Upstash for Redis®*
*Redis is a registered trademark of Redis Ltd. Any rights therein are reserved to Redis Ltd. Any use by Fly.io is for referential purposes only and does not indicate any sponsorship, endorsement or affiliation between Redis and Fly.io.
Upstash for Redis is a fully-managed, Redis-compatible database service offering global read replicas for reduced latency in distant regions. Upstash databases are provisioned inside your Fly organization, ensuring private, low-latency connections to your Fly applications.
See the What you Should Know section for more details about how Upstash Redis operates on Fly.io.
Create and manage a Redis database
Creating and managing databases happens exclusively via the Fly CLI. Install it, then signup for a Fly account.
Create and get status of a Redis database
If you’re using Sidekiq, BullMQ or similar software, consider switching your database to a fixed price plan to avoid running up your pay-as-you-go bill.
flyctl redis create
? Select Organization: fly-apps (fly-apps)
? Choose a primary region (can't be changed later) Madrid, Spain (mad)
? Optionally, choose one or more replica regions (can be changed later): Amsterdam, Netherlands (ams)
The Upstash web console
To view more details about database usage, connection strings, and more, use:
flyctl redis dashboard <org_name>
List your databases and view status
Get a list of all of your Redis databases.
flyctl redis list
ID NAME ORG PLAN PRIMARY REGION READ REGIONS
aaV829vaMVQGbi5 late-waterfall-1133 fly-apps payg mad ams
Note the database name, then fetch its status.
fly redis status late-waterfall-1133
Redis
ID = aaV829vaMVDGbi5
Name = late-waterfall-1133
Plan = Pay-as-you-go
Primary Region = mad
Read Regions = ams
Private URL = redis://password@fly-late-waterfall-1133.upstash.io
Connect to a Redis database
If you have redis-cli
installed, you can connect directly to your Redis database and run commands.
fly redis connect
? Select a database to connect to empty-water-3291 (sjc) 200M
Proxying local port 16379 to remote [fdaa:0:6d6b:0:1::3]:6379
127.0.0.1:16379> set foo bar
OK
127.0.0.1:16379> get foo
"bar"
127.0.0.1:16379>
Update a Redis database
Upstash Redis instances can’t change their primary region or name, but the following may change:
- Read regions
- Pricing plan
- Eviction settings
Use flyctl redis update
and follow the prompts. Changing region settings doesn’t cause downtime.
Delete a Redis database
Deleting a Redis database can’t be undone. Be careful!
fly redis destroy my-redis-db
Your Redis database my-redis-db was deleted
What you should know
Your databases run within Fly.io infrastructure, but not inside your organization’s network. So you’re only paying Upstash pricing - not additional VM costs.
All Upstash Redis databases are replicated within the same region in a highly-available configuration. This means that hardware failures generally don’t affect Upstash software, and therefore, your databases. Upstash also keeps regular backups of data in storage outside of Fly.io.
Once provisioned, the database primary region cannot be changed. However, replica regions can be added and removed at any time.
Traffic routing
Upstash Redis is available in all Fly regions via a private IPv6 address restricted to your Fly organization. Traffic is automatically routed to the nearest replica, or in the absence of nearby replicas, to the primary instance.
If you plan to deploy in a single region, ensure that your database is deployed in the same region as your application.
Writing to replica regions
Replicas forward writes to the primary. Replicas can’t be written to. Writes are synchronous, and synchronous writes over geographical distance experience latency. Plan for this latency in your application design.
If you’re using Redis as region-local cache and don’t require a shared cache, setup separate databases per-region and enable object eviction.
Memory limits and object eviction policies
By default, Upstash Redis will disallow writes when the max data size limit has been reached. If you enable eviction, keys will be evicted to free up space.
First, keys marked with a TTL will be evicted at random. In the absence of volatile keys, keys will be chosen randomly for eviction. This is roughly the combination of the volatile-random
and allkeys-random
eviction policies available in standard Redis.
Note that items marked with an explicit TTL will expire accurately, regardless of whether eviction is enabled.
Pricing
Upstash offers a range of payment plans for different use cases.
Pay-as-you-go plan
Upstash Redis databases start on the pay-as-you-go plan at $0.20 per 100k requests. This means you only pay for what you use. For most use cases, this is a good starting point.
Fixed price plans
Upstash also offers fixed price plans for when:
- You’re using Sidekiq, BullMQ or similar pre-packaged software that uses Redis as a queue, that aggressively poll Redis
- You understand your Redis usage patterns and want a predictable monthly pricing
These fixed price plans are available via flyctl redis update <dbname>
:
- Starter: $10 per month, single region only. Includes 200MB storage, 100 req/sec
- Standard: $50 per month, per region. Includes 3GB storage, 100 req/sec
- Pro 2K: $280 per month, $100 per replica region. Includes 50GB storage, 10k req/sec
Your usage is updated hourly on your monthly Fly.io bill. You can track database usage details in the Upstash web console as well.
Check the official Upstash Pricing page for more information.