Databases & ORMs

Redis Documentation

The open-source in-memory data store.

v7.4 320 pages indexed searchable · AI-grounded

What is Redis?

Redis is an in-memory key-value store used for caching, sessions, queues, rate limiting, and real-time data, with rich data structures and optional persistence.

Smart Stack indexes the official Redis documentation and keeps it current, so you can search it directly or ask questions in plain language. Because answers are grounded in the real pages — not a model's training data — you get correct, version-aware APIs instead of plausible-looking guesses.

$ smart-stack ask

Ask anything about Redis

Get an answer grounded in the official Redis docs — and add the rest of your stack for integration-aware help.

>How do I get started with Redis?

Ask Smart Stack

Works well with Redis

Add these alongside Redis for answers that understand how the pieces fit together.

Redis — FAQ

What is the latest version of Redis?
The latest version of Redis indexed in Smart Stack is 7.4. Smart Stack re-checks sources on a schedule, so answers stay current with releases rather than relying on a model's training cutoff.
Where can I find the official Redis documentation?
The official Redis documentation lives at https://redis.io/docs/latest/. Smart Stack indexes it so you can search across it — and the rest of your stack — and get AI answers grounded in those exact pages.
Can I search Redis docs together with the rest of my stack?
Yes. That's the core idea behind Smart Stack: add Redis to your stack alongside your other tools, and the AI answers questions using the official docs for everything you selected at once — no tab-switching.
Does Smart Stack hallucinate Redis APIs?
Smart Stack uses retrieval-augmented generation: it pulls relevant sections from the official Redis documentation and grounds the answer in them, which sharply reduces the made-up function signatures you get from ungrounded models.
What works well with Redis?
Redis is commonly used with tools in the databases orms space and adjacent layers of the stack. Add them together in Smart Stack to get integration-aware answers that understand how they fit.