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SwiftStack Swift Benchmarking Suite

Project description

SwiftStack Benchmark Suite (ssbench) is a flexible and scalable benchmarking tool for the OpenStack Swift object storage system.

The ssbench-master run-scenario command will run benchmark “scenarios” against an OpenStack Swift cluster, utilizing one or more distributed ssbench-worker processes, saving statistics about the run to a file. The ssbench-master report-scenario command can then generate a report from the saved statstics. By default, ssbench-master run-scenario will generate a report to STDOUT immediately following a benchmark run in addition to saving the raw results to a file.

Coordination between the ssbench-master and one or more ssbench-worker processes is managed through a pair of PyZMQ sockets. This allows ssbench-master to distribute the benchmark run across many, many client servers while still coordinating the entire run (each worker can be given a job referencing an object created by a different worker).

Installation on Ubuntu

I apologize for this stupid dependency dance with Ubuntu (tested with 12.04 LTS Precise). With the –noop benchmark, gevent-zeromq is about 25% faster than pyzmq 2.2.0.1’s zmq.green module, so I consider the annoying gevent-zeromq dependency worth it. The gevent-zeormq Cython build doesn’t work with Ubuntu 12.04’s Python’s distribute, and Cython has to be installed in a prior “pip” command to be recognized by gevent-zeromq’s setup.py:

$ sudo apt-get install -y python-dev python-pip 'g++' libzmq-dev libevent-dev
$ sudo pip install --upgrade distribute
$ sudo pip install Cython gevent pyzmq==2.2.0
$ sudo pip install ssbench

Installation on CentOS 6.3

Installation on CentOS 6.3 using its stock Python 2.6:

$ sudo rpm -Uvh http://mirror.pnl.gov/epel/6/i386/epel-release-6-8.noarch.rpm
$ sudo yum install -y gcc gcc-c++ python-setuptools python-devel libevent-devel python-pip zeromq3-devel
$ sudo pip-python install --upgrade argparse distribute Cython gevent pyzmq==2.2.0
$ sudo pip-python install ssbench
(Note that at this point you'll be using Python 2.6 which won't actuall work
with ssbench)

Installation on OS X

On the Mac, I recommend installing Homebrew and using that to install Python 2.7 and libevent. I haven’t tested a fresh install in a while, but I had far less problems with Cython and gevent-zeormq on OS X, probably because the Homebrew Python was newer than Ubuntu 12.04’s?

Then you should be able to just pip install ssbench.

Gevent 1.0beta

I have not tested ssbench against gevent 1.0rc2, but according to an old gevent blog post, gevent v1.x will bundle libev and not require the installation of libevent or libev_. If you try ssbench with gevent 1.0rc2, please let me know if and how that works…

Scenarios

A “scenario” (sometimes called a “CRUD scenario”) is a utf8-encoded JSON file defining a benchmark run. Specifically, it defines:

  • A name for the scenario (an arbitrary string)

  • A sizes list of “object size” classes. Each object size class has a name, a size_min minimum object size, a size_max maximum object size (in bytes), and an optional crud_profile for just this size. If crud_profile is not given for a size, the top-level crud_profile will be used. The crud_profile here is just like the top-level one, an array of 4 numbers whose relative sizes determine the percent chance of a Create, Read, Update, or Delete operation. Objects created or updated within an object size class will have a size (in bytes) chosen at random uniformly between the minimum and maximum sizes.

  • An initial_files dictionary of initial file-counts per size class. Each size class can have zero or more objects uploaded prior to the benchmark run itself. The proportion of initial files also defines the probability distribution of object sizes during the benchmark run itself. So if a particular object size class is not included in initial_files or has a value of 0 in initial_files, then no objects in that size class will be used during the benchmark run.

  • An operation_count of operations to perform during the benchmark run. An operation is either a CREATE, READ, UPDATE, or DELETE of an object. This value may be overridden for any given run with the -o COUNT flag to ssbench-master run-scenario.

