= redis_pubsub :type: input :status: stable :categories: ["Services"] //// THIS FILE IS AUTOGENERATED! To make changes, edit the corresponding source file under: https://github.com/redpanda-data/connect/tree/main/internal/impl/. And: https://github.com/redpanda-data/connect/tree/main/cmd/tools/docs_gen/templates/plugin.adoc.tmpl //// // © 2024 Redpanda Data Inc. component_type_dropdown::[] Consume from a Redis publish/subscribe channel using either the SUBSCRIBE or PSUBSCRIBE commands. [tabs] ====== Common:: + -- ```yml # Common config fields, showing default values input: label: "" redis_pubsub: url: redis://:6379 # No default (required) channels: [] # No default (required) use_patterns: false auto_replay_nacks: true ``` -- Advanced:: + -- ```yml # All config fields, showing default values input: label: "" redis_pubsub: url: redis://:6379 # No default (required) kind: simple master: "" tls: enabled: false skip_cert_verify: false enable_renegotiation: false root_cas: "" root_cas_file: "" client_certs: [] channels: [] # No default (required) use_patterns: false auto_replay_nacks: true ``` -- ====== In order to subscribe to channels using the `PSUBSCRIBE` command set the field `use_patterns` to `true`, then you can include glob-style patterns in your channel names. For example: - `h?llo` subscribes to hello, hallo and hxllo - `h*llo` subscribes to hllo and heeeello - `h[ae]llo` subscribes to hello and hallo, but not hillo Use `\` to escape special characters if you want to match them verbatim. == Fields === `url` The URL of the target Redis server. Database is optional and is supplied as the URL path. *Type*: `string` ```yml # Examples url: redis://:6379 url: redis://localhost:6379 url: redis://foousername:foopassword@redisplace:6379 url: redis://:foopassword@redisplace:6379 url: redis://localhost:6379/1 url: redis://localhost:6379/1,redis://localhost:6380/1 ``` === `kind` Specifies a simple, cluster-aware, or failover-aware redis client. *Type*: `string` *Default*: `"simple"` Options: `simple` , `cluster` , `failover` . === `master` Name of the redis master when `kind` is `failover` *Type*: `string` *Default*: `""` ```yml # Examples master: mymaster ``` === `tls` Custom TLS settings can be used to override system defaults. **Troubleshooting** Some cloud hosted instances of Redis (such as Azure Cache) might need some hand holding in order to establish stable connections. Unfortunately, it is often the case that TLS issues will manifest as generic error messages such as "i/o timeout". If you're using TLS and are seeing connectivity problems consider setting `enable_renegotiation` to `true`, and ensuring that the server supports at least TLS version 1.2. *Type*: `object` === `tls.enabled` Whether custom TLS settings are enabled. *Type*: `bool` *Default*: `false` === `tls.skip_cert_verify` Whether to skip server side certificate verification. *Type*: `bool` *Default*: `false` === `tls.enable_renegotiation` Whether to allow the remote server to repeatedly request renegotiation. Enable this option if you're seeing the error message `local error: tls: no renegotiation`. *Type*: `bool` *Default*: `false` Requires version 3.45.0 or newer === `tls.root_cas` An optional root certificate authority to use. This is a string, representing a certificate chain from the parent trusted root certificate, to possible intermediate signing certificates, to the host certificate. [CAUTION] ==== This field contains sensitive information that usually shouldn't be added to a config directly, read our xref:configuration:secrets.adoc[secrets page for more info]. ==== *Type*: `string` *Default*: `""` ```yml # Examples root_cas: |- -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- ... -----END CERTIFICATE----- ``` === `tls.root_cas_file` An optional path of a root certificate authority file to use. This is a file, often with a .pem extension, containing a certificate chain from the parent trusted root certificate, to possible intermediate signing certificates, to the host certificate. *Type*: `string` *Default*: `""` ```yml # Examples root_cas_file: ./root_cas.pem ``` === `tls.client_certs` A list of client certificates to use. For each certificate either the fields `cert` and `key`, or `cert_file` and `key_file` should be specified, but not both. *Type*: `array` *Default*: `[]` ```yml # Examples client_certs: - cert: foo key: bar client_certs: - cert_file: ./example.pem key_file: ./example.key ``` === `tls.client_certs[].cert` A plain text certificate to use. *Type*: `string` *Default*: `""` === `tls.client_certs[].key` A plain text certificate key to use. [CAUTION] ==== This field contains sensitive information that usually shouldn't be added to a config directly, read our xref:configuration:secrets.adoc[secrets page for more info]. ==== *Type*: `string` *Default*: `""` === `tls.client_certs[].cert_file` The path of a certificate to use. *Type*: `string` *Default*: `""` === `tls.client_certs[].key_file` The path of a certificate key to use. *Type*: `string` *Default*: `""` === `tls.client_certs[].password` A plain text password for when the private key is password encrypted in PKCS#1 or PKCS#8 format. The obsolete `pbeWithMD5AndDES-CBC` algorithm is not supported for the PKCS#8 format. Because the obsolete pbeWithMD5AndDES-CBC algorithm does not authenticate the ciphertext, it is vulnerable to padding oracle attacks that can let an attacker recover the plaintext. [CAUTION] ==== This field contains sensitive information that usually shouldn't be added to a config directly, read our xref:configuration:secrets.adoc[secrets page for more info]. ==== *Type*: `string` *Default*: `""` ```yml # Examples password: foo password: ${KEY_PASSWORD} ``` === `channels` A list of channels to consume from. *Type*: `array` === `use_patterns` Whether to use the PSUBSCRIBE command, allowing for glob-style patterns within target channel names. *Type*: `bool` *Default*: `false` === `auto_replay_nacks` Whether messages that are rejected (nacked) at the output level should be automatically replayed indefinitely, eventually resulting in back pressure if the cause of the rejections is persistent. If set to `false` these messages will instead be deleted. Disabling auto replays can greatly improve memory efficiency of high throughput streams as the original shape of the data can be discarded immediately upon consumption and mutation. *Type*: `bool` *Default*: `true`