mirror of
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337 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
337 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
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# Redis Commander
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Redis web management tool written in node.js
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# Install and Run
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```
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$ npm install -g redis-commander
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$ redis-commander
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```
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Installation via `yarn` is currently not supported. Please use `npm` as package manager.
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Or run Redis Commander as Docker image `ghcr.io/joeferner/redis-commander` ~~rediscommander/redis-commander~~ (instructions see below).
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Multi-Arch images built are available at `ghcr.io/joeferner/redis-commander:latest`.
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(https://github.com/joeferner/redis-commander/pkgs/container/redis-commander)
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Remark: new version are not published to Dockerhub right now.
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# Features
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Web-UI to display and edit data within multiple different Redis servers.
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It has support for the following data types to view, add, update and delete data:
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* Strings
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* Lists
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* Sets
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* Sorted Set
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* Streams (Basic support based on HFXBus project from https://github.com/exocet-engineering/hfx-bus, only view/add/delete data)
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* ReJSON documents (Basic support, only for viewing values of ReJSON type keys)
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# Usage
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```
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$ redis-commander --help
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Options:
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--redis-port The port to find redis on. [string]
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--redis-host The host to find redis on. [string]
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--redis-socket The unix-socket to find redis on. [string]
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--redis-username The redis username. [string]
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--redis-password The redis password. [string]
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--redis-db The redis database. [string]
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--redis-label The label to display for the connection. [string]
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--redis-tls Use TLS for connection to redis server or sentinel. [boolean] [default: false]
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--redis-optional Set to true if no permanent auto-reconnect shall be done if server is down [boolean] [default: false]
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--sentinel-port The port to find redis sentinel on. [string]
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--sentinel-host The host to find redis sentinel on. [string]
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--sentinels Comma separated list of sentinels with host:port. [string]
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--sentinel-name The redis sentinel group name to use. [string] [default: mymaster]
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--sentinel-username The username for sentinel instance. [string]
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--sentinel-password The password for sentinel instance. [string]
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--http-auth-username, --http-u The http authorisation username. [string]
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--http-auth-password, --http-p The http authorisation password. [string]
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--http-auth-password-hash, --http-h The http authorisation password hash. [string]
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--address, -a The address to run the server on. [string] [default: 0.0.0.0]
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--port, -p The port to run the server on. [string] [default: 8081]
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--url-prefix, -u The url prefix to respond on. [string] [default: ""]
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--root-pattern, --rp The root pattern of the redis keys. [string] [default: "*"]
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--read-only Start app in read-only mode. [boolean] [default: false]
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--trust-proxy App is run behind proxy (enable Express "trust proxy") [boolean|string] [default: false]
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--nosave, --ns Do not save new connections to config file. [boolean] [default: true]
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--noload, --nl Do not load connections from config. [boolean] [default: false]
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--use-scan, --sc Use scan instead of keys. [boolean] [default: false]
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--clear-config, --cc Clear configuration file.
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--migrate-config Migrate old configuration file in $HOME to new style.
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--scan-count, --sc The size of each separate scan. [integer] [default: 100]
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--no-log-data Do not log data values from redis store. [boolean] [default: false]
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--open Open web-browser with Redis-Commander. [boolean] [default: false]
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--folding-char, --fc Character to fold keys at in tree view. [character] [default: ":"]
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--test, -t Test final configuration (file, env-vars, command line)
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```
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The connection can be established either via direct connection to redis server or indirect
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via a sentinel instance. Most of this command line parameters map onto configuration params read from
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the config file - see [docs/configuration.md](docs/configuration.md) and [docs/connections.md](docs/connections.md).
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## Configuration
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Redis Commander can be configured by configuration files, environment variables or using command line
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parameters. The different types of config values overwrite each other, only the last (most important)
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value is used.
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For configuration files the `node-config` module (https://github.com/lorenwest/node-config) is used, with default to json syntax.
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The order of precedence for all configuration values (from least to most important) is:
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- Configuration files
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`default.json` - this file contains all default values and SHOULD NOT be changed
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`local.json` - optional file, all local overwrites for values inside default.json should be placed here as well
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as a list of redis connections to use at startup
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`local-<NODE_ENV>.json` - Do not add anything else than connections to this file! Redis Commander will overwrite this whenever a
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connection is added or removed via user interface. Inside docker container this file is used to store
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all connections parsed from REDIS_HOSTS env var.
