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-rw-r--r--docs/report/vpp_performance_tests/index.rst1
-rw-r--r--docs/report/vpp_performance_tests/methodology.rst293
-rw-r--r--docs/report/vpp_performance_tests/overview.rst262
3 files changed, 294 insertions, 262 deletions
diff --git a/docs/report/vpp_performance_tests/index.rst b/docs/report/vpp_performance_tests/index.rst
index 1292051a26..45efc3e10b 100644
--- a/docs/report/vpp_performance_tests/index.rst
+++ b/docs/report/vpp_performance_tests/index.rst
@@ -5,6 +5,7 @@ VPP Performance Tests
overview
csit_release_notes
+ methodology
packet_throughput_graphs/index
throughput_speedup_multi_core/index
packet_latency_graphs/index
diff --git a/docs/report/vpp_performance_tests/methodology.rst b/docs/report/vpp_performance_tests/methodology.rst
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..1de3fa4217
--- /dev/null
+++ b/docs/report/vpp_performance_tests/methodology.rst
@@ -0,0 +1,293 @@
+Test Methodology
+================
+
+Multi-Core and Multi-Threading
+------------------------------
+
+**Intel Hyper-Threading** - CSIT |release| performance tests are executed with
+SUT servers' Intel XEON processors configured in Intel Hyper-Threading Disabled
+mode (BIOS setting). This is the simplest configuration used to establish
+baseline single-thread single-core application packet processing and forwarding
+performance. Subsequent releases of CSIT will add performance tests with Intel
+Hyper-Threading Enabled (requires BIOS settings change and hard reboot of
+server).
+
+**Multi-core Tests** - CSIT |release| multi-core tests are executed in the
+following VPP thread and core configurations:
+
+#. 1t1c - 1 VPP worker thread on 1 CPU physical core.
+#. 2t2c - 2 VPP worker threads on 2 CPU physical cores.
+#. 4t4c - 4 VPP worker threads on 4 CPU physical cores.
+
+VPP worker threads are the data plane threads. VPP control thread is
+running on a separate non-isolated core together with other Linux
+processes. Note that in quite a few test cases running VPP workers on 2
+or 4 physical cores hits the I/O bandwidth or packets-per-second limit
+of tested NIC.
+
+Section :ref:`throughput_speedup_multi_core` includes a set of graphs
+illustrating packet throughout speedup when running VPP on multiple
+cores.
+
+Packet Throughput
+-----------------
+
+Following values are measured and reported for packet throughput tests:
+
+- NDR binary search per :rfc:`2544`:
+
+ - Packet rate: "RATE: <aggregate packet rate in packets-per-second> pps
+ (2x <per direction packets-per-second>)";
+ - Aggregate bandwidth: "BANDWIDTH: <aggregate bandwidth in Gigabits per
+ second> Gbps (untagged)";
+
+- PDR binary search per :rfc:`2544`:
+
+ - Packet rate: "RATE: <aggregate packet rate in packets-per-second> pps (2x
+ <per direction packets-per-second>)";
+ - Aggregate bandwidth: "BANDWIDTH: <aggregate bandwidth in Gigabits per
+ second> Gbps (untagged)";
+ - Packet loss tolerance: "LOSS_ACCEPTANCE <accepted percentage of packets
+ lost at PDR rate>";
+
+- NDR and PDR are measured for the following L2 frame sizes (untagged
+ Ethernet):
+
+ - IPv4 payload: 64B, IMIX_v4_1 (28x64B,16x570B,4x1518B), 1518B, 9000B;
+ - IPv6 payload: 78B, 1518B, 9000B;
+
+- NDR and PDR binary search resolution is determined by the final value of the
+ rate change, referred to as the final step:
+
+ - The final step is set to 50kpps for all NIC to NIC tests and all L2
+ frame sizes except 9000B (changed from 100kpps used in previous
+ releases).
+
+ - The final step is set to 10kpps for all remaining tests, including 9000B
+ and all vhost VM and memif Container tests.
+
+All rates are reported from external Traffic Generator perspective.
+
+Maximum Receive Rate (MRR)
+--------------------------
+
+MRR tests measure the packet forwarding rate under the maximum
+load offered by traffic generator over a set trial duration,
+regardless of packet loss. Maximum load for specified Ethernet frame
+size is set to the bi-directional link rate.
