Skip to content
/ fortio Public
forked from fortio/fortio

Fortio load testing library and command line tool and web UI in go (golang). Allows to specify a set query-per-second load and record latency histograms and other useful stats.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

SeriyBg/fortio

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Fortio

Awesome Go Go Report Card GoDoc codecov CircleCI

Fortio (Φορτίο) started as, and is, Istio's load testing tool and now graduated to be its own project.

Fortio runs at a specified query per second (qps) and records an histogram of execution time and calculates percentiles (e.g. p99 ie the response time such as 99% of the requests take less than that number (in seconds, SI unit)). It can run for a set duration, for a fixed number of calls, or until interrupted (at a constant target QPS, or max speed/load per connection/thread).

The name fortio comes from greek φορτίο which means load/burden.

Fortio is a fast, small (3Mb docker image, minimal dependencies), reusable, embeddable go library as well as a command line tool and server process, the server includes a simple web UI and graphical representation of the results (both a single latency graph and a multiple results comparative min, max, avg, qps and percentiles graphs).

Fortio also includes a set of server side features (similar to httpbin) to help debugging and testing: request echo back including headers, adding latency or error codes with a probability distribution, tcp proxying, GRPC echo/health in addition to http, etc...

Fortio is quite mature and very stable with no known major bugs (lots of possible improvements if you want to contribute though!), and when bugs are found they are fixed quickly, so after 1 year of development and 42 incremental releases, we reached 1.0 in June 2018.

Installation

  1. Install go (golang 1.8 or later)
  2. go get fortio.org/fortio
  3. you can now run fortio (from your gopath bin/ directory)

Or use docker, for instance:

docker run -p 8080:8080 -p 8079:8079 fortio/fortio server & # For the server
docker run fortio/fortio load http://www.google.com/ # For a test run

Or download one the binary distributions, from the releases assets page or for instance:

curl -L https://github.com/fortio/fortio/releases/download/v1.3.1/fortio-linux_x64-1.3.1.tgz \
 | sudo tar -C / -xvzpf -
# or the debian package
wget https://github.com/fortio/fortio/releases/download/v1.3.1/fortio_1.3.1-1_amd64.deb
dpkg -i fortio_1.3.1-1_amd64.deb
# or the rpm
rpm -i https://github.com/fortio/fortio/releases/download/v1.3.1/fortio-1.3.1-1.x86_64.rpm

On a MacOS you can also install Fortio using Homebrew:

brew install fortio

Once fortio server is running, you can visit its web UI at http://localhost:8080/fortio/

You can get a preview of the reporting/graphing UI at https://fortio.istio.io/ and on istio.io/docs/performance-and-scalability/synthetic-benchmarks/

Command line arguments

Fortio can be an http or grpc load generator, gathering statistics using the load subcommand, or start simple http and grpc ping servers, as well as a basic web UI, result graphing and https redirector, with the server command or issue grpc ping messages using the grpcping command. It can also fetch a single URL's for debugging when using the curl command (or the -curl flag to the load command). You can run just the redirector with redirect. If you saved JSON results (using the web UI or directly from the command line), you can browse and graph those results using the report command. The version command will print version and build information, fortio version -s just the version. Lastly, you can learn which flags are available using help command.

Most important flags for http load generation:

Flag Description, example
-qps rate Queries Per Seconds or 0 for no wait/max qps
-c connections Number of parallel simultaneous connections (and matching go routine)
-t duration How long to run the test (for instance -t 30min for 30 minutes) or 0 to run until ^C, example (default 5s)
-n numcalls Run for exactly this number of calls instead of duration. Default (0) is to use duration (-t).
-r resolution Resolution of the histogram lowest buckets in seconds (default 0.001 i.e 1ms), use 1/10th of your expected typical latency
-H "header: value" Can be specified multiple times to add headers (including Host:)
-a Automatically save JSON result with filename based on labels and timestamp
-json filename Filename or - for stdout to output json result (relative to -data-dir by default, should end with .json if you want fortio report to show them; using -a is typicallly a better option)
-labels "l1 l2 ..." Additional config data/labels to add to the resulting JSON, defaults to target URL and hostname

You can switch from http GET queries to POST by setting -content-type or passing one of the -payload-* option.