  • A crud_profile which determines the distribution of each kind of operation. For instance, [3, 4, 2, 2] would mean 27% CREATE, 36% READ, 18% UPDATE, and 18% DELETE.

  • A user_count which determines the maxiumum client concurrency during the benchmark run. The user is responsible for ensuring there are enough workers running to support the scenario’s defined user_count. (Each ssbench-worker process uses gevent to achive very efficeint concurrency for the benchmark client requests.) This value may be overridden for any given run with the -u COUNT flag to ssbench-master run-scenario.

  • A container_count which determines how many Swift containers are used for the benchmark run. This key is optional in the scenario file and defaults to 100. This value may be overridden for any given run with the -c COUNT flag to ssbench-master run-scenario.

  • A container_concurrency value which determines the level of client concurrency used by ssbench-master to create the benchmark containers. This value is optional and defaults to 10.

For each operation of the benchmark run, a size category is first chosen based on the relative counts for each size category in the initial_files dictionary. This probability for each size category appears under the “% Ops” column in the report. Then an operation type is chosen based on that size category’s CRUD profile (which can be individually specified or may be inherited from the “top level” CRUD profile).

If each size category has its own CRUD profile, then the overall CRUD profile of the benchmark run will be a weighted average between the values in the “% Ops” column and the CRUD profile of each size category. This weighted average CRUD profile is included in the report on the “CRUD weighted average” line.

ssbench comes with a few canned scenarios, but users are encouraged to experiment and define their own.

Here is an example JSON scenario file:

{
  "name": "Small test scenario",
  "sizes": [{
    "name": "tiny",
    "size_min": 4096,
    "size_max": 65536
  }, {
    "name": "small",
    "size_min": 100000,
    "size_max": 200000
  }],
  "initial_files": {
    "tiny": 100,
    "small": 10
  },
  "operation_count": 500,
  "crud_profile": [3, 4, 2, 2],
  "user_count": 7
}

Beware: hand-editing JSON is error-prone. Watch out for trailing commas, in particular.

Usage

The ssbench-worker script:

$ ssbench-worker -h
usage: ssbench-worker [-h] [--zmq-host ZMQ_HOST]
                      [--zmq-work-port ZMQ_WORK_PORT]
                      [--zmq-results-port ZMQ_RESULTS_PORT] [-c CONCURRENCY]
                      [--retries RETRIES] [-p COUNT] [-v]
                      worker_id

Benchmark your Swift installation

positional arguments:
  worker_id             An integer ID number; must be unique among all workers

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  --zmq-host ZMQ_HOST   Hostname or IP where ssbench-master may be reached
                        (default: 127.0.0.1)
  --zmq-work-port ZMQ_WORK_PORT
                        Must match the value given to ssbench-master (default:
                        13579)
  --zmq-results-port ZMQ_RESULTS_PORT
                        Must match the value given to ssbench-master (default:
                        13580)
  -c CONCURRENCY, --concurrency CONCURRENCY
                        Maximum concurrency this worker will provide.
                        (default: 256)
  --retries RETRIES     Maximum number of times to retry a job. (default: 10)
  -p COUNT, --profile-count COUNT
                        Profile COUNT work jobs, starting with the first.
                        (default: 0)
  -v, --verbose         Enable more verbose output. (default: False)

Basic usage of ssbench-master (requires one sub-command of run-scenario to actually run a benchmark scenario, or report-scenario to report on an existing scenario result data file:

usage: ssbench-master [-h] [-v] {run-scenario,report-scenario} ...

