# What is Redis? Redis is an open-source, networked, in-memory, key-value data store with optional durability. It is written in ANSI C. The development of Redis is sponsored by Redis Labs today; before that, it was sponsored by Pivotal and VMware. According to the monthly ranking by DB-Engines.com, Redis is the most popular key-value store. The name Redis means REmote DIctionary Server. > [wikipedia.org/wiki/Redis](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redis) %%LOGO%% # How to use this image ## start a redis instance ```console $ docker run --name some-redis -d redis ``` This image includes `EXPOSE 6379` (the redis port), so standard container linking will make it automatically available to the linked containers (as the following examples illustrate). ## start with persistent storage ```console $ docker run --name some-redis -d redis redis-server --appendonly yes ``` If persistence is enabled, data is stored in the `VOLUME /data`, which can be used with `--volumes-from some-volume-container` or `-v /docker/host/dir:/data` (see [docs.docker volumes](https://docs.docker.com/engine/tutorials/dockervolumes/)). For more about Redis Persistence, see [http://redis.io/topics/persistence](http://redis.io/topics/persistence). ## connect to it from an application ```console $ docker run --name some-app --link some-redis:redis -d application-that-uses-redis ``` ## ... or via `redis-cli` ```console $ docker run -it --link some-redis:redis --rm redis redis-cli -h redis -p 6379 ``` ## Additionally, If you want to use your own redis.conf ... You can create your own Dockerfile that adds a redis.conf from the context into /data/, like so. ```dockerfile FROM redis COPY redis.conf /usr/local/etc/redis/redis.conf CMD [ "redis-server", "/usr/local/etc/redis/redis.conf" ] ``` Alternatively, you can specify something along the same lines with `docker run` options. ```console $ docker run -v /myredis/conf/redis.conf:/usr/local/etc/redis/redis.conf --name myredis redis redis-server /usr/local/etc/redis/redis.conf ``` Where `/myredis/conf/` is a local directory containing your `redis.conf` file. Using this method means that there is no need for you to have a Dockerfile for your redis container. ## `32bit` variant This variant is *not* a 32bit image (and will not run on 32bit hardware), but includes Redis compiled as a 32bit binary, especially for users who need the decreased memory requirements associated with that. See ["Using 32 bit instances"](http://redis.io/topics/memory-optimization#using-32-bit-instances) in the Redis documentation for more information.