Full list of command line flags (fortio help):

Φορτίο 1.3.1 usage:
        fortio command [flags] target
where command is one of: load (load testing), server (starts grpc ping and
http echo/ui/redirect/proxy servers), grpcping (grpc client), report (report
only UI server), redirect (redirect only server), or curl (single URL debug).
where target is a url (http load tests) or host:port (grpc health test).
flags are:
  -H header
        Additional header(s)
  -L    Follow redirects (implies -std-client) - do not use for load test
  -P value
        Proxies to run, e.g -P "localport1 dest_host1:dest_port1" -P "[::1]:0
www.google.com:443" ...
  -a    Automatically save JSON result with filename based on labels & timestamp
  -abort-on int
        Http code that if encountered aborts the run. e.g. 503 or -1 for socket
errors.
  -allow-initial-errors
        Allow and don't abort on initial warmup errors
  -base-url string
        base URL used as prefix for data/index.tsv generation. (when empty, the
url from the first request is used)
  -c int
        Number of connections/goroutine/threads (default 4)
  -cacert Path
        Path to a custom CA certificate file to be used for the GRPC client
TLS, if empty, use https:// prefix for standard internet CAs TLS
  -cert Path
        Path to the certificate file to be used for GRPC server TLS
  -compression
        Enable http compression
  -content-type string
        Sets http content type. Setting this value switches the request method
from GET to POST.
  -curl
        Just fetch the content once
  -data-dir Directory
        Directory where JSON results are stored/read (default ".")
  -echo-debug-path string
        http echo server URI for debug, empty turns off that part (more secure)
(default "/debug")
  -gomaxprocs int
        Setting for runtime.GOMAXPROCS, <1 doesn't change the default
  -grpc
        Use GRPC (health check by default, add -ping for ping) for load testing
  -grpc-max-streams uint
        MaxConcurrentStreams for the grpc server. Default (0) is to leave the
option unset.
  -grpc-ping-delay duration
        grpc ping delay in response
  -grpc-port string
        grpc server port. Can be in the form of host:port, ip:port or port or
/unix/domain/path or "disabled" to not start the grpc server. (default "8079")
  -halfclose
        When not keepalive, whether to half close the connection (only for fast
http)
  -health
        grpc ping client mode: use health instead of ping
  -healthservice string
        which service string to pass to health check
  -http-port string
        http echo server port. Can be in the form of host:port, ip:port, port
or /unix/domain/path. (default "8080")
  -http1.0
        Use http1.0 (instead of http 1.1)
  -httpbufferkb kbytes
        Size of the buffer (max data size) for the optimized http client in
kbytes (default 128)
  -httpccch
        Check for Connection: Close Header
  -https-insecure
        Long form of the -k flag
  -json path
        Json output to provided file path or '-' for stdout (empty = no json
output, unless -a is used)
  -k    Do not verify certs in https connections
  -keepalive
        Keep connection alive (only for fast http 1.1) (default true)
  -key Path
        Path to the key file used for GRPC server TLS
  -labels string
        Additional config data/labels to add to the resulting JSON, defaults to
target URL and hostname
  -logcaller
        Logs filename and line number of callers to log (default true)
  -loglevel value
        loglevel, one of [Debug Verbose Info Warning Error Critical Fatal]
(default Info)
  -logprefix string
        Prefix to log lines before logged messages (default "> ")
  -maxpayloadsizekb int
        MaxPayloadSize is the maximum size of payload to be generated by the
EchoHandler size= argument. In Kbytes. (default 256)
  -n int
        Run for exactly this number of calls instead of duration. Default (0)
is to use duration (-t). Default is 1 when used as grpc ping count.
  -p string
        List of pXX to calculate (default "50,75,90,99,99.9")
  -payload string
        Payload string to send along
  -payload-file path
        File path to be use as payload (POST for http), replaces -payload when
set.
  -payload-size int
        Additional random payload size, replaces -payload when set > 0, must be
smaller than -maxpayloadsizekb. Setting this switches http to POST.
  -ping
        grpc load test: use ping instead of health
  -profile file
        write .cpu and .mem profiles to file
  -qps float
        Queries Per Seconds or 0 for no wait/max qps (default 8)
  -quiet
        Quiet mode: sets the loglevel to Error and reduces the output.
  -r float
        Resolution of the histogram lowest buckets in seconds (default 0.001)
  -redirect-port string
        Redirect all incoming traffic to https URL (need ingress to work
properly). Can be in the form of host:port, ip:port, port or "disabled" to
disable the feature. (default "8081")
  -s int
        Number of streams per grpc connection (default 1)
  -static-dir path
        Absolute path to the dir containing the static files dir
  -stdclient
        Use the slower net/http standard client (works for TLS)
  -sync string
        index.tsv or s3/gcs bucket xml URL to fetch at startup for server modes.
  -sync-interval duration
        Refresh the url every given interval (default, no refresh)
  -t duration
        How long to run the test or 0 to run until ^C (default 5s)
  -timeout duration
        Connection and read timeout value (for http) (default 15s)
  -ui-path string
        http server URI for UI, empty turns off that part (more secure)
(default "/fortio/")
  -unix-socket path
        Unix domain socket path to use for physical connection
  -user user:password
        User credentials for basic authentication (for http). Input data format
should be user:password