Benchmark your Swift installation

positional arguments:
  {run-scenario,report-scenario}
    run-scenario        Run CRUD scenario, saving statistics. You must supply
                        *either* the -A, -U, and -K options, or the -S and -T
                        options.
    report-scenario     Generate a report from saved scenario statistics

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -v, --verbose         Enable more verbose output. (default: False)

The run-scenario sub-command of ssbench-master which actually runs a benchmark scenario:

$ ssbench-master run-scenario -h
usage: ssbench-master run-scenario [-h] -f SCENARIO_FILE
                                   [--zmq-bind-ip BIND_IP]
                                   [--zmq-work-port PORT]
                                   [--zmq-results_port PORT] [-A AUTH_URL]
                                   [-U USER] [-K KEY] [-S STORAGE_URL]
                                   [-T TOKEN] [-c COUNT] [-u COUNT] [-o COUNT]
                                   [--workers COUNT] [-q] [--profile] [--noop]
                                   [-k] [-s STATS_FILE] [-r]
                                   [--pctile PERCENTILE]

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -f SCENARIO_FILE, --scenario-file SCENARIO_FILE
  --zmq-bind-ip BIND_IP
                        The IP to which the 2 ZMQ sockets will bind (default:
                        0.0.0.0)
  --zmq-work-port PORT  TCP port (on this host) from which workers will PULL
                        work (default: 13579)
  --zmq-results_port PORT
                        TCP port (on this host) to which workers will PUSH
                        results (default: 13580)
  -A AUTH_URL, --auth-url AUTH_URL
                        Auth URL for the Swift cluster under test. (default:
                        http://192.168.22.100/auth/v1.0)
  -U USER, --user USER  The X-Auth-User value to use for authentication.
                        (default: dev:admin)
  -K KEY, --key KEY     The X-Auth-Key value to use for authentication.
                        (default: admin)
  -S STORAGE_URL, --storage-url STORAGE_URL
                        A specific X-Storage-Url to use; mutually exclusive
                        with -A, -U, and -K; requires -T (default: None)
  -T TOKEN, --token TOKEN
                        A specific X-Storage-Token to use; mutually exclusive
                        with -A, -U, and -K; requires -S (default: None)
  -c COUNT, --container-count COUNT
                        Override the container count specified in the scenario
                        file. (default: value from scenario)
  -u COUNT, --user-count COUNT
                        Override the user count (concurrency) specified in the
                        scenario file. (default: value from scenario)
  -o COUNT, --op-count COUNT
                        Override the operation count specified in the scenario
                        file. (default: value from scenario)
  --workers COUNT       Spawn COUNT local ssbench-worker processes just for
                        this run. To workers on other hosts, they must be
                        started manually. (default: None)
  -q, --quiet           Suppress most output (including progress characters
                        during run). (default: False)
  --profile             Profile the main benchmark run. (default: False)
  --noop                Exercise benchmark infrastructure without talking to
                        cluster. (default: False)
  -k, --keep-objects    Keep all uploaded objects in cluster; do not delete
                        any. (default: False)
  -s STATS_FILE, --stats-file STATS_FILE
                        File into which benchmarking statistics will be saved
                        (default: /tmp/ssbench-
                        results/<scenario_name>.<timestamp>.stat)
  -r, --no-default-report
                        Suppress the default immediate generation of a
                        benchmark report to STDOUT after saving stats-file
                        (default: False)
  --pctile PERCENTILE   Report on the N-th percentile, if generating a report.
                        (default: 95)

The report-scenario sub-command of ssbench-master which can report on a previously-run benchmark scenario:

$ ssbench-master report-scenario -h
usage: ssbench-master report-scenario [-h] -s STATS_FILE [-f REPORT_FILE]
                                      [--pctile PERCENTILE] [-r RPS_HISTOGRAM]

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -s STATS_FILE, --stats-file STATS_FILE
                        An existing stats file from a previous --run-scenario
                        invocation (default: None)
  -f REPORT_FILE, --report-file REPORT_FILE
                        The file to which the report should be written
                        (default: <open file '<stdout>', mode 'w' at
                        0x1002511e0>)
  --pctile PERCENTILE   Report on the N-th percentile. (default: 95)
  -r RPS_HISTOGRAM, --rps-histogram RPS_HISTOGRAM
                        Also write a CSV file with requests completed per
                        second histogram data (default: None)

HTTPS on OS X

On a Mac, using HTTPS, I got a significant speed-up when setting OPENSSL_X509_TEA_DISABLE=1 in the environment of my ssbench-worker processes. I found this tip via a curl blog post after noticing a process named trustevaluationagent chewing up a lot of CPU during a benchmark run against a cluster using HTTPS.

