SORT

Syntax
SORT key [BY pattern] [LIMIT offset count] [GET pattern [GET pattern
  ...]] [ASC | DESC] [ALPHA] [STORE destination]
Available since:
1.0.0
Time complexity:
O(N+M*log(M)) where N is the number of elements in the list or set to sort, and M the number of returned elements. When the elements are not sorted, complexity is O(N).
ACL categories:
@write, @set, @sortedset, @list, @slow, @dangerous,

Returns or stores the elements contained in the list, set or sorted set at key.

There is also the SORT_RO read-only variant of this command.

By default, sorting is numeric and elements are compared by their value interpreted as double precision floating point number. This is SORT in its simplest form:

SORT mylist

Assuming mylist is a list of numbers, this command will return the same list with the elements sorted from small to large. In order to sort the numbers from large to small, use the DESC modifier:

SORT mylist DESC

When mylist contains string values and you want to sort them lexicographically, use the ALPHA modifier:

SORT mylist ALPHA

Redis is UTF-8 aware, assuming you correctly set the LC_COLLATE environment variable.

The number of returned elements can be limited using the LIMIT modifier. This modifier takes the offset argument, specifying the number of elements to skip and the count argument, specifying the number of elements to return from starting at offset. The following example will return 10 elements of the sorted version of mylist, starting at element 0 (offset is zero-based):

SORT mylist LIMIT 0 10

Almost all modifiers can be used together. The following example will return the first 5 elements, lexicographically sorted in descending order:

SORT mylist LIMIT 0 5 ALPHA DESC

Sorting by external keys

Sometimes you want to sort elements using external keys as weights to compare instead of comparing the actual elements in the list, set or sorted set. Let's say the list mylist contains the elements 1, 2 and 3 representing unique IDs of objects stored in object_1, object_2 and object_3. When these objects have associated weights stored in weight_1, weight_2 and weight_3, SORT can be instructed to use these weights to sort mylist with the following statement:

SORT mylist BY weight_*

The BY option takes a pattern (equal to weight_* in this example) that is used to generate the keys that are used for sorting. These key names are obtained substituting the first occurrence of * with the actual value of the element in the list (1, 2 and 3 in this example).

Skip sorting the elements

The BY option can also take a non-existent key, which causes SORT to skip the sorting operation. This is useful if you want to retrieve external keys (see the GET option below) without the overhead of sorting.

SORT mylist BY nosort

Retrieving external keys

Our previous example returns just the sorted IDs. In some cases, it is more useful to get the actual objects instead of their IDs (object_1, object_2 and object_3). Retrieving external keys based on the elements in a list, set or sorted set can be done with the following command:

SORT mylist BY weight_* GET object_*

The GET option can be used multiple times in order to get more keys for every element of the original list, set or sorted set.

It is also possible to GET the element itself using the special pattern #:

SORT mylist BY weight_* GET object_* GET #

Restrictions for using external keys

When enabling Redis cluster-mode there is no way to guarantee the existence of the external keys on the node which the command is processed on. In this case, any use of GET or BY which reference external key pattern will cause the command to fail with an error.

Starting from Redis 7.0, any use of GET or BY which reference external key pattern will only be allowed in case the current user running the command has full key read permissions. Full key read permissions can be set for the user by, for example, specifying '%R~*' or '~* with the relevant command access rules. You can check the ACL SETUSER command manual for more information on setting ACL access rules. If full key read permissions aren't set, the command will fail with an error.

Storing the result of a SORT operation

By default, SORT returns the sorted elements to the client. With the STORE option, the result will be stored as a list at the specified key instead of being returned to the client.

SORT mylist BY weight_* STORE resultkey

An interesting pattern using SORT ... STORE consists in associating an EXPIRE timeout to the resulting key so that in applications where the result of a SORT operation can be cached for some time. Other clients will use the cached list instead of calling SORT for every request. When the key will timeout, an updated version of the cache can be created by calling SORT ... STORE again.

Note that for correctly implementing this pattern it is important to avoid multiple clients rebuilding the cache at the same time. Some kind of locking is needed here (for instance using SETNX).

Using hashes in BY and GET

It is possible to use BY and GET options against hash fields with the following syntax:

SORT mylist BY weight_*->fieldname GET object_*->fieldname

The string -> is used to separate the key name from the hash field name. The key is substituted as documented above, and the hash stored at the resulting key is accessed to retrieve the specified hash field.

Return

Array reply: without passing the store option the command returns a list of sorted elements. Integer reply: when the store option is specified the command returns the number of sorted elements in the destination list.

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