PyAutoGUI
locust
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PyAutoGUI | locust | |
---|---|---|
17 | 58 | |
9,510 | 23,556 | |
- | 1.5% | |
2.6 | 9.8 | |
13 days ago | 8 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | MIT License |
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Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
PyAutoGUI
- PySimpleGUI 4 will be sunsetted in Q2 2024
- AutoHotkey v2 Official Release Announcement
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SwiftAutoGUI: Library for manipulating macOS with Swift
This repository is implemented with reference to pyautogui.
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Getting "NotImplementedError: The confidence keyword argument is only available if OpenCV is installed"
That uses pyInstaller under the hood, which is supposed to resolve dependencies, but I don't see any imports for cv2 in the pyautogui source (https://github.com/asweigart/pyautogui)
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is there a way to create an auto hotkey script alternative?
Or if you want to do Python, you'll want to create a virtual environment. Activate the virtual environment, install pyautogui (pip install pyautogui), and create a script. For the i3 config file, it would look like this: bindsym $mod+shift+d exec /path/to/env/bin/python3 /path/to/script.py
locust
- Protegendo APIs da Esquerda para a Direita (e em td no meio do caminho) [Tradução +/- Comentada]
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Simple, open-source, lightweight stress tool
If, like me, AGPL isn't your cup of tea, you can look at vegeta or locust which are both MIT.
- What server to pick for a good amount of consistent traffic?
- Simple web performance testing with Selenium?
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Load Testing: An Unorthodox Guide
Agreed with a lot of the points here, like starting small with a single piece of your API, then slowly expanding your tests once you’re comfortable that you know what you’re doing.
Note that if you use the Locust framework to write your load tests in Python, it takes care of measuring and reporting the latency and throughput for you. It’s really nice.
- I wrote a kubernetes operator for “locust”, should I open source it
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Testing NET TCP APIs without Jmeter
Locust ->https://locust.io/
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Load testing workflow for POST API calls
I used to use JMeter, till someone else on the team introduced me to locust, so check that out if you don’t mind doing some python: https://locust.io. There’s also gatling (scala based, but can be generated by a recorder or HAR files), https://gatling.io
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Ask HN: What is best way to do hands-on practice for system design?
You can pretend a small web app is a bigger one with load testing tools like locusts[0].
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Ask HN: Do you load test your applications? If so, how?
I’ve used Locust (https://locust.io/) which makes it easy to describe usage patterns and then spin up an arbitrary number of “users”. It provides a real-time web dashboard of the current state including counts of successful & failed requests.
What are some alternatives?
Selenium WebDriver - A browser automation framework and ecosystem.
splinter - splinter - python test framework for web applications
Gatling - Modern Load Testing as Code
PyRestTest - Python Rest Testing
sixpack - Sixpack is a language-agnostic a/b-testing framework
aiounittest - Test python asyncio-based code with ease.
siege - Siege is an http load tester and benchmarking utility
Selenium Wire - Extends Selenium's Python bindings to give you the ability to inspect requests made by the browser.
ddosify - Effortless Kubernetes Monitoring and Performance Testing. Available on CLI, Self-Hosted, and Cloud