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Thor

Thor is WebSocket benchmarking/load generator. There are a lot of benchmarking tools for HTTP servers. You've got ab, siege, wrk and more. But all these tools only work plain ol HTTP and have no support for WebSockets and even if they did they wouldn't be suitable as they would be testing short running HTTP requests instead of long running HTTP requests with a lot of messaging traffic. Thor fixes all of this.

Dependencies

Thor requires Node.js to be installed on your system. If you don't have Node.js installed you can download it from http://nodejs.org or build it from the github source repository: http://github.com/joyent/node.

Once you have Node.js installed, you can use bundled package manager npm to install this module:

npm install -g thor

The -g command flag tells npm to install the module globally on your system.

Usage

thor [options] <urls>

Thor can hit multiple URL's at once, this is useful if you are testing your reverse proxies, load balancers or just simply multiple applications. The url that you supply to thor should be written in a WebSocket compatible format using the ws or wss protocols:

thor --amount 5000 ws://localhost:8080 wss://localhost:8081

The snippet above will open up 5000 connections against the regular ws://localhost:8080 and also 5000 connections against the secured wss://localhost:8081 server. So a total of 10000 connections will be made.

One thing to keep in mind is that you probably need to bump the amount of file descriptors on your local machine if you start testing WebSockets. Set the ulimit -n on machine as high as possible. If you do not know how to do this, Google it.

Options

  Usage: thor [options] ws://localhost

  Options:

    -h, --help                      output usage information
    -A, --amount <connections>      the amount of persistent connections to generate
    -C, --concurrent <connections>  how many concurrent-connections per second
    -M, --messages <messages>       messages to be send per connection
    -P, --protocol <protocol>       WebSocket protocol version
    -B, --buffer <size>             size of the messages that are send
    -W, --workers <cpus>            workers to be spawned
    -G, --generator <file>          custom message generators
    -M, --masked                    send the messaged with a mask
    -b, --binary                    send binary messages instead of utf-8
    -V, --version                   output the version number

Some small notes about the options:

  • --protocol is the protocol version number. If you want to use the HyBi drafts 07-12 use 8 as argument or if you want to use the HyBi drafts 13-17 drafts which are the default version use 13.
  • --buffer should be size of the message in bytes.
  • --workers as Node.js is single threaded this sets the amount of sub processes to handle all the heavy lifting.

License

MIT

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