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							- Metadata-Version: 2.1
 
- Name: redis
 
- Version: 3.0.1
 
- Summary: Python client for Redis key-value store
 
- Home-page: https://github.com/andymccurdy/redis-py
 
- Author: Andy McCurdy
 
- Author-email: sedrik@gmail.com
 
- Maintainer: Andy McCurdy
 
- Maintainer-email: sedrik@gmail.com
 
- License: MIT
 
- Keywords: Redis,key-value store
 
- Platform: UNKNOWN
 
- Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
 
- Classifier: Environment :: Console
 
- Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
 
- Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
 
- Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
 
- Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
 
- Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2
 
- Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7
 
- Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
 
- Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4
 
- Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
 
- Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
 
- Requires-Python: >=2.7, !=3.0.*, !=3.1.*, !=3.2.*, !=3.3.*
 
- Description-Content-Type: text/x-rst
 
- Provides-Extra: hiredis
 
- Requires-Dist: hiredis (>=0.1.3); extra == 'hiredis'
 
- redis-py
 
- ========
 
- The Python interface to the Redis key-value store.
 
- .. image:: https://secure.travis-ci.org/andymccurdy/redis-py.png?branch=master
 
-         :target: https://travis-ci.org/andymccurdy/redis-py
 
- .. image:: https://readthedocs.org/projects/redis-py/badge/?version=latest&style=flat
 
-         :target: https://redis-py.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
 
- .. image:: https://badge.fury.io/py/redis.svg
 
-         :target: https://pypi.org/project/redis/
 
- Installation
 
- ------------
 
- redis-py requires a running Redis server. See `Redis's quickstart
 
- <https://redis.io/topics/quickstart>`_ for installation instructions.
 
- redis-py can be installed using `pip` similar to other Python packages. Do not use `sudo`
 
- with `pip`. It is usually good to work in a
 
- `virtualenv <https://virtualenv.pypa.io/en/latest/>`_ or
 
- `venv <https://docs.python.org/3/library/venv.html>`_ to avoid conflicts with other package
 
- managers and Python projects. For a quick introduction see
 
- `Python Virtual Environments in Five Minutes <https://bit.ly/py-env>`_.
 
- To install redis-py, simply:
 
- .. code-block:: bash
 
-     $ pip install redis
 
- or from source:
 
- .. code-block:: bash
 
-     $ python setup.py install
 
- Getting Started
 
- ---------------
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> import redis
 
-     >>> r = redis.Redis(host='localhost', port=6379, db=0)
 
-     >>> r.set('foo', 'bar')
 
-     True
 
-     >>> r.get('foo')
 
-     'bar'
 
- By default, all responses are returned as `bytes` in Python 3 and `str` in
 
- Python 2. The user is responsible for decoding to Python 3 strings or Python 2
 
- unicode objects.
 
- If **all** string responses from a client should be decoded, the user can
 
- specify `decode_responses=True` to `Redis.__init__`. In this case, any
 
- Redis command that returns a string type will be decoded with the `encoding`
 
- specified.
 
- Upgrading from redis-py 2.X to 3.0
 
- ----------------------------------
 
- redis-py 3.0 introduces many new features but required a number of backwards
 
- incompatible changes to be made in the process. This section attempts to
 
- provide an upgrade path for users migrating from 2.X to 3.0.
 
- Python Version Support
 
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 
- redis-py 3.0 now supports Python 2.7 and Python 3.4+. Python 2.6 and 3.3
 
- support has been dropped.
 
- Client Classes: Redis and StrictRedis
 
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 
- redis-py 3.0 drops support for the legacy "Redis" client class. "StrictRedis"
 
- has been renamed to "Redis" and an alias named "StrictRedis" is provided so
 
- that users previously using "StrictRedis" can continue to run unchanged.
 
- The 2.X "Redis" class provided alternative implementations of a few commands.
 
- This confused users (rightfully so) and caused a number of support issues. To
 
- make things easier going forward, it was decided to drop support for these
 
- alternate implementations and instead focus on a single client class.
 
- 2.X users that are already using StrictRedis don't have to change the class
 
- name. StrictRedis will continue to work for the forseeable future.
 
