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I was wondering how to disable presistence in redis. There is mention of the possibility of doing this here: http://redis.io/topics/persistence. I mean it in the exact same sense as described there. Any help would be very much appreciated!

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  • I found it surprising, if not annoying, that there's no instructions on the official website on this nor there's a lot of information on internet about this (See that stackoverflow.com/questions/19581059/… has much more votes and is better documented than this). Overall considering that Redis is often used as a non-persistent database.
    – Akronix
    Aug 23, 2018 at 13:51

4 Answers 4

156

To disable all data persistence in Redis do the following in the redis.conf file:

  1. Disable AOF by setting the appendonly configuration directive to no (it is the default value). like this:

    appendonly no
    
  2. Disable RDB snapshotting by commenting all of the save configuration directives (there are 3 that are defined by default) and explicitly disabling saving:

    #save 900 1
    #save 300 10
    #save 60 10000
    save ""
    

After change, make sure you restart Redis to apply them.

Alternatively, you can use the CONFIG SET command to apply these changes during runtime (just make sure you also do a CONFIG REWRITE to persist the changes).

Note: depending on your Redis' version, there are other tweaks that prevent Redis from accessing the disk for replication-related tasks.

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  • 1
    redis> config set auto-aof-rewrite-percentage 0
    – toontong
    Dec 9, 2015 at 13:58
  • 3
    I have configured my Redis to not save data to disk by commenting out the three save directives. I can see that it no longer periodically snapshots the data. However, I am still seeing a .rdb file written to disk whenever I shutdown my server. Could it be created anyway, perhaps due to the failover process?
    – Jolta
    Aug 3, 2017 at 14:02
  • 1
    To actually make this effective, you could use the commands listed here to do it via cli: stackoverflow.com/a/34736871/2904315 Or you could just change the redis.conf file as explained in this answer and then restart the service with: systemctl restart redis
    – Akronix
    Aug 23, 2018 at 13:41
  • 1
    In linux, the redis.conf file located in /etc/redis/redis.conf Aug 9, 2020 at 13:34
  • Also don't forget to delete any existing *.rdb files created by default config. E.g. in my case after commenting save lines, I also had to delete /var/lib/redis/dump.rdb before reboot. Feb 1, 2021 at 8:58
94

If you want to avoid playing with redis.conf (dev/test environments), you can do it through the command line with

redis-server --save "" --appendonly no

(tested with redis server 3.2.6 and 5.0.5)

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  • 3
    Are you sure the --appendonly no is necessary? Isn't it off by default?
    – aleclarson
    Feb 9, 2018 at 1:38
  • 7
    Could be true. But it certainly doesn't hurt to add it there, just to be on the safe side, what we want is to disable all types of persistence ;)
    – Kostis
    Feb 10, 2018 at 2:24
  • hmm, didn't work for me on Windows 10 in WSL (Ubuntu 16) Feb 13, 2019 at 18:19
  • @JamesGentes what's the error. It works in my Fedora 29 with Redis 5.0.3, tested it now. Perhaps you need to pass the arguments in a different way in Windows? What's the Redis version? redis-server --help could perhaps give some insight
    – Kostis
    Feb 13, 2019 at 20:48
  • 1
    Works on version 5.0.5 too.
    – abbas
    Jul 10, 2019 at 11:39
27

As AOF (appendonly) is disabled by default, there is only one thing that is to be done for disabling persistence without redis service restart is to disable save configuration.

For disabling it on runtime and verifying run below commands

Check current save configuration

pawan@devops:~$ redis-cli config get save
1) "save"
2) "900 1 300 10 60 10000"

Same setting will be present in redis.conf file as well

pawan@devops:~$ grep -w 'save' /etc/redis/redis.conf | grep -v '#'
save 900 1
save 300 10
save 60 10000

Disable save configuration

pawan@devops:~$ redis-cli config set save ""
OK

Modify redis.conf file with the new save configuration so that the configuration remains permanent on redis service restarts

root@ip-172-16-3-114:~# redis-cli config rewrite
OK

Confirm the new save configuration

pawan@devops:~$ redis-cli config get save
1) "save"
2) ""

Now if you will scan the redis.conf file for save configuration there won't be any results

pawan@devops:~$ grep -w 'save' /etc/redis/redis.conf | grep -v '#'  
pawan@devops:~$
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For RDB snapshotting you can disable it by using

$ sed -e '/save/ s/^#*/#/' -i /etc/redis/redis.conf && sudo service redis-server restart

It will comment the save lines in redis.conf and restarts the redis-server

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