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Redis

60K
46K
+ 1
3.9K
Rook

52
103
+ 1
4
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Pros of Redis
Pros of Rook
  • 887
    Performance
  • 542
    Super fast
  • 514
    Ease of use
  • 444
    In-memory cache
  • 324
    Advanced key-value cache
  • 194
    Open source
  • 182
    Easy to deploy
  • 165
    Stable
  • 156
    Free
  • 121
    Fast
  • 42
    High-Performance
  • 40
    High Availability
  • 35
    Data Structures
  • 32
    Very Scalable
  • 24
    Replication
  • 23
    Pub/Sub
  • 22
    Great community
  • 19
    "NoSQL" key-value data store
  • 16
    Hashes
  • 13
    Sets
  • 11
    Sorted Sets
  • 10
    Lists
  • 10
    NoSQL
  • 9
    Async replication
  • 9
    BSD licensed
  • 8
    Integrates super easy with Sidekiq for Rails background
  • 8
    Bitmaps
  • 7
    Open Source
  • 7
    Keys with a limited time-to-live
  • 6
    Lua scripting
  • 6
    Strings
  • 5
    Awesomeness for Free
  • 5
    Hyperloglogs
  • 4
    Runs server side LUA
  • 4
    Transactions
  • 4
    Networked
  • 4
    Outstanding performance
  • 4
    Feature Rich
  • 4
    Written in ANSI C
  • 4
    LRU eviction of keys
  • 3
    Data structure server
  • 3
    Performance & ease of use
  • 2
    Temporarily kept on disk
  • 2
    Dont save data if no subscribers are found
  • 2
    Automatic failover
  • 2
    Easy to use
  • 2
    Scalable
  • 2
    Channels concept
  • 2
    Object [key/value] size each 500 MB
  • 2
    Existing Laravel Integration
  • 2
    Simple
  • 3
    Minio Integration
  • 1
    Open Source

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Cons of Redis
Cons of Rook
  • 15
    Cannot query objects directly
  • 3
    No secondary indexes for non-numeric data types
  • 1
    No WAL
  • 2
    Ceph is difficult
  • 1
    Slow

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What is Redis?

Redis is an open source (BSD licensed), in-memory data structure store, used as a database, cache, and message broker. Redis provides data structures such as strings, hashes, lists, sets, sorted sets with range queries, bitmaps, hyperloglogs, geospatial indexes, and streams.

What is Rook?

It is an open source cloud-native storage orchestrator for Kubernetes, providing the platform, framework, and support for a diverse set of storage solutions to natively integrate with cloud-native environments.

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What companies use Redis?
What companies use Rook?
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What tools integrate with Redis?
What tools integrate with Rook?

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What are some alternatives to Redis and Rook?
Memcached
Memcached is an in-memory key-value store for small chunks of arbitrary data (strings, objects) from results of database calls, API calls, or page rendering.
MongoDB
MongoDB stores data in JSON-like documents that can vary in structure, offering a dynamic, flexible schema. MongoDB was also designed for high availability and scalability, with built-in replication and auto-sharding.
RabbitMQ
RabbitMQ gives your applications a common platform to send and receive messages, and your messages a safe place to live until received.
Hazelcast
With its various distributed data structures, distributed caching capabilities, elastic nature, memcache support, integration with Spring and Hibernate and more importantly with so many happy users, Hazelcast is feature-rich, enterprise-ready and developer-friendly in-memory data grid solution.
Cassandra
Partitioning means that Cassandra can distribute your data across multiple machines in an application-transparent matter. Cassandra will automatically repartition as machines are added and removed from the cluster. Row store means that like relational databases, Cassandra organizes data by rows and columns. The Cassandra Query Language (CQL) is a close relative of SQL.
See all alternatives