- 2.X users that are using the Redis class will have to make changes if they
 
- use any of the following commands:
 
- * SETEX: The argument order has changed. The new order is (name, time, value).
 
- * LREM: The argument order has changed. The new order is (name, num, value).
 
- * TTL and PTTL: The return value is now always an int and matches the
 
-   official Redis command (>0 indicates the timeout, -1 indicates that the key
 
-   exists but that it has no expire time set, -2 indicates that the key does
 
-   not exist)
 
- MSET, MSETNX and ZADD
 
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 
- These commands all accept a mapping of key/value pairs. In redis-py 2.X
 
- this mapping could be specified as ``*args`` or as ``**kwargs``. Both of these
 
- styles caused issues when Redis introduced optional flags to ZADD. Relying on
 
- ``*args`` caused issues with the optional argument order, especially in Python
 
- 2.7. Relying on ``**kwargs`` caused potential collision issues of user keys with
 
- the argument names in the method signature.
 
- To resolve this, redis-py 3.0 has changed these three commands to all accept
 
- a single positional argument named mapping that is expected to be a dict. For
 
- MSET and MSETNX, the dict is a mapping of key-names -> values. For ZADD, the
 
- dict is a mapping of element-names -> score.
 
- MSET, MSETNX and ZADD now look like:
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     def mset(self, mapping):
 
-     def msetnx(self, mapping):
 
-     def zadd(self, name, mapping, nx=False, xx=False, ch=False, incr=False):
 
- All 2.X users that use these commands must modify their code to supply
 
- keys and values as a dict to these commands.
 
- ZINCRBY
 
- ^^^^^^^
 
- redis-py 2.X accidentily modified the argument order of ZINCRBY, swapping the
 
- order of value and amount. ZINCRBY now looks like:
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     def zincrby(self, name, amount, value):
 
- All 2.X users that rely on ZINCRBY must swap the order of amount and value
 
- for the command to continue to work as intended.
 
- Encoding of User Input
 
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 
- redis-py 3.0 only accepts user data as bytes, strings or numbers (ints, longs
 
- and floats). Attempting to specify a key or a value as any other type will
 
- raise a DataError exception.
 
- redis-py 2.X attempted to coerce any type of input into a string. While
 
- occasionally convenient, this caused all sorts of hidden errors when users
 
- passed boolean values (which were coerced to 'True' or 'False'), a None
 
- value (which was coerced to 'None') or other values, such as user defined
 
- types.
 
- All 2.X users should make sure that the keys and values they pass into
 
- redis-py are either bytes, strings or numbers.
 
- Locks
 
- ^^^^^
 
- redis-py 3.0 drops support for the pipeline-based Lock and now only supports
 
- the Lua-based lock. In doing so, LuaLock has been renamed to Lock. This also
 
- means that redis-py Lock objects require Redis server 2.6 or greater.
 
- 2.X users that were explicitly referring to "LuaLock" will have to now refer
 
- to "Lock" instead.
 
- Locks as Context Managers
 
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 
- redis-py 3.0 now raises a LockError when using a lock as a context manager and
 
- the lock cannot be acquired within the specified timeout. This is more of a
 
- bug fix than a backwards incompatible change. However, given an error is now
 
- raised where none was before, this might alarm some users.
 
- 2.X users should make sure they're wrapping their lock code in a try/catch
 
- like this:
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     try:
 
-         with r.lock('my-lock-key', blocking_timeout=5) as lock:
 
-             # code you want executed only after the lock has been acquired
 
-     except LockError:
 
-         # the lock wasn't acquired
 
- API Reference
 
- -------------
 
- The `official Redis command documentation <https://redis.io/commands>`_ does a
 
- great job of explaining each command in detail. redis-py attempts to adhere
 
- to the official command syntax. There are a few exceptions:
 
- * **SELECT**: Not implemented. See the explanation in the Thread Safety section
 
-   below.
 
- * **DEL**: 'del' is a reserved keyword in the Python syntax. Therefore redis-py
 
-   uses 'delete' instead.
 
