This tutorial will walk you through installing Redis OM, creating your first model, and using it to save and validate data.
Redis OM requires Python version 3.8 or above and a Redis instance to connect to.
Make sure you are running Python version 3.8 or higher:
python --version
Python 3.8.0
If you don't have Python installed, you can download it from Python.org, use pyenv, or install Python with your operating system's package manager.
This library requires redis-py version 4.2.0 or higher.
Redis OM saves data in Redis, so you will need Redis installed and running to complete this tutorial.
We recommend the redis-stack image because it includes Redis capabilities that this library uses to provide extra features. Later sections of this guide will provide more detail about these features.
You can also use the official Redis Docker image, which is hosted on Docker Hub. However this does not include the Search and JSON modules required to store JSON models and use the find
query interface.
NOTE: We'll talk about how to actually start Redis with Docker when we discuss running Redis later in this guide.
The latest version of Redis is available from Redis.io. You can also install Redis with your operating system's package manager.
NOTE: This tutorial will guide you through starting Redis locally, but the instructions will also work if Redis is running on a remote server.
Redis doesn't run directly on Windows, but you can use Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) to run Redis. See our video on YouTube for a walk-through.
Windows users can also use the Docker image mentioned previously.
Redis OM relies on the RediSearch and RedisJSON Redis modules to support rich queries and embedded models.
You don't need these Redis modules to use Redis OM's data modeling, validation, and persistence features, but we recommend them to get the most out of Redis OM.
The easiest way to run these Redis modules during local development is to use the redis-stack Docker image.
For other installation methods, follow the "Quick Start" guides on both modules' home pages.
Before you get started with Redis OM, make sure you start Redis.
The command to start Redis will depend on how you installed it.
If you installed Redis using apt
, start it with the systemctl
command:
$ sudo systemctl restart redis.service
Otherwise, you can start the server manually:
$ redis-server start
$ brew services start redis
The command to start Redis with Docker depends on the image you've chosen to use.
TIP: The -d
option in these examples runs Redis in the background, while -p 6379:6379
makes Redis reachable at port 6379 on your localhost.
$ docker run -d -p 6379:6379 redislabs/redismod
$ docker run -d -p 6379:6379 redis
The recommended way to install Redis OM is with Poetry. You can install Redis OM using Poetry with the following command:
$ poetry add redis-om
If you're using Pipenv, the command is:
$ pipenv install redis-om
Finally, you can install Redis OM with pip
by running the following command:
$ pip install redis-om
TIP: If you aren't using Poetry or Pipenv and are instead installing directly with pip
, we recommend that you install Redis OM in a virtual environment (AKA, a virtualenv). If you aren't familiar with this concept, see Dan Bader's video and transcript.
We're almost ready to create a Redis OM model! But first, we need to make sure that Redis OM knows how to connect to Redis.
By default, Redis OM tries to connect to Redis on your localhost at port 6379. Most local install methods will result in Redis running at this location, in which case you don't need to do anything special.
However, if you configured Redis to run on a different port, or if you're using a remote Redis server, you'll need to set the REDIS_OM_URL
environment variable.
The REDIS_OM_URL
environment variable follows the redis-py URL format:
redis://[[username]:[password]]@localhost:6379/[database number]
The default connection is equivalent to the following REDIS_OM_URL
environment variable:
redis://@localhost:6379
TIP: Redis databases are numbered, and the default is 0. You can leave off the database number to use the default database.
Note: Indexing only works for data stored in Redis logical database 0. If you are using a different database number when connecting to Redis, you can expect the code to raise a MigrationError
when you run the migrator.
Other supported prefixes include "rediss" for SSL connections and "unix" for Unix domain sockets:
rediss://[[username]:[password]]@localhost:6379/0
unix://[[username]:[password]]@/path/to/socket.sock?db=0
In this tutorial, we'll create a Customer
model that validates and saves data. Let's start with a basic definition of the model. We'll add features as we go along.
import datetime
from redis_om import HashModel
class Customer(HashModel):
first_name: str
last_name: str
email: str
join_date: datetime.date
age: int
bio: str
There are a few details to note:
- Our
Customer
model extends theHashModel
class. This means that it will be saved to Redis as a hash. The other model class that Redis OM provides isJsonModel
, which we'll discuss later. - We've specified the model's fields using Python type annotations.
Let's dig into the HashModel
class and type annotations a bit more.
