.. _command-line-interface: ###################### Command Line Interface ###################### .. include:: guide-common.rst.inc FoundationDB comes with a command line interface tool called ``fdbcli``. This document describes basic usage of ``fdbcli`` and the commands it supports. The use of ``fdbcli`` while :doc:`configuring ` and :doc:`administering ` FoundationDB clusters is described in more detail in the documents on those topics and will be referenced as appropriate. .. _cli-invocation: Invocation at the Command Line ============================== You can invoke ``fdbcli`` at the command line simply by typing it. For example:: user@host$ fdbcli Using cluster file `/etc/foundationdb/fdb.cluster'. The database is available. Welcome to the fdbcli. For help, type `help'. fdb> This will result in ``fdbcli`` connecting to the :ref:`default cluster file ` (``/etc/foundationdb/fdb.cluster`` for Linux.) You can also specify a cluster file as an argument to ``fdbcli`` using the ``-C`` option. For further information, see :ref:`specifying-a-cluster-file`. Commands within ``fdbcli`` ========================== The following commands can be issued from within ``fdbcli`` at the internal ``fdb>`` prompt: begin ----- The ``begin`` command begins a new transaction. By default, ``fdbcli`` operates in autocommit mode. All operations are performed in their own transaction and are automatically committed. By explicitly beginning a transaction, successive operations are all performed as part of a single transaction. To commit the transaction, use the ``commit`` command. To discard the transaction, use the ``reset`` command. clear ----- The ``clear`` command clears a key from the database. Its syntax is ``clear ``. This command succeeds even if the specified key is not present but may fail due to conflicts. Note that :ref:`characters can be escaped ` when specifying keys (or values) in ``fdbcli``. clearrange ---------- The ``clearrange`` command clears a range of keys from the database. Its syntax is ``clearrange ``. All keys between ```` (inclusive) and ```` (exclusive) are cleared from the database. This command succeeds even if the specified range is empty but may fail due to conflicts. Note that :ref:`characters can be escaped ` when specifying keys (or values) in ``fdbcli``. commit ------ The ``commit`` command commits the current transaction. Any sets or clears executed after the start of the current transaction will be committed to the database. On success, the committed version number is displayed. If commit fails, the error is displayed and the transaction must be retried. configure --------- The ``configure`` command changes the database configuration. Its syntax is ``configure [new] [single|double|triple|three_data_hall|three_datacenter] [ssd|memory] [proxies=] [resolvers=] [logs=]``. The ``new`` option, if present, initializes a new database with the given configuration rather than changing the configuration of an existing one. When ``new`` is used, both a redundancy mode and a storage engine must be specified. redundancy mode ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Redundancy modes define storage requirements, required cluster size, and resilience to failure. The available redundancy modes are: * ``single`` * ``double`` * ``triple`` * ``three_data_hall`` * ``three_datacenter`` For descriptions of redundancy modes, see :ref:`configuration-choosing-redundancy-mode`. storage engine ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The storage engine is responsible for durably storing data. FoundationDB has two storage engines: * ``ssd`` * ``memory`` For descriptions of storage engines, see :ref:`configuration-storage-engine`. process types ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ A FoundationDB cluster employs server processes of different types. It automatically allocates these processes in default numbers appropriate for small-to-medium sized clusters. For large clusters, you can manually set the allocated number of processes of a given type. Valid process types are: * ``proxies`` * ``resolvers`` * ``logs`` Set the process using ``configure [proxies|resolvers|logs]=``, where ```` is an integer greater than 0, or -1 to reset the value to its default. For recommendations on appropriate values for process types in large clusters, see :ref:`guidelines-process-class-config`. fileconfigure ------------- The ``fileconfigure`` command is alternative to the ``configure`` command which changes the configuration of the database based on a json document. The command loads a JSON document from the provided file, and change the database configuration to match the contents of the JSON document. The format should be the same as the value of the ``configuration`` entry in status JSON without ``excluded_servers`` or ``coordinators_count``. Its syntax is ``fileconfigure [new] ``. "The ``new`` option, if present, initializes a new database with the given configuration rather than changing the configuration of an existing one. coordinators ------------ The ``coordinators`` command is used to change cluster coordinators or description. Its syntax is ``coordinators auto| [description=]``. Addresses may be specified as a list of IP:port pairs (such as ``coordinators 10.0.0.1:4000 10.0.0.2:4000 10.0.0.3:4000``). If addresses are specified, the coordinators will be set to them. An ``fdbserver`` process must be running on each of the specified addresses. If ``auto`` is specified, coordinator addresses will be chosen automatically to support the configured redundancy level. Processes with class coordinator will be prioritized. (If the current set of coordinators are healthy and already support the configured redundancy level, nothing will be changed.) For more information on setting coordinators, see :ref:`configuration-changing-coordination-servers`. If ``description=`` is specified, the description field in the cluster file is changed to ````, which must match ``[A-Za-z0-9_]+``. For more information on setting the cluster description, see :ref:`configuration-setting-cluster-description`. exclude ------- The ``exclude`` command excludes servers from the database. Its syntax is ``exclude ``. If no addresses are specified, the command provides the set of excluded servers. For each IP address or IP:port