This document describes how to run benchmarking tool.
Zaqar Contributors can use this tool to test how the particular code change affects Zaqar’s performance.
First install and run zaqar-server.
For example, you can setup Zaqar in development environment.
In your terminal cd into your local Zaqar repo and install additional requirements:
$ pip install -r bench-requirements.txt
Copy the configuration file to ~/.zaqar:
$ cp etc/zaqar-benchmark.conf.sample ~/.zaqar/zaqar-benchmark.conf
In this configuration file specify where zaqar-server can be found:
server_url = http://localhost:8888
The benchmarking tool needs a set of messages to work with. Specify the path
to the file with messages in the configuration file. Alternatively, put
it in the directory with the configuration file and name it
zaqar-benchmark-messages.json
.
As a starting point, you can use the sample file from the etc directory:
$ cp etc/zaqar-benchmark-messages.json ~/.zaqar/
If the file is not found or no file is specified, a single hard-coded message is used for all requests.
Run the benchmarking tool using the following command:
$ zaqar-bench
By default, the command will run a performance test for 5 seconds, using one producer process with 10 greenlet workers, and one observer process with 5 workers. The consumer role is disabled by default.
You can override these defaults in the config file or on the command line using a variety of options. For example, the following command runs a performance test for 30 seconds using 4 producer processes with 20 workers each, plus 4 consumer processes with 20 workers each.
Note that the observer role is also disabled in this example by setting its number of workers to zero:
$ zaqar-bench -pp 4 -pw 10 -cp 4 -cw 20 -ow 0 -t 30
By default, the results are in human-readable format. For JSON output add
the --noverbose
flag. The non-verbose output looks similar to the
following:
$ zaqar-bench --noverbose
Using 'envvars' credentials
Using 'keystone' authentication method
Benchmarking Zaqar API v2...
{"params": {"consumer": {"processes": 1, "workers": 0}, "observer": {"processes": 1, "workers": 5}, "producer": {"processes": 1, "workers": 10}}, "consumer": {"claim_total_requests": 0, "ms_per_claim": 0, "total_reqs": 0, "reqs_per_sec": 0, "successful_reqs": 0, "duration_sec": 0, "ms_per_delete": 0, "messages_processed": 0}, "producer": {"duration_sec": 8.569170951843262, "ms_per_req": 201.715140507139, "total_reqs": 29, "successful_reqs": 29, "reqs_per_sec": 3.384224700729303}, "observer": {"duration_sec": 8.481178045272827, "ms_per_req": 407.40778711107043, "total_reqs": 18, "successful_reqs": 18, "reqs_per_sec": 2.122346672115049}}
By default, zaqar-bench is benchmarking Zaqar API version 2. To run
benchmark against other API versions use -api
parameter. For
example:
$ zaqar-bench -api 1.1
It’s possible to use zaqar-bench with Keystone authentication, if your Zaqar is
configured to use Keystone authentication method and the Keystone service is
running. For example, this is always true when running DevStack with
unmodified zaqar.conf
.
Let’s configure zaqar-bench too to use Keystone:
Set zaqar-bench’s authentication method to Keystone.
By default zaqar-bench is using noauth
method. This can be changed by
setting the environment variable OS_AUTH_STRATEGY
to keystone
.
To set this environment variable:
temporarily, run:
$ export OS_AUTH_STRATEGY=keystone
permanently, add this line to your ~/bashrc
file:
export OS_AUTH_STRATEGY=keystone
Reboot your computer or just run in the terminal where you will start zaqar-bench:
$ source ~/.bashrc
Set Keystone credentials for zaqar-bench.
If you’re running Zaqar under DevStack, you can omit this step,
because zaqar-bench will automatically get administrator or user
credentials from the one of the files created by DevStack: either from
/etc/openstack/clouds.yaml
file or from
~/.config/openstack/clouds.yaml
file, if it exists.
If you’re running manually configured Zaqar with manually configured Keystone (not under DevStack):
Add these lines to your ~/.bashrc
file and specify the valid Keystone
credentials:
export OS_AUTH_URL="http://<your keystone endpoint>/v2.0" export OS_USERNAME="<keystone user name>" export OS_PASSWORD="<the user's password>" export OS_PROJECT_NAME="<keystone project name for the user>"
Reboot your computer or just run in the terminal where you will start zaqar-bench:
$ source ~/.bashrc
Run zaqar-bench as usual, for example:
$ zaqar-bench
If everything is properly configured, zaqar-bench must show the line
Using 'keystone' authentication method
and execute without
authentication errors.
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