# Ansible Role: Redis [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/geerlingguy/ansible-role-redis.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/geerlingguy/ansible-role-redis) Installs [Redis](http://redis.io/) on RHEL/CentOS or Debian/Ubuntu. ## Requirements On RedHat-based distributions, requires the EPEL repository (you can simply add the role `geerlingguy.repo-epel` to install ensure EPEL is available). ## Role Variables redis_enablerepo: epel (Used only on RHEL/CentOS) The repository to use for Redis installation. Available variables are listed below, along with default values (see `defaults/main.yml`): redis_port: 6379 redis_bind_interface: 127.0.0.1 Port and interface on which Redis will listen. Set the interface to `0.0.0.0` to listen on all interfaces. redis_unixsocket: '' If set, Redis will also listen on a local Unix socket. redis_timeout: 300 Close a connection after a client is idle `N` seconds. Set to `0` to disable timeout. redis_loglevel: "notice" redis_logfile: /var/log/redis/redis-server.log Log level and log location (valid levels are `debug`, `verbose`, `notice`, and `warning`). redis_databases: 16 The number of Redis databases. # Set to an empty set to disable persistence (saving the DB to disk). redis_save: - 900 1 - 300 10 - 60 10000 Snapshotting configuration; setting values in this list will save the database to disk if the given number of seconds (e.g. `900`) and the given number of write operations (e.g. `1`) have occurred. redis_rdbcompression: "yes" redis_dbfilename: dump.rdb redis_dbdir: /var/lib/redis Database compression and location configuration. redis_maxmemory: 0 Limit memory usage to the specified amount of bytes. Leave at 0 for unlimited. redis_maxmemory_policy: "noeviction" The method to use to keep memory usage below the limit, if specified. See [Using Redis as an LRU cache](http://redis.io/topics/lru-cache). redis_maxmemory_samples: 5 Number of samples to use to approximate LRU. See [Using Redis as an LRU cache](http://redis.io/topics/lru-cache). redis_appendonly: "no" The appendonly option, if enabled, affords better data durability guarantees, at the cost of slightly slower performance. redis_appendfsync: "everysec" Valid values are `always` (slower, safest), `everysec` (happy medium), or `no` (let the filesystem flush data when it wants, most risky). # Add extra include files for local configuration/overrides. redis_includes: [] Add extra include file paths to this list to include more/localized Redis configuration. The redis package name for installation via the system package manager. Defaults to `redis-server` on Debian and `redis` on RHEL. redis_package_name: "redis-server" (Default for RHEL shown) The redis package name for installation via the system package manager. Defaults to `redis-server` on Debian and `redis` on RHEL. redis_requirepass: "" Set a password to require authentication to Redis. You can generate a strong password using `echo "my_password_here" | sha256sum`. redis_disabled_commands: [] For extra security, you can disable certain Redis commands (this is especially important if Redis is publicly accessible). For example: redis_disabled_commands: - FLUSHDB - FLUSHALL - KEYS - PEXPIRE - DEL - CONFIG - SHUTDOWN ## Dependencies None. ## Example Playbook - hosts: all roles: - { role: geerlingguy.redis } ## License MIT / BSD ## Author Information This role was created in 2014 by [Jeff Geerling](https://www.jeffgeerling.com/), author of [Ansible for DevOps](https://www.ansiblefordevops.com/).