3.3 KiB
Setup Redis Streams
Creating a Redis instance
Dapr can use any Redis instance - containerized, running on your local dev machine, or a managed cloud service, provided the version of Redis is 5.0.0 or later. If you already have a Redis instance > 5.0.0 installed, move on to the Configuration section.
Running locally
The Dapr CLI will automatically create and setup a Redis Streams instance for you.
The Redis instance will be installed via Docker when you run dapr init
, and the component file will be created in default directory. ($HOME/.dapr/components
directory (Mac/Linux) or %USERPROFILE%\.dapr\components
on Windows).
Creating a Redis instance in your Kubernetes Cluster using Helm
We can use Helm to quickly create a Redis instance in our Kubernetes cluster. This approach requires Installing Helm.
-
Install Redis into your cluster.
helm repo add bitnami https://charts.bitnami.com/bitnami helm install redis bitnami/redis
-
Run
kubectl get pods
to see the Redis containers now running in your cluster. -
Add
redis-master:6379
as theredisHost
in your redis.yaml file. For example:metadata: - name: redisHost value: redis-master:6379
-
Next, we'll get our Redis password, which is slightly different depending on the OS we're using:
-
Windows: Run
kubectl get secret --namespace default redis -o jsonpath="{.data.redis-password}" > encoded.b64
, which will create a file with your encoded password. Next, runcertutil -decode encoded.b64 password.txt
, which will put your redis password in a text file calledpassword.txt
. Copy the password and delete the two files. -
Linux/MacOS: Run
kubectl get secret --namespace default redis -o jsonpath="{.data.redis-password}" | base64 --decode
and copy the outputted password.
Add this password as the
redisPassword
value in your redis.yaml file. For example:- name: redisPassword value: "lhDOkwTlp0"
-
Other ways to create a Redis Database
Configuration
To setup Redis, you need to create a component for pubsub.redis
.
The following yaml files demonstrates how to define each. If the Redis instance supports TLS with public certificates it can be configured to enable or disable TLS in the yaml. Note: yaml files below illustrate secret management in plain text. In a production-grade application, follow secret management instructions to securely manage your secrets.
Configuring Redis Streams for Pub/Sub
Create a file called pubsub.yaml, and paste the following:
apiVersion: dapr.io/v1alpha1
kind: Component
metadata:
name: messagebus
namespace: default
spec:
type: pubsub.redis
metadata:
- name: redisHost
value: <HOST>
- name: redisPassword
value: <PASSWORD>
- name: enableTLS
value: <bool>
Apply the configuration
Kubernetes
kubectl apply -f pubsub.yaml
Standalone
To run locally, create a components
dir containing the YAML file and provide the path to the dapr run
command with the flag --components-path
.