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Configuration

Here are the configuration options, set to the default values, for this service. If you are unsure about where this goes or what this means, we highly recommend scanning the services documentation to get a good handle on how the magicks work.

Also note that the below options are in addition to the build steps and overrides that are available to every service.

yaml
services:
  myservice:
    type: redis:5
    persist: false
    portforward: false
    password: ''
    config:
      server: SEE BELOW

Persisting data

This option is pretty straightforward. Use persist: true to persist the cache's data between restarts and rebuilds.

Port forwarding

portforward will allow you to access this service externally by assigning a port directly on your host's localhost. Note that portforward can be set to either true or a specific port but we highly recommend you set it to true unless you have pretty good knowledge of how port assignment works or you have a very compelling reason for needing a locked down port.

portforward: true will prevent inevitable port collisions and provide greater reliability and stability across Lando apps. That said, one downside of portforward: true is that Docker will assign a different port every time you restart your application. You can read more about accessing services externally over here.

tl;dr

Recommended

yaml
services:
  myservice:
    type: redis
    portforward: true

Not recommended

yaml
services:
  myservice:
    type: redis
    portforward: 6379

Setting a Password

Later versions of Redis require a non-blank password being set; provide a password for your redis instance using the creds option:

yaml
services:
  myservice:
    type: redis
    password: womprat-slayer

Note that you'll likely need to provide this password along with other Redis details to your application so it can connect to Redis. Typically this is done through environmental variables.

Do not use this option if you use a custom redis.conf that defines a default user password.

Using a custom redis.conf

You may need to override our default redis server config with your own custom redis config file.

If you do this, you must use a file that exists inside your application and express it relative to your project root as shown below:

A hypothetical project

Note that you can put your configuration files anywhere inside your application directory. We use a config directory in the below example but you can call it whatever you want such as .lando.

bash
./
|-- config
   |-- redis.conf
|-- .lando.yml

Landofile's redis config

yaml
services:
  myservice:
    type: redis
    config:
      server: config/redis.conf

Getting information

You can get connection and credential information about your redis instance by running lando info. It may also be worth checking out our accessing services externally guide.