+
+Current parameters for MRR tests:
+
+- Ethernet frame sizes: 64B (78B for IPv6 tests) for all tests, IMIX for
+ selected tests (vhost, memif); all quoted sizes include frame CRC, but
+ exclude per frame transmission overhead of 20B (preamble, inter frame
+ gap).
+
+- Maximum load offered: 10GE and 40GE link (sub-)rates depending on NIC
+ tested, with the actual packet rate depending on frame size,
+ transmission overhead and traffic generator NIC forwarding capacity.
+
+ - For 10GE NICs the maximum packet rate load is 2* 14.88 Mpps for 64B,
+ a 10GE bi-directional link rate.
+ - For 40GE NICs the maximum packet rate load is 2* 18.75 Mpps for 64B,
+ a 40GE bi-directional link sub-rate limited by TG 40GE NIC used,
+ XL710.
+
+- Trial duration: 10sec.
+
+Similarly to NDR/PDR throughput tests, MRR test should be reporting bi-
+directional link rate (or NIC rate, if lower) if tested VPP
+configuration can handle the packet rate higher than bi-directional link
+rate, e.g. large packet tests and/or multi-core tests.
+
+MRR tests are used for continuous performance trending and for
+comparison between releases.
+
+Packet Latency
+--------------
+
+TRex Traffic Generator (TG) is used for measuring latency of VPP DUTs. Reported
+latency values are measured using following methodology:
+
+- Latency tests are performed at 10%, 50% of discovered NDR rate (non drop rate)
+ for each NDR throughput test and packet size (except IMIX).
+- TG sends dedicated latency streams, one per direction, each at the rate of
+ 10kpps at the prescribed packet size; these are sent in addition to the main
+ load streams.
+- TG reports min/avg/max latency values per stream direction, hence two sets
+ of latency values are reported per test case; future release of TRex is
+ expected to report latency percentiles.
+- Reported latency values are aggregate across two SUTs due to three node
+ topology used for all performance tests; for per SUT latency, reported value
+ should be divided by two.
+- 1usec is the measurement accuracy advertised by TRex TG for the setup used in
+ FD.io labs used by CSIT project.
+- TRex setup introduces an always-on error of about 2*2usec per latency flow -
+ additonal Tx/Rx interface latency induced by TRex SW writing and reading
+ packet timestamps on CPU cores without HW acceleration on NICs closer to the
+ interface line.
+
+vhostuser with KVM VMs
+----------------------
+
+FD.io CSIT performance lab is testing VPP vhost with KVM VMs using following
+environment settings:
+
+- Tests with varying Qemu virtio queue (a.k.a. vring) sizes: [vr256] default 256
+ descriptors, [vr1024] 1024 descriptors to optimize for packet throughput.
+
+- Tests with varying Linux :abbr:`CFS (Completely Fair Scheduler)` settings:
+ [cfs] default settings, [cfsrr1] CFS RoundRobin(1) policy applied to all data
+ plane threads handling test packet path including all VPP worker threads and
+ all Qemu testpmd poll-mode threads.
+
+- Resulting test cases are all combinations with [vr256,vr1024] and
+ [cfs,cfsrr1] settings.
+
+- Adjusted Linux kernel :abbr:`CFS (Completely Fair Scheduler)` scheduler policy
+ for data plane threads used in CSIT is documented in
+ `CSIT Performance Environment Tuning wiki <https://wiki.fd.io/view/CSIT/csit-perf-env-tuning-ubuntu1604>`_.
+ The purpose is to verify performance impact (MRR and NDR/PDR
+ throughput) and same test measurements repeatability, by making VPP
+ and VM data plane threads less susceptible to other Linux OS system
+ tasks hijacking CPU cores running those data plane threads.
+
+Memif with LXC and Docker Containers
+------------------------------------
+
+CSIT |release| includes tests taking advantage of VPP memif virtual
+interface (shared memory interface) to interconnect VPP running in
+Containers. VPP vswitch instance runs in bare-metal user-mode handling
+NIC interfaces and connecting over memif (Slave side) to VPPs running in
+:abbr:`Linux Container (LXC)` or in Docker Container (DRC) configured
+with memif (Master side). LXCs and DRCs run in a priviliged mode with
+VPP data plane worker threads pinned to dedicated physical CPU cores per
+usual CSIT practice. All VPP instances run the same version of software.
+This test topology is equivalent to existing tests with vhost-user and
+VMs as described earlier in :ref:`tested_physical_topologies`.
+
+More information about CSIT LXC and DRC setup and control is available
+in :ref:`container_orchestration_in_csit`.
