Python-redis keys() returns list of bytes objects instead of strings

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孤独总比滥情好 2021-02-01 14:37

I\'m using the regular redis package in order to connect my Python code to my Redis server.

As part of my code I check if a string object is existed in my R

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  • 2021-02-01 14:51

    Previous answers are correct in that the decode_responses connection parameter is needed to do this automatically, what they omit is that this needs to be set on the ConnectionPool instead if the connections are made using the pool. The below snippet will set the 'decode_responses' value on all clients to true, even if the client sets itself to False during connection

    pool = redis.ConnectionPool(host=REDIS_HOST, port=REDIS_PORT, db=REDIS_DB, password=REDIS_PWD, decode_responses=True)
    
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  • 2021-02-01 14:53

    If you do not wish to iterate the list for decoding, set your redis connection to automagically perform the decode and you'll receive your required result. As follows in your connection string, please notice the decode_responses argument:

    rdb = redis.StrictRedis(host="localhost", port=6379, db=0, decode_responses=True)
    

    Happy Coding! :-) (revised 13 Nov 2019)

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  • 2021-02-01 14:59

    You would be better off using the EXISTS command and restructuring your code like:

    string = 'abcde'
    if redis.exists(string):
        do something..
    

    The KEYS operation returns every key in your Redis database and will cause serious performance degradation in production. As a side effect you avoid having to deal with the binary to string conversion.

    You can configure the Redis client to automatically convert responses from bytes to strings using the decode_responses argument to the StrictRedis constructor:

    r = redis.StrictRedis('localhost', 6379, charset="utf-8", decode_responses=True)
    

    Make sure you are consistent with the charset option between clients.

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  • 2021-02-01 15:03

    One solution can be:

    decode the redis key

    print(key)
    #output is : b'some_key'
    
    print(key.decode())
    #output is : 'some_key'
    

    Updated :

    Pass dictionary object into RedisPost class then decoding individual item and storing them as a object.

    class RedisPost():
       def __init__(self, dic):
          for k,v in dic.items():
              if not isinstance(k,int):
                 var = k.decode()
                 setattr(self,var,v.decode())
    
    
    my_dic = {'a':12, 'b':123}
    obj = RedisPost(my_dic)
    print(obj.a) # output will be 12 
    
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