Swift Community Update: April 2026 Highlights – Valkey Swift Client and More

By

Introduction

The Swift ecosystem continues to evolve with exciting releases and community contributions. This month’s update brings a major new client library for Valkey, along with fresh video content covering Embedded Swift and concurrency. Below, we dive into the key developments.

Swift Community Update: April 2026 Highlights – Valkey Swift Client and More

Valkey-Swift 1.0: A Production-Grade Client

One of the most significant announcements is the 1.0 release of valkey-swift, a Swift client library for the Valkey data store. Valkey, an open-source fork of Redis, is a high-performance datastore commonly used for caching, message brokering, and other server-side tasks. The new client is built from the ground up for Swift 6 with full structured concurrency support.

Guest Contributor: Adam Fowler

We’re joined this month by Adam Fowler, an open-source developer active in the Swift on server ecosystem. Adam shares his excitement about the release and explains the motivation behind starting fresh instead of retrofitting existing libraries.

Key Features of Valkey-Swift

Migration from RediStack

Previously, the de facto Swift client for Redis was RediStack, built on pre-concurrency concepts. As the Swift language evolved, retrofitting structured concurrency became awkward, and new features like auto-generated commands were infeasible. Around the same time, Redis changed its licensing, leading to the open-source Valkey fork. This created an opportunity for a clean break. The team provides a migration guide for users transitioning from RediStack.

Videos and Talks from the Swift Community

April brought several must-watch videos from conferences and online channels, covering both embedded development and advanced language features.

Embedded Swift at try! Swift Tokyo

The try! Swift Tokyo 2026 conference featured two talks on Embedded Swift:

Swift Concurrency Q&A and Optionals Deep Dive

If you want to understand Swift concurrency from the engineers who designed it, check out the live online Q&A on Swift concurrency. Additionally, Nil Coalescing published a video titled Advanced Techniques for Working with Optionals in Swift, covering lesser-known options.

Other News

April also saw the release of new Swift packages, adding to the growing ecosystem. Developers are encouraged to explore the latest additions on the Swift Package Index.

Stay tuned for next month’s update, and as always, happy coding!

Tags:

Related Articles

Recommended

Discover More

6 Essential Lessons from Learning in Public as a Backend EngineerUnderstanding the Complex Web of Environmental Exposures: A Q&A on Exposure ScienceHow to Get Ready for Star Fox on Switch 2: A Step-by-Step Guide10 Key Takeaways from the Supreme Court’s Rejection of Apple’s Stay Request in the Epic Games CaseA Practical Guide to Building Reliable Multi-Agent AI Systems with Open Protocols