- * **MULTI/EXEC**: These are implemented as part of the Pipeline class. The
 
-   pipeline is wrapped with the MULTI and EXEC statements by default when it
 
-   is executed, which can be disabled by specifying transaction=False.
 
-   See more about Pipelines below.
 
- * **SUBSCRIBE/LISTEN**: Similar to pipelines, PubSub is implemented as a separate
 
-   class as it places the underlying connection in a state where it can't
 
-   execute non-pubsub commands. Calling the pubsub method from the Redis client
 
-   will return a PubSub instance where you can subscribe to channels and listen
 
-   for messages. You can only call PUBLISH from the Redis client (see
 
-   `this comment on issue #151
 
-   <https://github.com/andymccurdy/redis-py/issues/151#issuecomment-1545015>`_
 
-   for details).
 
- * **SCAN/SSCAN/HSCAN/ZSCAN**: The \*SCAN commands are implemented as they
 
-   exist in the Redis documentation. In addition, each command has an equivilant
 
-   iterator method. These are purely for convenience so the user doesn't have
 
-   to keep track of the cursor while iterating. Use the
 
-   scan_iter/sscan_iter/hscan_iter/zscan_iter methods for this behavior.
 
- More Detail
 
- -----------
 
- Connection Pools
 
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 
- Behind the scenes, redis-py uses a connection pool to manage connections to
 
- a Redis server. By default, each Redis instance you create will in turn create
 
- its own connection pool. You can override this behavior and use an existing
 
- connection pool by passing an already created connection pool instance to the
 
- connection_pool argument of the Redis class. You may choose to do this in order
 
- to implement client side sharding or have finer grain control of how
 
- connections are managed.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> pool = redis.ConnectionPool(host='localhost', port=6379, db=0)
 
-     >>> r = redis.Redis(connection_pool=pool)
 
- Connections
 
- ^^^^^^^^^^^
 
- ConnectionPools manage a set of Connection instances. redis-py ships with two
 
- types of Connections. The default, Connection, is a normal TCP socket based
 
- connection. The UnixDomainSocketConnection allows for clients running on the
 
- same device as the server to connect via a unix domain socket. To use a
 
- UnixDomainSocketConnection connection, simply pass the unix_socket_path
 
- argument, which is a string to the unix domain socket file. Additionally, make
 
- sure the unixsocket parameter is defined in your redis.conf file. It's
 
- commented out by default.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> r = redis.Redis(unix_socket_path='/tmp/redis.sock')
 
- You can create your own Connection subclasses as well. This may be useful if
 
- you want to control the socket behavior within an async framework. To
 
- instantiate a client class using your own connection, you need to create
 
- a connection pool, passing your class to the connection_class argument.
 
- Other keyword parameters you pass to the pool will be passed to the class
 
- specified during initialization.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> pool = redis.ConnectionPool(connection_class=YourConnectionClass,
 
-                                     your_arg='...', ...)
 
- Parsers
 
- ^^^^^^^
 
- Parser classes provide a way to control how responses from the Redis server
 
- are parsed. redis-py ships with two parser classes, the PythonParser and the
 
- HiredisParser. By default, redis-py will attempt to use the HiredisParser if
 
- you have the hiredis module installed and will fallback to the PythonParser
 
- otherwise.
 
- Hiredis is a C library maintained by the core Redis team. Pieter Noordhuis was
 
- kind enough to create Python bindings. Using Hiredis can provide up to a
 
- 10x speed improvement in parsing responses from the Redis server. The
 
- performance increase is most noticeable when retrieving many pieces of data,
 
- such as from LRANGE or SMEMBERS operations.
 
- Hiredis is available on PyPI, and can be installed via pip just like redis-py.
 
- .. code-block:: bash
 
-     $ pip install hiredis
 
- Response Callbacks
 
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 
- The client class uses a set of callbacks to cast Redis responses to the
 
- appropriate Python type. There are a number of these callbacks defined on
 
- the Redis client class in a dictionary called RESPONSE_CALLBACKS.
 
- Custom callbacks can be added on a per-instance basis using the
 
- set_response_callback method. This method accepts two arguments: a command
 
- name and the callback. Callbacks added in this manner are only valid on the
 
- instance the callback is added to. If you want to define or override a callback
 
- globally, you should make a subclass of the Redis client and add your callback
 
- to its RESPONSE_CALLBACKS class dictionary.
 
