diff options
| author | Adam Vandenberg | 2010-02-13 17:17:25 -0800 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Adam Vandenberg | 2010-02-13 17:17:25 -0800 |
| commit | caeb071e957cf0d9c6f2aedebfac44516d4afa8f (patch) | |
| tree | 4178a06bce5382f195e1259c6914bb41e834d413 | |
| parent | 316a4ce6cc78a4feb2476759bf395044992523fe (diff) | |
| download | homebrew-caeb071e957cf0d9c6f2aedebfac44516d4afa8f.tar.bz2 | |
Update redis to 1.2.1
* Use built-in conf file, with replacements, rather than duplicating
it entirely.
* Use GCC to compile, until possible LLVM issues are tracked down.
| -rw-r--r-- | Library/Formula/redis.rb | 209 |
1 files changed, 12 insertions, 197 deletions
diff --git a/Library/Formula/redis.rb b/Library/Formula/redis.rb index c18efc217..1e8c2ddec 100644 --- a/Library/Formula/redis.rb +++ b/Library/Formula/redis.rb @@ -1,211 +1,26 @@ require 'formula' class Redis <Formula - url 'http://redis.googlecode.com/files/redis-1.2.0.tar.gz' + url 'http://redis.googlecode.com/files/redis-1.2.1.tar.gz' homepage 'http://code.google.com/p/redis/' - sha1 '187dbb3d7e34b73bf15a20cab7fd9687435ee6bf' + sha1 'a668befcd26f27cc90f6808d3119875f75453788' def install %w( run db/redis log ).each do |path| - FileUtils.mkdir_p(var+path) unless File.directory?(var+path) + (var+path).mkpath end + ENV.gcc_4_2 system "make" - bin.install %w( redis-benchmark redis-cli redis-server ) - - # set up the conf file - (etc+'redis.conf').write <<-REDIS_CONF -# Redis configuration file example - -# By default Redis does not run as a daemon. Use 'yes' if you need it. -# Note that Redis will write a pid file in #{var}/run/redis.pid when daemonized. -daemonize no - -# When run as a daemon, Redis write a pid file in #{var}/run/redis.pid by default. -# You can specify a custom pid file location here. -pidfile #{var}/run/redis.pid - -# Accept connections on the specified port, default is 6379 -port 6379 - -# If you want you can bind a single interface, if the bind option is not -# specified all the interfaces will listen for connections. -# -# bind 127.0.0.1 - -# Close the connection after a client is idle for N seconds (0 to disable) -timeout 300 - -# Set server verbosity to 'debug' -# it can be one of: -# debug (a lot of information, useful for development/testing) -# notice (moderately verbose, what you want in production probably) -# warning (only very important / critical messages are logged) -loglevel notice - -# Specify the log file name. Also 'stdout' can be used to force -# the demon to log on the standard output. Note that if you use standard -# output for logging but daemonize, logs will be sent to /dev/null -logfile #{var}/log/redis.log - -# Set the number of databases. The default database is DB 0, you can select -# a different one on a per-connection basis using SELECT <dbid> where -# dbid is a number between 0 and 'databases'-1 -databases 16 - -################################ SNAPSHOTTING ################################# -# -# Save the DB on disk: -# -# save <seconds> <changes> -# -# Will save the DB if both the given number of seconds and the given -# number of write operations against the DB occurred. -# -# In the example below the behaviour will be to save: -# after 900 sec (15 min) if at least 1 key changed -# after 300 sec (5 min) if at least 10 keys changed -# after 60 sec if at least 10000 keys changed -save 900 1 -save 300 10 -save 60 10000 - -# Compress string objects using LZF when dump .rdb databases? -# For default that's set to 'yes' as it's almost always a win. -# If you want to save some CPU in the saving child set it to 'no' but -# the dataset will likely be bigger if you have compressible values or keys. -rdbcompression yes - -# The filename where to dump the DB -dbfilename dump.rdb - -# For default save/load DB in/from the working directory -# Note that you must specify a directory not a file name. -dir #{var}/db/redis/ - -################################# REPLICATION ################################# - -# Master-Slave replication. Use slaveof to make a Redis instance a copy of -# another Redis server. Note that the configuration is local to the slave -# so for example it is possible to configure the slave to save the DB with a -# different interval, or to listen to another port, and so on. -# -# slaveof <masterip> <masterport> - -# If the master is password protected (using the "requirepass" configuration -# directive below) it is possible to tell the slave to authenticate before -# starting the replication synchronization process, otherwise the master will -# refuse the slave request. -# -# masterauth <master-password> - -################################## SECURITY ################################### - -# Require clients to issue AUTH <PASSWORD> before processing any other -# commands. This might be useful in environments in which you do not trust -# others with access to the host running redis-server. -# -# This should stay commented out for backward compatibility and because most -# people do not need