+
+Memif with K8s Pods/Containers
+------------------------------
+
+CSIT |release| includes tests of VPP topologies running in K8s
+orchestrated Pods/Containers and connected over memif virtual
+interfaces. In order to provide simple topology coding flexibility and
+extensibility container orchestration is done with `Kubernetes
+<https://github.com/kubernetes>`_ using `Docker
+<https://github.com/docker>`_ images for all container applications
+including VPP. `Ligato <https://github.com/ligato>`_ is used for the
+Pod/Container networking orchestration that is integrated with K8s,
+including memif support.
+
+In these tests VPP vswitch runs in a K8s Pod with Docker Container (DRC)
+handling NIC interfaces and connecting over memif to more instances of
+VPP running in Pods/DRCs. All DRCs run in a priviliged mode with VPP
+data plane worker threads pinned to dedicated physical CPU cores per
+usual CSIT practice. All VPP instances run the same version of software.
+This test topology is equivalent to existing tests with vhost-user and
+VMs as described earlier in :ref:`tested_physical_topologies`.
+
+Further documentation is available in
+:ref:`container_orchestration_in_csit`.
+
+IPSec with Intel QAT HW cards
+-----------------------------
+
+VPP IPSec performance tests are using DPDK cryptodev device driver in
+combination with HW cryptodev devices - Intel QAT 8950 50G - present in
+LF FD.io physical testbeds. DPDK cryptodev can be used for all IPSec
+data plane functions supported by VPP.
+
+Currently CSIT |release| implements following IPSec test cases:
+
+- AES-GCM, CBC-SHA1 ciphers, in combination with IPv4 routed-forwarding
+ with Intel xl710 NIC.
+- CBC-SHA1 ciphers, in combination with LISP-GPE overlay tunneling for
+ IPv4-over-IPv4 with Intel xl710 NIC.
+
+TRex Traffic Generator Usage
+----------------------------
+
+`TRex traffic generator <https://wiki.fd.io/view/TRex>`_ is used for all
+CSIT performance tests. TRex stateless mode is used to measure NDR and PDR
+throughputs using binary search (NDR and PDR discovery tests) and for quick
+checks of DUT performance against the reference NDRs (NDR check tests) for
+specific configuration.
+
+TRex is installed and run on the TG compute node. The typical procedure is:
+
+- If the TRex is not already installed on TG, it is installed in the
+ suite setup phase - see `TRex intallation`_.
+- TRex configuration is set in its configuration file
+ ::
+
+ /etc/trex_cfg.yaml
+
+- TRex is started in the background mode
+ ::
+
+ $ sh -c 'cd <t-rex-install-dir>/scripts/ && sudo nohup ./t-rex-64 -i -c 7 --iom 0 > /tmp/trex.log 2>&1 &' > /dev/null
+
+- There are traffic streams dynamically prepared for each test, based on traffic
+ profiles. The traffic is sent and the statistics obtained using
+ :command:`trex_stl_lib.api.STLClient`.
+
+**Measuring packet loss**
+
+- Create an instance of STLClient
+- Connect to the client
+- Add all streams
+- Clear statistics
+- Send the traffic for defined time
+- Get the statistics
+
+If there is a warm-up phase required, the traffic is sent also before test and
+the statistics are ignored.
+
+**Measuring latency**
+
+If measurement of latency is requested, two more packet streams are created (one
+for each direction) with TRex flow_stats parameter set to STLFlowLatencyStats. In
+that case, returned statistics will also include min/avg/max latency values.
+
+TCP/IP tests with WRK tool
+--------------------------
+
+`WRK HTTP benchmarking tool <https://github.com/wg/wrk>`_ is used for
+experimental TCP/IP and HTTP tests of VPP TCP/IP stack and built-in
+static HTTP server. WRK has been chosen as it is capable of generating
+significant TCP/IP and HTTP loads by scaling number of threads across
+multi-core processors.
+
+This in turn enables quite high scale benchmarking of the main TCP/IP
+and HTTP service including HTTP TCP/IP Connections-Per-Second (CPS),
+HTTP Requests-Per-Second and HTTP Bandwidth Throughput.
+
+The initial tests are designed as follows:
+
+- HTTP and TCP/IP Connections-Per-Second (CPS)
+
+ - WRK configured to use 8 threads across 8 cores, 1 thread per core.
+ - Maximum of 50 concurrent connections across all WRK threads.
+ - Timeout for server responses set to 5 seconds.
+ - Test duration is 30 seconds.