When you subclass HashModel
, your subclass is both a Redis OM model, with methods for saving data to Redis, and a Pydantic model.
This means that you can use Pydantic field validations with your Redis OM models, which we'll cover later, when we talk about validation. But this also means you can use Redis OM models anywhere you would use a Pydantic model, like in your FastAPI applications. 🤯
The type annotations you add to your model fields are used for a few purposes:
- Validating data with Pydantic validators
- Serializing data Redis
- Deserializing data from Redis
We'll see examples of these throughout the course of this tutorial.
An important detail about the HashModel
class is that it does not support list
, set
, or mapping (like dict
) types. This is because Redis hashes cannot contain lists, sets, or other hashes.
If you want to model fields with a list, set, or mapping type, or another model, you'll need to use the JsonModel
class, which can support these types, as well as embedded models.
Let's see what creating a model object looks like:
import datetime
from redis_om import HashModel
class Customer(HashModel):
first_name: str
last_name: str
email: str
join_date: datetime.date
age: int
bio: str
andrew = Customer(
first_name="Andrew",
last_name="Brookins",
email="andrew.brookins@example.com",
join_date=datetime.date.today(),
age=38,
bio="Python developer, works at Redis, Inc."
)
What would happen if we left out one of these fields, like bio
?
import datetime
from redis_om import HashModel
from pydantic import ValidationError
class Customer(HashModel):
first_name: str
last_name: str
email: str
join_date: datetime.date
age: int
bio: str
# All fields are required because none of the fields
# are marked `Optional`, so we get a validation error:
try:
Customer(
first_name="Andrew",
last_name="Brookins",
email="andrew.brookins@example.com",
join_date=datetime.date.today(),
age=38 # <- We didn't pass in a bio!
)
except ValidationError as e:
print(e)
"""
ValidationError: 1 validation error for Customer
bio
field required (type=value_error.missing)
"""
If we want the bio
field to be optional, we need to change the type annotation to use Optional
.
import datetime
from typing import Optional
from redis_om import HashModel
class Customer(HashModel):
first_name: str
last_name: str
email: str
join_date: datetime.date
age: int
bio: Optional[str] # <- Now, bio is an Optional[str]
Now we can create Customer
objects with or without the bio
field.
Fields can have default values. You set them by assigning a value to a field.
import datetime
from typing import Optional
from redis_om import HashModel
class Customer(HashModel):
first_name: str
last_name: str
email: str
join_date: datetime.date
age: int
bio: Optional[str] = "Super dope" # <- We added a default here
Now, if we create a Customer
object without a bio
field, it will use the default value.
import datetime
from typing import Optional
from redis_om import HashModel
class Customer(HashModel):
first_name: str
last_name: str
email: str
join_date: datetime.date
age: int
bio: Optional[str] = "Super dope"
andrew = Customer(
first_name="Andrew",
last_name="Brookins",
email="andrew.brookins@example.com",
join_date=datetime.date.today(),
age=38) # <- Notice, we didn't give a bio!
print(andrew.bio) # <- So we got the default value.
# > 'Super Dope'
The model will then save this default value to Redis the next time you call save()
.
Models generate a globally unique primary key automatically without needing to talk to Redis.
import datetime
from typing import Optional
from redis_om import HashModel
class Customer(HashModel):
first_name: str
last_name: str
email: str
join_date: datetime.date
age: int
bio: Optional[str] = "Super dope"
andrew = Customer(
first_name="Andrew",
last_name="Brookins",
email="andrew.brookins@example.com",
join_date=datetime.date.today(),
age=38)
print(andrew.pk)
# > '01FJM6PH661HCNNRC884H6K30C'
The ID is available before you save the model.
The default ID generation function creates ULIDs, though you can change the function that generates the primary key for models if you'd like to use a different kind of primary key.
Redis OM uses Pydantic to validate data based on the type annotations you assign to fields in a model class.
This validation ensures that fields like first_name
, which the Customer
model marked as a str
, are always strings. But every Redis OM model is also a Pydantic model, so you can use Pydantic validators like EmailStr
, Pattern
, and many more for complex validations!
For example, we defined the join_date
for our Customer
model earlier as a datetime.date
. So, if we try to create a model with a join_date
that isn't a date, we'll get a validation error.
