High availability in Aiven for Redis®*#
Aiven for Redis®* is available on a variety of plans, offering different levels of high availability. The selected plan defines the features available, and a summary is provided in the table below:
Plan |
Node configuration |
High availability & failover features |
Backup features |
Backup history |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hobbyist |
Single-node |
Limited availability. No automatic failover. |
Single backup only for disaster recovery. |
N/A |
Startup |
Single-node |
Limited availability. No automatic failover. |
Automatic backups to a remote location. |
1 day |
Business |
Two-node (primary + standby) |
High availability with automatic failover to a standby node if the primary fails. |
Automatic backups to a remote location. |
3 days |
Premium |
Three-node (primary + standby + standby) |
Enhanced high availability with automatic failover among multiple standby nodes if the primary fails. |
Automatic backups to a remote location. |
13 days |
Custom |
Custom configurations |
Custom high availability and failover features based on user requirements. |
Custom backup features based on user requirements. |
Custom based on user requirements |
Check out our Plans & Pricing page for more information.
Failure handling#
Minor failures: Aiven automatically handles minor failures, such as service process crashes or temporary loss of network access, without any significant changes to the service deployment. In all plans, the service automatically restores regular operation by restarting crashed processes or restoring network access when available.
Severe failures: In case of severe hardware or software problems, such as losing an entire node, more drastic recovery measures are required. Aiven’s monitoring infrastructure automatically detects a failing node when it reports problems with its self-diagnostics or stops communicating altogether. The monitoring infrastructure then schedules the creation of a new replacement node.
Note
In case of database failover, your service’s Service URI remains the same—only the IP address changes to point to the new primary node.
Single-node hobbyist and startup service plans#
Losing the only node in the service triggers an automatic process of creating a new replacement node. The new node then restores its state from the latest available backup and resumes serving customers.
Since there was just a single node providing the service, the service will be unavailable for the duration of the restore operation. All the write operations made since the last backup are lost.