.. | ||
iql | ||
statement | ||
stress_client | ||
stressql | ||
DESIGN.md | ||
influx_stress_v2.png | ||
main.go | ||
README.md |
Influx Stress Tool V2
$ influx_stress -v2 -config iql/file.iql
This stress tool works from list of InfluxQL-esque statements. The language has been extended to allow for some basic templating of fields, tags and measurements in both line protocol and query statements.
By default the test outputs a human readable report to STDOUT
and records test statistics in an active installation of InfluxDB at localhost:8086
.
To set state variables for the test such as the address of the Influx node use the following syntax:
# The values listed below are the default values for each of the parameters
# Pipe delineated list of addresses. For cluster: [192.168.0.10:8086|192.168.0.2:8086|192.168.0.3:8086]
# Queries and writes are round-robin to the configured addresses.
SET Addresses [localhost:8086]
# False (default) uses http, true uses https
SET SSL [false]
# Username for targeted influx server or cluster
SET Username []
# Password for targeted influx server or cluster
SET Password []
# Database to target for queries and writes. Works like the InfluxCLI USE
SET Database [stress]
# Precision for the data being written
# Only s and ns supported
SET Precision [s]
# Date the first written point will be timestamped
SET StartDate [2016-01-01]
# Size of batches to send to InfluxDB
SET BatchSize [5000]
# Time to wait between sending batches
SET WriteInterval [0s]
# Time to wait between sending queries
SET QueryInterval [0s]
# Number of concurrent writers
SET WriteConcurrency [15]
# Number of concurrent readers
SET QueryConcurrency [5]
The values in the example are also the defaults.
Valid line protocol will be forwarded right to the server making setting up your testing environment easy:
CREATE DATABASE thing
ALTER RETENTION POLICY default ON thing DURATION 1h REPLICATION 1
SET database [thing]
You can write points like this:
INSERT mockCpu
cpu,
host=server-[int inc(0) 10000],location=[string rand(8) 1000]
value=[float rand(1000) 0]
100000 10s
Explained:
# INSERT keyword kicks off the statement, next to it is the name of the statement for reporting and templated query generation
INSERT mockCpu
# Measurement
cpu,
# Tags - separated by commas. Tag values can be templates, mixed template and fixed values
host=server-[float rand(100) 10000],location=[int inc(0) 1000],fixed=[fix|fid|dor|pom|another_tag_value]
# Fields - separated by commas either templates, mixed template and fixed values
value=[float inc(0) 0]
# 'Timestamp' - Number of points to insert into this measurement and the amount of time between points
100000 10s
Each template contains 3 parts: a datatype (str
, float
, or int
) a function which describes how the value changes between points: inc(0)
is increasing and rand(n)
is a random number between 0
and n
. The last number is the number of unique values in the tag or field. 0
is unbounded. To make a tag
To run multiple insert statements at once:
GO INSERT devices
devices,
city=[str rand(8) 10],country=[str rand(8) 25],device_id=[str rand(10) 1000]
lat=[float rand(90) 0],lng=[float rand(120) 0],temp=[float rand(40) 0]
10000000 10s
GO INSERT devices2
devices2,
city=[str rand(8) 10],country=[str rand(8) 25],device_id=[str rand(10) 1000]
lat=[float rand(90) 0],lng=[float rand(120) 0],temp=[float rand(40) 0]
10000000 10s
WAIT
Fastest point generation and write load requires 3-4 running GO INSERT
statements at a time.
You can run queries like this:
QUERY cpu
SELECT mean(value) FROM cpu WHERE host='server-1'
DO 1000
Output:
Output for config file in this repo:
[√] "CREATE DATABASE thing" -> 1.806785ms
[√] "CREATE DATABASE thing2" -> 1.492504ms
SET Database = 'thing'
SET Precision = 's'
Go Write Statement: mockCpu
Points/Sec: 245997
Resp Time Average: 173.354445ms
Resp Time Standard Deviation: 123.80344ms
95th Percentile Write Response: 381.363503ms
Average Request Bytes: 276110
Successful Write Reqs: 20
Retries: 0
Go Query Statement: mockCpu
Resp Time Average: 3.140803ms
Resp Time Standard Deviation: 2.292328ms
95th Percentile Read Response: 5.915437ms
Query Resp Bytes Average: 16 bytes
Successful Queries: 10
WAIT -> 406.400059ms
SET DATABASE = 'thing2'
Go Write Statement: devices
Points/Sec: 163348
Resp Time Average: 132.553789ms
Resp Time Standard Deviation: 149.397972ms
95th Percentile Write Response: 567.987467ms
Average Request Bytes: 459999
Successful Write Reqs: 20
Retries: 0
Go Write Statement: devices2
Points/Sec: 160078
Resp Time Average: 133.303097ms
Resp Time Standard Deviation: 144.352404ms
95th Percentile Write Response: 560.565066ms
Average Request Bytes: 464999
Successful Write Reqs: 20
Retries: 0
Go Query Statement: fooName
Resp Time Average: 1.3307ms
Resp Time Standard Deviation: 640.249µs
95th Percentile Read Response: 2.668ms
Query Resp Bytes Average: 16 bytes
Successful Queries: 10
WAIT -> 624.585319ms
[√] "DROP DATABASE thing" -> 991.088464ms
[√] "DROP DATABASE thing2" -> 421.362831ms
Next Steps:
Documentation
- Parser behavior and proper
.iql
syntax - How the templated query generation works
- Collection of tested
.iql
files to simulate different loads
Performance
Commune
, a stuct to enable templated Query generation, is blocking writes when used, look into performance.- Templated query generation is currently in a quazi-working state. See the above point.