GETEX
Introduction
In Dragonfly, as well as in Redis and Valkey, the GETEX
command is used to get the value of a key and set a new expiration time in the same operation. This can be useful when you want to access the current value of a key but also update how long that key will live before automatically being removed from your database.
Syntax
GETEX key [EX seconds | PX milliseconds | EXAT timestamp |PXAT milliseconds-timestamp | PERSIST]
Parameter Explanations
key
: The key for which the value is to be retrieved and an expiration set.EX seconds
: Set the key to expire inseconds
.PX milliseconds
: Set the key to expire inmilliseconds
.EXAT timestamp
: Set the key to expire at a specific UNIX timestamp (in seconds).PXAT milliseconds-timestamp
: Set the key to expire at a specific UNIX timestamp (in milliseconds).PERSIST
: Remove the expiration from the key, making it persistent.
Return Values
The command returns the value of the key before the expiration is updated. Since the command is atomic, the value retrieved is unaffected by the expiration update and reflects the value of the key at the time of the GETEX
operation.
If the key does not exist, GETEX
returns nil
.
Code Examples
Basic Example
Get the current value of a key and set a new TTL (in seconds):
dragonfly> SET mykey "hello" EX 3600
OK
dragonfly> GETEX mykey EX 1200
"hello"
In this example, we first set the value ("hello"
) to the key mykey
with a TTL of 3600 seconds (one hour). Then, we retrieve the value with GETEX
and update the TTL to 1200 seconds (20 minutes).
Using Milliseconds for Expiration
Set the expiration time in milliseconds:
dragonfly> SET mykey "data"
OK
dragonfly> GETEX mykey PX 15000
"data"
Here, the key mykey
has its value retrieved ("data"
) while the expiration time is updated to 15,000 milliseconds (15 seconds).
Setting Expiration at a Specific UNIX Timestamp
Set an expiration using a UNIX timestamp in seconds:
dragonfly> SET report "yearly"
OK
dragonfly> GETEX report EXAT 1699999999
"yearly"
In this case, the key report
is set to expire at the specified UNIX timestamp (1699999999
), while we retrieve its current value.
Removing Expiration Using PERSIST
Remove the key’s expiration:
dragonfly> SET session "active" EX 1800
OK
dragonfly> GETEX session PERSIST
"active"
Here, the key session
had an expiration of 30 minutes, but with GETEX ... PERSIST
, we not only retrieve the value but also make the key persistent, removing its expiration.
Best Practices
- Use
GETEX
when you need to read a key’s value and update its expiration simultaneously. - Choose the options (
EX/PX
, orEXAT/PXAT
) wisely based on your use case. For instance, in a user authentication system utilizing access tokens and refresh tokens, access tokens typically have a fixed, short-lived expiration time. Whereas for refresh tokens utilizing the sliding expiration strategy, we may extend the expiration each time it’s used.
Common Mistakes
- Using
GETEX
on non-existent keys will returnnil
, which could lead to confusion if your code doesn’t handle missing keys appropriately. - Misinterpreting the atomic nature of
GETEX
—the expiration is set at the same time as retrieving the value, so no race condition occurs.
FAQs
What happens if the key does not exist?
If the key does not exist, GETEX
will return nil
and no expiration will be set.
Does GETEX
alter the value of the key?
No, GETEX
only retrieves the value and optionally changes the TTL. The value stored in the key remains unchanged unless modified by other commands.
Is GETEX
equivalent to GET
when no options are supplied?
Yes, when GETEX
is used without any expiration options, it functions the same as a GET
command, retrieving the current value without modifying the expiration time.