This was a test to check how much faster native implementation would be.
In initial tests it does not look like is this huge win.
After all this is at least in part obvious. Now scripting.c tries to
avoid allocations of argument vectors, and turning ":1" accumulated in
the client buffer into a Lua type is a fast operation.
Should be much faster, and regardless, the code is more obvious now
compared to generating a string just to get the return value of the
ll2stirng() function.
1. HVSTRLEN -> HSTRLEN. It's unlikely one needs the length of the key,
not clear how the API would work (by value does not make sense) and
there will be better names anyway.
2. Default is to return 0 when field is missing.
3. Default is to return 0 when key is missing.
4. The implementation was slower than needed, and produced unnecessary COW.
Related issue #2415.
1. Remove useless "cs" initialization.
2. Add a "select" var to capture a condition checked multiple times.
3. Avoid duplication of the same if (!copy) conditional.
4. Don't increment dirty if copy is given (no deletion is performed),
otherwise we propagate MIGRATE when not needed.
It's hard to pick a good approach here. A few arguments:
1) There are many exposed instances on the internet.
2) Changing the default when "bind" is not given is very dangerous,
after an upgrade the server changes a fundamental behavior.
3) Usually Redis, when used in a proper way, will be protected *and*
accessed often from other computers, so this new default is likely
not what most people want.
4) However if users end with this default, they are using the example
redis.conf: likely they are reading what is inside, and they'll see
the warning.
Less grays: more readable palette since usually we have a non linear
distribution of percentages and very near gray tones are hard to take
apart. Final part of the palette is gradient from yellow to red. The red
part is hardly reached because of usual distribution of latencies, but
shows up mainly when latencies are very high because of the logarithmic
scale, this is coherent to what people expect: red = bad.