Written by BiRU Sunday, 17 January 2016 08:22
You can benchmark Apache, IIS and other web server with apache benchmarking tool called ab. Recently I was asked to performance benchmarks for different web servers.
It is true that benchmarking a web server is not an easy task. From how to benchmark a web server:
First, benchmarking a web server is not an easy thing. To benchmark a web server the time it will take to give a page is not important: you don't care if a user can have his page in 0.1 ms or in 0.05 ms as nobody can have such delays on the Internet.
What is important is the average time it will take when you have a maximum number of users on your site simultaneously. Another important thing is how much more time it will take when there are 2 times more users: a server that take 2 times more for 2 times more users is better than another that take 4 times more for the same amount of users."
Here are few tips to carry out procedure along with an example:
Let us see how to benchmark a Apache 2.2 and lighttpd 1.4.xx web server.
i) Note down server load using uptime command
$ uptime
ii) Create a static (small) html page as follows (snkpage.html) (assuming that server IP is 202.54.200.1) in /var/www/html (or use your own webroot):
PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
Webserver test
This is a webserver test page.
Login to Linux/bsd desktop computer and type following command:
$ ab -n 1000 -c 5 http://202.54.200.1/snkpage.html
Where,
For example if you want to send 10 request, type following command:
$ ab -n 10 -c 2 http://www.somewhere.com/
Output:
This is ApacheBench, Version 2.0.41-dev apache-2.0
Copyright (c) 1996 Adam Twiss, Zeus Technology Ltd, http://www.zeustech.net/
Copyright (c) 1998-2002 The Apache Software Foundation, http://www.apache.org/
Benchmarking www.cyberciti.biz (be patient).....done
Server Software:
Server Hostname: www.somewhere.com
Server Port: 80
Document Path: /
Document Length: 16289 bytes
Concurrency Level: 1
Time taken for tests: 16.885975 seconds
Complete requests: 10
Failed requests: 0
Write errors: 0
Total transferred: 166570 bytes
HTML transferred: 162890 bytes
Requests per second: 0.59 [#/sec] (mean)
Time per request: 1688.597 [ms] (mean)
Time per request: 1688.597 [ms] (mean, across all concurrent requests)
Transfer rate: 9.59 [Kbytes/sec] received
Connection Times (ms)
min mean[+/-sd] median max
Connect: 353 375 16.1 386 391
Processing: 1240 1312 52.1 1339 1369
Waiting: 449 472 16.2 476 499
Total: 1593 1687 67.7 1730 1756
Percentage of the requests served within a certain time (ms)
50% 1730
66% 1733
75% 1741
80% 1753
90% 1756
95% 1756
98% 1756
99% 1756
100% 1756 (longest request)
Repeat above command 3-5 times and save the best reading.
First, reboot the server:
# reboot
Stop Apache web server. Now configure lighttpd and copy /var/www/html/snkpage.html to lighttpd webroot and run the command (from other linux/bsd system):
$ ab -n 1000 -c 5 http://202.54.200.1/snkpage.html
c) Plot graph using Spreadsheet or gnuplot.
Use -k option that enables the HTTP KeepAlive feature using ab test tool. For example:
$ ab -k -n 1000 -c 5 http://202.54.200.1/snkpage.html
Use the above procedure to create php, fast-cgi and dynmic pages to benchmarking the web server.
Please note that 1000 request is a small number you need to send bigger (i.e. the hits you want to test) requests, for example following command will send 50000 requests :
$ ab -k -n 50000 -c 2 http://202.54.200.1/snkpage.html
Use -e option that allows to write a comma separated value (CSV) file which contains for each percentage (from 1% to 100%) the time (in milliseconds) it took to serve that percentage of the requests:
$ ab -k -n 50000 -c 2 -e apache2r1.cvs http://202.54.200.1/snkpage.html
Use above command or -g option as follows:
$ ab -k -n 50000 -c 2 -g apache2r3.txt http://202.54.200.1/snkpage.html
Put following files in your webroot (/var/www/html or /var/www/cgi-bin) directory. Use ab command.
Php test with phpinfo() Run ab command as follows:
$ ab -n 500 -c 5 http://202.54.200.1/test.php
#!/usr/bin/perl $command=`perl -v`; $title = "Perl Version"; print "Content-type: text/html\n\n"; print "$title\n\n\n"; print "$title
\n"; print $command; print "\n\n";
Run ab command as follows:
$ ab -n 3000 -c 5 http://202.54.200.1/cgi-bin/test.pl
Php+MySQL
$link = mysql_connect("localhost", "USERNAME", "PASSWORD");
mysql_select_db("DATABASE");
$query = "SELECT * FROM TABLENAME";
$result = mysql_query($query);
while ($line = mysql_fetch_array($result))
{
foreach ($line as $value)
{
print "$value\n";
}
}
mysql_close($link);
?>
Run ab command as follows:
$ ab -n 1000 -c 5 http://202.54.200.1/psql.php