1

I have just started looking at ss and redis. i am using microsoft redis implementation. with compression turned on, the dump.rdb is growing too fast.

I would like to save per second process stats. example object.

public class PerfData
{
    public long Id { get; set; }    
    public DateTime TimeStamp { get; set; }
    public string ProcessName { get; set; }
    public int ProcessId { get; set; }
    public TimeSpan TotalProcessorTime { get; set; }
    public TimeSpan UserProcessorTime { get; set; }
    public TimeSpan PrivilegedProcessorTime { get; set; }
    public float ProcessorTime { get; set; }
    public float WorkingSet { get; set; }
}

i have seen suggestions to compress on client. does it mean i need to convert the object to something like this?

public class PerfData
{
    public long Id { get; set; }    
    public DateTime TimeStamp { get; set; }
    public byte[] CompressedJson{get;set;}
}

appreciate any suggestion and correction. thanks!

1 Answer 1

1

The base most class in ServiceStack's Redis Client is the RedisNativeClient where all operations work on byte[]. The RedisClient is a subclass of RedisNativeClient so you can cast to get the lower-level API.

You would need to compress your value which will end up as a byte[] that you can persist directly into redis. You would need to do the reverse to get it back out again, e.g. retrieve the raw byte[] values and uncompress it.

ServiceStack's Redis client already has dependency on ServiceStack.Common which contains convenient Stream Extensions to Compress/UnCompress data.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.