Let's try it now:
import datetime
from typing import Optional
from redis_om import HashModel
from pydantic import ValidationError
class Customer(HashModel):
first_name: str
last_name: str
email: str
join_date: datetime.date
age: int
bio: Optional[str] = "Super dope"
try:
Customer(
first_name="Andrew",
last_name="Brookins",
email="a@example.com",
join_date="not a date!", # <- The problem line!
age=38
)
except ValidationError as e:
print(e)
"""
pydantic.error_wrappers.ValidationError: 1 validation error for Customer
join_date
invalid date format (type=value_error.date)
"""
You might wonder what qualifies as a "date" in our last validation example. By default, Redis OM will try to coerce input values to the correct type. That means we can pass a date string for join_date
instead of a date
object:
import datetime
from redis_om import HashModel
class Customer(HashModel):
first_name: str
last_name: str
email: str
join_date: datetime.date
age: int
andrew = Customer(
first_name="Andrew",
last_name="Brookins",
email="a@example.com",
join_date="2020-01-02", # <- We're passing a YYYY-MM-DD date string now
age=38
)
print(andrew.join_date)
# > 2021-11-02
type(andrew.join_date)
# > datetime.date # The model parsed the string automatically!
This ability to combine parsing (in this case, a date string) with validation can save you a lot of work.
However, you can turn off coercion -- check the next section on using strict validation.
You can turn on strict validation to reject values for a field unless they match the exact type of the model's type annotations.
You do this by changing a field's type annotation to use one of the "strict" types provided by Pydantic.
Redis OM supports all of Pydantic's strict types: StrictStr
, StrictBytes
, StrictInt
, StrictFloat
, and StrictBool
.
If we wanted to make sure that the age
field only accepts integers and doesn't try to parse a string containing an integer, like "1", we'd use the StrictInt
class.
import datetime
from typing import Optional
from pydantic import StrictInt, ValidationError
from redis_om import HashModel
class Customer(HashModel):
first_name: str
last_name: str
email: str
join_date: datetime.date
age: StrictInt # <- Instead of int, we use StrictInt
bio: Optional[str]
# Now if we use a string instead of an integer for `age`,
# we get a validation error:
try:
Customer(
first_name="Andrew",
last_name="Brookins",
email="a@example.com",
join_date="2020-01-02",
age="38" # <- Age as a string shouldn't work now!
)
except ValidationError as e:
print(e)
"""
pydantic.error_wrappers.ValidationError: 1 validation error for Customer
age
Value is not a valid integer (type=type_error.integer)
"""
Pydantic doesn't include a StrictDate
class, but we can create our own. In this example, we create a StrictDate
type that we'll use to validate that join_date
is a datetime.date
object.
import datetime
from typing import Optional
from pydantic import ValidationError
from redis_om import HashModel
class StrictDate(datetime.date):
@classmethod
def __get_validators__(cls) -> 'CallableGenerator':
yield cls.validate
@classmethod
def validate(cls, value: datetime.date, **kwargs) -> datetime.date:
if not isinstance(value, datetime.date):
raise ValueError("Value must be a datetime.date object")
return value
class Customer(HashModel):
first_name: str
last_name: str
email: str
join_date: StrictDate
age: int
bio: Optional[str]
# Now if we use a string instead of a date object for `join_date`,
# we get a validation error:
try:
Customer(
first_name="Andrew",
last_name="Brookins",
email="a@example.com",
join_date="2020-01-02", # <- A string shouldn't work now!
age="38"
)
except ValidationError as e:
print(e)
"""
pydantic.error_wrappers.ValidationError: 1 validation error for Customer
join_date
Value must be a datetime.date object (type=value_error)
"""
We can save the model to Redis by calling save()
:
import datetime
from redis_om import HashModel
class Customer(HashModel):
first_name: str
last_name: str
email: str
join_date: datetime.date
age: int
andrew = Customer(
first_name="Andrew",
last_name="Brookins",
email="andrew.brookins@example.com",
join_date=datetime.date.today(),
age=38)
andrew.save()
We can expire an instance of a model using expire
, and passing it the number of seconds after which we want the instance to expire in Redis:
# Expire Andrew in 2 minutes (120 seconds)
andrew.expire(120)
You can view the data stored in Redis for any Redis OM model.
First, get the key of a model instance you want to inspect. The key()
method will give you the exact Redis key used to store the model.