See also the FAQ entry about fortio flags for best results

Example use and output

Start the internal servers

$ fortio server &
Fortio 1.3.1 grpc 'ping' server listening on [::]:8079
Fortio 1.3.1 https redirector server listening on [::]:8081
Fortio 1.3.1 echo server listening on [::]:8080
UI started - visit:
http://localhost:8080/fortio/
(or any host/ip reachable on this server)
14:57:12 I fortio_main.go:217> All fortio 1.3.1 release go1.10.3 servers started!

Change the port / binding address

By default, Fortio's web/echo servers listen on port 8080 on all interfaces. Use the -http-port flag to change this behavior:

$ fortio server -http-port 10.10.10.10:8088
UI starting - visit:
http://10.10.10.10:8088/fortio/
Https redirector running on :8081
Fortio 1.3.1 grpc ping server listening on port :8079
Fortio 1.3.1 echo server listening on port 10.10.10.10:8088

Unix domain sockets

You can use unix domain socket for any server/client:

$ fortio server --http-port /tmp/fortio-uds-http &
Fortio 1.3.1 grpc 'ping' server listening on [::]:8079
Fortio 1.3.1 https redirector server listening on [::]:8081
Fortio 1.3.1 echo server listening on /tmp/fortio-uds-http
UI started - visit:
fortio curl -unix-socket=/tmp/fortio-uds-http http://localhost/fortio/
14:58:45 I fortio_main.go:217> All fortio 1.3.1 unknown go1.10.3 servers started!
$ fortio curl -unix-socket=/tmp/fortio-uds-http http://foo.bar/debug
15:00:48 I http_client.go:428> Using unix domain socket /tmp/fortio-uds-http instead of foo.bar http
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
Date: Wed, 08 Aug 2018 22:00:48 GMT
Content-Length: 231

Φορτίο version 1.3.1 unknown go1.10.3 echo debug server up for 2m3.4s on ldemailly-macbookpro - request from

GET /debug HTTP/1.1

headers:

Host: foo.bar
User-Agent: fortio.org/fortio-1.3.1

body:

GRPC

Simple grpc ping

$ fortio grpcping localhost
02:29:27 I pingsrv.go:116> Ping RTT 305334 (avg of 342970, 293515, 279517 ns) clock skew -2137
Clock skew histogram usec : count 1 avg -2.137 +/- 0 min -2.137 max -2.137 sum -2.137
# range, mid point, percentile, count
>= -4 < -2 , -3 , 100.00, 1
# target 50% -2.137
RTT histogram usec : count 3 avg 305.334 +/- 27.22 min 279.517 max 342.97 sum 916.002
# range, mid point, percentile, count
>= 250 < 300 , 275 , 66.67, 2
>= 300 < 350 , 325 , 100.00, 1
# target 50% 294.879

Change the target port for grpc

The value of -grpc-port (default 8079) is used when specifying a hostname or an IP address in grpcping. Add :port to the grpcping destination to change this behavior:

$ fortio grpcping 10.10.10.100:8078 # Connects to gRPC server 10.10.10.100 listening on port 8078
02:29:27 I pingsrv.go:116> Ping RTT 305334 (avg of 342970, 293515, 279517 ns) clock skew -2137
Clock skew histogram usec : count 1 avg -2.137 +/- 0 min -2.137 max -2.137 sum -2.137
# range, mid point, percentile, count
>= -4 < -2 , -3 , 100.00, 1
# target 50% -2.137
RTT histogram usec : count 3 avg 305.334 +/- 27.22 min 279.517 max 342.97 sum 916.002
# range, mid point, percentile, count
>= 250 < 300 , 275 , 66.67, 2
>= 300 < 350 , 325 , 100.00, 1
# target 50% 294.879

grpcping using TLS

  • First, start Fortio server with the -cert and -key flags:

/path/to/fortio/server.crt and /path/to/fortio/server.key are paths to the TLS certificate and key that you must provide.

