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Log in to the command line via SSH as the ROOT user and run the following commands line-by-line.

yum groupinstall 'Development Tools'
yum install tcl wget
wget http://download.redis.io/redis-stable.tar.gz
tar xvzf redis-stable.tar.gz
cd redis-stable/
make distclean
make
make test
make install
cd utils/
./install_server.sh

This will allow REDIS to use more memory than it has been allocated by Plesk if required

echo "vm.overcommit_memory = 1" >>  /etc/sysctl.conf  && sysctl  -p

Disable transparant_hugepage

echo never > /sys/kernel/mm/transparent_hugepage/enabled

Start and test your Redis service

systemctl start redis_6379
systemctl status redis_6379

(credits)

Check if redis is working (should reply with PONG)

redis-cli ping

Configure Redis to bind only on localhost for obvious security reasons by editing /etc/redis/6379.conf, uncommenting line 57 (bind 127.0.0.1 ::1)

vi /etc/redis/6379.conf
(edit and save)
systemctl restart redis_6379

Install EPEL (this is for CentOS 7, do hostnamectl to verify your version) then php-pecl-redis

yum install https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/epel-release-latest-7.noarch.rpm
yum install php-pecl-redis

Update PECL channels

pecl channel-update pecl.php.net

Install php-devel package for your desired PHP version (here I am going with PHP 7.2)

yum install plesk-php72-devel

Finally install redis in PHP

/opt/plesk/php/7.2/bin/pecl install redis

Plesk should already have "extension=redis.so" enabled inside /etc/php.d/redis.ini

You can start using redis with phpredis!

Now, if you use WordPress with the plugin Redis Object Cache you should see in diagnostic that you are using at least PhpRedis (v5.0.2) instead of the obsolete v.3 coming with default Plesk!

Enjoy

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