+ - Expected HTTP test sequence:
+
+ - Single HTTP GET Request sent per open connection.
+ - Connection close after valid HTTP reply.
+ - Resulting flow sequence - 8 packets: >S,<S-A,>A,>Req,<Rep,>F,<F,> A.
+
+- HTTP Requests-Per-Second
+
+ - WRK configured to use 8 threads across 8 cores, 1 thread per core.
+ - Maximum of 50 concurrent connections across all WRK threads.
+ - Timeout for server responses set to 5 seconds.
+ - Test duration is 30 seconds.
+ - Expected HTTP test sequence:
+
+ - Multiple HTTP GET Requests sent in sequence per open connection.
+ - Connection close after set test duration time.
+ - Resulting flow sequence: >S,<S-A,>A,>Req[1],<Rep[1],..,>Req[n],<Rep[n],>F,<F,>A.
diff --git a/docs/report/vpp_performance_tests/overview.rst b/docs/report/vpp_performance_tests/overview.rst
index 6682226651..d9e271e2d9 100644
--- a/docs/report/vpp_performance_tests/overview.rst
+++ b/docs/report/vpp_performance_tests/overview.rst
@@ -236,265 +236,3 @@ and system functional tests, introduced in CSIT rls1701.
The naming should be intuitive for majority of the tests. Complete description
of CSIT test naming convention is provided on :ref:`csit_test_naming`.
-
-Methodology: Multi-Core and Multi-Threading
--------------------------------------------
-
-**Intel Hyper-Threading** - CSIT |release| performance tests are executed with
-SUT servers' Intel XEON processors configured in Intel Hyper-Threading Disabled
-mode (BIOS setting). This is the simplest configuration used to establish
-baseline single-thread single-core application packet processing and forwarding
-performance. Subsequent releases of CSIT will add performance tests with Intel
-Hyper-Threading Enabled (requires BIOS settings change and hard reboot of
-server).
-
-**Multi-core Tests** - CSIT |release| multi-core tests are executed in the
-following VPP thread and core configurations:
-
-#. 1t1c - 1 VPP worker thread on 1 CPU physical core.
-#. 2t2c - 2 VPP worker threads on 2 CPU physical cores.
-#. 4t4c - 4 VPP worker threads on 4 CPU physical cores.
-
-VPP worker threads are the data plane threads. VPP control thread is
-running on a separate non-isolated core together with other Linux
-processes. Note that in quite a few test cases running VPP workers on 2
-or 4 physical cores hits the I/O bandwidth or packets-per-second limit
-of tested NIC.
-
-Section :ref:`throughput_speedup_multi_core` includes a set of graphs
-illustrating packet throughout speedup when running VPP on multiple
-cores.
-
-Methodology: Packet Throughput
-------------------------------
-
-Following values are measured and reported for packet throughput tests:
-
-- NDR binary search per :rfc:`2544`:
-
- - Packet rate: "RATE: <aggregate packet rate in packets-per-second> pps
- (2x <per direction packets-per-second>)";
- - Aggregate bandwidth: "BANDWIDTH: <aggregate bandwidth in Gigabits per
- second> Gbps (untagged)";
-
-- PDR binary search per :rfc:`2544`:
-
- - Packet rate: "RATE: <aggregate packet rate in packets-per-second> pps (2x
- <per direction packets-per-second>)";
- - Aggregate bandwidth: "BANDWIDTH: <aggregate bandwidth in Gigabits per
- second> Gbps (untagged)";
- - Packet loss tolerance: "LOSS_ACCEPTANCE <accepted percentage of packets
- lost at PDR rate>";
-
-- NDR and PDR are measured for the following L2 frame sizes:
-
- - IPv4: 64B, IMIX_v4_1 (28x64B,16x570B,4x1518B), 1518B, 9000B;
- - IPv6: 78B, 1518B, 9000B;
-
-- NDR and PDR binary search resolution is determined by the final value of the
- rate change, referred to as the final step:
-
- - The final step is set to 50kpps for all NIC to NIC tests and all L2
- frame sizes except 9000B (changed from 100kpps used in previous
- releases).
-
- - The final step is set to 10kpps for all remaining tests, including 9000B
- and all vhost VM and memif Container tests.
-
-All rates are reported from external Traffic Generator perspective.
-
-Methodology: Packet Latency
----------------------------
-
-TRex Traffic Generator (TG) is used for measuring latency of VPP DUTs. Reported
-latency values are measured using following methodology:
-
-- Latency tests are performed at 10%, 50% of discovered NDR rate (non drop rate)
- for each NDR throughput test and packet size (except IMIX).
