#benchmark #benchmarks #performance #web-frameworks

INADA Naoki 9331fd7be2 Fix pypy install 12 years ago
aspnet 58b3c41923 change sort order 12 years ago
bottle 50b736905c Fixed else if error 12 years ago
cake 0c3d4680dd Change cache engine from File to Apc 12 years ago
compojure b70efc1d44 updated sort order for compojure raw 12 years ago
config 2ea89d5977 force utf8 encoding at the mysql server level 12 years ago
cowboy cfa971ecdb README changes 12 years ago
dancer 89dc62cb74 fixed nginx.conf 12 years ago
django e25ae0c014 Moved teh max_threads multiplier 12 years ago
django-stripped abc909581e Missing commas 12 years ago
dropwizard cea2eb7c2a Improve DropWizard test to use JSON generation similar to Servlet test -- more efficient that way 12 years ago
elli cfa971ecdb README changes 12 years ago
express d17bdbe779 nodejs and express modifications for Windows 12 years ago
finagle 75118c32b8 fix finagle configuration 12 years ago
flask ac39315fa5 Fix committed real DBHOSTNAME. 12 years ago
gemini d3194f9dcf the run script now understands the new update test. and initial implementation for gemini 12 years ago
go 9d5646277d Update: gofmt all Go code 12 years ago
grails 5eaf0f31a5 Removed 'optimistic locking' from grails so that the version column isn't created 12 years ago
grizzly-jersey 4f43803025 Modified the webserver to listen on 0.0.0.0 12 years ago
http-kit b22e505e54 Update http-kit README to current versions 12 years ago
kelp e7e0b0ca85 merge naturalist-master 12 years ago
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onion 45ac1f51a7 Fixed UTF8 encodings, force mysql use utf8. Set utf meta at html base. 12 years ago
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rack 3e6fef2174 Updated readme files to reference unicorn rather than passenger 12 years ago
rails 799ec696bb fix rails update urls 12 years ago
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ringojs-convinient e2bad23247 Update sort order for ringo tests. Add ringo-sqlstore to installer 12 years ago
scalatra a37b478bec Added -raw to scalatra db tests 12 years ago
servlet b4d0ea106a added postgres test for servlet 12 years ago
sinatra 3e6fef2174 Updated readme files to reference unicorn rather than passenger 12 years ago
snap 049e7c2888 Correcting usage of randomRs by generating a new StdGen instance per handler call 12 years ago
spark 75a949e725 Updated sort number 12 years ago
spring e3af87a294 Spring fortune test 12 years ago
tapestry f9391c5e02 Fix typo in log4j.properties 12 years ago
tornado c95e60ca48 Update Python to 2.7.4 12 years ago
unfiltered 51fb3586f4 #118 Updated connection string for JDBC based tests 12 years ago
vertx 649d738c3e Mods url changed for vertx: https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups=#!topic/vertx/dphzshlTN2E 12 years ago
wai edfa5f72cc used correct port 12 years ago
web-simple baa61cade6 lower case framework name 12 years ago
webgo 9d5646277d Update: gofmt all Go code 12 years ago
wicket 5203b6e936 Setup repository 12 years ago
wsgi a29f4365cf Use ujson instead of simplejson 12 years ago
yesod a1e1904a77 upgrade to yesod 1.2 12 years ago
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README.md ba9114f78f Add windows installation instructions 12 years ago
benchmarker.py 84ab5436bd ensure windows specific tests (aspnet) don't run on our linux machine 12 years ago
framework_test.py 84ab5436bd ensure windows specific tests (aspnet) don't run on our linux machine 12 years ago
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installer.ps1 305786a28f PHP for Windows 12 years ago
installer.py 9331fd7be2 Fix pypy install 12 years ago
latest.json abdd14d34c Fixed bug in result parsing 12 years ago
run-tests.py 231cdf9685 s/clinet/client/ 12 years ago
setup_util.py 5203b6e936 Setup repository 12 years ago

README.md

Web Framework Performance Comparison

This project is an attempt to provide representative and objective performance measures across a wide field of web application frameworks. With much help from the community, we now have very broad coverage and are happy to broaden it further with contributions. The project presently includes frameworks on many languages including Go, Python, Java, Ruby, PHP, Clojure, Groovy, JavaScript, Erlang, Haskell, Scala, Lua, and C. The current tests exercise the frameworks' JSON seralization and object-relational model (ORM). Future tests will exercise server-side template libraries and other computation.