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This file overwrites all connections defined inside `local.json`
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There are some more possible files available to use - please check the node-config Wiki
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for an complete list of all possible file names (https://github.com/lorenwest/node-config/wiki/Configuration-Files)
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- Environment variables - the full list of env vars possible (except the docker specific ones)
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can be get from the file `config/custom-environment-variables.json` together with their mapping
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to the respective configuration key.
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- Command line parameters - Overwrites everything
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To check the final configuration created from files, env-vars set and command line param overwrites
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start redis commander with additional param "--test". All invalid configuration keys will be listed
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in the output. The config test does not check if hostnames or ip addresses can be resolved.
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More information can be found in the documentation at [docs/configuration.md](docs/configuration.md)
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and [docs/connections.md](docs/connections.md).
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## Environment Variables
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These environment variables can be used starting Redis Commander as normal
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application or inside docker container (defined inside file `config/custom-environment-variables.json`)
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and at [docs/configuration.md](docs/configuration.md):
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```
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HTTP_USER
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HTTP_PASSWORD
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HTTP_PASSWORD_HASH
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ADDRESS
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PORT
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READ_ONLY
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URL_PREFIX
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SIGNIN_PATH
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ROOT_PATTERN
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NOSAVE
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NO_LOG_DATA
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FOLDING_CHAR
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VIEW_JSON_DEFAULT
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USE_SCAN
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SCAN_COUNT
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FLUSH_ON_IMPORT
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REDIS_CONNECTION_NAME
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REDIS_LABEL
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CLIENT_MAX_BODY_SIZE
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BINARY_AS_HEX
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```
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## Docker
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All environment variables listed at "Environment Variables" can be used running image
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with Docker. The following additional environment variables are available too (defined inside
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docker startup script):
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```
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HTTP_PASSWORD_FILE
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HTTP_PASSWORD_HASH_FILE
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REDIS_PORT
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REDIS_HOST
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REDIS_SOCKET
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REDIS_TLS
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REDIS_USERNAME
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REDIS_PASSWORD
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REDIS_PASSWORD_FILE
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REDIS_DB
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REDIS_HOSTS
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REDIS_OPTIONAL
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SENTINEL_PORT
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SENTINEL_HOST
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SENTINEL_NAME
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SENTINEL_USERNAME
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SENTINEL_PASSWORD
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SENTINEL_PASSWORD_FILE
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SENTINELS
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K8S_SIGTERM
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```
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A (partial) description for the mapping onto the cli params and into the config files can be found
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at the [docs/connections.md](docs/connections.md) file.
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The `K8S_SIGTERM` variable (default "0") can be set to "1" to work around kubernetes specifics
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to allow pod replacement with zero downtime. More information on how kubernetes handles termination of old pods and the
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setup of new ones can be found within the thread [https://github.com/kubernetes/contrib/issues/1140#issuecomment-290836405]
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Hosts can be optionally specified with a comma separated string by setting the `REDIS_HOSTS` environment variable.
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After running the container, `redis-commander` will be available at [localhost:8081](http://localhost:8081).
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### Valid host strings
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the `REDIS_HOSTS` environment variable is a comma separated list of host definitions,
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where each host should follow one of these templates:
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`hostname`
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`label:hostname`
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`label:hostname:port`
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`label:hostname:port:dbIndex`
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`label:hostname:port:dbIndex:password`
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Connection strings defined with `REDIS_HOSTS` variable do not support TLS connections.
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If remote redis server needs TLS write all connections into a config file instead
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of using `REDIS_HOSTS` (see [docs/connections.md](docs/connections.md) at the end
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within the more complex examples).
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### With docker-compose
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```
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version: '3'
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services:
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redis:
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container_name: redis
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hostname: redis
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image: redis
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redis-commander:
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container_name: redis-commander
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hostname: redis-commander
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image: ghcr.io/joeferner/redis-commander:latest
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restart: always
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environment:
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- REDIS_HOSTS=local:redis:6379
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ports:
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- "8081:8081"
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```
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### Without docker-compose
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#### Simplest
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If you're running redis on `localhost:6379`, this is all you need to get started.