- Response callbacks take at least one parameter: the response from the Redis
 
- server. Keyword arguments may also be accepted in order to further control
 
- how to interpret the response. These keyword arguments are specified during the
 
- command's call to execute_command. The ZRANGE implementation demonstrates the
 
- use of response callback keyword arguments with its "withscores" argument.
 
- Thread Safety
 
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 
- Redis client instances can safely be shared between threads. Internally,
 
- connection instances are only retrieved from the connection pool during
 
- command execution, and returned to the pool directly after. Command execution
 
- never modifies state on the client instance.
 
- However, there is one caveat: the Redis SELECT command. The SELECT command
 
- allows you to switch the database currently in use by the connection. That
 
- database remains selected until another is selected or until the connection is
 
- closed. This creates an issue in that connections could be returned to the pool
 
- that are connected to a different database.
 
- As a result, redis-py does not implement the SELECT command on client
 
- instances. If you use multiple Redis databases within the same application, you
 
- should create a separate client instance (and possibly a separate connection
 
- pool) for each database.
 
- It is not safe to pass PubSub or Pipeline objects between threads.
 
- Pipelines
 
- ^^^^^^^^^
 
- Pipelines are a subclass of the base Redis class that provide support for
 
- buffering multiple commands to the server in a single request. They can be used
 
- to dramatically increase the performance of groups of commands by reducing the
 
- number of back-and-forth TCP packets between the client and server.
 
- Pipelines are quite simple to use:
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> r = redis.Redis(...)
 
-     >>> r.set('bing', 'baz')
 
-     >>> # Use the pipeline() method to create a pipeline instance
 
-     >>> pipe = r.pipeline()
 
-     >>> # The following SET commands are buffered
 
-     >>> pipe.set('foo', 'bar')
 
-     >>> pipe.get('bing')
 
-     >>> # the EXECUTE call sends all buffered commands to the server, returning
 
-     >>> # a list of responses, one for each command.
 
-     >>> pipe.execute()
 
-     [True, 'baz']
 
- For ease of use, all commands being buffered into the pipeline return the
 
- pipeline object itself. Therefore calls can be chained like:
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> pipe.set('foo', 'bar').sadd('faz', 'baz').incr('auto_number').execute()
 
-     [True, True, 6]
 
- In addition, pipelines can also ensure the buffered commands are executed
 
- atomically as a group. This happens by default. If you want to disable the
 
- atomic nature of a pipeline but still want to buffer commands, you can turn
 
- off transactions.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> pipe = r.pipeline(transaction=False)
 
- A common issue occurs when requiring atomic transactions but needing to
 
- retrieve values in Redis prior for use within the transaction. For instance,
 
- let's assume that the INCR command didn't exist and we need to build an atomic
 
- version of INCR in Python.
 
- The completely naive implementation could GET the value, increment it in
 
- Python, and SET the new value back. However, this is not atomic because
 
- multiple clients could be doing this at the same time, each getting the same
 
- value from GET.
 
- Enter the WATCH command. WATCH provides the ability to monitor one or more keys
 
- prior to starting a transaction. If any of those keys change prior the
 
- execution of that transaction, the entire transaction will be canceled and a
 
- WatchError will be raised. To implement our own client-side INCR command, we
 
- could do something like this:
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> with r.pipeline() as pipe:
 
-     ...     while True:
 
-     ...         try:
 
-     ...             # put a WATCH on the key that holds our sequence value
 
-     ...             pipe.watch('OUR-SEQUENCE-KEY')
 
-     ...             # after WATCHing, the pipeline is put into immediate execution
 
-     ...             # mode until we tell it to start buffering commands again.
 
