EXPIREAT key timestamp
EXPIREAT has the same effect and semantic as EXPIRE, but instead of specifying the number of seconds representing the TTL (time to live), it takes an absolute Unix timestamp (seconds since January 1, 1970). A timestamp in the past will delete the key immediately.
Please for the specific semantics of the command refer to the documentation of EXPIRE.
EXPIREAT was introduced in order to convert relative timeouts to absolute timeouts for the AOF persistence mode. Of course, it can be used directly to specify that a given key should expire at a given time in the future.
Integer reply, specifically:
1
if the timeout was set.0
if key
does not exist."OK"
redis> EXISTS mykey (integer) 1
redis> EXPIREAT mykey 1293840000 (integer) 1
redis> EXISTS mykey (integer) 0
© 2009–2020 Salvatore Sanfilippo
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License 4.0.
https://redis.io/commands/expireat