
Running the same command N times
It is possible to run the same command multiple times in interactive mode by prefixing the command name by a number:
127.0.0.1:6379> 5 INCR mycounter (integer) 1 (integer) 2 (integer) 3 (integer) 4 (integer) 5
Showing help about Valkey commands
valkey-cli
provides online help for most Valkey valkey-commands(7) , using the HELP
command. The command can be used in two forms:
HELP @<category>
shows all the commands about a given category. The categories are:@generic
@string
@list
@set
@sorted_set
@hash
@pubsub
@transactions
@connection
@server
@scripting
@hyperloglog
@cluster
@geo
@stream
HELP <commandname>
shows specific help for the command given as argument.
For example in order to show help for the PFADD
command, use:
127.0.0.1:6379> HELP PFADD PFADD key element [element ...] summary: Adds the specified elements to the specified HyperLogLog. since: 2.8.9
Note that HELP
supports TAB completion as well.
Clearing the terminal screen
Using the CLEAR
command in interactive mode clears the terminal’s screen.
Special Modes of Operation
So far we saw two main modes of valkey-cli
.
- Command line execution of Valkey commands.
- Interactive “REPL” usage.
The CLI performs other auxiliary tasks related to Valkey that are explained in the next sections:
- Monitoring tool to show continuous stats about a Valkey server.
- Scanning a Valkey database for very large keys.
- Key space scanner with pattern matching.
- Acting as a valkey-pubsub(7) Pub/Sub client to subscribe to channels.
- Monitoring the commands executed into a Valkey instance.
- Checking the valkey-latency(7) of a Valkey server in different ways.
- Checking the scheduler latency of the local computer.
- Transferring RDB backups from a remote Valkey server locally.
- Acting as a Valkey replica for showing what a replica receives.
- Simulating valkey-lru-cache(7) LRU workloads for showing stats about keys hits.
- A client for the Lua debugger.
Continuous stats mode
Continuous stats mode is probably one of the lesser known yet very useful features of valkey-cli
to monitor Valkey instances in real time. To enable this mode, the --stat
option is used. The output is very clear about the behavior of the CLI in this mode:
$ valkey-cli --stat ------- data ------ --------------------- load -------------------- - child - keys mem clients blocked requests connections 506 1015.00K 1 0 24 (+0) 7 506 1015.00K 1 0 25 (+1) 7 506 3.40M 51 0 60461 (+60436) 57 506 3.40M 51 0 146425 (+85964) 107 507 3.40M 51 0 233844 (+87419) 157 507 3.40M 51 0 321715 (+87871) 207 508 3.40M 51 0 408642 (+86927) 257 508 3.40M 51 0 497038 (+88396) 257
In this mode a new line is printed every second with useful information and differences of request values between old data points. Memory usage, client connection counts, and various other statistics about the connected Valkey database can be easily understood with this auxiliary valkey-cli
tool.
The -i <interval>
option in this case works as a modifier in order to change the frequency at which new lines are emitted. The default is one second.
Scanning for big keys
In this special mode, valkey-cli
works as a key space analyzer. It scans the dataset for big keys, but also provides information about the data types that the data set consists of. This mode is enabled with the --bigkeys
option, and produces verbose output:
$ valkey-cli --bigkeys # Scanning the entire keyspace to find biggest keys as well as # average sizes per key type. You can use -i 0.01 to sleep 0.01 sec # per SCAN command (not usually needed). [00.00%] Biggest string found so far 'key-419' with 3 bytes [05.14%] Biggest list found so far 'mylist' with 100004 items [35.77%] Biggest string found so far 'counter:__rand_int__' with 6 bytes [73.91%] Biggest hash found so far 'myobject' with 3 fields -------- summary ------- Sampled 506 keys in the keyspace! Total key length in bytes is 3452 (avg len 6.82) Biggest string found 'counter:__rand_int__' has 6 bytes Biggest list found 'mylist' has 100004 items Biggest hash found 'myobject' has 3 fields 504 strings with 1403 bytes (99.60% of keys, avg size 2.78) 1 lists with 100004 items (00.20% of keys, avg size 100004.00) 0 sets with 0 members (00.00% of keys, avg size 0.00) 1 hashs with 3 fields (00.20% of keys, avg size 3.00) 0 zsets with 0 members (00.00% of keys, avg size 0.00)
In the first part of the output, each new key larger than the previous larger key (of the same type) encountered is reported. The summary section provides general stats about the data inside the Valkey instance.