-     ...             # this allows us to get the current value of our sequence
 
-     ...             current_value = pipe.get('OUR-SEQUENCE-KEY')
 
-     ...             next_value = int(current_value) + 1
 
-     ...             # now we can put the pipeline back into buffered mode with MULTI
 
-     ...             pipe.multi()
 
-     ...             pipe.set('OUR-SEQUENCE-KEY', next_value)
 
-     ...             # and finally, execute the pipeline (the set command)
 
-     ...             pipe.execute()
 
-     ...             # if a WatchError wasn't raised during execution, everything
 
-     ...             # we just did happened atomically.
 
-     ...             break
 
-     ...        except WatchError:
 
-     ...             # another client must have changed 'OUR-SEQUENCE-KEY' between
 
-     ...             # the time we started WATCHing it and the pipeline's execution.
 
-     ...             # our best bet is to just retry.
 
-     ...             continue
 
- Note that, because the Pipeline must bind to a single connection for the
 
- duration of a WATCH, care must be taken to ensure that the connection is
 
- returned to the connection pool by calling the reset() method. If the
 
- Pipeline is used as a context manager (as in the example above) reset()
 
- will be called automatically. Of course you can do this the manual way by
 
- explicitly calling reset():
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> pipe = r.pipeline()
 
-     >>> while True:
 
-     ...     try:
 
-     ...         pipe.watch('OUR-SEQUENCE-KEY')
 
-     ...         ...
 
-     ...         pipe.execute()
 
-     ...         break
 
-     ...     except WatchError:
 
-     ...         continue
 
-     ...     finally:
 
-     ...         pipe.reset()
 
- A convenience method named "transaction" exists for handling all the
 
- boilerplate of handling and retrying watch errors. It takes a callable that
 
- should expect a single parameter, a pipeline object, and any number of keys to
 
- be WATCHed. Our client-side INCR command above can be written like this,
 
- which is much easier to read:
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> def client_side_incr(pipe):
 
-     ...     current_value = pipe.get('OUR-SEQUENCE-KEY')
 
-     ...     next_value = int(current_value) + 1
 
-     ...     pipe.multi()
 
-     ...     pipe.set('OUR-SEQUENCE-KEY', next_value)
 
-     >>>
 
-     >>> r.transaction(client_side_incr, 'OUR-SEQUENCE-KEY')
 
-     [True]
 
- Publish / Subscribe
 
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 
- redis-py includes a `PubSub` object that subscribes to channels and listens
 
- for new messages. Creating a `PubSub` object is easy.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> r = redis.Redis(...)
 
-     >>> p = r.pubsub()
 
- Once a `PubSub` instance is created, channels and patterns can be subscribed
 
- to.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> p.subscribe('my-first-channel', 'my-second-channel', ...)
 
-     >>> p.psubscribe('my-*', ...)
 
- The `PubSub` instance is now subscribed to those channels/patterns. The
 
- subscription confirmations can be seen by reading messages from the `PubSub`
 
- instance.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> p.get_message()
 
-     {'pattern': None, 'type': 'subscribe', 'channel': 'my-second-channel', 'data': 1L}
 
-     >>> p.get_message()
 
-     {'pattern': None, 'type': 'subscribe', 'channel': 'my-first-channel', 'data': 2L}
 
-     >>> p.get_message()
 
-     {'pattern': None, 'type': 'psubscribe', 'channel': 'my-*', 'data': 3L}
 
- Every message read from a `PubSub` instance will be a dictionary with the
 
- following keys.
 
- * **type**: One of the following: 'subscribe', 'unsubscribe', 'psubscribe',
 
-   'punsubscribe', 'message', 'pmessage'
 
- * **channel**: The channel [un]subscribed to or the channel a message was
 
-   published to
 
- * **pattern**: The pattern that matched a published message's channel. Will be
 
-   `None` in all cases except for 'pmessage' types.
 
- * **data**: The message data. With [un]subscribe messages, this value will be
 
-   the number of channels and patterns the connection is currently subscribed
 
-   to. With [p]message messages, this value will be the actual published
 
-   message.
 
