Hardy
Hardy is a Thor library which easily converts an HTTP Archive (HAR) file into a siege URLs file.
What does that mean for you? Well, it means that it's now a trivial task to generate load testing scripts for your HTTP(S) web applications and determine exactly how many concurrent, active, hammering-away-on-your-systems users your application and infrastructure can fully support.
Stop guessing and find out! It's easy!!
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile (probably not in the default group, but more likely in a :test or :development group):
gem 'hardy'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install hardy
Generating HAR files
Creating a HAR file is simple:
- Open Chrome,
- Open the Chrome Developer Tools panel (cmd-shift-i on a Mac),
- With the tools panel open, navigate to the site you want to test,
- Click the Preserve Log upon Navigation button on the Network tab of the tools panel (otherwise, your Network tab will be cleared with each page view),
- Click around the site! Act like the user you want to simulate. Meaning, click links, post forms, change pages, sign in, sign out. Whatever you do here will be recreated by your load test users, so try to do things that will generate interesting test metrics.
- Right-click in the Network panel and click "Save as HAR with Content"
You now have a HAR file to source for load testing! 🍺
Installing siege
Note: If you are planning on testing a site which uses a JSON interface, you'll want to read the Enabling JSON support in siege section further down this README.
On a Mac, you can install siege with homebrew:
$ brew install siege
On Ubuntu:
$ apt-get install siege
Installing from source:
$ curl http://www.joedog.org/pub/siege/siege-latest.tar.gz -o siege-latest.tar.gz
$ tar xvfz siege-latest.tar.gz
$ cd siege-*
$ ./configure
$ make
$ make install
It is important to note that if you want to load test an HTTPS (SSL) site, you'll need to install siege with SSL support. The Mac homebrew installation and Ubuntu package already enable this, by default.
$ ./configure --with-ssl
Enabling JSON support in siege
So, you're load testing a web application which uses JSON, huh? Does it look
like your application is not recognizing the parameters as JSON? Yeah... as of
siege 2.74 (currently the latest version), siege does not recognize .json
files, nor does it support automatically setting the Content-Type: application/json
request header. Bummer.
But you need JSON support, you say? Yeah, me too. Sadly, that means you get to
edit some C source code. So, download the latest source (as instructed in the
Installing siege section, above) and before you
./configure
, you'll need to edit src/load.c
:
static const struct ContentType tmap[] = {
{"default", TRUE, "application/x-www-form-urlencoded"},
{"ai", FALSE, "application/postscript"},
...
+ {"json", FALSE, "application/json"},
...
{"xyz", FALSE, "chemical/x-pdb"},
{"zip", FALSE, "application/zip"}
};
Just add an entry to allow .json
files to be recognized and transmitted as
"application/json" format. Once that's done, re-configure, build, and install
siege, as detailed above. Now, when the URLs file defines
a .json
file, siege will automatically recognize it and make the request with
the proper Content-Type
request header.
Usage
Once you've created or otherwise acquired your HAR file, use Hardy to convert it to a siege URLs file:
$ hardy convert my-har-file.env
By default, this will create a urls.siege
file and a data
directory full of
data files to support it.
Hardy options
There are a handful of command line options when running the convert task,
ranging from defining your output file to changing the data directory, and
more. Check out hardy help convert
for more details. Below are a few details
of the more interesting ones:
--host-filter
will restrict the generated URLs file to only include requests to
the given host. This is very useful if your site uses a CDN for assets and you
do not want to include those requests in your load test (that would be a bad
idea!).
--host
will replace the request hosts for all generated URLs with the host
given. This is useful if you're generating your HAR script on one system (say,
your staging server) and want to run the siege test against another (perhaps
your production stack).
--protocol
will replace the request protocols for all generated URLs with the
protocol given. This is useful for creating one script where you're load
testing https://
and another where you're load testing http://
. Again,
commonly useful when you're generating your HAR from a system different from
the on you're running your siege against.
An example where we've generated a my-site.env
HAR file by walking our
staging site (http://staging.my-site.com) and we want to have siege run against
our production site (https://www.my-site.com):
$ hardy my-site.env --host-filter=staging.my-site.com --host=www.my-site.com --protocol=https://
Using siege
Now, to use siege with your shiny new URLs file (and data directory), here's an example:
$ siege -c5 -d10 -t5M -v -f urls.siege
This tells siege to run with 5 concurrent users (-c5), ramping them up over 10 seconds (-d10), running with all 5 users active for 5 minutes (-t5M), displaying the request results to the screen (-v), and sourcing your URLs file for their run script (-f urls.siege).
siege offers a lot of settings options, so check out siege --help
for more
information.
Contributing
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request