Read more and see the results of our tests on Amazon EC2 and physical hardware at http://www.techempower.com/benchmarks/

Join in the conversation at our Google Group: https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups=#!forum/framework-benchmarks

Running the test suite

We ran our tests using two dedicated i7 2600k machines as well as two EC2 m1.large instances. Below you will find instructions on how to replicate our tests using either EC2 or your own dedicated machines.

###EC2 Instructions

1. Create EC2 Instances

Create two EC2 instances running Ubuntu Server 12.04.1 LTS 64-bit. We tested on m1.large instances, but feel free to experiment with different configurations. Give the instance that will act as the application server more then the default 8GB of disk capacity (we used 20GB).

Security Group

When propmted to create a security group for the instances, here are the ports that you'll need to open.

  • 22 (SSH)
  • 8080 (Most of the tests run on 8080)
  • 3306 (MySQL)
  • 5432 (PostgreSQL)
  • 9000 (Play Framework)
  • 27017 (MongoDB)
  • 3000 (yesod)
  • 8000 (snap)

2. Setting up the servers

To coordinate the tests via scripting, the servers need to be able to work together. So once the instances are running, the first thing you'll want to do is copy your ssh key to the application server instance so that you can ssh between the two machines:

sftp -i path-to-pem-file ubuntu@server-instance-ip
put path-to-pem-file .ssh/
exit

Now ssh into the server instance and clone the latest from this repository (the scripts we use to run the tests expect that you'll clone the repository into your home directory):

ssh -i path-to-pem-file ubuntu@server-instance-ip
yes | sudo apt-get install git-core
git clone https://github.com/TechEmpower/FrameworkBenchmarks.git
cd FrameworkBenchmarks

Next, we're going to setup the servers with all the necessary software:

./run-tests.py -s server-private-ip -c client-private-ip -i path-to-pem --install-software --list-tests
source ~/.bash_profile
# For your first time through the tests, set the ulimit for open files
ulimit -n 8192
# Most software is installed autormatically by the script, but running the mongo command below from 
# the install script was causing some errors. For now this needs to be run manually.
cd installs/jruby-rack && rvm jruby-1.7.3 do jruby -S bundle exec rake clean gem SKIP_SPECS=true
cd target && rvm jruby-1.7.3 do gem install jruby-rack-1.2.0.SNAPSHOT.gem
cd ../../..
cd installs && curl -sS https://getcomposer.org/installer | php -- --install-dir=bin
cd ..
sudo apt-get remove --purge openjdk-6-jre openjdk-6-jre-headless
  mongo --host client-private-ip < config/create.js

Assuming the above finished without error, we're ready to start the test suite:

nohup ./run-tests.py -s server-private-ip -c client-private-ip -i path-to-pem --max-threads number-of-cores &

For the number-of-cores parameter, you will need to know your application server's core count. For example, Amazon EC2 large instances have 2 cores.

This script will run the full set of tests. Results of all the tests will output to ~/FrameworkBenchmarks/results/ec2/timestamp. If you use a different configuration than two m1.large instances, please use the --name option to name the results appropriately.

nohup ./run-tests.py -s server-private-ip -c client-private-ip -i path-to-pem --max-threads cores --name ec2-servertype-clienttype &

So if you were running an m1.large and an m1.medium, it would look like this:

nohup ./run-tests.py -s server-private-ip -c client-private-ip -i path-to-pem --max-threads cores --name ec2-m1.large-m1.medium &

This will allow us to differentiate results.

Be aware that on Large instances, if you include the slower frameworks (and they are included by default), the total runtime of a full suite of tests can be measured in days, not just hours. The EC2 bill isn't going to break the bank, but it's also not going to be chump change.

Dedicated Hardware Instructions

If you have two servers or workstations lying around, then you can install and run the tests on physical hardware. Please be aware that these setup instructions can overwrite software and settings, It's best to follow these instructions on clean hardware. We assume that both machines are running Ubuntu Server 12.04 64-bit.

1. Prerequisites

Before you get started, there are a couple of steps you can take to make running the tests easier on yourself. Since the tests can run for several hours, it helps to set everything up so that once the tests are running, you can leave the machines unattended and don't need to be around to enter ssh or sudo passwords.

  1. Setup an ssh key for the client machine
  2. Edit your sudoers file so that you do not need to enter your password for sudo access

2. Setting up the servers

As it currently stands, the script that runs the tests makes some assumptions about where the code is placed, we assume that the FrameworkBenchmarks repository will be located in your home directory.