Example Multi-Server Run

Start one or more ssbench-worker processes on each server (each ssbench-worker process defaults to a maximum gevent-based concurrency of 256, but the -c option can override that default). Use the --zmq-host command-line parameter to specify the host on which you will run ssbench-master.:

bench-host-01$ ssbench-worker -c 1000 --zmq-host bench-host-01 1 &
bench-host-01$ ssbench-worker -c 1000 --zmq-host bench-host-01 2 &

bench-host-02$ ssbench-worker -c 1000 --zmq-host bench-host-01 3 &
bench-host-02$ ssbench-worker -c 1000 --zmq-host bench-host-01 4 &

Finally, run one ssbench-master process which will manage and coordinate the multi-server benchmark run:

bench-host-01$ ssbench-master run-scenario -f scenarios/very_small.scenario -u 2000 -o 40000

The above example would involve a total client concurrency of 2000, spread evenly among the four workers on two hosts (bench-host-01 and bench-host-02). The four workers, as started in the above example, could support a client concurrency up to 4000.

Example Simple Single-Server Run

If you only need workers running on the local host, you can do so with a single command. Simply use the --workers COUNT option to ssbench-master:

$ ssbench-master run-scenario -f scenarios/very_small.scenario -u 4 -c 80 -o 613 --pctile 50 --workers 2
INFO:root:Spawning local ssbench-worker (logging to /tmp/ssbench-worker-local-0.log) with ssbench-worker --zmq-host 127.0.0.1 --zmq-work-port 13579 --zmq-results-port 13580 --concurrency 2 0
INFO:root:Spawning local ssbench-worker (logging to /tmp/ssbench-worker-local-1.log) with ssbench-worker --zmq-host 127.0.0.1 --zmq-work-port 13579 --zmq-results-port 13580 --concurrency 2 1
INFO:root:Starting scenario run for "Small test scenario"
INFO:root:Ensuring 80 containers (ssbench_*) exist; concurrency=10...
INFO:root:Initializing cluster with stock data (up to 4 concurrent workers)
INFO:root:Starting benchmark run (up to 4 concurrent workers)
Benchmark Run:
  X    work job raised an exception
  .  <  1s first-byte-latency
  o  <  3s first-byte-latency
  O  < 10s first-byte-latency
  * >= 10s first-byte-latency
  _  <  1s last-byte-latency  (CREATE or UPDATE)
  |  <  3s last-byte-latency  (CREATE or UPDATE)
  ^  < 10s last-byte-latency  (CREATE or UPDATE)
  @ >= 10s last-byte-latency  (CREATE or UPDATE)
.___..__..__.__..____._._._._.___.__.____..._._._.__._.._.____._.__._.__..._..
.._.._..._..._........_._.._.___....__...._..._.__._.._._........_..._..__....
.._..__.___.._._..__.._..._.___.___..._._____.__....___.._._..__.......___._._
.__.._.___.._.___._._._._.._.__.________._.........__..__._._.._._.__._.___._.
._._...._._.._..._.._...______..._____.__.._....._...._._.____.._._._.___.._._
.._._.___...___.._....._.__..__.......__._...__.__...__.._._...__._..._.....__
__..___._.__..__..___._.._._____...___.__..___._..._.____._._._....__...__..__
______.__.._....__..._.___.._._____...___.__..___.._._._______.____
INFO:root:Deleting population objects from cluster
INFO:root:Calculating statistics for 613 result items...

