I am aware of redis-cli, and the info and config commands. However, they do not have anything that states the size of the current database. How could I figure this out?
Using the INFO
command. full details here: http://redis.io/commands/info
sample output:
redis-cli
redis 127.0.0.1:6379> info
redis_version:2.4.11
redis_git_sha1:00000000
redis_git_dirty:0
arch_bits:64
multiplexing_api:kqueue
gcc_version:4.2.1
process_id:300
uptime_in_seconds:1389779
uptime_in_days:16
lru_clock:1854465
used_cpu_sys:59.86
used_cpu_user:73.02
used_cpu_sys_children:0.15
used_cpu_user_children:0.11
connected_clients:1
connected_slaves:0
client_longest_output_list:0
client_biggest_input_buf:0
blocked_clients:0
used_memory:1329424
used_memory_human:1.27M
used_memory_rss:2285568
used_memory_peak:1595680
used_memory_peak_human:1.52M
mem_fragmentation_ratio:1.72
mem_allocator:libc
loading:0
aof_enabled:0
changes_since_last_save:0
bgsave_in_progress:0
last_save_time:1360719404
bgrewriteaof_in_progress:0
total_connections_received:221
total_commands_processed:29926
expired_keys:2
evicted_keys:0
keyspace_hits:1678
keyspace_misses:3
pubsub_channels:0
pubsub_patterns:0
latest_fork_usec:379
vm_enabled:0
role:master
db0:keys=23,expires=0
You can use the following command to list the databases for which some keys are defined:
INFO keyspace
# Keyspace
db0:keys=6002,expires=0,avg_ttl=0
db9:keys=20953296,expires=0,avg_ttl=0
db10:keys=1,expires=0,avg_ttl=0
You can also use Select 0
or Select 1
or any db which you want to check with the current size. After selection of db Use dbsize
command to display the size of selected db.
Select 9
OK
dbsize
(integer) 20953296
for listing overall information of your redis type info
and to view only memory just type
INFO Memory
# Memory
used_memory:1259920
used_memory_human:1.20M
used_memory_rss:1227000
used_memory_peak:2406152
used_memory_peak_human:2.29M
used_memory_lua:36864
mem_fragmentation_ratio:0.97
mem_allocator:dlmalloc-2.8
redis-cli info memory | grep 'used_memory.*human';
Sample output:
used_memory_human:20.66M
used_memory_rss_human:24.26M
used_memory_peak_human:46.14M
used_memory_lua_human:37.00K
used_memory_scripts_human:0B
You can also do this with an one line command:
redis-cli -p 6379 -a password info| egrep "used_memory_human|total_system_memory_human"
This will display the total memory used by Redis and the total RAM on the server.
Use the dbsize
command to get the number of keys in the database
From the cli, run INFO
and look for used_memory_human
field.
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