Hammerhead 2 - Web Testing Tool
What does it do? Hammerhead 2 is a stress testing tool designed to test out
your web server and web site. It can initiate multiple
connections from IP aliases and simulated numerous (256+)
users at any given time. The rate at which Hammerhead 2
attempts to pound your site is fully configurable,
there are numerous other options for trying to create
problems with a web site (so you can fix them).
It can be used to test the
behaviour of the port under load, or the
ability of the port to service a set of requests.
Warning: Hammerhead can destroy a web site very quickly
(and cost you lots of money if you pay for traffic you generate).
It should only be used to generate heavy loads on local web sites
for testing purposes.
Using Hammerhead The behaviour of Hammerhead is very configurable.
Hammerhead loads a set of requests from a number of files,
each of which may contain a number of scenarios (one
request per scenario). Scenarios may be linked into
sequences, in order to simulate real users actions.
Generating Load Once the specified scenarios are loaded, Hammerhead starts a number of
threads and sends requests to the configured port. Hammerhead can
simulate requests from multiple machines by exploiting IP aliasing.
Hammerhead can
generate a large amount of load on a web server by having a large number
of sessions (200+), an IP alias for each session and setting the
time between requests to be small (in the order of a second)
Because Hammerhead (generally) waits for replies from the web
server it will load the web server to capacity and can be
used for capacity testing.
Testing Expected results of an HTTP request may be specified in a scenario,
and any result from the port which does not match
with the expected result will be reported as an error. If
no expected results are specified, then any result from
the port will be accepted as valid. Specifying an expected
result for any scenario has the effect of specifying the
same result for all scenarios which have the same request.
Any failure to get a connection to the port, or any failure
to receive a reply to a request will also be reported. http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=15206&release_id=42907 -
Platforms Hammerhead has been used with Linux, Solaris and FreeBSD. It would
should be relatively easy to port to any Unix environment.
Limitations Trying to truly simulate users on the web is very difficult.
Hammerhead has a number of inherent limitations. Primarily
it is limited by the number of IP aliases you can add to your
machine and still have it perform reasonably. Typically a big
web site will get lots more users than you can generate IP aliases.
Secondly Hammerhead (normally) waits on the web server to respond once
it has a connection; this can cause Hammerhead to fall
below the request rate you've configured for if the web server
is running poorly. Really Hammerhead should disconnect from a slow
connection and force a "reload" like a "real" user might do.
Also data is extracted at full rate from any connections that
have been made. Ideally you'd want to be able to control this
rate to simulate users on modems (etc).
Mick Dwyer has just begun to add in bottleneck simulation
code to address some of these concerns but this is currently incomplete.
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