EXPIREAT
EXPIREAT key unix-time-seconds [NX | XX | GT | LT]
- Available since
- 1.2.0
- Time complexity
- O(1)
- ACL categories
- @keyspace, @write, @fast
EXPIREAT
has the same effect and semantic as EXPIRE
, but instead of
specifying the number of seconds representing the TTL (time to live), it takes
an absolute Unix timestamp (seconds since January 1, 1970). A
timestamp in the past will delete the key immediately.
Please for the specific semantics of the command refer to the documentation of
EXPIRE
.
Background #
EXPIREAT
was introduced in order to convert relative timeouts to absolute
timeouts for the AOF persistence mode.
Of course, it can be used directly to specify that a given key should expire at
a given time in the future.
Options #
The EXPIREAT
command supports a set of options:
NX
– Set expiry only when the key has no expiryXX
– Set expiry only when the key has an existing expiryGT
– Set expiry only when the new expiry is greater than current oneLT
– Set expiry only when the new expiry is less than current one
A non-volatile key is treated as an infinite TTL for the purpose of GT
and LT
.
The GT
, LT
and NX
options are mutually exclusive.
Examples #
SET mykey "Hello"
EXISTS mykey
EXPIREAT mykey 1293840000
EXISTS mykey
History #
- 7.0.0
- Added options: `NX`, `XX`, `GT` and `LT`.