Install from Binary
Below are step-by-step instructions for running Dragonfly from binary.
Prerequisites
- You must be running a Linux-based OS (if using a Mac, run using Docker, Windows WSL will work as well).
- Network access
- Minimum 4GB of RAM to get the benefits of Dragonfly
- Minimum 1 CPU Core
- Linux Kernel 4.19 or higher
Step 1: Download preferred release
Download the latest Dragonfly release from one of the links below. You can also checkout all releases here.
- Download Latest (Aarch64)
- Download Latest (X86-64)
- Download Latest (ARM64 Debian)
- Download Latest (AMD64 Debian)
Step 2: Uncompress and rename file
Uncompress the downloaded file and rename it to dragonfly
:
tar zxf {file_name}
mv {file_name} dragonfly
Step 3: Run Dragonfly
Use the following command to run Dragonfly:
./dragonfly --logtostderr
Run Dragonfly with flags
The list of supported flags for Dragonfly can be seen by running the --help
option, and a full list of options can be viewed with the --helpfull
option.
A list of the most useful flags can be found here.
For example, to run dragonfly with:
- Log message at standard error
- Password (set to
youshallnotpass
) - Cache mode enabled
- Number of db set to
1
- Listen on port
6379
andlocalhost
traffic only - Persist data at
30
minute intervals - Max memory set to 12GB
- The number of keys that
KEY
commands return (set to 12288) - Set the dump file name (to
dump.db
)
You would run:
dragonfly --logtostderr --requirepass=youshallnotpass --cache_mode=true -dbnum 1 --bind localhost --port 6379 --save_schedule "*:30" --maxmemory=12gb --keys_output_limit=12288 --dbfilename dump.rdb
Flag files
To add flags from a configuration file, use the --flagfile <filename>
flag. The file must list one flag per line. For key-value flags, use the --<flag_name>=<flag_value>
format (note the equals character, you can’t use a space character).