Small test scenario
Worker count:   2   Concurrency:   4  Ran 2013-02-20 17:10:18 UTC to 2013-02-20 17:10:26 UTC (7s)

% Ops    C   R   U   D       Size Range       Size Name
 91%   % 27  36  18  18        4 kB -  66 kB  tiny
  9%   % 27  36  18  18      100 kB - 200 kB  small
---------------------------------------------------------------------
         27  36  18  18      CRUD weighted average

TOTAL
       Count:   613  Average requests per second:  79.8
                            min       max      avg      std_dev  50%-ile                   Worst latency TX ID
       First-byte latency:  0.004 -   0.079    0.019  (  0.014)    0.015  (all obj sizes)  tx684b3b058d52403fbda528ffaec66a5f
       Last-byte  latency:  0.004 -   0.167    0.043  (  0.027)    0.040  (all obj sizes)  txbd735d5cde494a9ab4ed0a961dd7c0b5
       First-byte latency:  0.004 -   0.079    0.019  (  0.013)    0.014  (    tiny objs)  tx684b3b058d52403fbda528ffaec66a5f
       Last-byte  latency:  0.004 -   0.167    0.042  (  0.027)    0.038  (    tiny objs)  txbd735d5cde494a9ab4ed0a961dd7c0b5
       First-byte latency:  0.009 -   0.049    0.025  (  0.013)    0.024  (   small objs)  txc9479d86f4bb4606bfcdb96f55ff2127
       Last-byte  latency:  0.019 -   0.123    0.054  (  0.026)    0.048  (   small objs)  tx3b2d5943869a4d65af887ef00d95271a

CREATE
       Count:   179  Average requests per second:  23.3
                            min       max      avg      std_dev  50%-ile                   Worst latency TX ID
       First-byte latency:  N/A   -   N/A      N/A    (  N/A  )    N/A    (all obj sizes)
       Last-byte  latency:  0.018 -   0.167    0.066  (  0.021)    0.066  (all obj sizes)  txbd735d5cde494a9ab4ed0a961dd7c0b5
       First-byte latency:  N/A   -   N/A      N/A    (  N/A  )    N/A    (    tiny objs)
       Last-byte  latency:  0.018 -   0.167    0.065  (  0.021)    0.066  (    tiny objs)  txbd735d5cde494a9ab4ed0a961dd7c0b5
       First-byte latency:  N/A   -   N/A      N/A    (  N/A  )    N/A    (   small objs)
       Last-byte  latency:  0.048 -   0.123    0.077  (  0.020)    0.078  (   small objs)  tx3b2d5943869a4d65af887ef00d95271a

READ
       Count:   215  Average requests per second:  28.3
                            min       max      avg      std_dev  50%-ile                   Worst latency TX ID
       First-byte latency:  0.004 -   0.032    0.012  (  0.006)    0.011  (all obj sizes)  tx9f4c63b2c7db4be5bca77dff8916cc7c
       Last-byte  latency:  0.004 -   0.053    0.016  (  0.009)    0.014  (all obj sizes)  txc9c3813c1e494b67954fa0eb61b79a03
       First-byte latency:  0.004 -   0.032    0.012  (  0.006)    0.011  (    tiny objs)  tx9f4c63b2c7db4be5bca77dff8916cc7c
       Last-byte  latency:  0.004 -   0.042    0.015  (  0.007)    0.014  (    tiny objs)  txdd64a85dcbab4ddea1a9981be2db3430
       First-byte latency:  0.009 -   0.027    0.015  (  0.006)    0.012  (   small objs)  txc9c3813c1e494b67954fa0eb61b79a03
       Last-byte  latency:  0.019 -   0.053    0.033  (  0.011)    0.031  (   small objs)  txc9c3813c1e494b67954fa0eb61b79a03