$ fortio server -cert /path/to/fortio/server.crt -key /path/to/fortio/server.key
UI starting - visit:
http://localhost:8080/fortio/
Https redirector running on :8081
Fortio 1.3.1 grpc ping server listening on port :8079
Fortio 1.3.1 echo server listening on port localhost:8080
Using server certificate /path/to/fortio/server.crt to construct TLS credentials
Using server key /path/to/fortio/server.key to construct TLS credentials
  • Next, use grpcping with the -cacert flag:

/path/to/fortio/ca.crt is the path to the CA certificate that issued the server certificate for localhost. In our example, the server certificate is /path/to/fortio/server.crt:

$ fortio grpcping -cacert /path/to/fortio/ca.crt localhost
Using server certificate /path/to/fortio/ca.crt to construct TLS credentials
16:00:10 I pingsrv.go:129> Ping RTT 501452 (avg of 595441, 537088, 371828 ns) clock skew 31094
Clock skew histogram usec : count 1 avg 31.094 +/- 0 min 31.094 max 31.094 sum 31.094
# range, mid point, percentile, count
>= 31.094 <= 31.094 , 31.094 , 100.00, 1
# target 50% 31.094
RTT histogram usec : count 3 avg 501.45233 +/- 94.7 min 371.828 max 595.441 sum 1504.357
# range, mid point, percentile, count
>= 371.828 <= 400 , 385.914 , 33.33, 1
> 500 <= 595.441 , 547.721 , 100.00, 2
# target 50% 523.86

GRPC to standard https service

grpcping can connect to a non-Fortio TLS server by prefacing the destination with https://:

$ fortio grpcping https://fortio.istio.io
11:07:55 I grpcrunner.go:275> stripping https scheme. grpc destination: fortio.istio.io. grpc port: 443
Clock skew histogram usec : count 1 avg 12329.795 +/- 0 min 12329.795 max 12329.795 sum 12329.795
# range, mid point, percentile, count
>= 12329.8 <= 12329.8 , 12329.8 , 100.00, 1
# target 50% 12329.8

Simple load test

Load (low default qps/threading) test:

$ fortio load http://www.google.com
Fortio 1.3.1 running at 8 queries per second, 8->8 procs, for 5s: http://www.google.com
19:10:33 I httprunner.go:84> Starting http test for http://www.google.com with 4 threads at 8.0 qps
Starting at 8 qps with 4 thread(s) [gomax 8] for 5s : 10 calls each (total 40)
19:10:39 I periodic.go:314> T002 ended after 5.056753279s : 10 calls. qps=1.9775534712220633
19:10:39 I periodic.go:314> T001 ended after 5.058085991s : 10 calls. qps=1.9770324224999916
19:10:39 I periodic.go:314> T000 ended after 5.058796046s : 10 calls. qps=1.9767549252963101
19:10:39 I periodic.go:314> T003 ended after 5.059557593s : 10 calls. qps=1.9764573910247019
Ended after 5.059691387s : 40 calls. qps=7.9056
Sleep times : count 36 avg 0.49175757 +/- 0.007217 min 0.463508712 max 0.502087879 sum 17.7032725
Aggregated Function Time : count 40 avg 0.060587641 +/- 0.006564 min 0.052549016 max 0.089893269 sum 2.42350566
# range, mid point, percentile, count
>= 0.052549 < 0.06 , 0.0562745 , 47.50, 19
>= 0.06 < 0.07 , 0.065 , 92.50, 18
>= 0.07 < 0.08 , 0.075 , 97.50, 2
>= 0.08 <= 0.0898933 , 0.0849466 , 100.00, 1
# target 50% 0.0605556
# target 75% 0.0661111
# target 99% 0.085936
# target 99.9% 0.0894975
Code 200 : 40
Response Header Sizes : count 40 avg 690.475 +/- 15.77 min 592 max 693 sum 27619
Response Body/Total Sizes : count 40 avg 12565.2 +/- 301.9 min 12319 max 13665 sum 502608
All done 40 calls (plus 4 warmup) 60.588 ms avg, 7.9 qps