The program uses the SCAN
command, so it can be executed against a busy server without impacting the operations, however the -i
option can be used in order to throttle the scanning process of the specified fraction of second for each SCAN
command.
For example, -i 0.01
will slow down the program execution considerably, but will also reduce the load on the server to a negligible amount.
Note that the summary also reports in a cleaner form the biggest keys found for each time. The initial output is just to provide some interesting info ASAP if running against a very large data set.
Getting a list of keys
It is also possible to scan the key space, again in a way that does not block the Valkey server (which does happen when you use a command like KEYS *
), and print all the key names, or filter them for specific patterns. This mode, like the --bigkeys
option, uses the SCAN
command, so keys may be reported multiple times if the dataset is changing, but no key would ever be missing, if that key was present since the start of the iteration. Because of the command that it uses this option is called --scan
.
$ valkey-cli --scan | head -10 key-419 key-71 key-236 key-50 key-38 key-458 key-453 key-499 key-446 key-371
Note that head -10
is used in order to print only the first ten lines of the output.
Scanning is able to use the underlying pattern matching capability of the SCAN
command with the --pattern
option.
$ valkey-cli --scan --pattern '*-11*' key-114 key-117 key-118 key-113 key-115 key-112 key-119 key-11 key-111 key-110 key-116
Piping the output through the wc
command can be used to count specific kind of objects, by key name:
$ valkey-cli --scan --pattern 'user:*' | wc -l 3829433
You can use -i 0.01
to add a delay between calls to the SCAN
command. This will make the command slower but will significantly reduce load on the server.
Pub/sub mode
The CLI is able to publish messages in Valkey Pub/Sub channels using the PUBLISH
command. Subscribing to channels in order to receive messages is different - the terminal is blocked and waits for messages, so this is implemented as a special mode in valkey-cli
. Unlike other special modes this mode is not enabled by using a special option, but simply by using the SUBSCRIBE
or PSUBSCRIBE
command, which are available in interactive or command mode:
$ valkey-cli PSUBSCRIBE '*' Reading messages... (press Ctrl-C to quit) 1) "PSUBSCRIBE" 2) "*" 3) (integer) 1
The reading messages message shows that we entered Pub/Sub mode. When another client publishes some message in some channel, such as with the command valkey-cli PUBLISH mychannel mymessage
, the CLI in Pub/Sub mode will show something such as:
1) "pmessage" 2) "*" 3) "mychannel" 4) "mymessage"
This is very useful for debugging Pub/Sub issues. To exit the Pub/Sub mode just process CTRL-C
.
Monitoring commands executed in Valkey
Similarly to the Pub/Sub mode, the monitoring mode is entered automatically once you use the MONITOR
command. All commands received by the active Valkey instance will be printed to the standard output:
$ valkey-cli MONITOR OK 1460100081.165665 [0 127.0.0.1:51706] "set" "shipment:8000736522714:status" "sorting" 1460100083.053365 [0 127.0.0.1:51707] "get" "shipment:8000736522714:status"
Note that it is possible to pipe the output, so you can monitor for specific patterns using tools such as grep
.
Monitoring the latency of Valkey instances
Valkey is often used in contexts where latency is very critical. Latency involves multiple moving parts within the application, from the client library to the network stack, to the Valkey instance itself.
The valkey-cli
has multiple facilities for studying the latency of a Valkey instance and understanding the latency’s maximum, average and distribution.
The basic latency-checking tool is the --latency
option. Using this option the CLI runs a loop where the PING
command is sent to the Valkey instance and the time to receive a reply is measured. This happens 100 times per second, and stats are updated in a real time in the console:
$ valkey-cli --latency min: 0, max: 1, avg: 0.19 (427 samples)
The stats are provided in milliseconds. Usually, the average latency of a very fast instance tends to be overestimated a bit because of the latency due to the kernel scheduler of the system running valkey-cli
itself, so the average latency of 0.19 above may easily be 0.01 or less. However this is usually not a big problem, since most developers are interested in events of a few milliseconds or more.
