--- title: Redis description: Tunnel Redis connections through Pomerium --- # Tunneled Redis Connections Redis is a popular in-memory data structure store. It can be run locally or configured as a single or distributed standalone service. ## Basic Connection 1. Create a TCP tunnel, using either [`pomerium-cli`](/docs/releases.md#pomerium-cli) or the Pomerium Desktop client: ::::: tabs :::: tab pomerium-cli ```bash pomerium-cli tcp redis.corp.example.com:6379 --listen :6379 ``` :::tip --listen The `--listen` flag is optional. It lets you define what port the tunnel listens on locally. If not specified, the client will choose a random available port. ::: :::: :::: tab Pomerium Desktop ![An example connection to a Redis service from Pomerium Desktop](./img/desktop/example-redis-connection.png) :::tip Local Address The **Local Address** field is optional. Using it defines what port the tunnel listens on locally. If not specified, Pomerium Desktop will choose a random available port. ::: :::: ::::: 1. Initiate your Redis connection, pointing to `localhost`: ```bash redis-cli -h localhost -p 6379 ``` This demonstrates access to a Redis server through Pomerium from the `redis-cli` tool. Pomerium Enterprise users can utilize [Service Accounts](/enterprise/service-accounts.md) to enable secure machine-to-machine communication of Redis services. ## More Resources - [redis-cli](https://redis.io/topics/rediscli) - [Redis ACL](https://redis.io/topics/acl)