NOTE: The naming of this method may be confusing. This is not the primary key, but is instead the Redis key for this model. For this reason, the method name may change.
In this example, we're looking at the key created for the Customer
model we've been building:
import datetime
from typing import Optional
from redis_om import HashModel
class Customer(HashModel):
first_name: str
last_name: str
email: str
join_date: datetime.date
age: int
bio: Optional[str] = "Super dope"
andrew = Customer(
first_name="Andrew",
last_name="Brookins",
email="andrew.brookins@example.com",
join_date=datetime.date.today(),
age=38)
andrew.save()
andrew.key()
# > 'mymodel.Customer:01FKGX1DFEV9Z2XKF59WQ6DC9T'
With the model's Redis key, you can start redis-cli
and inspect the data stored under that key. Here, we run JSON.GET
command with redis-cli
using the running "redis" container that this project's Docker Compose file defines:
$ docker compose exec -T redis redis-cli HGETALL mymodel.Customer:01FKGX1DFEV9Z2XKF59WQ6DC9r
1) "pk"
2) "01FKGX1DFEV9Z2XKF59WQ6DC9T"
3) "first_name"
4) "Andrew"
5) "last_name"
6) "Brookins"
7) "email"
8) "andrew.brookins@example.com"
9) "join_date"
10) "2021-11-02"
11) "age"
12) "38"
13) "bio"
14) "Super dope"
If you have the primary key of a model, you can call the get()
method on the model class to get the model's data.
import datetime
from typing import Optional
from redis_om import HashModel
class Customer(HashModel):
first_name: str
last_name: str
email: str
join_date: datetime.date
age: int
bio: Optional[str] = "Super dope"
andrew = Customer(
first_name="Andrew",
last_name="Brookins",
email="andrew.brookins@example.com",
join_date=datetime.date.today(),
age=38)
andrew.save()
assert Customer.get(andrew.pk) == andrew
Redis OM comes with a rich query language that allows you to query Redis with Python expressions.
To show how this works, we'll make a small change to the Customer
model we defined earlier. We'll add Field(index=True)
to tell Redis OM that we want to index the last_name
and age
fields:
import datetime
from typing import Optional
from pydantic import EmailStr
from redis_om import (
Field,
HashModel,
Migrator
)
class Customer(HashModel):
first_name: str
last_name: str = Field(index=True)
email: EmailStr
join_date: datetime.date
age: int = Field(index=True)
bio: Optional[str]
# Now, if we use this model with a Redis deployment that has the
# RediSearch module installed, we can run queries like the following.
# Before running queries, we need to run migrations to set up the
# indexes that Redis OM will use. You can also use the `migrate`
# CLI tool for this!
Migrator().run()
# Find all customers with the last name "Brookins"
Customer.find(Customer.last_name == "Brookins").all()
# Find all customers that do NOT have the last name "Brookins"
Customer.find(Customer.last_name != "Brookins").all()
# Find all customers whose last name is "Brookins" OR whose age is
# 100 AND whose last name is "Smith"
Customer.find((Customer.last_name == "Brookins") | (
Customer.age == 100
) & (Customer.last_name == "Smith")).all()
For historical reasons, saving and querying Boolean values is not supported in HashModels
, however in JSON models,
you may store and query Boolean values using the ==
syntax:
from redis_om import (
Field,
JsonModel,
Migrator
)
class Demo(JsonModel):
b: bool = Field(index=True)
Migrator().run()
d = Demo(b=True)
d.save()
res = Demo.find(Demo.b == True)
Sometimes you'll need to run a Redis command directly. Redis OM supports this through the db
method on your model's class. This returns a connected Redis client instance which exposes a function named for each Redis command. For example, let's perform some basic set operations:
from redis_om import HashModel
class Demo(HashModel):
some_field: str
redis_conn = Demo.db()
redis_conn.sadd("myset", "a", "b", "c", "d")
# Prints False
print(redis_conn.sismember("myset", "e"))
# Prints True
print(redis_conn.sismember("myset", "b"))
The parameters expected by each command function are those documented on the command's page on redis.io.
If you don't want to get a Redis connection from a model class, you can also use get_redis_connection
:
from redis_om import get_redis_connection
redis_conn = get_redis_connection()
redis_conn.set("hello", "world")
Now that you know the basics of working with Redis OM, start playing around with it in your project!
If you're a FastAPI user, check out how to integrate Redis OM with FastAPI.