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loadtest

v8.1.1

Published

Run load tests for your web application. Mostly ab-compatible interface, with an option to force requests per second. Includes an API for automated load testing.

Downloads

69,543

Readme

run on repl.it

NPM

Package quality

loadtest

Runs a load test on the selected HTTP or WebSockets URL. The API allows for easy integration in your own tests.

Installation

Install globally as root:

# npm install -g loadtest

On Ubuntu or Mac OS X systems install using sudo:

$ sudo npm install -g loadtest

For access to the API just install it in your npm package as a dev dependency:

$ npm install --save-dev loadtest

Compatibility

Versions 6 and later should be used at least with Node.js v16 or later:

  • Node.js v16 or later: ^6.0.0
  • Node.js v10 or later: ^5.0.0
  • Node.js v8 or later: 4.x.y
  • Node.js v6 or earlier: ^3.1.0
  • ES5 support (no let, const or arrow functions): ^2.0.0.

Usage

Why use loadtest instead of any other of the available tools, notably Apache ab? loadtest allows you to configure and tweak requests to simulate real world loads.

Basic Usage

Run as a script to load test a URL:

$ loadtest [-n requests] [-c concurrency] [-k] URL

The URL can be "http://", "https://" or "ws://". Set the max number of requests with -n, and the desired level of concurrency with the -c parameter. Use keep-alive connections with -k whenever it makes sense, which should be always except when you are testing opening and closing connections.

Single-dash parameters (e.g. -n) are designed to be compatible with Apache ab, except that here you can add the parameters after the URL.

To get online help, run loadtest without parameters:

$ loadtest

Usage Dos

The set of basic options are designed to be compatible with Apache ab. But while ab can only set a concurrency level and lets the server adjust to it, loadtest allows you to set a rate or requests per second with the --rps option. Example:

loadtest -c 10 --rps 200 http://mysite.com/

This command sends exactly 200 requests per second with concurrency 10, so you can see how your server copes with sustained rps. Even if ab reported a rate of 200 rps, you will be surprised to see how a constant rate of requests per second affects performance: no longer are the requests adjusted to the server, but the server must adjust to the requests! Rps rates are usually lowered dramatically, at least 20~25% (in our example from 200 to 150 rps), but the resulting figure is much more robust.

loadtest is also quite extensible. Using the provided API it is very easy to integrate loadtest with your package, and run programmatic load tests. loadtest makes it very easy to run load tests as part of systems tests, before deploying a new version of your software. The result includes mean response times and percentiles, so that you can abort deployment e.g. if 99% of all requests don't finish in 10 ms or less.

Usage Don'ts

loadtest performance has improved significantly, but it is still limited. loadtest saturates a single CPU pretty quickly, so it uses half the available cores in your processor. The Node.js processes can reach 100% usage in top, which happens approx. when your load is above 4000~7000 rps per core. In this case please adjust the number of cores. So for instance with eight cores you can expect to get a maximum performance of 8 * 5000 = 40 krps.

You can measure the practical limits of loadtest on your specific test machines by running it against a simple test server and seeing when it reaches 100% CPU. Run the following commands on two different consoles:

$ node bin/testserver.js
$ node bin/loadtest.js -n 1000000 -c 100 http://localhost:7357/

If you have reached the limits of loadtest even after using all cores, there are other tools that you can try.

  • AutoCannon: also an npm package, awesome tool with an interface similar to wrk.
  • Apache ab has great performance, but it is limited by a single CPU performance. Its practical limit is somewhere around ~40 krps.
  • weighttp is also ab-compatible and is supposed to be very fast (the author has not personally used it).
  • wrk is multithreaded and highly performance. It may need installing from source though, and its interface is not ab-compatible.
  • wrk2: evolution of wrk.

Regular Usage

The following parameters are compatible with Apache ab.

-t, --maxSeconds

Max number of seconds to wait until requests no longer go out. Default is 10 seconds, applies only if no --maxRequests is specified.

Note: this is different than Apache ab, which stops receiving requests after the given seconds.

Warning: max seconds used to have no default value, so tests would run indefinitely if no --maxSeconds and no --maxRequests were specified. Max seconds was changed to default to 10 in version 8.

-n, --maxRequests

Number of requests to send out. Default is no limit; will keep on sending until the time limit in --maxSeconds is reached.

Note: the total number of requests sent can be bigger than the parameter if there is a concurrency parameter; loadtest will report just the first n.

-c, --concurrency

loadtest will create a certain number of clients; this parameter controls how many. Requests from them will arrive concurrently to the server. Default value is 10.

Note: requests are not sent in parallel (from different processes), but concurrently (a second request may be sent before the first has been answered). Does not apply if --requestsPerSecond is specified.

