Ok, googled around for a while and found help at http://java.dzone.com/articles/spring-data-redis.
It happened because of Java serialization.
The key serializer for redisTemplate needs to be configured to StringRedisSerializer
i.e. like this:
<bean
id="jedisConnectionFactory"
class="org.springframework.data.redis.connection.jedis.JedisConnectionFactory"
p:host-name="${redis.server}"
p:port="${redis.port}"
p:use-pool="true"/>
<bean
id="stringRedisSerializer"
class="org.springframework.data.redis.serializer.StringRedisSerializer"/>
<bean
id="redisTemplate"
class="org.springframework.data.redis.core.RedisTemplate"
p:connection-factory-ref="jedisConnectionFactory"
p:keySerializer-ref="stringRedisSerializer"
p:hashKeySerializer-ref="stringRedisSerializer"
/>
Now the key in redis is vc:501381
.
Or like @niconic says, we can also set the default serializer itself to the string serializer as follows:
<bean
id="redisTemplate"
class="org.springframework.data.redis.core.RedisTemplate"
p:connection-factory-ref="jedisConnectionFactory"
p:defaultSerializer-ref="stringRedisSerializer"
/>
which means all our keys and values are strings. Notice however that this may not be preferable, since you may want your values to be not just strings.
If your value is a domain object, then you can use Jackson serializer and configure a serializer as mentioned here i.e. like this:
<bean id="userJsonRedisSerializer" class="org.springframework.data.redis.serializer.Jackson2JsonRedisSerializer">
<constructor-arg type="java.lang.Class" value="com.mycompany.redis.domain.User"/>
</bean>
and configure your template as:
<bean
id="redisTemplate"
class="org.springframework.data.redis.core.RedisTemplate"
p:connection-factory-ref="jedisConnectionFactory"
p:keySerializer-ref="stringRedisSerializer"
p:hashKeySerializer-ref="stringRedisSerializer"
p:valueSerialier-ref="userJsonRedisSerializer"
/>
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