Sometimes it is useful to study how the maximum and average latencies evolve during time. The --latency-history
option is used for that purpose: it works exactly like --latency
, but every 15 seconds (by default) a new sampling session is started from scratch:
$ valkey-cli --latency-history min: 0, max: 1, avg: 0.14 (1314 samples) -- 15.01 seconds range min: 0, max: 1, avg: 0.18 (1299 samples) -- 15.00 seconds range min: 0, max: 1, avg: 0.20 (113 samples)^C
Sampling sessions’ length can be changed with the -i <interval>
option.
The most advanced latency study tool, but also the most complex to interpret for non-experienced users, is the ability to use color terminals to show a spectrum of latencies. You’ll see a colored output that indicates the different percentages of samples, and different ASCII characters that indicate different latency figures. This mode is enabled using the --latency-dist
option:
$ valkey-cli --latency-dist (output not displayed, requires a color terminal, try it!)
There is another pretty unusual latency tool implemented inside valkey-cli
. It does not check the latency of a Valkey instance, but the latency of the computer running valkey-cli
. This latency is intrinsic to the kernel scheduler, the hypervisor in case of virtualized instances, and so forth.
Valkey calls it intrinsic latency because it’s mostly opaque to the programmer. If the Valkey instance has high latency regardless of all the obvious things that may be the source cause, it’s worth to check what’s the best your system can do by running valkey-cli
in this special mode directly in the system you are running Valkey servers on.
By measuring the intrinsic latency, you know that this is the baseline, and Valkey cannot outdo your system. In order to run the CLI in this mode, use the --intrinsic-latency <test-time>
. Note that the test time is in seconds and dictates how long the test should run.
$ ./valkey-cli --intrinsic-latency 5 Max latency so far: 1 microseconds. Max latency so far: 7 microseconds. Max latency so far: 9 microseconds. Max latency so far: 11 microseconds. Max latency so far: 13 microseconds. Max latency so far: 15 microseconds. Max latency so far: 34 microseconds. Max latency so far: 82 microseconds. Max latency so far: 586 microseconds. Max latency so far: 739 microseconds. 65433042 total runs (avg latency: 0.0764 microseconds / 764.14 nanoseconds per run). Worst run took 9671x longer than the average latency.
IMPORTANT: this command must be executed on the computer that runs the Valkey server instance, not on a different host. It does not connect to a Valkey instance and performs the test locally.
In the above case, the system cannot do better than 739 microseconds of worst case latency, so one can expect certain queries to occasionally run less than 1 millisecond.
Remote backups of RDB files
During a Valkey replication’s first synchronization, the primary and the replica exchange the whole data set in the form of an RDB file. This feature is exploited by valkey-cli
in order to provide a remote backup facility that allows a transfer of an RDB file from any Valkey instance to the local computer running valkey-cli
. To use this mode, call the CLI with the --rdb <dest-filename>
option:
$ valkey-cli --rdb /tmp/dump.rdb SYNC sent to master, writing 13256 bytes to '/tmp/dump.rdb' Transfer finished with success.
This is a simple but effective way to ensure disaster recovery RDB backups exist of your Valkey instance. When using this options in scripts or cron
jobs, make sure to check the return value of the command. If it is non zero, an error occurred as in the following example:
$ valkey-cli --rdb /tmp/dump.rdb SYNC with master failed: -ERR Can't SYNC while not connected with my master $ echo $? 1
Replica mode
The replica mode of the CLI is an advanced feature useful for Valkey developers and for debugging operations. It allows for the inspection of the content a primary sends to its replicas in the replication stream in order to propagate the writes to its replicas. The option name is simply --replica
. The following is a working example:
$ valkey-cli --replica SYNC with master, discarding 13256 bytes of bulk transfer... SYNC done. Logging commands from master. "PING" "SELECT","0" "SET","last_name","Enigk" "PING" "INCR","mycounter"
The command begins by discarding the RDB file of the first synchronization and then logs each command received in CSV format.