pair in ````, the command adds the address to the set of excluded servers. It then waits until all database state has been safely moved off the specified servers. For more information on excluding servers, see :ref:`removing-machines-from-a-cluster`. exit ---- The ``exit`` command exits ``fdbcli``. get --- The ``get`` command fetches the value of a given key. Its syntax is ``get ``. It displays the value of ```` if ```` is present in the database and ``not found`` otherwise. Note that :ref:`characters can be escaped ` when specifying keys (or values) in ``fdbcli``. getrange -------- The ``getrange`` command fetches key-value pairs in a range. Its syntax is ``getrange [ENDKEY] [LIMIT]``. It displays up to ```` keys and values for keys between ```` (inclusive) and ```` (exclusive). If ```` is omitted, then the range will include all keys starting with ````. ```` defaults to 25 if omitted. Note that :ref:`characters can be escaped ` when specifying keys (or values) in ``fdbcli``. getrangekeys ------------ The ``getrangekeys`` command fetches keys in a range. Its syntax is ``getrangekeys [ENDKEY] [LIMIT]``. It displays up to ```` keys for keys between ```` (inclusive) and ```` (exclusive). If ```` is omitted, then the range will include all keys starting with ````. ```` defaults to 25 if omitted. Note that :ref:`characters can be escaped ` when specifying keys (or values) in ``fdbcli``. help ---- The ``help`` command provides information on specific commands. Its syntax is ``help ``, where ```` is any of the commands in this section, ``escaping``, or ``options``. The latter two topics are described below: .. _cli-escaping: help escaping ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ``help escaping`` provides the following information on escaping keys and values within ``fdbcli``: When parsing commands, ``fdbcli`` considers a space to delimit individual tokens. To include a space in a single value, you may either enclose the token in quotation marks ``"``, prefix the space with a backslash ``\``, or encode the space as a hex character. To include a literal quotation mark in a token, precede it with a backslash ``\"``. To express a binary value, encode each byte as a two-digit hex value, preceded by ``\x`` (e.g. ``\x20`` for a space character, or ``\x0a\x00\x00\x00`` for a 32-bit, little-endian representation of the integer 10). All keys and values are displayed by ``fdbcli`` with non-printable characters and spaces encoded as two-digit hex bytes. .. _cli-options: help options ^^^^^^^^^^^^ The following options are available for use with the ``option`` command: ``ACCESS_SYSTEM_KEYS`` - Allows this transaction to read and modify system keys (those that start with the byte ``0xFF``). ``CAUSAL_READ_RISKY`` - In the event of a fault or partition, the read version returned may not the last committed version potentially causing you to read outdated data. ``CAUSAL_WRITE_RISKY`` - The transaction, if not self-conflicting, may be committed a second time after commit succeeds, in the event of a fault. ``INITIALIZE_NEW_DATABASE`` - This is a write-only transaction which sets the initial configuration. ``NEXT_WRITE_NO_WRITE_CONFLICT_RANGE`` - The next write performed on this transaction will not generate a write conflict range. As a result, other transactions which read the key(s) being modified by the next write will not conflict with this transaction. Care needs to be taken when using this option on a transaction that is shared between multiple threads. When setting this option, write conflict ranges will be disabled on the next write operation, regardless of what thread it is on. ``PRIORITY_BATCH`` - Specifies that this transaction should be treated as low priority and that default priority transactions should be processed first. Useful for doing batch work simultaneously with latency-sensitive work. ``PRIORITY_SYSTEM_IMMEDIATE`` - Specifies that this transaction should be treated as highest priority and that lower priority transactions should block behind this one. Use is discouraged outside of low-level tools. ``READ_AHEAD_DISABLE`` - Disables read-ahead caching for range reads. Under normal operation, a transaction will read extra rows from the database into cache if range reads are used to page through a series of data one row at a time (i.e. if a range read with a one row limit is followed by another one row range read starting immediately after the result of the first). ``READ_YOUR_WRITES_DISABLE`` - Reads performed by a transaction will not see any prior mutations that occurred in that transaction, instead seeing the value which was in the database at the transaction's read version. This option may provide a small performance benefit for the client, but also disables a number of client-side optimizations which are beneficial for transactions which tend to read and write the same keys within a single transaction. ``RETRY_LIMIT`` - Set a maximum number of retries after which additional calls to ``onError`` will throw the most recently seen error code. Valid parameter values are ``[-1, INT_MAX]``. If set to -1, will disable the retry limit. Like all transaction options, the retry limit must be reset after a call to ``onError``. This behavior allows the user to make the retry limit dynamic. ``TIMEOUT`` - Set a timeout in milliseconds which, when elapsed, will cause the transaction automatically to be cancelled. Valid parameter values are ``[0, INT_MAX]``. If set to 0, will disable all timeouts. All pending and any future uses of the transaction will throw an exception. The transaction can be used again after it is reset. Like all transaction options, a timeout must be reset after a call to ``onError``. This behavior allows the user to make the timeouts dynamic. include ------- The ``include`` command permits previously excluded servers to rejoin the database. Its syntax is ``include all|``. If ``all`` is specified, the excluded servers list is cleared. For each IP address or IP:port pair in ````, the command removes any matching exclusions from the excluded servers list. (A specified IP will match all ``IP:*`` exclusion entries). For information on adding machines to a cluster, see :ref:`adding-machines-to-a-cluster`. option ------ The ``option`` command enables or disables an option. Its syntax is ``option