Follow the steps below to install Redis
Step 1: Prerequisites
System running Ubuntu
Access Terminal Command line
Sudo or root privileges on local or remote machines
Step 2: Install Redis
Redis packages are available under the default apt repository for the installation of Redis on an Ubuntu VPS.
Start by updating the packages to the latest version. Run the following command:
- sudo apt update
Install Redis using the following command.
- sudo apt install redis-server
Once the installation is completed, you can check the version of Redis using the following command.
redis-server -v
Step 3: Configure Redis
Redis can start without a configuration file using a built-in default configuration. Aim to make Any extra parameter exchange, you can use ict configuration file: /etc/redis/redis.conf. Edit the Redis configuration file in a text editor to make changes:
- sudo nano /etc/redis/redis.conf
Configure Memory
Update the following values in the Redis configuration file. You can use its configuration file /etc/redis/redis.conf.
- maxmemory 256mb
- maxmemory-policy allkeys-lru
Configure supervised
For Ubuntu, we can safely select the systemd as the supervised so that Redis can interact with your supervision tree. You can use its configuration file /etc/redis/redis.conf.
Supervised systemd
Binding to localhost
By default, the Redis server doesn’t accept remote connections. You can connect to Redis only from 127.0.0.1 (localhost) – the machine where Redis is running.
If you are using a single server setup where the client connecting to the database is also running on the same host, you should not enable remote access. You can use its configuration file /etc/redis/redis.conf.
- bind 127.0.0.1 ::1
Verify redis is listening on all interfaces on port 6379. Run the following command:
- ss -an | grep 6379
Configure Password
Configuring a Redis password enables one of its two built-in security features – the auth command, which requires clients to authenticate to access the database. You can use its configuration file /etc/redis/redis.conf.
- requirepass Bada$$320
Restart Redis for the changes to take effect.
- sudo systemctl restart redis-server
Step 4: Install PHP Extension (Optional)
Next, if you need to use Redis with a PHP application, you need to install Redis PHP extension on your Ubuntu system. To install the Redis PHP extension, type:
- sudo apt install php-redis