Beware: if concurrency is too low then it is possible that there will not be enough clients to send all the supported traffic, adjust it with -c if needed.

Warning: concurrency used to have a default value of 1, until it was changed to 10 in version 8.

-k, --keepalive

Open connections using keep-alive: use header Connection: keep-alive instead of Connection: close.

Note: Uses agentkeepalive, which performs better than the default node.js agent.

-C, --cookie cookie-name=value

Send a cookie with the request. The cookie name=value is then sent to the server. This parameter can be repeated as many times as needed.

-H, --header header:value

Send a custom header with the request. The line header:value is then sent to the server. This parameter can be repeated as many times as needed. Example:

$ loadtest -H user-agent:tester/0.4 ...

Note: if not present, loadtest will add a few headers on its own: the "host" header parsed from the URL, a custom user agent "loadtest/" plus version (loadtest/1.1.0), and an accept header for "*/*".

Note: when the same header is sent several times, only the last value will be considered. If you want to send multiple values with a header, separate them with semicolons:

$ loadtest -H accept:text/plain;text-html ...

Note: if you need to add a header with spaces, be sure to surround both header and value with quotes:

$ loadtest -H "Authorization: Basic xxx=="

-T, --contentType

Set the MIME content type for POST data. Default: text/plain.

-P, --postBody

Send the string as the POST body. E.g.: -P '{"key": "a9acf03f"}'

-A, --patchBody

Send the string as the PATCH body. E.g.: -A '{"key": "a9acf03f"}'

-m, --method

Set method that will be sent to the test URL. Accepts: GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, PATCH, and lowercase versions. Default is GET. Example: -m POST.

--data body

Add some data to send in the body. It does not support method GET. Requires setting the method with -m and the type with -T. Example: --data '{"username": "test", "password": "test"}' -T 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded' -m POST

-p, --postFile

Send the data contained in the given file in the POST body. Remember to set -T to the correct content-type.

If POST-file has .js extension it will be imported. It should be a valid node module and it should export a default function, which is invoked with an automatically generated request identifier to provide the body of each request. This is useful if you want to generate request bodies dynamically and vary them for each request.

Example:

export default function request(requestId) {
  // this object will be serialized to JSON and sent in the body of the request
  return {
	key: 'value',
	requestId: requestId
  }
}

See sample file in sample/post-file.js, and test in test/body-generator.js.

-u, --putFile

Send the data contained in the given file as a PUT request. Remember to set -T to the correct content-type.

If PUT-file has .js extension it will be imported. It should be a valid node module and it should export a default function, which is invoked with an automatically generated request identifier to provide the body of each request. This is useful if you want to generate request bodies dynamically and vary them for each request. For examples see above for -p.

-a, --patchFile

Send the data contained in the given file as a PATCH request. Remember to set -T to the correct content-type.

If PATCH-file has .js extension it will be imported. It should be a valid node module and it should export a default function, which is invoked with an automatically generated request identifier to provide the body of each request. This is useful if you want to generate request bodies dynamically and vary them for each request. For examples see above for -p.

-r, --recover

Recover from errors. Always active: loadtest does not stop on errors. After the tests are finished, if there were errors a report with all error codes will be shown.

-s, --secureProtocol

The TLS/SSL method to use. (e.g. TLSv1_method)

Example:

$ loadtest -n 1000 -s TLSv1_method https://www.example.com

-V, --version

Show version number and exit.

Advanced Usage

The following parameters are not compatible with Apache ab.

--rps, --requestsPerSecond

Controls the number of requests per second that are sent. Cannot be fractional, e.g. --rps 0.5. In this mode each request is not sent as soon as the previous one is responded, but periodically even if previous requests have not been responded yet.

Note: the --concurrency option will be ignored if --requestsPerSecond is specified; clients will be created on demand.

Note: --rps is not supported for websockets.

--cores number

Start loadtest in multi-process mode on a number of cores simultaneously. Forks the requested number of processes using the Node.js cluster module. Default: half the available CPUs on the machine.

The total number of requests and the rps rate are shared among all processes. The result shown is the aggregation of results from all cores.

Note: this option is not available in the API, since it runs just within the calling process.

Warning: the default value for --cores has changed in version 7+, from 1 to half the available CPUs on the machine. Set to 1 to get the previous single-process mode.

--timeout milliseconds

Timeout for each generated request in milliseconds. Setting this to 0 disables timeout (default).

-R requestGeneratorModule.js

Use a custom request generator function from an external file. See an example of a request generator module in requestGenerator. Also see sample/request-generator.js for some sample code including a body (or sample/request-generator.ts for ES6/TypeScript).

