To setup Redis state store create a component of type state.redis
. See this guide on how to create and apply a state store configuration.
apiVersion: dapr.io/v1alpha1
kind: Component
metadata:
name: <NAME>
namespace: <NAMESPACE>
spec:
type: state.redis
version: v1
metadata:
- name: redisHost
value: <HOST>
- name: redisPassword
value: <PASSWORD>
- name: enableTLS
value: <bool> # Optional. Allowed: true, false.
- name: failover
value: <bool> # Optional. Allowed: true, false.
- name: sentinelMasterName
value: <string> # Optional
- name: maxRetries
value: # Optional
- name: maxRetryBackoff
value: # Optional
TLS: If the Redis instance supports TLS with public certificates it can be configured to enable or disable TLS true
or false
.
Failover: When set to true
enables the failover feature. The redisHost should be the sentinel host address. See Redis Sentinel Documentation
If you wish to use Redis as an actor store, append the following to the yaml.
- name: actorStateStore
value: "true"
Field | Required | Details | Example |
---|---|---|---|
redisHost | Y | Connection-string for the redis host | localhost:6379 , redis-master.default.svc.cluster.local:6379 |
redisPassword | Y | Password for Redis host. No Default. Can be secretKeyRef to use a secret reference | "" , "KeFg23!" |
consumerID | N | The consumer group ID | "myGroup" |
enableTLS | N | If the Redis instance supports TLS with public certificates, can be configured to be enabled or disabled. Defaults to "false" | "true" , "false" |
maxRetries | N | Maximum number of retries before giving up. Defaults to 3 | 5 , 10 |
maxRetryBackoff | N | Minimum backoff between each retry. Defaults to 2 seconds | 3000000000 |
failover | N | Property to enabled failover configuration. Needs sentinalMasterName to be set. Defaults to "false" | "true" , "false" |
sentinelMasterName | N | The sentinel master name. See Redis Sentinel Documentation | "" , "127.0.0.1:6379" |
actorStateStore | N | Consider this state store for actors. Defaults to "false" | "true" , "false" |
Dapr can use any Redis instance - containerized, running on your local dev machine, or a managed cloud service. If you already have a Redis store, move on to the Configuration section.
A Redis instance is automatically created as a Docker container when you run dapr init
We can use Helm to quickly create a Redis instance in our Kubernetes cluster. This approach requires Installing Helm.
Install Redis into your cluster. Note that we’re explicitly setting an image tag to get a version greater than 5, which is what Dapr' pub/sub functionality requires. If you’re intending on using Redis as just a state store (and not for pub/sub), you do not have to set the image version.
helm repo add bitnami https://charts.bitnami.com/bitnami
helm install redis bitnami/redis
Run kubectl get pods
to see the Redis containers now running in your cluster.
Add redis-master:6379
as the redisHost
in your redis.yaml file. For example:
metadata:
- name: redisHost
value: redis-master:6379
Next, we’ll get the Redis password, which is slightly different depending on the OS we’re using:
Windows: Run kubectl get secret --namespace default redis -o jsonpath="{.data.redis-password}" > encoded.b64
, which will create a file with your encoded password. Next, run certutil -decode encoded.b64 password.txt
, which will put your redis password in a text file called password.txt
. Copy the password and delete the two files.
Linux/MacOS: Run kubectl get secret --namespace default redis -o jsonpath="{.data.redis-password}" | base64 --decode
and copy the outputted password.
Add this password as the redisPassword
value in your redis.yaml file. For example:
metadata:
- name: redisPassword
value: lhDOkwTlp0
Note: this approach requires having an Azure Subscription.
redis.yaml
file that Dapr can apply to our cluster. If you’re running a sample, you’ll add the host and key to the provided redis.yaml
. If you’re creating a project from the ground up, you’ll create a redis.yaml
file as specified in Configuration. Set the redisHost
key to [HOST NAME FROM PREVIOUS STEP]:6379
and the redisPassword
key to the key you copied in step 4. Note: In a production-grade application, follow secret management instructions to securely manage your secrets.NOTE: Dapr pub/sub uses Redis Streams that was introduced by Redis 5.0, which isn’t currently available on Azure Managed Redis Cache. Consequently, you can use Azure Managed Redis Cache only for state persistence.
dapr init
command.