Services

Start with the right services already in place

These are the services enabled by default when you create a new instance from the Redis stack.

Stack services can be configured, added or removed for specific instances, and their versions can be changed as your workload evolves.

Stack serviceBase serviceRole
RedisEnabled by default

Explore the full stack service catalog for configs, settings, actions, cron, volumes, links, backups, and imports attached to each service in this stack.

Deploy

Run the same stack on the hosting model that fits

The stack stays the same while the hosting model changes. That lets you keep one stack across lighter environments, production clusters, and self-managed servers.

Wodby Cloud

Start without running a cluster in your own account when you want the most managed option.

Managed Kubernetes

Keep the cluster in your own cloud account while using the same stack to deploy and operate the app.

K3S on your own server

Run the same stack on a VM, bare-metal, or dedicated server when you want a leaner self-managed setup.

Explore hosting options for this stack to compare Wodby Cloud, managed Kubernetes, and K3S in more detail.

Get started

Run the Redis stack on Wodby

Launch this stack with the enabled services, integrations, hosting options, and managed updates outlined on this page.

Stack control

Stay current with managed stack updates

Included service updates can mark the stack as outdated. Upgrading the stack releases a new revision, but existing instances stay on their current revision until you decide to move them or enable automatic updates.

Explore stack control to see how revisions, app-by-app upgrades, and auto-updates work.

Environments

Create new environments from the same stack in minutes

Reuse the same Redis stack for development, staging, production, customer-specific environments, or short-lived feature branches, with per-environment values and configuration overrides where needed instead of rebuilding the stack every time.

Create development and staging environments from the same stack

Teams can test against the same enabled services and integrations instead of maintaining a separate setup for non-production environments.

Spin up dedicated feature environments when teams need them

Short-lived environments can reuse the same stack instead of forcing teams to create a new stack for every branch or task.

Preview app instances on branch push are coming soon

Automatically create a new preview environment on branch push. Coming soon.

Explore app instances for reusable environments, preview apps, and branch-based workflows.

Get started

Launch a new Redis environment in minutes

Reuse the same stack across environments without rebuilding the definition for every new instance.

FAQ

Common questions about the Redis stack

What does the Redis stack include?

Redis stack for caching, queues, sessions, and other in-memory data workloads. Instances created from this stack inherit the services enabled by default, attached integrations, hosting options, and stack revision history.

How can one stack support multiple apps and environments?

You can reuse the same stack for multiple similar apps and for development, staging, production, and other environment types. The stack defines the shared services and defaults, you can set different values for env types such as dev and prod, and each app instance can still be configured individually.

How do stack updates work?

When an included service gets an update, the stack can be marked as outdated. Upgrading releases a new stack revision, but existing instances stay on their current revision until you upgrade selected ones manually or enable automatic updates.

How do integrations work with this stack?

External providers stay attached to the stack definition so credentials, variables, and related services can be reused across app instances.

Can app instances from this stack run on different infrastructure?

Yes. Development and production instances from the same stack can run on different hosting models, including Wodby Cloud, managed Kubernetes, and K3S on a VM or dedicated server, while keeping the same stack definition and upgrade path.