CHANGELOG 9.1 KB

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  1. v0.6.2 (2010-xx-xx)
  2. * Minor internal improvements and clean ups.
  3. * New commands available in the Redis v2.2 profile (dev):
  4. - Strings: STRLEN
  5. - Lists : LINSERT, RPUSHX, LPUSHX
  6. * WATCH also accepts a single array parameter with the keys that should be
  7. monitored during a transaction.
  8. * Improved the behaviour of Predis\MultiExecBlock in certain corner cases.
  9. * Improved parameters checking for the SORT command.
  10. * FIX: the STORE parameter for the SORT command didn't work correctly when
  11. using '0' as the target key (ISSUE #13).
  12. v0.6.1 (2010-07-11)
  13. * Minor internal improvements and clean ups.
  14. * New commands available in the Redis v2.2 profile (dev):
  15. - Misc. : WATCH, UNWATCH
  16. * Optional modifiers for ZRANGE, ZREVRANGE and ZRANGEBYSCORE queries are
  17. supported using an associative array passed as the last argument of their
  18. respective methods.
  19. * The LIMIT modifier for ZRANGEBYSCORE can be specified using either:
  20. - an indexed array: array($offset, $count)
  21. - an associative array: array('offset' => $offset, 'count' => $count)
  22. * The method Predis\Client::__construct() now accepts also instances of
  23. Predis\ConnectionParameters.
  24. * Predis\MultiExecBlock and Predis\PubSubContext now throw an exception
  25. when trying to create their instances using a profile that does not
  26. support the required Redis commands or when the client is connected to
  27. a cluster of connections.
  28. * Various improvements to Predis\MultiExecBlock:
  29. - fixes and more consistent behaviour across various usage cases.
  30. - support for WATCH and UNWATCH when using the current development
  31. profile (Redis v2.2) and aborted transactions.
  32. * New signature for Predis\Client::multiExec() which is now able to accept
  33. an array of options for the underlying instance of Predis\MultiExecBlock.
  34. Backwards compatibility with previous releases of Predis is ensured.
  35. * New signature for Predis\Client::pipeline() which is now able to accept
  36. an array of options for the underlying instance of Predis\CommandPipeline.
  37. Backwards compatibility with previous releases of Predis is ensured.
  38. The method Predis\Client::pipelineSafe() is to be considered deprecated.
  39. * FIX: The WEIGHT modifier for ZUNIONSTORE and ZINTERSTORE was handled
  40. incorrectly with more than two weights specified.
  41. v0.6.0 (2010-05-24)
  42. * Switched to the new multi-bulk request protocol for all of the commands
  43. in the Redis 1.2 and Redis 2.0 profiles. Inline and bulk requests are now
  44. deprecated as they will be removed in future releases of Redis.
  45. * The default server profile is "2.0" (targeting Redis 2.0.x). If you are
  46. using older versions of Redis, it is highly recommended that you specify
  47. which server profile the client should use (e.g. "1.2" when connecting
  48. to instances of Redis 1.2.x).
  49. * Support for Redis 1.0 is now optional and it is provided by requiring
  50. 'Predis_Compatibility.php' before creating an instance of Predis\Client.
  51. * New commands added to the Redis 2.0 profile since Predis 0.5.1:
  52. - Strings: SETEX, APPEND, SUBSTR
  53. - ZSets : ZCOUNT, ZRANK, ZUNIONSTORE, ZINTERSTORE, ZREMBYRANK, ZREVRANK
  54. - Hashes : HSET, HSETNX, HMSET, HINCRBY, HGET, HMGET, HDEL, HEXISTS,
  55. HLEN, HKEYS, HVALS, HGETALL
  56. - PubSub : PUBLISH, SUBSCRIBE, UNSUBSCRIBE
  57. - Misc. : DISCARD, CONFIG
  58. * Introduced client-level options with the new Predis\ClientOptions class.
  59. Options can be passed to Predis\Client::__construct in its second argument
  60. as an array or an instance of Predis\ClientOptions. For brevity's sake and
  61. compatibility with older versions, the constructor of Predis\Client still
  62. accepts an instance of Predis\RedisServerProfile in its second argument.
  63. The currently supported client options are:
  64. - profile [default: "2.0" as of Predis 0.6.0]
  65. specifies which server profile to use when connecting to Redis. This
  66. option accepts an instance of Predis\RedisServerProfile or a string
  67. that indicates the target version.
