HEXPIREAT has the same effect and semantic as HEXPIRE, 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.
For the specific semantics of the command refer to the documentation of
HEXPIRE.
Options
The HEXPIREAT command supports a set of options that modify its behavior:
- NX — For each specified field, set expiration only when the field has no expiration.
- XX — For each specified field, set expiration only when the field has an existing expiration.
- GT — For each specified field, set expiration only when the new expiration is greater than current one.
- LT — For each specified field, set expiration only when the new expiration is less than current one.
Examples
127.0.0.1:6379> HSET myhash f1 v1 f2 v2 f3 v3
(integer) 3
27.0.0.1:6379> HEXPIREAT myhash 1754846600 FIELDS 2 f2 f3
1) (integer) 1
2) (integer) 1
127.0.0.1:6379> HEXPIRETIME myhash FIELDS 3 f1 f2 f3
1) (integer) -1
2) (integer) 1754846600
3) (integer) 1754846600