auth (e.g. they run their own servers). -# -# requirepass foobared - -################################### LIMITS #################################### - -# Set the max number of connected clients at the same time. By default there -# is no limit, and it's up to the number of file descriptors the Redis process -# is able to open. The special value '0' means no limts. -# Once the limit is reached Redis will close all the new connections sending -# an error 'max number of clients reached'. -# -# maxclients 128 - -# Don't use more memory than the specified amount of bytes. -# When the memory limit is reached Redis will try to remove keys with an -# EXPIRE set. It will try to start freeing keys that are going to expire -# in little time and preserve keys with a longer time to live. -# Redis will also try to remove objects from free lists if possible. -# -# If all this fails, Redis will start to reply with errors to commands -# that will use more memory, like SET, LPUSH, and so on, and will continue -# to reply to most read-only commands like GET. -# -# WARNING: maxmemory can be a good idea mainly if you want to use Redis as a -# 'state' server or cache, not as a real DB. When Redis is used as a real -# database the memory usage will grow over the weeks, it will be obvious if -# it is going to use too much memory in the long run, and you'll have the time -# to upgrade. With maxmemory after the limit is reached you'll start to get -# errors for write operations, and this may even lead to DB inconsistency. -# -# maxmemory <bytes> - -############################## APPEND ONLY MODE ############################### - -# By default Redis asynchronously dumps the dataset on disk. If you can live -# with the idea that the latest records will be lost if something like a crash -# happens this is the preferred way to run Redis. If instead you care a lot -# about your data and don't want to that a single record can get lost you should -# enable the append only mode: when this mode is enabled Redis will append -# every write operation received in the file appendonly.log. This file will -# be read on startup in order to rebuild the full dataset in memory. -# -# Note that you can have both the async dumps and the append only file if you -# like (you have to comment the "save" statements above to disable the dumps). -# Still if append only mode is enabled Redis will load the data from the -# log file at startup ignoring the dump.rdb file. -# -# The name of the append only file is "appendonly.log" -# -# IMPORTANT: Check the BGREWRITEAOF to check how to rewrite the append -# log file in background when it gets too big. - -appendonly no - -# The fsync() call tells the Operating System to actually write data on disk -# instead to wait for more data in the output buffer. Some OS will really flush -# data on disk, some other OS will just try to do it ASAP. -# -# Redis supports three different modes: -# -# no: don't fsync, just let the OS flush the data when it wants. Faster. -# always: fsync after every write to the append only log . Slow, Safest. -# everysec: fsync only if one second passed since the last fsync. Compromise. -# -# The default is "always" that's the safer of the options. It's up to you to -# understand if you can relax this to "everysec" that will fsync every second -# or to "no" that will let the operating system flush the output buffer when -# it want, for better performances (but if you can live with the idea of -# some data loss consider the default persistence mode that's snapshotting). - -appendfsync always -# appendfsync everysec -# appendfsync no - -############################### ADVANCED CONFIG ############################### - -# Glue small output buffers together in order to send small replies in a -# single TCP packet. Uses a bit more CPU but most of the times it is a win -# in terms of number of queries per second. Use 'yes' if unsure. -glueoutputbuf yes - -# Use object sharing. Can save a lot of memory if you have many common -# string in your dataset, but performs lookups against the shared objects -# pool so it uses more CPU and can be a bit slower. Usually it's a good -# idea. -# -# When object sharing is enabled (shareobjects yes) you can use -# shareobjectspoolsize to control the size of the pool used in order to try -# object sharing. A bigger pool size will lead to better sharing capabilities. -# In general you want this value to be at least the double of the number of -# very common strings you have in your dataset. -# -# WARNING: object sharing is experimental, don't enable this feature -# in production before of Redis 1.0-stable. Still please try this feature in -# your development environment so that we can test it better. -shareobjects no -shareobjectspoolsize 1024 - REDIS_CONF + + # Fix up default conf file to match our paths + inreplace "redis.conf" do |s| + s.gsub! "/var/run/redis.pid", "#{var}/run/redis.pid" + s.gsub! "dir ./", "dir #{var}/db/redis/" + end + + etc.install "redis.conf" end def caveats |