-- TG sends dedicated latency streams, one per direction, each at the rate of
- 10kpps at the prescribed packet size; these are sent in addition to the main
- load streams.
-- TG reports min/avg/max latency values per stream direction, hence two sets
- of latency values are reported per test case; future release of TRex is
- expected to report latency percentiles.
-- Reported latency values are aggregate across two SUTs due to three node
- topology used for all performance tests; for per SUT latency, reported value
- should be divided by two.
-- 1usec is the measurement accuracy advertised by TRex TG for the setup used in
- FD.io labs used by CSIT project.
-- TRex setup introduces an always-on error of about 2*2usec per latency flow -
- additonal Tx/Rx interface latency induced by TRex SW writing and reading
- packet timestamps on CPU cores without HW acceleration on NICs closer to the
- interface line.
-
-
-Methodology: KVM VM vhost
--------------------------
-
-CSIT |release| introduced test environment configuration changes to KVM Qemu
-vhost-user tests in order to more representatively measure |vpp-release|
-performance in configurations with vhost-user interfaces and different Qemu
-settings.
-
-FD.io CSIT performance lab is testing VPP vhost with KVM VMs using following
-environment settings:
-
-- Tests with varying Qemu virtio queue (a.k.a. vring) sizes: [vr256] default 256
- descriptors, [vr1024] 1024 descriptors to optimize for packet throughput;
-
-- Tests with varying Linux :abbr:`CFS (Completely Fair Scheduler)` settings:
- [cfs] default settings, [cfsrr1] CFS RoundRobin(1) policy applied to all data
- plane threads handling test packet path including all VPP worker threads and
- all Qemu testpmd poll-mode threads;
-
-- Resulting test cases are all combinations with [vr256,vr1024] and
- [cfs,cfsrr1] settings;
-
-- Adjusted Linux kernel :abbr:`CFS (Completely Fair Scheduler)` scheduler policy
- for data plane threads used in CSIT is documented in
- `CSIT Performance Environment Tuning wiki <https://wiki.fd.io/view/CSIT/csit-perf-env-tuning-ubuntu1604>`_.
- The purpose is to verify performance impact (NDR, PDR throughput) and
- same test measurements repeatability, by making VPP and VM data plane
- threads less susceptible to other Linux OS system tasks hijacking CPU
- cores running those data plane threads.
-
-Methodology: LXC and Docker Containers memif
---------------------------------------------
-
-CSIT |release| introduced additional tests taking advantage of VPP memif virtual
-interface (shared memory interface) tests to interconnect VPP instances. VPP
-vswitch instance runs in bare-metal user-mode handling Intel x520 NIC 10GbE,
-Intel x710 NIC 10GbE, Intel xl710 NIC 40GbE interfaces and connecting over memif
-(Slave side) virtual interfaces to more instances of VPP running in
-:abbr:`LXC (Linux Container)` or in Docker Containers, both with memif virtual
-interfaces (Master side). LXCs and Docker Containers run in a priviliged mode
-with VPP data plane worker threads pinned to dedicated physical CPU cores per
-usual CSIT practice. All VPP instances run the same version of software.
-This test topology is equivalent to existing tests with vhost-user and
-VMs as described earlier in :ref:`tested_physical_topologies`.
-
-More information about CSIT LXC and Docker Container setup and control
-is available in :ref:`container_orchestration_in_csit`.
-
-Methodology: Container Topologies Orchestrated by K8s
------------------------------------------------------
-
-CSIT |release| introduced new tests of Container topologies connected
-over the memif virtual interface (shared memory interface). In order to
-provide simple topology coding flexibility and extensibility container
-orchestration is done with `Kubernetes <https://github.com/kubernetes>`_
-using `Docker <https://github.com/docker>`_ images for all container
-applications including VPP. `Ligato <https://github.com/ligato>`_ is
-used to address the container networking orchestration that is
-integrated with K8s, including memif support.
-
-For these tests VPP vswitch instance runs in a Docker Container handling
-Intel x520 NIC 10GbE, Intel x710 NIC 10GbE interfaces and connecting over memif
-virtual interfaces to more instances of VPP running in Docker Containers
-with memif virtual interfaces. All Docker Containers run in a priviliged mode
-with VPP data plane worker threads pinned to dedicated physical CPU cores per
-usual CSIT practice. All VPP instances run the same version of software. This
-test topology is equivalent to existing tests with vhost-user and VMs as
-described earlier in :ref:`tested_physical_topologies`.