--agent (deprecated)

Open connections using keep-alive.

Note: instead of using the default agent, this option is now an alias for -k.

--quiet

Do not show any messages.

--debug (deprecated)

Show debug messages.

Note: deprecated in version 6+.

--insecure

Allow invalid and self-signed certificates over https.

--cert path/to/cert.pem

Sets the certificate for the http client to use. Must be used with --key.

--key path/to/key.pem

Sets the key for the http client to use. Must be used with --cert.

--tcp (experimental)

Option to use low level TCP sockets, faster than the standard HTTP library. Not all options are supported.

Warning: experimental option. May not work with your test case. See TCP Sockets Performance for details.

Test Server

loadtest bundles a test server. To run it:

$ testserver-loadtest [options] [port]

This command will show the number of requests received per second, the latency in answering requests and the headers for selected requests.

The server returns a short text 'OK' for every request, so that latency measurements don't have to take into account request processing.

If no port is given then default port 7357 will be used. The optional delay instructs the server to wait for the given number of milliseconds before answering each request, to simulate a busy server. You can also simulate errors on a given percent of requests.

The following optional parameters are available.

--delay ms

Wait the specified number of milliseconds before answering each request.

--error 5xx

Return the given error for every request.

--percent yy

Return an error (default 500) only for the specified % of requests.

--cores number

Number of cores to use. If not 1, will start in multi-process mode.

Note: since version v6.3.0 the test server uses half the available cores by default; use --cores 1 to use in single-process mode.

Complete Example

Let us now see how to measure the performance of the test server.

First we install loadtest globally:

$ sudo npm install -g loadtest

Now we start the test server:

$ testserver-loadtest --cores 2
Listening on http://localhost:7357/
Listening on http://localhost:7357/

On a different console window we run a load test against it for 20 seconds with concurrency 10 (only relevant results are shown):

$ loadtest http://localhost:7357/ -t 20 -c 10
...
Requests: 9589, requests per second: 1915, mean latency: 10 ms
Requests: 16375, requests per second: 1359, mean latency: 10 ms
Requests: 16375, requests per second: 0, mean latency: 0 ms
...
Completed requests:  16376
Requests per second: 368
Total time:          44.503181166000005 s

Percentage of requests served within a certain time
  50%      4 ms
  90%      5 ms
  95%      6 ms
  99%      14 ms
 100%      35997 ms (longest request)

The result was quite erratic, with some requests taking up to 36 seconds; this suggests that Node.js is queueing some requests for a long time, and answering them irregularly. Now we will try a fixed rate of 1000 rps:

$ loadtest http://localhost:7357/ -t 20 -c 10 --rps 1000
...
Requests: 4551, requests per second: 910, mean latency: 0 ms
Requests: 9546, requests per second: 1000, mean latency: 0 ms
Requests: 14549, requests per second: 1000, mean latency: 20 ms
...
Percentage of requests served within a certain time
  50%      1 ms
  90%      2 ms
  95%      8 ms
  99%      133 ms
 100%      1246 ms (longest request)

Again erratic results. In fact if we leave the test running for 50 seconds we start seeing errors:

$ loadtest http://localhost:7357/ -t 50 -c 10 --rps 1000
...
Requests: 29212, requests per second: 496, mean latency: 14500 ms
Errors: 426, accumulated errors: 428, 1.5% of total requests

Let us lower the rate to 500 rps:

$ loadtest http://localhost:7357/ -t 20 -c 10 --rps 500
...
Requests: 0, requests per second: 0, mean latency: 0 ms
Requests: 2258, requests per second: 452, mean latency: 0 ms
Requests: 4757, requests per second: 500, mean latency: 0 ms
Requests: 7258, requests per second: 500, mean latency: 0 ms
Requests: 9757, requests per second: 500, mean latency: 0 ms
...
Requests per second: 500
Completed requests:  9758
Total errors:        0
Total time:          20.002735398000002 s
Requests per second: 488
Total time:          20.002735398000002 s

Percentage of requests served within a certain time
  50%      1 ms
  90%      1 ms
  95%      1 ms
  99%      14 ms
 100%      148 ms (longest request)

Much better: a sustained rate of 500 rps is seen most of the time, 488 rps average, and 99% of requests answered within 14 ms.

We now know that our server can accept 500 rps without problems. Not bad for a single-process naïve Node.js server... We may refine our results further to find at which point from 500 to 1000 rps our server breaks down.

