Sets the string value of a key, ignoring its type. The key is created if it doesn’t exist.
SET key value
[NX | XX]
[GET] [EX
seconds | PX
milliseconds | EXAT
unix-time-seconds | PXAT
unix-time-milliseconds |
KEEPTTL]
Set key to hold the string value. If
key already holds a value, it is overwritten, regardless of
its type. Any previous time to live associated with the key is discarded
on successful SET operation.
The SET command supports a set of options that modify
its behavior:
EX seconds – Set the specified expire time, in
seconds (a positive integer).PX milliseconds – Set the specified expire
time, in milliseconds (a positive integer).EXAT timestamp-seconds – Set the specified
Unix time at which the key will expire, in seconds (a positive
integer).PXAT timestamp-milliseconds – Set the
specified Unix time at which the key will expire, in milliseconds (a
positive integer).NX – Only set the key if it does not already
exist.XX – Only set the key if it already exists.KEEPTTL – Retain the time to live associated with the
key.GET – Return the old string stored at key, or nil if
key did not exist. An error is returned and SET aborted if
the value stored at key is not a string.Note: Since the SET command options can replace
SETNX, SETEX, PSETEX,
GETSET, it is possible that in future versions of Valkey
these commands will be deprecated and finally removed.
Any of the following:
Nil reply:
GET not given: Operation was aborted (conflict with one of
the XX/NX options).
Simple string
reply: OK. GET not given: The key was
set.
Nil reply:
GET given: The key didn’t exist before the
SET.
Bulk string
reply: GET given: The previous value of the
key.
Any of the following:
Null reply:
GET not given: Operation was aborted (conflict with one of
the XX/NX options).
Simple string
reply: OK. GET not given: The key was
set.
Null reply:
GET given: The key didn’t exist before the
SET.
Bulk string
reply: GET given: The previous value of the
key.
O(1)
@slow @string @write
127.0.0.1:6379> SET mykey "Hello"
OK
127.0.0.1:6379> GET mykey
"Hello"
127.0.0.1:6379>
127.0.0.1:6379> SET anotherkey "will expire in a minute" EX 60
OK
Note: The following pattern is discouraged in favor of the Redlock algorithm which is only a bit more complex to implement, but offers better guarantees and is fault tolerant.
The command
SET resource-name anystring NX EX max-lock-time is a simple
way to implement a locking system with Valkey.
A client can acquire the lock if the above command returns
OK (or retry after some time if the command returns Nil),
and remove the lock just using DEL.
The lock will be auto-released after the expire time is reached.
It is possible to make this system more robust modifying the unlock schema as follows:
DEL, send a script
that only removes the key if the value matches.This avoids that a client will try to release the lock after the expire time deleting the key created by another client that acquired the lock later.
An example of unlock script would be similar to the following:
if server.call("get",KEYS[1]) == ARGV[1]
then
return server.call("del",KEYS[1])
else
return 0
end
The script should be called with
EVAL ...script... 1 resource-name token-value
EX, PX, NX
and XX options.KEEPTTL option.GET, EXAT and
PXAT option.NX and GET options to
be used together.APPEND, DECR, DECRBY, GET, GETDEL, GETEX, GETRANGE, INCR, INCRBY, INCRBYFLOAT, LCS, MGET, MSET, MSETNX, SETRANGE, STRLEN.