# Save the DB to disk. # save [ ...] # # Redis will save the DB if the given number of seconds elapsed and it # surpassed the given number of write operations against the DB. # # Snapshotting can be completely disabled with a single empty string argument # as in following example: # # save "" # # Unless specified otherwise, by default Redis will save the DB: # * After 3600 seconds (an hour) if at least 1 change was performed # * After 300 seconds (5 minutes) if at least 100 changes were performed # * After 60 seconds if at least 10000 changes were performed # # You can set these explicitly by uncommenting the following line. # # save 3600 1 300 100 60 10000 save "" port 6379 requirepass 'redis123' maxmemory 256mb appendonly no maxmemory-policy allkeys-lru # Examples: # # bind 192.168.1.100 10.0.0.1 # listens on two specific IPv4 addresses # bind 127.0.0.1 ::1 # listens on loopback IPv4 and IPv6 # bind * -::* # like the default, all available interfaces # # ~~~ WARNING ~~~ If the computer running Redis is directly exposed to the # internet, binding to all the interfaces is dangerous and will expose the # instance to everybody on the internet. So by default we uncomment the # following bind directive, that will force Redis to listen only on the # IPv4 and IPv6 (if available) loopback interface addresses (this means Redis # will only be able to accept client connections from the same host that it is # running on). # # IF YOU ARE SURE YOU WANT YOUR INSTANCE TO LISTEN TO ALL THE INTERFACES # COMMENT OUT THE FOLLOWING LINE. # # You will also need to set a password unless you explicitly disable protected # mode. # ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ bind 127.0.0.1 # Redis supports recording timestamp annotations in the AOF to support restoring # the data from a specific point-in-time. However, using this capability changes # the AOF format in a way that may not be compatible with existing AOF parsers. #aof-timestamp-enabled no # Since version 5 of RDB a CRC64 checksum is placed at the end of the file. # This makes the format more resistant to corruption but there is a performance # hit to pay (around 10%) when saving and loading RDB files, so you can disable it # for maximum performances. # # RDB files created with checksum disabled have a checksum of zero that will # tell the loading code to skip the check. rdbchecksum no # By default protected mode is enabled. You should disable it only if # you are sure you want clients from other hosts to connect to Redis # even if no authentication is configured. protected-mode yes