Mac Redis Server
Redis is an open source database with a primary focus on storing data using unique keys and it turns out to be an excellent and versatile choice if you want a highly scalable data store shared. Redis 5.0 is the first version of Redis to introduce the new stream data type with consumer groups, sorted sets blocking pop operations, LFU/LRU info in RDB, Cluster manager inside redis-cli, active defragmentation V2, HyperLogLogs improvements and many other improvements. Overview DBeaver EE supports Redis key browser, key value viewer and Redis commands shell. DBeaver uses Jedis driver 2.9.0 to operate with Redis server. It supports Redis servers of any version. Download redis connector for free. Developer Tools downloads - Redis Desktop Manager by Igor Malinovskiy and many more programs are available for instant and free download. 2X Client RDP connects with the 2X ApplicationServer XG to publish any Windows application to Mac desktops. Client RDP connects with the. Used to connect to remote. Unicode enabled 32/64-bit ODBC Driver for Mac. Connect to Redis high-performance data stores from popular Mac applications like FileMaker Pro and Office for Mac.
I still see a lot of people asking 'what's the best MongoDB client for Mac OS X' (besides the mongo
shell console), so I think it would be only fair to share my experience.
I've been using MongoDB a lot and for some reason I haven't been too comfortable using the shell console. I mean, you need an integrated code editor to fiddle with those somewhat verbose JSON-formatted queries...
So I was constantly looking for alternatives; 18 months ago there was none I could find and learn to like, really, but now I really favour Robomongo. It gives you 'the full power of MongoDB shell', but in the same time you can easily save, load, edit your queries, do copy/paste, view your results as JSON/trees/tables... and yes, you do get a decent autocompletion :-).
Mac Redis Manager
It's also cross-platform, free and open-source (GitHub repo here).
Redis Desktop Client For Mac
Fotonauts' fork of MongoHub is another interesting alternative to keep an eye on; it has a more 'native' OS X feel but IMO it does lack a better query editor...