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```
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docker run --rm --name redis-commander -d -p 8081:8081 \
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ghcr.io/joeferner/redis-commander:latest
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```
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#### Specify single host
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```
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docker run --rm --name redis-commander -d -p 8081:8081 \
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--env REDIS_HOSTS=10.10.20.30 \
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ghcr.io/joeferner/redis-commander:latest
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```
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#### Specify multiple hosts with labels
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```
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docker run --rm --name redis-commander -d -p 8081:8081 \
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--env REDIS_HOSTS=local:localhost:6379,myredis:10.10.20.30 \
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ghcr.io/joeferner/redis-commander:latest
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```
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## Kubernetes
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An example deployment can be found at [k8s/redis-commander/deployment.yaml](k8s/redis-commander/deployment.yaml).
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If you already have a cluster running with `redis` in the default namespace, deploy `redis-commander` with `kubectl apply -f k8s/redis-commander`. If you don't have `redis` running yet, you can deploy a simple pod with `kubectl apply -f k8s/redis`.
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Alternatively, you can add a container to a deployment's spec like this:
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```
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containers:
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- name: redis-commander
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image: ghcr.io/joeferner/redis-commander
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env:
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- name: REDIS_HOSTS
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value: instance1:redis:6379
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ports:
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- name: redis-commander
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containerPort: 8081
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```
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known issues with Kubernetes:
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* using REDIS_HOSTS works only with a password-less redis db. You must specify REDIS_HOST on a password
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protected redis db
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## Helm chart
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You can install the application on any Kubernetes cluster using Helm.
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There is no helm repo available currently, therefore local checkout of helm sources inside
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this repo is needed:
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```
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helm -n myspace install redis-web-ui ./k8s/helm-chart/redis-commander
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```
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More [Documentation](k8s/helm-chart/README.md) about this Helm chart and its values.
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## OpenShift V3
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To use the stock Node.js image builder do the following.
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1. Open Catalog and select the Node.js template
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1. Specify the name of the application and the URL to the [redis-command github repository](https://github.com/joeferner/redis-commander.git)
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1. Click the ```advanced options``` link
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1. (optional) specify the hostname for the route - _if one is not specified it will be generated_
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1. In the Deployment Configuration section
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* Add ```REDIS_HOST``` environment variable whose value is the name of the redis service - e.g., ```redis```
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* Add ```REDIS_PORT``` environment variable whose value is the port exposed of the redis service - e.g., ```6379```
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* Add value from secret generated by the [redis template](https://github.com/sclorg/redis-container/blob/master/examples/redis-persistent-template.json):
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* name: ```REDIS_PASSWORD```
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* resource: ```redis```
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* key: ```database-password```
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1. (optional) specify a label such as ```appl=redis-commander-dev1```
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* _this label will be applied on all objects created allowing for easy deletion later via:_
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```
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oc delete all --selector appl=redis-commander-dev1
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```
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## Helper Scripts
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### Generate BCrypted password hash
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Redis commander allows setting either a plain text password for http authentication or an already bcrypted
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password hash.
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To generate a hashed password the script `bin/bcrypt-password.js` can be used. The parameter "-p" to set password should be given.
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Usage example:
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```
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$ git clone https://github.com/joeferner/redis-commander.git
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$ cd redis-commander/bin
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$ node bcrypt-password.js -p myplainpass
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$2b$10BQPbC8dlxeEqB/nXOkyjr.tlafGZ28J3ug8sWIMRoeq5LSVOXpl3W
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```
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This generated hash can be set inside the config file as "server.httpAuth.passwordHash", as env var "HTTP_PASSWORD_HASH"
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or on the command line as `--http-auth-password-hash`.
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Running inside docker image a file containing this password hash can be set via env var
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`HTTP_PASSWORD_HASH_FILE`
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## Build images based on this one
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To use this images as a base image for other images you need to call "apk update" inside your Dockerfile
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before adding other apk packages with "apk add foo". Afterwards, to reduce your image size, you may
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remove all temporary apk configs too again as this Dockerfile does.
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