Check out the latest from github:

cd ~
git clone https://github.com/TechEmpower/FrameworkBenchmarks.git
cd FrameworkBenchmarks

Next, we're going to setup the servers with all the necessary software:

./run-tests.py -s server-ip -c client-ip -i path-to-ssh-key --install-software --list-tests
source ~/.bash_profile
# For your first time through the tests, set the ulimit for open files
# Most software is installed autormatically by the script, but running the mongo command below from
# the install script was causing some errors. For now this needs to be run manually.
cd installs/jruby-rack && rvm jruby-1.7.3 do jruby -S bundle exec rake clean gem SKIP_SPECS=true
cd target && rvm jruby-1.7.3 do gem install jruby-rack-1.2.0.SNAPSHOT.gem
cd ../../..
cd installs && curl -sS https://getcomposer.org/installer | php -- --install-dir=bin
cd ..
sudo apt-get remove --purge openjdk-6-jre openjdk-6-jre-headless
mongo --host client-ip < config/create.js

Assuming this finished without error, we're ready to start the test suite:

nohup ./run-tests.py -s server-ip -c client-ip -i path-to-ssh-key --max-threads cores --name unique-machine-name &

This will run the full set of tests. Results of all the tests will output to ~/FrameworkBenchmarks/results/unique-machine-name/timestamp.

Windows Instructions

Generously provided by @pdonald

Note: The following tests are the only known tests to run on Windows

  • aspnet
  • aspnet-mysql-raw
  • aspnet-postgresql-raw
  • aspnet-mongodb-raw
  • aspnet-mysql-entityframework
  • aspnet-postgres-entityframework
  • nodejs
  • nodejs-mongodb
  • nodejs-mongodb-raw
  • express
  • express-mongodb
  • kohana
  • kohana-raw
  • codeigniter
  • codeigniter-raw

Server installation scripts for Windows Server 2012 R2 on Amazon EC2.

Instructions:

  • Create an instance from the Microsoft Windows Server 2012 Base image on Amazon EC2
  • Connect to it via Remote Desktop
  • Copy installer-bootstrap.ps1 from this repo to the server (for files CTRL-C + CTRL-V works alright)
  • Copy your client private key too while you're at it
  • Right click on the installer script and select Run with PowerShell
  • It will ask something, just hit enter
  • It will install git and then launch installer.ps1 from the repo which will install everything else
  • Installation shouldn't take more than 5 to 10 minutes
  • Then you have a working console: try python, git, ssh, curl, node etc. everything works + PowerShell goodies

The client/database machine is still assumed to be a Linux box, you can install just the client software via python run-tests.py -s server-ip -c client-ip -i "C:\Users\Administrator\Desktop\client.key" --install-software --install client --list-tests

Now you can run tests:

python run-tests.py -s server-ip -c client-ip -i "C:\Users\Administrator\Desktop\client.key" --max-threads 2 --duration 30 --sleep 5 --name win --test aspnet --type all

Result Files

After a test run, the directory ~/FrameworkBenchmarks/results/machine-name/timestamp will contains all the result files. In this folder are four files: three CSV files, one for each of the test types (json, db, query), and a single results.json file that contains all the results as well as some additional information. The results.json file is what we use to drive our blog post, and may or may not be useful to you. There are three subdirectories: one for each of the test types (json, db, query), each of these directories contain the raw weighttp results for each framework.

Benchmarking a Single Test

If you are making changes to any of the tests, or you simply want to verify a single test, you can run the script with the --test flag. For example, if you only wanted to run the JRuby tests:

nohup ./run-tests.py -s server-ip -c client-ip -i path-to-ssh-key --max-threads cores --name unique-machine-name --test rack-jruby sinatra-jruby rails-jruby

Updating Tests

We hope that the community will help us in making these tests better, so if you'd like to make any changes to the tests we currently have, here are some things to keep in mind.

Updating Dependencies

If you're updating a dependency of a framework that uses a dependency management system (Bundler, npm, etc.), please be specific with the version number that you are updating to.

Also, if you do change the dependency of any test, please update the README file for that test to reflect that change, we want to try and keep the README files as up to date as possible.

Updating Software

If you would like to update any of the software used, again, please be as specific as possible, while we still install some software via apt-get and don't specify a version, we would like to have as much control over the versions as possible.

The main file that installs all the software is in installer.py. It's broken up into two sections, server software and client software.

Additionally, it may be necessary to update the setup.py file in the framework's directory to use this new version.

If you update any software, please update the README files of any tests that use that software.