- Let's send a message now.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     # the publish method returns the number matching channel and pattern
 
-     # subscriptions. 'my-first-channel' matches both the 'my-first-channel'
 
-     # subscription and the 'my-*' pattern subscription, so this message will
 
-     # be delivered to 2 channels/patterns
 
-     >>> r.publish('my-first-channel', 'some data')
 
-     2
 
-     >>> p.get_message()
 
-     {'channel': 'my-first-channel', 'data': 'some data', 'pattern': None, 'type': 'message'}
 
-     >>> p.get_message()
 
-     {'channel': 'my-first-channel', 'data': 'some data', 'pattern': 'my-*', 'type': 'pmessage'}
 
- Unsubscribing works just like subscribing. If no arguments are passed to
 
- [p]unsubscribe, all channels or patterns will be unsubscribed from.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> p.unsubscribe()
 
-     >>> p.punsubscribe('my-*')
 
-     >>> p.get_message()
 
-     {'channel': 'my-second-channel', 'data': 2L, 'pattern': None, 'type': 'unsubscribe'}
 
-     >>> p.get_message()
 
-     {'channel': 'my-first-channel', 'data': 1L, 'pattern': None, 'type': 'unsubscribe'}
 
-     >>> p.get_message()
 
-     {'channel': 'my-*', 'data': 0L, 'pattern': None, 'type': 'punsubscribe'}
 
- redis-py also allows you to register callback functions to handle published
 
- messages. Message handlers take a single argument, the message, which is a
 
- dictionary just like the examples above. To subscribe to a channel or pattern
 
- with a message handler, pass the channel or pattern name as a keyword argument
 
- with its value being the callback function.
 
- When a message is read on a channel or pattern with a message handler, the
 
- message dictionary is created and passed to the message handler. In this case,
 
- a `None` value is returned from get_message() since the message was already
 
- handled.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> def my_handler(message):
 
-     ...     print 'MY HANDLER: ', message['data']
 
-     >>> p.subscribe(**{'my-channel': my_handler})
 
-     # read the subscribe confirmation message
 
-     >>> p.get_message()
 
-     {'pattern': None, 'type': 'subscribe', 'channel': 'my-channel', 'data': 1L}
 
-     >>> r.publish('my-channel', 'awesome data')
 
-     1
 
-     # for the message handler to work, we need tell the instance to read data.
 
-     # this can be done in several ways (read more below). we'll just use
 
-     # the familiar get_message() function for now
 
-     >>> message = p.get_message()
 
-     MY HANDLER:  awesome data
 
-     # note here that the my_handler callback printed the string above.
 
-     # `message` is None because the message was handled by our handler.
 
-     >>> print message
 
-     None
 
- If your application is not interested in the (sometimes noisy)
 
- subscribe/unsubscribe confirmation messages, you can ignore them by passing
 
- `ignore_subscribe_messages=True` to `r.pubsub()`. This will cause all
 
- subscribe/unsubscribe messages to be read, but they won't bubble up to your
 
- application.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> p = r.pubsub(ignore_subscribe_messages=True)
 
-     >>> p.subscribe('my-channel')
 
-     >>> p.get_message()  # hides the subscribe message and returns None
 
-     >>> r.publish('my-channel')
 
-     1
 
-     >>> p.get_message()
 
-     {'channel': 'my-channel', 'data': 'my data', 'pattern': None, 'type': 'message'}
 
- There are three different strategies for reading messages.
 
- The examples above have been using `pubsub.get_message()`. Behind the scenes,
 
- `get_message()` uses the system's 'select' module to quickly poll the
 
- connection's socket. If there's data available to be read, `get_message()` will
 
- read it, format the message and return it or pass it to a message handler. If
 
- there's no data to be read, `get_message()` will immediately return None. This
 
- makes it trivial to integrate into an existing event loop inside your
 
- application.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> while True:
 
-     >>>     message = p.get_message()
 
-     >>>     if message:
 
-     >>>         # do something with the message
 
-     >>>     time.sleep(0.001)  # be nice to the system :)
 
- Older versions of redis-py only read messages with `pubsub.listen()`. listen()
 
- is a generator that blocks until a message is available. If your application
 
- doesn't need to do anything else but receive and act on messages received from
 
- redis, listen() is an easy way to get up an running.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> for message in p.listen():
 
-     ...     # do something with the message
 
- The third option runs an event loop in a separate thread.
 