UPDATE
       Count:   119  Average requests per second:  15.8
                            min       max      avg      std_dev  50%-ile                   Worst latency TX ID
       First-byte latency:  N/A   -   N/A      N/A    (  N/A  )    N/A    (all obj sizes)
       Last-byte  latency:  0.023 -   0.108    0.064  (  0.019)    0.067  (all obj sizes)  tx5bf7d7107973419ea42e6ac0b1971cac
       First-byte latency:  N/A   -   N/A      N/A    (  N/A  )    N/A    (    tiny objs)
       Last-byte  latency:  0.023 -   0.108    0.063  (  0.019)    0.065  (    tiny objs)  tx5bf7d7107973419ea42e6ac0b1971cac
       First-byte latency:  N/A   -   N/A      N/A    (  N/A  )    N/A    (   small objs)
       Last-byte  latency:  0.052 -   0.102    0.077  (  0.017)    0.085  (   small objs)  tx7be6135fa8544e2d87c64b335e990e5d

DELETE
       Count:   100  Average requests per second:  13.7
                            min       max      avg      std_dev  50%-ile                   Worst latency TX ID
       First-byte latency:  0.010 -   0.079    0.035  (  0.012)    0.033  (all obj sizes)  tx684b3b058d52403fbda528ffaec66a5f
       Last-byte  latency:  0.010 -   0.079    0.035  (  0.012)    0.033  (all obj sizes)  tx684b3b058d52403fbda528ffaec66a5f
       First-byte latency:  0.010 -   0.079    0.035  (  0.013)    0.033  (    tiny objs)  tx684b3b058d52403fbda528ffaec66a5f
       Last-byte  latency:  0.010 -   0.079    0.035  (  0.013)    0.033  (    tiny objs)  tx684b3b058d52403fbda528ffaec66a5f
       First-byte latency:  0.020 -   0.049    0.036  (  0.009)    0.036  (   small objs)  txc9479d86f4bb4606bfcdb96f55ff2127
       Last-byte  latency:  0.020 -   0.049    0.036  (  0.009)    0.036  (   small objs)  txc9479d86f4bb4606bfcdb96f55ff2127

INFO:root:Scenario run results saved to /tmp/ssbench-results/Small_test_scenario.2013-02-20.091016.stat
INFO:root:You may generate a report with:
  ssbench-master report-scenario -s /tmp/ssbench-results/Small_test_scenario.2013-02-20.091016.stat

The No-op Mode

To test the maximum throughput of the ssbench-master ==> beantalkd ==> ssbench-worker infrastructure, you can add --noop to a ssbench-master run-scenario command and the scenario will be “run” but the ssbench-worker processes will not actually talk to the Swift cluster.

In this manner, you may determine your maximum requests per second if talking to the Swift cluster were free.

The reported “Average requests per second:” value in the “TOTAL” section of the report should be higher than you expect to get out of the Swift cluster itself.

With an older version of ssbench which used a beanstalkd server to manage master/worker communication, my 2012 15” Retina Macbook Pro could get ~2,700 requests per second with --noop using a local beanstalkd, one ssbench-worker, and a user count (concurrency) of 4.

With ZeorMQ sockets (no beanstalkd involved), the same laptop can get between 7,000 and 8,000 requests per second with --noop.

Contributing to ssbench

First, please use the Github Issues for the project when submitting bug reports or feature requests.

Code submissions should be submitted as pull requests and all code should be PEP8 (v. 1.4.2) compliant. Current unit test line coverage is not 100%, but code contributions should not lower the code coverage (so please include new tests or update existing ones as part of your change).

If contributing code which implements a feature or fixes a bug, please ensure a Github Issue exists prior to submitting the pull request and reference the Issue number in your commit message.

When submitting your first pull request, please also update AUTHORS to include yourself, maintaining alphabetical ordering by last name.

If any of the file(s) you change do not yet have a copyright line with your name, please add one at the bottom of the others, above the license text (but never remove any existing copyright lines). Your copyright line should look something like:

# Copyright (c) 2013 FirstName LastName

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