Adding Frameworks

When adding a new framework or new test to an existing framework, please follow these steps:

  • Update/add benchmark_config
  • Update/add setup file
  • When creating a database test, please use the MySQL table hello_world.World, or the MongoDB collection hello_world.world

There are three different tests that we currently run:

  • JSON Response
  • Database (single query)
  • Database (multiple query)

The single query database test can be treated as a special case of the multiple query test with the query-count parameter set to 1.

JSON Response

This test needs to follow the following conventions:

  • The message object should be instantiated as a new object for each request.
  • The test should use a JSON serializer to render the newly instantiated object to JSON.
  • Set the response Content-Type to application/json.
  • The response should be {"message": "Hello, World!"}
  • White space in the response does not matter.

Pseudo-code:

obj = { message : "Hello, World!" }
render json.encode(obj)

Database (single query)

This test will:

  • Access a database table or collection named "World" that is known to contain 10,000 rows/entries.
  • Query for a single row from the table or collection using a randomly generated id (the ids range from 1 to 10,000).
  • Set the response Content-Type to application/json.
  • Serialize the row to JSON and send the resulting string as the response.

By convention, if the test does not use an ORM, and instead uses the raw database connectivity provided by the platform (e.g., JDBC), we append a "-raw" to the test name in the benchmark_config file. For example, "php-raw".

Pseudo-code:

random_id = random(1, 10000)
world = World.find(random_id)
render json.encode(world)

Database (multiple queries)

This test is very similar to the single query test, and in some cases it will be implemented using the same code. A URL parameter is made available to specify the number of queries to run per request. The response is a list of objects resulting from the queries for random rows.

Pseudo-code:

number_of_queries = get("queries")
worlds = []
for i = 0; i < number_of_queries; i++
    random_id = random(1, 10000)
    worlds[i] = World.find(random_id)
render json.encode(worlds)

The benchmark_config File

The benchmark_config file is used by our run script to identify the available tests to be run. This file should exist at the root of the test directory. Here is its basic structure:

{
  "framework": "my-framework",
  "tests": [{
    "default": {
      "setup_file": "setup.py"
      "json_url": "/json",
      "db_url": "/db",
      "query_url": "/db?queries=",
      "port": 8080,
      "sort": 32
  }, {
    "alternative": {
      "setup_file": "alternate_setup.py"
      "json_url": "/json",
      "db_url": "/db",
      "query_url": "/db?queries=",
      "port": 8080,
      "sort": 33
    }
  }]
}
  • framework: Specifies the framework name.
  • tests: An array of tests that can be run for this framework. In most cases, this contains a single element for the "default" test, but additional tests can be specified.
    • setup_file: The location of the setup file that can start and stop the test. By convention this is just setup.py.
    • json_url (optional): The relative URL path to the JSON test
    • db_url (optional): The relative URL path to the database test
    • query_url (optional): The relative URL path to the variable query test. The URL must be set up so that an integer can be applied to the end of the url to specify the number of queries to run, i.e. /db?queries= or /db/
    • port: The port the server is listneing on
    • sort: The sort order. This is important for our own blog post which relies on consistent ordering of the frameworks. You can get the next available sort order by running: ./run-tests.py --next-sort

Setup Files

The setup file is responsible for starting and stopping the test. This script is responsible for (among other things):

  • Setting the database host to the correct IP
  • Compiling/packaging the code
  • Starting the server
  • Stopping the server

The setup file is a python file that contains a start() and a stop() function. Here is an example of Wicket's setup file.

import subprocess
import sys
import setup_util

##################################################
# start(args)
#
# Starts the server for Wicket
# returns 0 if everything completes, 1 otherwise
##################################################
def start(args):

# setting the database url
setup_util.replace_text("wicket/src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/resin-web.xml", "mysql:\/\/.*:3306", "mysql://" + args.database_host + ":3306")

# 1. Compile and package
# 2. Clean out possible old tests
# 3. Copy package to Resin's webapp directory
# 4. Start resin
try:
  subprocess.check_call("mvn clean compile war:war", shell=True, cwd="wicket")
  subprocess.check_call("rm -rf $RESIN_HOME/webapps/*", shell=True)
  subprocess.check_call("cp wicket/target/hellowicket-1.0-SNAPSHOT.war $RESIN_HOME/webapps/wicket.war", shell=True)
  subprocess.check_call("$RESIN_HOME/bin/resinctl start", shell=True)
  return 0
except subprocess.CalledProcessError:
  return 1

##################################################
# stop()
#
# Stops the server for Wicket
# returns 0 if everything completes, 1 otherwise
##################################################
def stop():
try:
  subprocess.check_call("$RESIN_HOME/bin/resinctl shutdown", shell=True)
  return 0
except subprocess.CalledProcessError:
  return 1