- `pubsub.run_in_thread()` creates a new thread and starts the event loop. The
 
- thread object is returned to the caller of `run_in_thread()`. The caller can
 
- use the `thread.stop()` method to shut down the event loop and thread. Behind
 
- the scenes, this is simply a wrapper around `get_message()` that runs in a
 
- separate thread, essentially creating a tiny non-blocking event loop for you.
 
- `run_in_thread()` takes an optional `sleep_time` argument. If specified, the
 
- event loop will call `time.sleep()` with the value in each iteration of the
 
- loop.
 
- Note: Since we're running in a separate thread, there's no way to handle
 
- messages that aren't automatically handled with registered message handlers.
 
- Therefore, redis-py prevents you from calling `run_in_thread()` if you're
 
- subscribed to patterns or channels that don't have message handlers attached.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> p.subscribe(**{'my-channel': my_handler})
 
-     >>> thread = p.run_in_thread(sleep_time=0.001)
 
-     # the event loop is now running in the background processing messages
 
-     # when it's time to shut it down...
 
-     >>> thread.stop()
 
- A PubSub object adheres to the same encoding semantics as the client instance
 
- it was created from. Any channel or pattern that's unicode will be encoded
 
- using the `charset` specified on the client before being sent to Redis. If the
 
- client's `decode_responses` flag is set the False (the default), the
 
- 'channel', 'pattern' and 'data' values in message dictionaries will be byte
 
- strings (str on Python 2, bytes on Python 3). If the client's
 
- `decode_responses` is True, then the 'channel', 'pattern' and 'data' values
 
- will be automatically decoded to unicode strings using the client's `charset`.
 
- PubSub objects remember what channels and patterns they are subscribed to. In
 
- the event of a disconnection such as a network error or timeout, the
 
- PubSub object will re-subscribe to all prior channels and patterns when
 
- reconnecting. Messages that were published while the client was disconnected
 
- cannot be delivered. When you're finished with a PubSub object, call its
 
- `.close()` method to shutdown the connection.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> p = r.pubsub()
 
-     >>> ...
 
-     >>> p.close()
 
- The PUBSUB set of subcommands CHANNELS, NUMSUB and NUMPAT are also
 
- supported:
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> r.pubsub_channels()
 
-     ['foo', 'bar']
 
-     >>> r.pubsub_numsub('foo', 'bar')
 
-     [('foo', 9001), ('bar', 42)]
 
-     >>> r.pubsub_numsub('baz')
 
-     [('baz', 0)]
 
-     >>> r.pubsub_numpat()
 
-     1204
 
- Lua Scripting
 
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 
- redis-py supports the EVAL, EVALSHA, and SCRIPT commands. However, there are
 
- a number of edge cases that make these commands tedious to use in real world
 
- scenarios. Therefore, redis-py exposes a Script object that makes scripting
 
- much easier to use.
 
- To create a Script instance, use the `register_script` function on a client
 
- instance passing the Lua code as the first argument. `register_script` returns
 
- a Script instance that you can use throughout your code.
 
- The following trivial Lua script accepts two parameters: the name of a key and
 
- a multiplier value. The script fetches the value stored in the key, multiplies
 
- it with the multiplier value and returns the result.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> r = redis.Redis()
 
-     >>> lua = """
 
-     ... local value = redis.call('GET', KEYS[1])
 
-     ... value = tonumber(value)
 
-     ... return value * ARGV[1]"""
 
-     >>> multiply = r.register_script(lua)
 
- `multiply` is now a Script instance that is invoked by calling it like a
 
- function. Script instances accept the following optional arguments:
 
- * **keys**: A list of key names that the script will access. This becomes the
 
-   KEYS list in Lua.
 
- * **args**: A list of argument values. This becomes the ARGV list in Lua.
 
- * **client**: A redis-py Client or Pipeline instance that will invoke the
 
-   script. If client isn't specified, the client that intiially
 
-   created the Script instance (the one that `register_script` was
 
-   invoked from) will be used.
 
- Continuing the example from above:
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> r.set('foo', 2)
 
-     >>> multiply(keys=['foo'], args=[5])
 
-     10
 
- The value of key 'foo' is set to 2. When multiply is invoked, the 'foo' key is
 
- passed to the script along with the multiplier value of 5. Lua executes the
 
- script and returns the result, 10.
 
