Redis Filter
In this example, we show how a Redis filter can be used with the Envoy proxy. The Envoy proxy configuration includes a Redis filter that routes egress requests to redis server.
Running the Sandboxes
The following documentation runs through the setup of Envoy described above.
Step 1: Install Docker
Ensure that you have a recent versions of docker
and docker-compose
installed.
A simple way to achieve this is via the Docker Desktop.
Step 2: Clone the Envoy repo
If you have not cloned the Envoy repo, clone it with:
SSH
HTTPS
git clone git@github.com:envoyproxy/envoy
git clone https://github.com/envoyproxy/envoy.git
Step 3: Build the sandbox
Terminal 1
$ pwd
envoy/examples/redis
$ docker-compose pull
$ docker-compose up --build -d
$ docker-compose ps
Name Command State Ports
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
redis_proxy_1 /docker-entrypoint.sh /bin Up 10000/tcp, 0.0.0.0:1999->1999/tcp, 0.0.0.0:8001->8001/tcp
redis_redis_1 docker-entrypoint.sh redis Up 0.0.0.0:6379->6379/tcp
Step 4: Issue Redis commands
Issue Redis commands using your favourite Redis client, such as redis-cli
, and verify they are routed via Envoy.
Terminal 1
$ redis-cli -h localhost -p 1999 set foo foo
OK
$ redis-cli -h localhost -p 1999 set bar bar
OK
$ redis-cli -h localhost -p 1999 get foo
"foo"
$ redis-cli -h localhost -p 1999 get bar
"bar"
Step 5: Verify egress stats
Go to http://localhost:8001/stats?usedonly&filter=redis.egress_redis.command
and verify the following stats:
redis.egress_redis.command.get.total: 2
redis.egress_redis.command.set.total: 2