-
-More information about CSIT Container Topologies Orchestrated by K8s is
-available in :ref:`container_orchestration_in_csit`.
-
-Methodology: IPSec with Intel QAT HW cards
-------------------------------------------
-
-VPP IPSec performance tests are using DPDK cryptodev device driver in
-combination with HW cryptodev devices - Intel QAT 8950 50G - present in
-LF FD.io physical testbeds. DPDK cryptodev can be used for all IPSec
-data plane functions supported by VPP.
-
-Currently CSIT |release| implements following IPSec test cases:
-
-- AES-GCM, CBC-SHA1 ciphers, in combination with IPv4 routed-forwarding
- with Intel xl710 NIC.
-- CBC-SHA1 ciphers, in combination with LISP-GPE overlay tunneling for
- IPv4-over-IPv4 with Intel xl710 NIC.
-
-Methodology: TRex Traffic Generator Usage
------------------------------------------
-
-`TRex traffic generator <https://wiki.fd.io/view/TRex>`_ is used for all
-CSIT performance tests. TRex stateless mode is used to measure NDR and PDR
-throughputs using binary search (NDR and PDR discovery tests) and for quick
-checks of DUT performance against the reference NDRs (NDR check tests) for
-specific configuration.
-
-TRex is installed and run on the TG compute node. The typical procedure is:
-
-- If the TRex is not already installed on TG, it is installed in the
- suite setup phase - see `TRex intallation`_.
-- TRex configuration is set in its configuration file
- ::
-
- /etc/trex_cfg.yaml
-
-- TRex is started in the background mode
- ::
-
- $ sh -c 'cd <t-rex-install-dir>/scripts/ && sudo nohup ./t-rex-64 -i -c 7 --iom 0 > /tmp/trex.log 2>&1 &' > /dev/null
-
-- There are traffic streams dynamically prepared for each test, based on traffic
- profiles. The traffic is sent and the statistics obtained using
- :command:`trex_stl_lib.api.STLClient`.
-
-**Measuring packet loss**
-
-- Create an instance of STLClient
-- Connect to the client
-- Add all streams
-- Clear statistics
-- Send the traffic for defined time
-- Get the statistics
-
-If there is a warm-up phase required, the traffic is sent also before test and
-the statistics are ignored.
-
-**Measuring latency**
-
-If measurement of latency is requested, two more packet streams are created (one
-for each direction) with TRex flow_stats parameter set to STLFlowLatencyStats. In
-that case, returned statistics will also include min/avg/max latency values.
-
-Methodology: TCP/IP tests with WRK tool
----------------------------------------
-
-`WRK HTTP benchmarking tool <https://github.com/wg/wrk>`_ is used for
-experimental TCP/IP and HTTP tests of VPP TCP/IP stack and built-in
-static HTTP server. WRK has been chosen as it is capable of generating
-significant TCP/IP and HTTP loads by scaling number of threads across
-multi-core processors.
-
-This in turn enables quite high scale benchmarking of the main TCP/IP
-and HTTP service including HTTP TCP/IP Connections-Per-Second (CPS),
-HTTP Requests-Per-Second and HTTP Bandwidth Throughput.
-
-The initial tests are designed as follows:
-
-- HTTP and TCP/IP Connections-Per-Second (CPS)
-
- - WRK configured to use 8 threads across 8 cores, 1 thread per core.
- - Maximum of 50 concurrent connections across all WRK threads.
- - Timeout for server responses set to 5 seconds.
- - Test duration is 30 seconds.
- - Expected HTTP test sequence:
-
- - Single HTTP GET Request sent per open connection.
- - Connection close after valid HTTP reply.
- - Resulting flow sequence - 8 packets: >S,<S-A,>A,>Req,<Rep,>F,<F,> A.
-
-- HTTP Requests-Per-Second
-
- - WRK configured to use 8 threads across 8 cores, 1 thread per core.
- - Maximum of 50 concurrent connections across all WRK threads.
- - Timeout for server responses set to 5 seconds.
- - Test duration is 30 seconds.
- - Expected HTTP test sequence:
-
- - Multiple HTTP GET Requests sent in sequence per open connection.
- - Connection close after set test duration time.
- - Resulting flow sequence: >S,<S-A,>A,>Req[1],<Rep[1],..,>Req[n],<Rep[n],>F,<F,>A.