Hey
Newman
Hey | Newman | |
---|---|---|
38 | 249 | |
17,319 | 6,724 | |
- | 0.5% | |
0.0 | 7.5 | |
17 days ago | 16 days ago | |
Go | JavaScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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.
Hey
-
AWS SnapStart - Part 19 Measuring cold starts and deployment time with Java 17 using different Lambda memory settings
The results of the experiment below were based on reproducing approximately 100 cold starts for the duration of our experiment which ran for approximately 1 hour. For it (and all experiments from my previous articles) I used the load test tool hey, but you can use whatever tool you want, like Serverless-artillery or Postman
-
Data API for Amazon Aurora Serverless v2 with AWS SDK for Java - Part 5 Basic cold and warm starts measurements
The results of the experiment to retrieve the existing product from the database by its id see GetProductByIdViaAuroraServerlessV2DataApiHandler with Lambda function with 1024 MB memory setting were based on reproducing more than 100 cold and approximately 10.000 warm starts with experiment which ran for approximately 1 hour. For it (and experiments from my previous article) I used the load test tool hey, but you can use whatever tool you want, like Serverless-artillery or Postman. We won't enable SnapStart on the Lambda function first.
-
AWS SnapStart - Part 15 Measuring cold and warm starts with Java 21 using different synchronous HTTP clients
The results of the experiment below were based on reproducing more than 100 cold and approximately 100.000 warm starts with experiment which ran for approximately 1 hour. For it (and experiments from my previous article) I used the load test tool hey, but you can use whatever tool you want, like Serverless-artillery or Postman. I ran all these experiments for all 3 scenarios using 2 different compilation options in template.yaml each:
-
AWS SnapStart - Part 13 Measuring warm starts with Java 21 using different Lambda memory settings
In our experiment we'll re-use the application introduced in part 9 for this. There are basically 2 Lambda functions which both respond to the API Gateway requests and retrieve product by id received from the API Gateway from DynamoDB. One Lambda function GetProductByIdWithPureJava21Lambda can be used with and without SnapStart and the second one GetProductByIdWithPureJava21LambdaAndPriming uses SnapStart and DynamoDB request invocation priming. We'll measure cold and warm starts using the following memory settings in MBs : 256, 512, 768, 1024, 1536 and 2048. I also put the cold starts measured in the part 12 into the tables to see both cold and warm starts in one place. The results of the experiment below were based on reproducing more than 100 cold and approximately 100.000 warm starts for the duration of our experiment which ran for approximately 1 hour. Here is the code for the sample application. For it (and experiments from my previous article) I used the load test tool hey, but you can use whatever tool you want, like Serverless-artillery or Postman. Abbreviation c is for the cold start and w is for the warm start.
-
Diagnósticos usando dotnet-monitor + prometheus + grafana
Por último, podemos executar os testes de carga usando hey.
-
Amazon DevOps Guru for the Serverless applications - Part 2 Setting up the Sample Application for the Anomaly Detection
For running our experiments to provoke anomalies we'll use the stress test tool. You can use the tool of your choice (like Gatling, JMeter, Fiddler or Artillery), I personally prefer to use the tool hey as it is easy to use and similar to curl. On Linux this tool can be installed by executing
- Threadpool no aspnet e problemas de performance
-
The Uncreative Software Engineer's Compendium to Testing
Hey: is a fast HTTP load testing tool used to test web applications and APIs. It provides a CLI (command-line interface) and supports concurrent requests.
-
The TCP receiver only ack the minimum bytes of MSS one by one
The client and server nodes are CentOS7.9/X86_64. If the HTTP POST requests were sent directly to the server with hey -c 1, there are about 0.2% of cases that may timeout. If the HTTP POST requests were sent through an NGINX proxy on the client node, there are about 20% of cases will timeout. I've confirmed that only one backend node has this problem. All other nodes are 100% succeeded even with higher throughput.
-
Benchmarking SQLite Performance in Go. Using Go's awesome built-in simple benchmarking tools to investigate SQLite database performance in a couple of different benchmarks, plus a comparison to Postgres.