But instead let us research how to improve the result. One obvious candidate is to add keep-alive to the requests so we don't have to create a new connection for every request. The result (with the same test server) is impressive:

$ loadtest http://localhost:7357/ -t 20 -c 10 -k
...
Requests per second: 4099

Percentage of requests served within a certain time
50%      2 ms
90%      3 ms
95%      3 ms
99%      10 ms
100%      25 ms (longest request)

Now we're talking! The steady rate also goes up to 2 krps:

$ loadtest http://localhost:7357/ -t 20 -c 10 --keepalive --rps 2000
...
Requests per second: 1950

Percentage of requests served within a certain time
  50%      1 ms
  90%      2 ms
  95%      2 ms
  99%      7 ms
 100%      20 ms (longest request)

Not bad at all: 2 krps with a single core, sustained. However, it you try to push it beyond that, at 3 krps it will fail miserably.

API

loadtest is not limited to running from the command line; it can be controlled using an API, thus allowing you to load test your application in your own tests. A short introduction follows; see complete docs for API.

Invoke Load Test

To run a load test, invoke the exported function loadTest() with the desired options:

import {loadTest} from 'loadtest'

const options = {
    url: 'http://localhost:8000',
    maxRequests: 1000,
}
const result = await loadTest(options)
result.show()
console.log('Tests run successfully')

Beware: if there are no maxRequests and no maxSeconds, the test will run forever.

loadTest() Parameters

A simplified list of parameters is shown below; see doc/api.md for the full explanations with examples.

  • url: URL to invoke, mandatory.
  • concurrency: how many clients to start in parallel.
  • maxRequests: max number of requests; after they are reached the test will end.
  • maxSeconds: max number of seconds to run the tests.
  • timeout: timeout for each generated request in milliseconds, set to 0 to disable (default).
  • cookies: array of cookies to send, of the form name=value.
  • headers: object with headers, each with the value as string. Separate by semicolons to have multiple values.
  • method: HTTP method to use, default GET.
  • body: contents to send in the body of the message.
  • contentType: MIME type to use for the body, default text/plain.
  • requestsPerSecond: how many requests will be sent per second.
  • requestGenerator: custom request generator function.
  • agentKeepAlive: if true, will use 'Connection: Keep-alive'.
  • quiet: if true, do not show any messages.
  • indexParam: parameter to replace in URL and body with a unique index.
  • indexParamCallback: function to generate unique indexes.
  • insecure: allow invalid and self-signed certificates over https.
  • secureProtocol: TLS/SSL method to use.
  • statusCallback(error, result): function to call after every request is completed.
  • contentInspector(result): function to call before aggregating statistics.

Start Test Server

To start the test server use the exported function startServer() with a set of options:

import {startServer} from 'loadtest'
const server = await startServer({port: 8000})
// do your thing
await server.close()

The following options are available, see doc/api.md for details.

  • port: optional port to use for the server, default 7357.
  • delay: milliseconds to wait before answering each request.
  • error: HTTP status code to return, default 200 (no error).
  • percent: return error only for the given % of requests.
  • logger(request, response): function to call after every request.

Returns a test server that you can close() when finished.

Configuration file

It is possible to put configuration options in a file named .loadtestrc in your working directory or in a file whose name is specified in the loadtest entry of your package.json. The options in the file will be used only if they are not specified in the command line.

The expected structure of the file is the following:

{
	"delay": "Delay the response for the given milliseconds",
	"error": "Return an HTTP error code",
	"percent": "Return an error (default 500) only for some % of requests",
	"maxRequests": "Number of requests to perform",
	"concurrency": "Number of requests to make",
	"maxSeconds": "Max time in seconds to wait for responses",
	"timeout": "Timeout for each request in milliseconds",
	"method": "method to url",
	"contentType": "MIME type for the body",
	"body": "Data to send",
	"file": "Send the contents of the file",
	"cookies": {
		"key": "value"
	},
	"headers": {
		"key": "value"
	},
	"secureProtocol": "TLS/SSL secure protocol method to use",
	"insecure": "Allow self-signed certificates over https",
	"cert": "The client certificate to use",
	"key": "The client key to use",
	"requestGenerator": "JS module with a custom request generator function",
	"recover": "Do not exit on socket receive errors (default)",
	"agentKeepAlive": "Use a keep-alive http agent",
	"proxy": "Use a proxy for requests",
	"requestsPerSecond": "Specify the requests per second for each client",
	"indexParam": "Replace the value of given arg with an index in the URL"
}

See sample file in sample/.loadtestrc.

For more information about the actual configuration file name, read the confinode user manual. In the list of the supported file types, please note that only synchronous loaders can be used with loadtest.

Complete Example

The file test/integration.js contains complete examples, which are also a full integration test suite: they start the server with different options, send requests, waits for finalization and close down the server.

Licensed under The MIT License

Copyright (c) 2013-9 Alex Fernández [email protected] and contributors.

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.