wrk
artillery
wrk | artillery | |
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36 | 29 | |
36,802 | 7,486 | |
- | 1.1% | |
0.0 | 9.7 | |
4 months ago | 2 days ago | |
C | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Mozilla Public 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.
wrk
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Ruby on Rails load testing habits
> My initial requirement was to send requests with unique parameters. To the best of my knowledge, no tool could do this.
wrk does this with lua. https://github.com/wg/wrk/blob/master/src/wrk.lua
Also even things like the venerable jmeter supported pulling parameters from a csv file.
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Running a Billion Workflows a month with Netflix Conductor
We used wrk2, a fantastic tool to generate stable load on the server. Wrk2 improves on wrk and adds the ability to generate sustained load at a specific rate (-R parameter).
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So how does WSGI concurrency work?
I am using a tool called wrk to make a bunch of requests to my website, and changing the concurrency of the requests drastically changes the result, with concurrency set to 1, I get 894 requests made in 10 seconds, and when I set concurrency to 10, I get 8549 requests. This linear scaling stops when increasing the concurrency more drastically (18805 requests for 100 and 19814 for 500 concurrency).
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TcpSocket read error (with wrk)
Im creating multithreaded async http server for learning purposes and i'm facing problem when benchmarking with wrk. I get socket read errors on every connection:
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Grasshopper – An Open Source Python Library for Load Testing
We use locust at work but I HIGHLY recommend wrk for a very robust yet simple load testing tool.
https://github.com/wg/wrk
And of course, this talk by Gil Tene is fantastic if you're interested in load testing stats https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lJ8ydIuPFeU
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What tools you use for http load testing?
Good morning what tool do you use to test your infra in terms of http load ? A tool that works, I tested : - https://github.com/tsenart/vegeta but it returns 0 errors or a http_net error from Golang - LOIC (Low Orbit Ion Canon) https://github.com/NewEraCracker/LOIC but the requests do not appear in my nginx logs and I feel no slowdown - Apache Jmeter https://jmeter.apache.org/ but I can't drop my infra and I have Java socket closed errors - K6 https://k6.io/ but I can't bring down my infra with - wrk https://github.com/wg/wrk no matter what parameter I put it doesn't make enough requests per second, I put the same parameters as on a tutorial and I don't get the same result...
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My Rust server on a $20 VPS handles 10k requests per second with no caching. Is it just me or is that crazy ?
You could try to just blast it with wrk or bombardier. Can easily get around 50k requests on consumer machine.
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[2023] Nginx proxy_pass to apache mod_php VS nginx proxy_pass to apache php-fpm vs nginx php-fpm
Sure, first I did the load testing on the same machine. The same machine ran web servers, php-fpm and ab / wrk programs.
- Dúvida sobre banco de dados
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Six Charged in Mass Takedown of DDoS-for-Hire Sites
There are http benchmarking tools like wrk [0]. You don't need a ddos service for that.
[0] https://github.com/wg/wrk
artillery
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Ask HN: What are you using for load testing?
Usually, I would let organic users be my load test. However, I am working on a project that has an anticipated load on a new-to-my-team stack, so I'm looking into ways to load test.
I've seen tools like k6 (https://k6.io/), Artillery (https://www.artillery.io), and JMeter (https://jmeter.apache.org/).
I've been using Artillery, but it's hard to visualize the results.
What do you use?
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Tracetest + Artillery Launch Week Recap 💥
This week was Tracetest’s first-ever Launch Week. We’ve been working on a major integration with Artillery for the last month and our team is beyond excited to share it with you all!
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Building Llama as a Service (LaaS)
I found a tool for load testing called Artillery. Following this guide I installed Artillery and began research for the test configuration.
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Ruby on Rails load testing habits
This is a great blog post! just taking the opportunity here to comment on this:
> Finally for full scale high fidelity load tests there are relatively few tools out there for browser based load testing.
It exists as of a few months ago and it's fully open source: https://github.com/artilleryio/artillery (I'm the lead dev). You write a Playwright script, then run it in your own AWS account on serverless Fargate and scale it out horizontally as you see fit. Artillery takes care of spinning up and down all of the infra. It will also automatically grab and report Core Web Vitals for you from all those browser sessions, and we just released support for tracing so you can dig into the details of each session if you want to (OpenTelemetry based so works with most vendors- Datadago APM, New Relic etc)
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Rust and Lambda Performance
So not to stress test Momento or AWS' Lambda, I wanted to build a small but stable 10-minute workload that hits the Momento Topic API and then let Momento trigger the FunctionURL to run the Lambda code. I wrote a small Artillery config file that ramps up to 20 users and then sustains that for the duration. Again, the script is simple to trigger the work.
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API Benchmarking with Artillery and Gitpod: Emulating Production for Enterprises
Tool Spotlight: Featuring insights on how Artillery and Gitpod can enhance and streamline the benchmarking process.
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Timing with Curl (2010)
curl is fantastic. There's also HTTPStat which provides a waterfall visualization on top of curl timings: https://github.com/reorx/httpstat
There's also Skytrace (made by yours truly), which provides timing info as a waterfall visualization inspired by HTTPStat + lots more (syntax highlighting for responses, built-in JMESPath support, command-line assertions and checks etc) - https://github.com/artilleryio/artillery/tree/main/packages/...
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Ask HN: What do you use to stress test your web application?
https://www.artillery.io/
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Is there a way to auto-scale when using the cluster module?
I know it's an annoying answer, but it depends on your application. The only true way to know is to test it using a load tester like artillery. Measuring performance is a fundamental part of any optimisation (otherwise how do you know?), so it's a great idea to be using tools like this anyway.
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Comparison between ARM64 and X86_X64 on ECS Fargate (Node.js)
For this test I have used artillery.io with the following configuration:
What are some alternatives?
wrk2 - A constant throughput, correct latency recording variant of wrk
k6-examples - Project using K6 and Javascript to create scenarios of Load and Stress Test
siege - Siege is an http load tester and benchmarking utility
k6 - A modern load testing tool, using Go and JavaScript - https://k6.io
grpcurl - Like cURL, but for gRPC: Command-line tool for interacting with gRPC servers
Apache JMeter - Apache JMeter open-source load testing tool for analyzing and measuring the performance of a variety of services
prometheus - The Prometheus monitoring system and time series database.
locust - Write scalable load tests in plain Python 🚗💨
jester - A sinatra-like web framework for Nim.
web-frameworks - Which is the fastest web framework?