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RedisBundle

About

This bundle integrates Predis, PhpRedis and Relay into your Symfony application.

Installation

Add the snc/redis-bundle package to your require section in the composer.json file.

$ composer require snc/redis-bundle

If you want to use the predis client library, you have to add the predis/predis package, too.

$ composer require predis/predis

Add the RedisBundle to your application's kernel:

<?php
public function registerBundles()
{
    $bundles = [
        // ...
        new Snc\RedisBundle\SncRedisBundle(),
        // ...
    ];
    ...
}

Usage

Configure the redis client(s) in your config.yml:

Please note that passwords with special characters in the DSN string such as @ % : + must be urlencoded.

snc_redis:
    clients:
        default:
            type: predis
            alias: default
            dsn: redis://localhost

You have to configure at least one client. In the above example your service container will contain the service snc_redis.default which will return a Predis client.

Available types are predis, phpredis and relay.

A more complex setup which contains a clustered client could look like this:

snc_redis:
    clients:
        default:
            type: predis
            alias: default
            dsn: redis://localhost
            logging: '%kernel.debug%'
        cache:
            type: predis
            alias: cache
            dsn: redis://secret@localhost/1
            options:
                connection_timeout: 10
                read_write_timeout: 30
        cluster:
            type: predis
            alias: cluster
            dsn:
                - redis://localhost/3?weight=10
                - redis://localhost/4?weight=5
                - redis://localhost/5?weight=1

In your code you can now access all your configured clients using dependency injection or service locators. The services are named snc_redis. followed by the alias name, ie. snc_redis.default or snc_redis.cluster in the example above.

A setup using predis master-slave replication could look like this:

snc_redis:
    clients:
        default:
            type: predis
            alias: default
            dsn:
                - redis://master-host?role=master
                - redis://slave-host1
                - redis://slave-host2
            options:
                replication: predis

Please note that the master dsn connection needs to be tagged with the master role. If not, predis will complain.

A setup using predis, phpredis or relay sentinel replication could look like this:

snc_redis:
    clients:
        default:
            type: "predis" # or "phpredis", or "relay"
            alias: default
            dsn:
                - redis://localhost:26379
                - redis://otherhost:26379
            options:
                replication: sentinel
                service: mymaster
                parameters:
                    database: 1
                    password: pass

The service is the name of the set of Redis instances. The optional parameters option can be used to set parameters like the database number and password for the master/slave connections, they don't apply for the connection to sentinel. If you use a password, it must be in the password parameter and must be omitted from the DSNs. Also make sure to use the sentinel port number (26379 by default) in the DSNs, and not the default Redis port. You can find more information about this on Configuring Sentinel.

A setup using RedisCluster from phpredis could look like this:

snc_redis:
    clients:
        default:
            type: phpredis
            alias: default
            dsn:
                - redis://localhost:7000
                - redis://localhost:7001
                - redis://localhost:7002
            options:
                cluster: true

Authentication using Redis ACL

Starting with redis 6.0, it is possible to use an ACL system that only allows users with valid username and password to log in. Using the phpredis driver, you can set up an authenticated connection like this:

snc_redis:
    clients:
        default:
            type: phpredis
            alias: default
            dsn: redis://localhost
            # dsn: redis://my_username:my_password@localhost <- username and password can be also set here
            options:
                parameters:
                    username: my_userame
                    password: my_password
                

Sessions

Use Redis sessions by utilizing Symfony built-in Redis session handler like so:

First, define your redis clients:

snc_redis:
    clients:
        session:
            type: predis
            alias: session
            dsn: redis://localhost/1

Then, reference it in your framework.yaml config:

framework:
    ...
    session:
        handler_id: Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Session\Storage\Handler\RedisSessionHandler
services:
    Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Session\Storage\Handler\RedisSessionHandler:
        arguments: ['@snc_redis.session']

Note that this solution does not perform session locking and that you may face race conditions when accessing sessions (see Symfony docs).

Monolog logging

You can store your logs in a redis LIST by adding this to your config:

snc_redis:
    clients:
        monolog:
            type: predis
            alias: monolog
            dsn: redis://localhost/1
            logging: false
            options:
                connection_persistent: true
    monolog:
        client: monolog
        key: monolog

monolog:
    handlers:
        main:
            type: service
            id: snc_redis.monolog.handler
            level: debug

You can also add a custom formatter to the monolog handler

snc_redis:
    clients:
        monolog:
            type: predis
            alias: monolog
            dsn: redis://localhost/1
            logging: false
            options:
                connection_persistent: true
    monolog:
        client: monolog
        key: monolog
        formatter: my_custom_formatter

Symfony Cache Pools

If you want to use one of the client connections for the Symfony App Cache or a Symfony Cache Pool, just use its service name as a cache pool provider:

framework:
    cache:
        app: cache.adapter.redis
        # app cache from client config as default adapter/provider
        default_redis_provider: snc_redis.default
        pools:
            some-pool.cache:
                adapter: cache.adapter.redis
                # a specific provider, e.g. if you have a snc_redis.clients.cache
                provider: snc_redis.cache

Complete configuration example

snc_redis:
    clients:
        default:
            type: predis
            alias: default
            dsn: redis://localhost
            logging: '%kernel.debug%'
        cache:
            type: predis
            alias: cache
            dsn: redis://localhost/1
            logging: false
        cluster:
            type: predis
            alias: cluster
            dsn:
                - redis://127.0.0.1/1
                - redis://127.0.0.2/2
                - redis://pw@/var/run/redis/redis-1.sock/10
                - redis://pw@127.0.0.1:63790/10
            options:
                prefix: foo
                connection_timeout: 10
                connection_persistent: true
                read_write_timeout: 30
                iterable_multibulk: false
                throw_errors: true
                cluster: predis
                parameters:
                    # Here you can specify additional context data, see connect/pconnect documentation here
                    # https://github.com/phpredis/phpredis#connect-open
                    # Stream configuration options can be found here https://www.php.net/manual/en/context.ssl.php
                    ssl_context: {'verify_peer': false, 'allow_self_signed': true, 'verify_peer_name': false}
    monolog:
        client: cache
        key: monolog

Usage with symfony/web-profiler-bundle

If you are using symfony/web-profiler-bundle and want to inspect commands sent by a configured Redis client, logging needs to be enabled for that client.

snc_redis:
    clients:
        default:
            type: predis
            alias: default
            dsn: redis://localhost/
            logging: '%kernel.debug%'

Troubleshooting

If cache warmup fails for prod because a redis server is not available, try to install symfony/proxy-manager-bridge:

$ composer require symfony/proxy-manager-bridge

Once done some services will be lazy-loaded and could prevent unwanted connection call.