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redis/agent-skills880 installs

redis-connections

Redis client and connection guidance covering connection pooling, multiplexing, pipelining, client-side caching with RESP3, avoiding slow commands (KEYS, SMEMBERS, HGETALL), and tuning socket timeouts. Use when configuring a Redis client (redis-py, Jedis, Lettuce, NRedisStack), batching commands for throughput, eliminating per-request connection creation, iterating large keyspaces with SCAN, enabling client-side caching for read-heavy workloads, or setting connect and read timeouts.

How do I install this agent skill?

npx skills add https://github.com/redis/agent-skills --skill redis-connections
view source ↗

Is this agent skill safe to install?

  • Gen Agent Trust Hubpass

    This skill provides best practice guidance for Redis client connections, including pooling, pipelining, and timeout configuration. It contains no executable code or malicious instructions and originates from a trusted source.

  • Socketpass

    No alerts

  • Snykpass

    Risk: LOW · No issues

What does this agent skill do?

Redis Connections

Client-side guidance for talking to Redis efficiently: how to share connections, how to batch commands, which commands not to call in production, when to turn on client-side caching, and how to set timeouts that fail fast without breaking healthy traffic.

When to apply

  • Creating or reviewing a Redis client setup (redis-py, Jedis, Lettuce, go-redis, NRedisStack).
  • Making many small Redis calls and wondering where the latency is going.
  • Iterating large keyspaces, sets, hashes, or lists.
  • Enabling client-side caching for hot keys.
  • Tuning connect / read / write timeouts.

1. Pool or multiplex — never one connection per request

The single biggest mistake in Redis client code is opening a new TCP connection for every operation. Always either:

  • Pool — keep N persistent connections that the application leases per call (redis-py ConnectionPool, Jedis JedisPooled, go-redis client).
  • Multiplex — share a single connection across all requests (Lettuce, NRedisStack).
StyleUsed byNote
Poolredis-py, Jedis, go-redisEach lease blocks if pool exhausted; size the pool to your concurrency
MultiplexLettuce, NRedisStackSingle connection; cannot carry blocking commands like BLPOP
# redis-py — connection pool
pool = redis.ConnectionPool(host="localhost", port=6379, max_connections=50)
r = redis.Redis(connection_pool=pool)

See references/pooling.md for Python + Java + Lettuce examples.

2. Pipeline bulk work

For N commands that don't depend on each other's results, send them as a single batch with pipelining. One round-trip instead of N.

pipe = redis.pipeline()
for user_id in user_ids:
    pipe.get(f"user:{user_id}")
results = pipe.execute()

Use non-transactional pipelining for performance, and pipeline(transaction=True) only when you actually need atomicity (see redis-core's transactions guidance).

See references/pipelining.md.

3. Avoid commands that scan everything

Anything that walks the whole keyspace (or a whole large container) blocks the server. Use incremental variants instead.

Don'tUse
KEYS patternSCAN cursor loop
SMEMBERS large_setSSCAN
HGETALL large_hashHSCAN
LRANGE 0 -1 on a huge listPaginate (LRANGE 0 100)
cursor = 0
while True:
    cursor, keys = redis.scan(cursor, match="user:*", count=100)
    for key in keys:
        process(key)
    if cursor == 0:
        break

Blocking commands (BLPOP, BRPOP, BLMOVE) are different — they intentionally wait for data and are fine for queue consumers, but always pass a timeout, and don't issue them on a multiplexed connection (Lettuce, NRedisStack).

See references/blocking.md.

4. Client-side caching for hot keys

For data that's read often and written rarely (config, feature flags, sessions on every request), enable RESP3 client-side caching. The client keeps a local copy and the server invalidates it on writes — saving the round trip for hot reads.

client = redis.Redis(
    host="localhost",
    port=6379,
    protocol=3,                                    # RESP3 is required
    cache_config=redis.CacheConfig(max_size=1000),
)

Skip it for write-heavy workloads or data that changes constantly — the invalidation traffic overruns the savings.

See references/client-cache.md.

5. Set explicit timeouts

Defaults vary by client and may be too generous. Pick values that match the application's failure model:

r = redis.Redis(
    host="localhost",
    socket_connect_timeout=2.0,   # fail fast on dead nodes
    socket_timeout=5.0,           # tune to expected operation time
    retry_on_timeout=True,
)

Rule of thumb: connect timeout shorter than read/write timeout. Tight timeouts + retry-on-timeout for latency-sensitive paths; longer timeouts for batch jobs.

See references/timeouts.md.

References

Add the canonical catalog link to the repository README so users can inspect current installs and available audits. The publishing guide covers the complete discovery path.

<a href="https://skillzs.dev/skills/redis/agent-skills/redis-connections">View redis-connections on skillZs</a>