GRPC load test

Uses -s to use multiple (h2/grpc) streams per connection (-c), request to hit the fortio ping grpc endpoint with a delay in replies of 0.25s and an extra payload for 10 bytes and auto save the json result:

$ fortio load -a -grpc -ping -grpc-ping-delay 0.25s -payload "01234567890" -c 2 -s 4 https://fortio-stage.istio.io
Fortio 1.3.1 running at 8 queries per second, 8->8 procs, for 5s: https://fortio-stage.istio.io
16:32:56 I grpcrunner.go:139> Starting GRPC Ping Delay=250ms PayloadLength=11 test for https://fortio-stage.istio.io with 4*2 threads at 8.0 qps
16:32:56 I grpcrunner.go:261> stripping https scheme. grpc destination: fortio-stage.istio.io. grpc port: 443
16:32:57 I grpcrunner.go:261> stripping https scheme. grpc destination: fortio-stage.istio.io. grpc port: 443
Starting at 8 qps with 8 thread(s) [gomax 8] for 5s : 5 calls each (total 40)
16:33:04 I periodic.go:533> T005 ended after 5.283227589s : 5 calls. qps=0.9463911814835126
[...]
Ended after 5.28514474s : 40 calls. qps=7.5684
Sleep times : count 32 avg 0.97034752 +/- 0.002338 min 0.967323561 max 0.974838789 sum 31.0511206
Aggregated Function Time : count 40 avg 0.27731944 +/- 0.001606 min 0.2741372 max 0.280604967 sum 11.0927778
# range, mid point, percentile, count
>= 0.274137 <= 0.280605 , 0.277371 , 100.00, 40
# target 50% 0.277288
# target 75% 0.278947
# target 90% 0.279942
# target 99% 0.280539
# target 99.9% 0.280598
Ping SERVING : 40
All done 40 calls (plus 2 warmup) 277.319 ms avg, 7.6 qps
Successfully wrote 1210 bytes of Json data to 2018-04-03-163258_fortio_stage_istio_io_ldemailly_macbookpro.json

And the JSON saved is

{
  "RunType": "GRPC Ping Delay=250ms PayloadLength=11",
  "Labels": "fortio-stage.istio.io , ldemailly-macbookpro",
  "StartTime": "2018-04-03T16:32:58.895472681-07:00",
  "RequestedQPS": "8",
  "RequestedDuration": "5s",
  "ActualQPS": 7.568383075162479,
  "ActualDuration": 5285144740,
  "NumThreads": 8,
  "Version": "0.9.0",
  "DurationHistogram": {
    "Count": 40,
    "Min": 0.2741372,
    "Max": 0.280604967,
    "Sum": 11.092777797,
    "Avg": 0.277319444925,
    "StdDev": 0.0016060870789948905,
    "Data": [
      {
        "Start": 0.2741372,
        "End": 0.280604967,
        "Percent": 100,
        "Count": 40
      }
    ],
    "Percentiles": [
      {
        "Percentile": 50,
        "Value": 0.2772881634102564
      },
      {
        "Percentile": 75,
        "Value": 0.27894656520512817
      },
      {
        "Percentile": 90,
        "Value": 0.2799416062820513
      },
      {
        "Percentile": 99,
        "Value": 0.28053863092820513
      },
      {
        "Percentile": 99.9,
        "Value": 0.2805983333928205
      }
    ]
  },
  "Exactly": 0,
  "RetCodes": {
    "1": 40
  },
  "Destination": "https://fortio-stage.istio.io",
  "Streams": 4,
  "Ping": true
}
  • Load test using gRPC and TLS security. First, start Fortio server with the -cert and -key flags:
fortio server -cert /etc/ssl/certs/server.crt -key /etc/ssl/certs/server.key

Next, run the load command with the -cacert flag:

fortio load -cacert /etc/ssl/certs/ca.crt -grpc localhost:8079

Curl like (single request) mode

$ fortio load -curl -H Foo:Bar http://localhost:8080/debug
14:26:26 I http.go:133> Setting regular extra header Foo: Bar
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
Date: Mon, 08 Jan 2018 22:26:26 GMT
Content-Length: 230

Φορτίο version 1.3.1 echo debug server up for 39s on ldemailly-macbookpro - request from [::1]:65055

GET /debug HTTP/1.1

headers:

Host: localhost:8080
User-Agent: fortio.org/fortio-1.3.1
Foo: Bar

body:

Report only UI

If you have json files saved from running the full UI, you can serve just the reports:

$ fortio report
Browse only UI starting - visit:
http://localhost:8080/
Https redirector running on :8081

Server URLs and features

Fortio server has the following feature for the http listening on 8080 (all paths and ports are configurable through flags above):

  • A simple echo server which will echo back posted data (for any path not mentioned below).

