Set algebra solver for Redis.
Stal
receives an array with an s-expression composed of commands
and key names and resolves the set operations in Redis.
Meet us on IRC: #lesscode on freenode.net.
Install Redis. On most platforms it's as easy as grabbing
the sources, running make and then putting the redis-server
binary
in the PATH.
Once you have it installed, you can execute redis-server
and it
will run on localhost:6379
by default. Check the redis.conf
file that comes with the sources if you want to change some settings.
Stal
is a Lua script for Redis that receives a JSON formatted
s-expression and resolves the set algebra operations.
# Populate some sets
$ redis-cli SADD A 1 2 3
(integer) 3
$ redis-cli SADD B 2 3 4
(integer) 3
$ redis-cli SADD C 3 4 5
(integer) 3
# Calculate the intersection of A and B
$ redis-cli --eval stal.lua , '["SINTER", "A", "B"]'
1) "2"
2) "3"
More complex expressions are possible:
$ redis-cli --eval stal.lua , '["SDIFF", ["SUNION", "A", "C"], "B"]'
1) "1"
2) "5"
Stal
translates the internal calls to SDIFF
, SINTER
, SUNION
,
ZINTER
and ZUNION
into SDIFFSTORE
, SINTERSTORE
, SUNIONSTORE
,
ZINTERSTORE
and ZUNIONSTORE
respectively in order to perform
the underlying operations, and it takes care of generating and
deleting any temporary keys. Furthermore, the temporary keys are
not replicated to the slaves and are not appended to AOF.
All the nested commands in the s-expression will have a temporary key passed as the first argument. That means only commands that can make sense of that feature can be used in nested expressions.
$ redis-cli --eval stal.lua , '["SINTER", ["SADD", "4", "5" "6"], "C"]'
1) "4"
2) "5"
The outermost command can be practically anything, for example:
$ redis-cli --eval stal.lua , '["DBSIZE"]'
(integer) 3
$ redis-cli --eval stal.lua , '["SCARD", ["SUNION", "A", "B", "C"]]'
(integer) 5
Copy the script and use it directly as shown in the examples. You can also use a wrapper in your preferred programming language.
The following wrappers are available:
The tests are written in Lua and can be run as follows:
$ lua stal_test.lua
Alternatively you can run make
. If there's no output, it means
all the assertions passed.