If you think some of the commands are not replicated correctly in your replicas this is a good way to check what’s happening, and also useful information in order to improve the bug report.
Performing an LRU simulation
Valkey is often used as a cache with valkey-lru-cache(7) LRU eviction. Depending on the number of keys and the amount of memory allocated for the cache (specified via the maxmemory
directive), the amount of cache hits and misses will change. Sometimes, simulating the rate of hits is very useful to correctly provision your cache.
The valkey-cli
has a special mode where it performs a simulation of GET and SET operations, using an 80-20% power law distribution in the requests pattern. This means that 20% of keys will be requested 80% of times, which is a common distribution in caching scenarios.
Theoretically, given the distribution of the requests and the Valkey memory overhead, it should be possible to compute the hit rate analytically with a mathematical formula. However, Valkey can be configured with different LRU settings (number of samples) and LRU’s implementation, which is approximated in Valkey, changes a lot between different versions. Similarly the amount of memory per key may change between versions. That is why this tool was built: its main motivation was for testing the quality of Valkey’ LRU implementation, but now is also useful for testing how a given version behaves with the settings originally intended for deployment.
To use this mode, specify the amount of keys in the test and configure a sensible maxmemory
setting as a first attempt.
IMPORTANT NOTE: Configuring the maxmemory
setting in the Valkey configuration is crucial: if there is no cap to the maximum memory usage, the hit will eventually be 100% since all the keys can be stored in memory. If too many keys are specified with maximum memory, eventually all of the computer RAM will be used. It is also needed to configure an appropriate maxmemory policy; most of the time allkeys-lru
is selected.
In the following example there is a configured a memory limit of 100MB and an LRU simulation using 10 million keys.
WARNING: the test uses pipelining and will stress the server, don’t use it with production instances.
$ ./valkey-cli --lru-test 10000000 156000 Gets/sec | Hits: 4552 (2.92%) | Misses: 151448 (97.08%) 153750 Gets/sec | Hits: 12906 (8.39%) | Misses: 140844 (91.61%) 159250 Gets/sec | Hits: 21811 (13.70%) | Misses: 137439 (86.30%) 151000 Gets/sec | Hits: 27615 (18.29%) | Misses: 123385 (81.71%) 145000 Gets/sec | Hits: 32791 (22.61%) | Misses: 112209 (77.39%) 157750 Gets/sec | Hits: 42178 (26.74%) | Misses: 115572 (73.26%) 154500 Gets/sec | Hits: 47418 (30.69%) | Misses: 107082 (69.31%) 151250 Gets/sec | Hits: 51636 (34.14%) | Misses: 99614 (65.86%)
The program shows stats every second. In the first seconds the cache starts to be populated. The misses rate later stabilizes into the actual figure that can be expected:
120750 Gets/sec | Hits: 48774 (40.39%) | Misses: 71976 (59.61%) 122500 Gets/sec | Hits: 49052 (40.04%) | Misses: 73448 (59.96%) 127000 Gets/sec | Hits: 50870 (40.06%) | Misses: 76130 (59.94%) 124250 Gets/sec | Hits: 50147 (40.36%) | Misses: 74103 (59.64%)
A miss rate of 59% may not be acceptable for certain use cases therefor 100MB of memory is not enough. Observe an example using a half gigabyte of memory. After several minutes the output stabilizes to the following figures:
140000 Gets/sec | Hits: 135376 (96.70%) | Misses: 4624 (3.30%) 141250 Gets/sec | Hits: 136523 (96.65%) | Misses: 4727 (3.35%) 140250 Gets/sec | Hits: 135457 (96.58%) | Misses: 4793 (3.42%) 140500 Gets/sec | Hits: 135947 (96.76%) | Misses: 4553 (3.24%)
With 500MB there is sufficient space for the key quantity (10 million) and distribution (80-20 style).
Referenced By
valkey(7), valkey-benchmark(1), valkey-eval-intro(7), valkey-protocol(7), valkey-quickstart(7), valkey-server(1).