- Script instances can be executed using a different client instance, even one
 
- that points to a completely different Redis server.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> r2 = redis.Redis('redis2.example.com')
 
-     >>> r2.set('foo', 3)
 
-     >>> multiply(keys=['foo'], args=[5], client=r2)
 
-     15
 
- The Script object ensures that the Lua script is loaded into Redis's script
 
- cache. In the event of a NOSCRIPT error, it will load the script and retry
 
- executing it.
 
- Script objects can also be used in pipelines. The pipeline instance should be
 
- passed as the client argument when calling the script. Care is taken to ensure
 
- that the script is registered in Redis's script cache just prior to pipeline
 
- execution.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> pipe = r.pipeline()
 
-     >>> pipe.set('foo', 5)
 
-     >>> multiply(keys=['foo'], args=[5], client=pipe)
 
-     >>> pipe.execute()
 
-     [True, 25]
 
- Sentinel support
 
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 
- redis-py can be used together with `Redis Sentinel <https://redis.io/topics/sentinel>`_
 
- to discover Redis nodes. You need to have at least one Sentinel daemon running
 
- in order to use redis-py's Sentinel support.
 
- Connecting redis-py to the Sentinel instance(s) is easy. You can use a
 
- Sentinel connection to discover the master and slaves network addresses:
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> from redis.sentinel import Sentinel
 
-     >>> sentinel = Sentinel([('localhost', 26379)], socket_timeout=0.1)
 
-     >>> sentinel.discover_master('mymaster')
 
-     ('127.0.0.1', 6379)
 
-     >>> sentinel.discover_slaves('mymaster')
 
-     [('127.0.0.1', 6380)]
 
- You can also create Redis client connections from a Sentinel instance. You can
 
- connect to either the master (for write operations) or a slave (for read-only
 
- operations).
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> master = sentinel.master_for('mymaster', socket_timeout=0.1)
 
-     >>> slave = sentinel.slave_for('mymaster', socket_timeout=0.1)
 
-     >>> master.set('foo', 'bar')
 
-     >>> slave.get('foo')
 
-     'bar'
 
- The master and slave objects are normal Redis instances with their
 
- connection pool bound to the Sentinel instance. When a Sentinel backed client
 
- attempts to establish a connection, it first queries the Sentinel servers to
 
- determine an appropriate host to connect to. If no server is found,
 
- a MasterNotFoundError or SlaveNotFoundError is raised. Both exceptions are
 
- subclasses of ConnectionError.
 
- When trying to connect to a slave client, the Sentinel connection pool will
 
- iterate over the list of slaves until it finds one that can be connected to.
 
- If no slaves can be connected to, a connection will be established with the
 
- master.
 
- See `Guidelines for Redis clients with support for Redis Sentinel
 
- <https://redis.io/topics/sentinel-clients>`_ to learn more about Redis Sentinel.
 
- Scan Iterators
 
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 
- The \*SCAN commands introduced in Redis 2.8 can be cumbersome to use. While
 
- these commands are fully supported, redis-py also exposes the following methods
 
- that return Python iterators for convenience: `scan_iter`, `hscan_iter`,
 
- `sscan_iter` and `zscan_iter`.
 
- .. code-block:: pycon
 
-     >>> for key, value in (('A', '1'), ('B', '2'), ('C', '3')):
 
-     ...     r.set(key, value)
 
-     >>> for key in r.scan_iter():
 
-     ...     print key, r.get(key)
 
-     A 1
 
-     B 2
 
-     C 3
 
- Author
 
- ^^^^^^
 
- redis-py is developed and maintained by Andy McCurdy (sedrik@gmail.com).
 
- It can be found here: https://github.com/andymccurdy/redis-py
 
- Special thanks to:
 
- * Ludovico Magnocavallo, author of the original Python Redis client, from
 
-   which some of the socket code is still used.
 
- * Alexander Solovyov for ideas on the generic response callback system.
 
- * Paul Hubbard for initial packaging support.
 
 
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