  68. - key_distribution [default: Predis\Distribution\HashRing]
  69. specifies which key distribution strategy to use to distribute keys
  70. among the servers that compose a cluster. This option accepts an
  71. instance of Predis\Distribution\IDistributionStrategy so that users
  72. can implement their own key distribution strategy. Optionally, the new
  73. Predis\Distribution\KetamaPureRing class also provides a pure-PHP
  74. implementation of the same algorithm used by libketama.
  75. - throw_on_error [default: TRUE]
  76. server errors can optionally be handled "silently": instead of throwing
  77. an exception, the client returns an error response type.
  78. - iterable_multibulk [EXPERIMENTAL - default: FALSE]
  79. in addition to the classic way of fetching a whole multibulk reply
  80. into an array, the client can now optionally stream a multibulk reply
  81. down to the user code by using PHP iterators. It is just a little bit
  82. slower, but it can save a lot of memory in certain scenarios.
  83. * New parameters for connections:
  84. - alias [default: not set]
  85. every connection can now be identified by an alias that is useful to
  86. get a certain connection when connected to a cluster of Redis servers.
  87. - weight [default: not set]
  88. allows the client to balance the keys asymmetrically across multiple
  89. servers. This might be useful when you have servers with different
  90. amounts of memory and you want to distribute the load of your keys
  91. accordingly.
  92. - connection_async [default: FALSE]
  93. estabilish connections to servers in a non-blocking way, so that the
  94. client is not blocked while the underlying resource performs the actual
  95. connection.
  96. - connection_persistent [default: FALSE]
  97. the underlying connection resource is left open when a script ends its
  98. lifecycle. Persistent connections can lead to unpredictable or strange
  99. behaviours, so they should be used with extreme care.
  100. * Introduced the Predis\Pipeline\IPipelineExecutor interface. Classes that
  101. implements this interface are used internally by the Predis\CommandPipeline
  102. class to change the behaviour of the pipeline when writing/reading commands
  103. from one or multiple servers. Here is the list of the default executors:
  104. - Predis\Pipeline\StandardExecutor
  105. Exceptions generated by server errors might be thrown depending on the
  106. options passed to the client (see "throw_on_error"). Instead, protocol
  107. or network errors always throw exceptions. This is the default executor
  108. for single and clustered connections and shares the same behaviour of
  109. Predis 0.5.x.
  110. - Predis\Pipeline\SafeExecutor
  111. Exceptions generated by server, protocol or network errors are not
  112. thrown, instead they are returned in the response array as instances of
  113. ResponseError or CommunicationException.
  114. - Predis\Pipeline\SafeClusterExecutor
  115. This executor shares the same behaviour of Predis\Pipeline\SafeExecutor
  116. but it is geared towards clustered connections.
  117. * Support for PUBSUB is handled by the new Predis\PubSubContext class, which
  118. could also be used to build a callback dispatcher for PUBSUB scenarios.
  119. * When connected to a cluster of connections, it is now possible to get a
  120. new Predis\Client instance for a single connection of the cluster by
  121. passing its alias/index to the new Predis\Client::getClientFor() method.
  122. * CommandPipeline and MultiExecBlock return their instances when invoking
  123. commands, thus allowing method chaining in pipelines and multi-exec blocks.
  124. * MultiExecBlock instances can handle the new DISCARD command.
  125. * Connections now support float values for the connection_timeout parameter
  126. to express timeouts with a microsecond resolution.
  127. * FIX: TCP connections now respect the read/write timeout parameter when
  128. reading the payload of server responses. Previously, stream_get_contents()
  129. was being used internally to read data from a connection but it looks like
  130. PHP does not honour the specified timeout for socket streams when inside
  131. this function.
  132. * FIX: The GET parameter for the SORT command now accepts also multiple key
  133. patterns by passing an array of strings. (ISSUE #1).
  134. * FIX: Replies to the DEL command return the number of elements deleted by
  135. the server and not 0 or 1 interpreted as a boolean response. (ISSUE #4).
  136. v0.5.1 (2010-01-23)
  137. * RPOPLPUSH has been changed from bulk command to inline command in Redis
  138. 1.2.1, so ListPopLastPushHead now extends InlineCommand. The old RPOPLPUSH
  139. behavior is still available via the ListPopLastPushHeadBulk class so that
  140. you can override the server profile if you need the old (and uncorrect)
  141. behaviour when connecting to a Redis 1.2.0 instance.
  142. * Added missing support for BGREWRITEAOF for Redis >= 1.2.0
  143. * Implemented a factory method for the RedisServerProfile class to ease the
  144. creation of new server profile instances based on a version string.
  145. v0.5.0 (2010-01-09)
  146. * First versioned release of Predis