4. Redis#
This is a tutorial on using Redis.
See RedisContextStorage class for storing you users’ contexts in Redis database.
DFF uses redis.asyncio library for asynchronous access to Redis DB.
[1]:
# installing dependencies
%pip install -q dff[redis]
Note: you may need to restart the kernel to use updated packages.
[2]:
import os
from dff.context_storages import context_storage_factory
from dff.pipeline import Pipeline
from dff.utils.testing.common import (
check_happy_path,
is_interactive_mode,
run_interactive_mode,
)
from dff.utils.testing.toy_script import TOY_SCRIPT_ARGS, HAPPY_PATH
[3]:
db_uri = "redis://{}:{}@localhost:6379/{}".format(
"", os.environ["REDIS_PASSWORD"], "0"
)
db = context_storage_factory(db_uri)
pipeline = Pipeline.from_script(*TOY_SCRIPT_ARGS, context_storage=db)
[4]:
if __name__ == "__main__":
check_happy_path(pipeline, HAPPY_PATH)
if is_interactive_mode():
run_interactive_mode(pipeline)
(user) >>> text='Hi'
(bot) <<< text='Hi, how are you?'
(user) >>> text='i'm fine, how are you?'
(bot) <<< text='Good. What do you want to talk about?'
(user) >>> text='Let's talk about music.'
(bot) <<< text='Sorry, I can not talk about music now.'
(user) >>> text='Ok, goodbye.'
(bot) <<< text='bye'
(user) >>> text='Hi'
(bot) <<< text='Hi, how are you?'