Scripting with Lua
Dragonfly allows users to execute scripts written in Lua. Its interface for managing and writing scripts its compatible with the interface provided by Redis.
Dragonfly uses Lua version 5.4.
Script flags
Dragonfly provides additional flexibility with special script flags. By default, none are set.
Flags can be configured in multiple ways:
1. Inside the script source code
#!lua flags=allow-undeclared-keys,disable-atomicity
-- script body below
2. As default flags
Default flags are applied to all scripts and can be provided as an argument to Dragonfly.
./dragonfly --default_lua_flags=allow-undeclared-keys,disable-atomicity
3. With SCRIPT FLAGS
command
Flags can be set for a script by its SHA.
SCRIPT FLAGS sha1 disable-atomicity allow-undeclared-keys
This command can be called even before the script is loaded. This makes it possible to patch scripts used by frameworks or side applications.
First, determine what SHAs are used by the framework/application. This can be done with the SCRIPT LIST
command. Then, before starting the framework/application, call SCRIPT FLAGS sha1 [flags ...]
for all required scripts with the desired flags.
Allowing undeclared keys
Dragonfly forbids accessing undeclared keys from scripts and returns the following error:
script tried accessing undeclared key
To allow accessing any keys, including undeclared, the flag allow-undeclared-keys
should be used. This option is disabled by default because unpredictability, atomicity and multithreading don’t mix well. If enabled, Dragonfly has to stop all other operations when the script is running.
Disabling atomicity
Disabling atomicity for a script allows Dragonfly to execute commands that access any of the declared keys while the script is still running. The script’s execution can be compared to a series of pipelined commands, only that it’s not produced by a remote client, but the script itself.
The disable-atomicity
flag disables atomicity.
This behavior can be useful for long-running scripts that don’t require strict atomicity. Because the keys will always be available to other clients for both reads and writes, latency spikes can be avoided.
Dragonfly’s asynchronous model keeps this flag functional even on with low number of cores. Please note that a script can only be interrupted when calling commands. Intensive computations can still cause latency spikes.