Retry Helpers#

class redis.retry.Retry(backoff, retries, supported_errors=(<class 'redis.exceptions.ConnectionError'>, <class 'redis.exceptions.TimeoutError'>, <class 'socket.timeout'>))[source]#

Retry a specific number of times after a failure

call_with_retry(do, fail)[source]#

Execute an operation that might fail and returns its result, or raise the exception that was thrown depending on the Backoff object. do: the operation to call. Expects no argument. fail: the failure handler, expects the last error that was thrown

update_supported_errors(specified_errors)[source]#

Updates the supported errors with the specified error types

Parameters

specified_errors (list) –

Retry in Redis Standalone#

>>> from redis.backoff import ExponentialBackoff
>>> from redis.retry import Retry
>>> from redis.client import Redis
>>> from redis.exceptions import (
>>>    BusyLoadingError,
>>>    ConnectionError,
>>>    TimeoutError
>>> )
>>>
>>> # Run 3 retries with exponential backoff strategy
>>> retry = Retry(ExponentialBackoff(), 3)
>>> # Redis client with retries on custom errors
>>> r = Redis(host='localhost', port=6379, retry=retry, retry_on_error=[BusyLoadingError, ConnectionError, TimeoutError])
>>> # Redis client with retries on TimeoutError only
>>> r_only_timeout = Redis(host='localhost', port=6379, retry=retry, retry_on_timeout=True)

As you can see from the example above, Redis client supports 3 parameters to configure the retry behaviour:

  • retry: Retry instance with a Backoff strategy and the max number of retries

  • retry_on_error: list of Exceptions to retry on

  • retry_on_timeout: if True, retry on TimeoutError only

If either retry_on_error or retry_on_timeout are passed and no retry is given, by default it uses a Retry(NoBackoff(), 1) (meaning 1 retry right after the first failure).

Retry in Redis Cluster#

>>> from redis.backoff import ExponentialBackoff
>>> from redis.retry import Retry
>>> from redis.cluster import RedisCluster
>>>
>>> # Run 3 retries with exponential backoff strategy
>>> retry = Retry(ExponentialBackoff(), 3)
>>> # Redis Cluster client with retries
>>> rc = RedisCluster(host='localhost', port=6379, retry=retry, cluster_error_retry_attempts=2)

Retry behaviour in Redis Cluster is a little bit different from Standalone:

  • retry: Retry instance with a Backoff strategy and the max number of retries, default value is Retry(NoBackoff(), 0)

  • cluster_error_retry_attempts: number of times to retry before raising an error when TimeoutError or ConnectionError or ClusterDownError are encountered, default value is 3

Let’s consider the following example:

>>> from redis.backoff import ExponentialBackoff
>>> from redis.retry import Retry
>>> from redis.cluster import RedisCluster
>>>
>>> rc = RedisCluster(host='localhost', port=6379, retry=Retry(ExponentialBackoff(), 6), cluster_error_retry_attempts=1)
>>> rc.set('foo', 'bar')
  1. the client library calculates the hash slot for key ‘foo’.

  2. given the hash slot, it then determines which node to connect to, in order to execute the command.

  3. during the connection, a ConnectionError is raised.

  4. because we set retry=Retry(ExponentialBackoff(), 6), the client tries to reconnect to the node up to 6 times, with an exponential backoff between each attempt.

  5. even after 6 retries, the client is still unable to connect.

  6. because we set cluster_error_retry_attempts=1, before giving up, the client starts a cluster update, removes the failed node from the startup nodes, and re-initializes the cluster.

  7. after the cluster has been re-initialized, it starts a new cycle of retries, up to 6 retries, with an exponential backoff.

  8. if the client can connect, we’re good. Otherwise, the exception is finally raised to the caller, because we’ve run out of attempts.