    For instance curl -d abcdef http://localhost:8080/ returns abcdef back. It supports the following optional query argument parameters:

Parameter Usage, example
delay duration to delay the response by. Can be a single value or a coma separated list of probabilities, e.g delay=150us:10,2ms:5,0.5s:1 for 10% of chance of a 150 us delay, 5% of a 2ms delay and 1% of a 1/2 second delay
status http status to return instead of 200. Can be a single value or a coma separated list of probabilities, e.g status=404:10,503:5,429:1 for 10% of chance of a 404 status, 5% of a 503 status and 1% of a 429 status
size size of the payload to reply instead of echoing input. Also works as probabilities list. size=1024:10,512:5 10% of response will be 1k and 5% will be 512 bytes payload and the rest defaults to echoing back.
close close the socket after answering e.g close=true
header header(s) to add to the reply e.g. &header=Foo:Bar&header=X:Y
  • /debug will echo back the request in plain text for human debugging.

  • /fortio/ A UI to

    • Run/Trigger tests and graph the results.
    • A UI to browse saved results and single graph or multi graph them (comparative graph of min,avg, median, p75, p99, p99.9 and max).
    • Proxy/fetch other URLs
    • /fortio/data/index.tsv an tab separated value file conforming to Google cloud storage URL list data transfer format so you can export/backup local results to the cloud.
    • Download/sync peer to peer JSON results files from other Fortio servers (using their index.tsv URLs)
    • Download/sync from an Amazon S3 or Google Cloud compatible bucket listings XML URLs

The report mode is a readonly subset of the above directly on /.

There is also the GRPC health and ping servers, as well as the http->https redirector.

Implementation details

Fortio is written in the Go language and includes a scalable semi log histogram in stats.go and a periodic runner engine in periodic.go with specializations for http and grpc. The http/ package includes a very high performance specialized http 1.1 client. You may find fortio's logger useful as well.

You can run the histogram code standalone as a command line in histogram/, a basic echo http server in echosrv/, or both the http echo and GRPC ping server through fortio server, the fortio command line interface lives in this top level directory fortio_main.go

There is also fcurl/ which is the fortio curl part of the code (if you need a light http client without grpc or server side). A matching tiny (2Mb compressed) docker image is fortio/fortio.fcurl

More examples

You can get the data on the console, for instance, with 5k qps: (includes envoy and mixer in the calls)

