A Redis cluster Docker image. This image is for testing environment. DO NOT use it for production.
Start a cluster. It will start 6 Redis servers listening on 7000~7005 port and a supervisor to make sure all servers started. After all servers are started, redis-trib will create a Redis cluster.
# For Redis 3.x
docker run -p 7000:7000 -p 7001:7001 -p 7002:7002 -p 7003:7003 -p 7004:7004 -p 7005:7005 tommy351/redis-cluster:3.2
# For Redis 4.x
docker run -p 7000:7000 -p 7001:7001 -p 7002:7002 -p 7003:7003 -p 7004:7004 -p 7005:7005 tommy351/redis-cluster:4.0
# For Redis 5.x, 6.x, 7.x, 8.x
docker run -p 7000:7000 -p 7001:7001 -p 7002:7002 -p 7003:7003 -p 7004:7004 -p 7005:7005 tommy351/redis-cluster:5.0
docker run -p 7000:7000 -p 7001:7001 -p 7002:7002 -p 7003:7003 -p 7004:7004 -p 7005:7005 tommy351/redis-cluster:6.0
docker run -p 7000:7000 -p 7001:7001 -p 7002:7002 -p 7003:7003 -p 7004:7004 -p 7005:7005 tommy351/redis-cluster:7.2
docker run -p 7000:7000 -p 7001:7001 -p 7002:7002 -p 7003:7003 -p 7004:7004 -p 7005:7005 tommy351/redis-cluster:8.0You can mount a data volume on /data.
docker run -v /some/path/:/data tommy351/redis-cluster:3.2If you are using Redis 4.0 and above, you can set CLUSTER_ANNOUNCE_IP. (See redis#2527 for more details)
docker run -e CLUSTER_ANNOUNCE_IP=127.0.0.1 tommy351/redis-cluster:4.0MIT