64 concurrent requests isn't a lot. Modern web apps can typically handle much more than that (depending on what the request does, of course). Try it yourself with a load tester like https://github.com/rakyll/hey against a Go HTTP server, for example the one I've built in https://www.golang.dk/articles/go-and-sqlite-in-the-cloud
Newman
-
AWS SnapStart - Part 20 Measuring warm starts with Java 17 using different Lambda memory settings
I also put the cold starts measured in the part 19 into the tables to see both cold and warm starts in one place. The results of the experiment below were based on reproducing more than 100 cold and approximately 100.000 warm starts for the duration of our experiment which ran for approximately 1 hour. Here is the code for the sample application. For it (and experiments from my previous article) I used the load test tool hey, but you can use whatever tool you want, like Serverless-artillery or Postman. Abbreviation c is for the cold start and w is for the warm start.
-
Data API for Amazon Aurora Serverless v2 with AWS SDK for Java - Part 6 Comparing cold and warm starts between Data API and JDBC
The results of the experiments to retrieve the existing product from the database with all approaches by its id with Lambda functions with 1024 MB memory setting were based on reproducing more than 100 cold and approximately 10.000 warm starts with experiment which ran for approximately 1 hour. For it (and experiments from my previous article) I used the load test tool hey, but you can use whatever tool you want, like Serverless-artillery or Postman. We won't enable SnapStart on the Lambda functions first.
-
How to Add Firebase Authentication To Your NodeJS App
There are several testing approaches you can take to ascertain the functionality of the auth API. One way would be to automate the testing using unit tests with tools like Jest and Supertest. Alternatively, you can make use of API clients like Postman or the Thunder Client VS Code extension to test the API.
-
Leveraging Zoom WebSockets with Postman for Real-Time Interactivity - POSTCON 2024
I'm excited to be speaking at POSTCON, where I will dive into the world of real-time data using Zoom's innovative WebSockets. We'll seamlessly test these functionalities with the help of POSTMAN. This session is designed to give you a glimpse into how we at Zoom are enhancing the real-time capabilities of our platform to ensure faster, more reliable communication. During this session, we'll explore the limitations with Webhooks and why WebSockets are becoming a preferable alternative for real-time, bi-directional communication.
-
Spring Boot 3 application on AWS Lambda - Part 4 Measuring cold and warm starts with AWS Serverless Java Container
The results of the experiment below were based on reproducing more than 100 cold and approximately 100.000 warm starts with Lambda function with 1024 MB memory setting for the duration of 1 hour. For it I used the load test tool hey, but you can use whatever tool you want, like Serverless-artillery or Postman.
-
API Inspection Best Practices: Ensuring API Gateway Stability and Efficiency
Testing Tools: Select suitable automated testing tools, such as OWASP Zap and Postman, for security and functionality testing.
-
Software Engineering Workflow
Postman - API platform for easy endpoint testing
-
Data API for Amazon Aurora Serverless v2 with AWS SDK for Java - Part 5 Basic cold and warm starts measurements
The results of the experiment to retrieve the existing product from the database by its id see GetProductByIdViaAuroraServerlessV2DataApiHandler with Lambda function with 1024 MB memory setting were based on reproducing more than 100 cold and approximately 10.000 warm starts with experiment which ran for approximately 1 hour. For it (and experiments from my previous article) I used the load test tool hey, but you can use whatever tool you want, like Serverless-artillery or Postman. We won't enable SnapStart on the Lambda function first.
-
Building a RESTful API with Node.js and Express
Use tools like Postman or Insomnia to test the API endpoints and ensure they behave as expected.
-
Guide on authenticating requests with the REST API
Products are available on our Strapi server. We need to be able to send HTTP requests that will allow clients or users to perform CRUD operations on these product resources. Postman will be our tool for making requests to the Strapi REST API.
What are some alternatives?
Vegeta - HTTP load testing tool and library. It's over 9000!
postman-to-k6 - Converts Postman collections to k6 script code
k6 - A modern load testing tool, using Go and JavaScript - https://k6.io
Swagger Client - Javascript library to connect to swagger-enabled APIs via browser or nodejs
siege - Siege is an http load tester and benchmarking utility
breeze.js - Breeze for JavaScript clients
anteon - Anteon (formerly Ddosify) - Effortless Kubernetes Monitoring and Performance Testing. Available on CLI, Self-Hosted, and Cloud
oauth-signature-js - JavaScript OAuth 1.0a signature generator (RFC 5849) for node and the browser
grpcurl - Like cURL, but for gRPC: Command-line tool for interacting with gRPC servers
bottleneck - Job scheduler and rate limiter, supports Clustering
kubernetes - Production-Grade Container Scheduling and Management
SWR - React Hooks for Data Fetching