$ time fortio load -qps 5000 -t 60s -c 8 -r 0.0001 -H "Host: perf-cluster" http://benchmark-2:9090/echo
2017/07/09 02:31:05 Will be setting special Host header to perf-cluster
Fortio running at 5000 queries per second for 1m0s: http://benchmark-2:9090/echo
Starting at 5000 qps with 8 thread(s) [gomax 4] for 1m0s : 37500 calls each (total 300000)
2017/07/09 02:32:05 T004 ended after 1m0.000907812s : 37500 calls. qps=624.9905437680746
2017/07/09 02:32:05 T000 ended after 1m0.000922222s : 37500 calls. qps=624.9903936684861
2017/07/09 02:32:05 T005 ended after 1m0.00094454s : 37500 calls. qps=624.9901611965524
2017/07/09 02:32:05 T006 ended after 1m0.000944816s : 37500 calls. qps=624.9901583216429
2017/07/09 02:32:05 T001 ended after 1m0.00102094s : 37500 calls. qps=624.9893653892883
2017/07/09 02:32:05 T007 ended after 1m0.001096292s : 37500 calls. qps=624.9885805003184
2017/07/09 02:32:05 T003 ended after 1m0.001045342s : 37500 calls. qps=624.9891112105419
2017/07/09 02:32:05 T002 ended after 1m0.001044416s : 37500 calls. qps=624.9891208560392
Ended after 1m0.00112695s : 300000 calls. qps=4999.9
Aggregated Sleep Time : count 299992 avg 8.8889218e-05 +/- 0.002326 min -0.03490402 max 0.001006041 sum 26.6660543
# range, mid point, percentile, count
< 0 , 0 , 8.58, 25726
>= 0 < 0.001 , 0.0005 , 100.00, 274265
>= 0.001 < 0.002 , 0.0015 , 100.00, 1
# target 50% 0.000453102
WARNING 8.58% of sleep were falling behind
Aggregated Function Time : count 300000 avg 0.00094608764 +/- 0.0007901 min 0.000510522 max 0.029267604 sum 283.826292
# range, mid point, percentile, count
>= 0.0005 < 0.0006 , 0.00055 , 0.15, 456
>= 0.0006 < 0.0007 , 0.00065 , 3.25, 9295
>= 0.0007 < 0.0008 , 0.00075 , 24.23, 62926
>= 0.0008 < 0.0009 , 0.00085 , 62.73, 115519
>= 0.0009 < 0.001 , 0.00095 , 85.68, 68854
>= 0.001 < 0.0011 , 0.00105 , 93.11, 22293
>= 0.0011 < 0.0012 , 0.00115 , 95.38, 6792
>= 0.0012 < 0.0014 , 0.0013 , 97.18, 5404
>= 0.0014 < 0.0016 , 0.0015 , 97.94, 2275
>= 0.0016 < 0.0018 , 0.0017 , 98.34, 1198
>= 0.0018 < 0.002 , 0.0019 , 98.60, 775
>= 0.002 < 0.0025 , 0.00225 , 98.98, 1161
>= 0.0025 < 0.003 , 0.00275 , 99.21, 671
>= 0.003 < 0.0035 , 0.00325 , 99.36, 449
>= 0.0035 < 0.004 , 0.00375 , 99.47, 351
>= 0.004 < 0.0045 , 0.00425 , 99.57, 290
>= 0.0045 < 0.005 , 0.00475 , 99.66, 280
>= 0.005 < 0.006 , 0.0055 , 99.79, 380
>= 0.006 < 0.007 , 0.0065 , 99.82, 92
>= 0.007 < 0.008 , 0.0075 , 99.83, 15
>= 0.008 < 0.009 , 0.0085 , 99.83, 5
>= 0.009 < 0.01 , 0.0095 , 99.83, 1
>= 0.01 < 0.012 , 0.011 , 99.83, 8
>= 0.012 < 0.014 , 0.013 , 99.84, 35
>= 0.014 < 0.016 , 0.015 , 99.92, 231
>= 0.016 < 0.018 , 0.017 , 99.94, 65
>= 0.018 < 0.02 , 0.019 , 99.95, 26
>= 0.02 < 0.025 , 0.0225 , 100.00, 139
>= 0.025 < 0.03 , 0.0275 , 100.00, 14
# target 50% 0.000866935
# target 75% 0.000953452
# target 99% 0.00253875
# target 99.9% 0.0155152
Code 200 : 300000
Response Body Sizes : count 300000 avg 0 +/- 0 min 0 max 0 sum 0

Or you can get the data in JSON format (using -json result.json)

Web/Graphical UI

Or graphically (through the http://localhost:8080/fortio/ web UI):

Simple form/UI:

Sample requests with responses delayed by 250us and 0.5% of 503 and 1.5% of 429 simulated http errors.

Web UI form screenshot

Run result:

Graphical result

Code 200 : 2929 (97.6 %)
Code 429 : 56 (1.9 %)
Code 503 : 15 (0.5 %)

There are newer/live examples on istio.io/docs/concepts/performance-and-scalability/#synthetic-end-to-end-benchmarks

Contributing

Contributions whether through issues, documentation, bug fixes, or new features are most welcome !

Please also see Contributing to Istio and Getting started contributing to Fortio in the FAQ.

If you are not using the binary releases, please do make pull to pull/update to the latest of the current branch.

And make sure to go format and run those commands successfully before sending your PRs:

make test
make lint
make release-test

When modifying Javascript, check with standard:

standard --fix ui/static/js/fortio_chart.js

See also

Our wiki and the Fortio FAQ (including for instance differences between fortio and wrk or httpbin)

Disclaimer

This is not an officially supported Google product.

About

Fortio load testing library and command line tool and web UI in go (golang). Allows to specify a set query-per-second load and record latency histograms and other useful stats.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Go 84.7%
  • JavaScript 5.2%
  • Shell 4.0%
  • HTML 2.8%
  • Makefile 2.8%
  • Dockerfile 0.5%