performance test
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WWW.THETECHFIRM.COM © 2016, The Technology Firm
Measuring Performance
Quickstart
Tony Fortunato
The Technology Firm
www.Thetechfirm.com
© 2016, The Technology Firm WWW.THETECHFIRM.COM
Goal
Measuring performance is not a straight forward exercise because:• Many variables need to be documented• Many other variables will be missed• Choosing the appropriate methodology is key• Tool selection is also important
Choosing what type of performance you want to measure is your first step.• Observing existing traffic.• Generate your own traffic
Regardless of performance type, you should always start with a local baseline
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What Makes A Tool Effective
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USB 3.0 to Gigabit Ethernet NIC Network Adapter
USB 2.0 120 to 300 Mbps
USB 3.0 5 Gbit/s
Is there anything wrong with this
USB 2.0 to Gigabit Ethernet NIC Network Adapter
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Network Latency Analysis
• To truly understand if you have an issue with latency, you must have a point of reference to compare your results to
• Over time, you will learn your true latency values
Packet Transmit Time ChartPacket Size
Bandwidth 48 64 512 1024 1518 2048 40969,600 0.04000000 0.05333333 0.42666667
19,200 0.02000000 0.02666667 0.21333333 56,000 0.00685714 0.00914286 0.07314286 64,000 0.00600000 0.00800000 0.06400000 0.1280000 0.1897500 0.2560000 0.5120000
128,000 0.00300000 0.00400000 0.03200000 0.0640000 0.0948750 0.1280000 0.2560000 1,024,000 0.00037500 0.00050000 0.00400000 0.0080000 0.0118594 0.0160000 0.0320000 1,544,000 0.00024870 0.00033161 0.00265285 0.0053057 0.0078653 0.0106114 0.0212228
4,000,000 0.00012800 0.00102400 0.0020480 0.0030360 0.0040960 0.0081920 16,000,000 0.00003200 0.00025600 0.0005120 0.0007590 0.0010240 0.0020480
10,000,000 0.00005120 0.00040960 0.0008192 0.0012144 100,000,000 0.00000512 0.00004096 0.0000819 0.0001214
1,000,000,000 0.00000051 0.00000410 0.0000082 0.0000121 0.0000164 0.0000328
155,000,000 0.00000248 0.00000330 0.00002643 0.00005285 0.00007835 0.00010570 0.00021141
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Observing Existing Traffic The following items need to be documented when considering this task:
• Date/Time
• Any business events – year end, tax season, etc.
• Duration of test
• Application information
• Client computer specifications/Operating system
• Software overview (SQL, WEB, multi-tier)
• How you will intercept data (span, tap, hub)
• Test script (manual)
• Can you automate the test (autoit, macros)
• How many tests are you performing I do 5, drop the high/low and average the 3
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Generate your own Traffic The following items need to be documented when considering this task:
• Date/Time
• Any business events – year end, tax season, etc.
• Duration of test
• Application information
• Client computer specifications/Operating system
• Are you using the disk – local or network drive
• If you are using a file, what is the size
• What is the slowest link between hosts
• How long do you want to test for
• What is the direction of traffic generation (upload vs download vs both)
• Can the test be automated
• What protocol/application do you want to use
• How many tests are you performing I do 5, drop the high/low and average the 3
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Don’t guess at file sizes
Determining Proper File Size
To get an approximate idea of the proper file size:
• Bandwidth of the slowest link between the client server
• Divide by 8 (bits in a Byte)
• Multiply by number of seconds
• Example:
• 100 Mbps / 8 = 12.5 MBps x 10 seconds = 125 MB file
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Always Start With A Local Baseline
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In this example I used iperf, opened 2 command prompts and performed an upload test using the application defaults.i.e TCP port 5001, upload, 64K TCP Window Size, 10 seconds
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A Local Baseline Can Also Be a VM Baseline
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In this example I used iperf, opened 1 command prompt in the VM Host and Guest and performed an upload test using the application defaults.i.e TCP port 5001, upload, 64K TCP Window Size, 10 seconds
Guest VM
Host VM
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Back to Back (or as close as possible)
Generate traffic
1 GB full duplex
Local test avg throughput = 5 Gbps Local test avg throughput = 2 Gbps
Average test throughput: 955 Mbps
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Back to Back (or as close as possible)
1 GB full duplex
Local test avg throughput = 5 Gbps Local test avg throughput = 2 Gbps
Average test throughput: 955 MbpsNo measurable change
Same VLAN
Generate traffic
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Back to Back (or as close as possible)
1 GB full duplex
Average test throughput: 15 MbpsItems to document-Distance to AP-Channel, RSSI, Noise-How many other devices on AP-Etc…
2.4 Ghz 802.11n
Generate traffic
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Ways to Automate Traffic Generation (Windows) To test from RAM
• Iperf + batch file To test from Disk
• Iperf + batch file
• Use -F, --fileinput <name> Option• To test FTP
• Microsoft ftp supports the –s option that uses a text file where you can login, download, upload a file
• To test http
• Use a utility such as wget
• To test SQL/DB2
• Microsofts sqlcmd
• Many db2 and SQL vendors have utilities already available to work from the command line
• Another technical option is to use Telnet and the application port number
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Iperf Command line Example
Generates the file test.txt with the following output
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Using >> appends to the file test.txt
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Iperf Batch File Example
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ftp example The –s option with microsoft’s FTP client allows you to script a test i.e ftp -s:ftp_test.ftp
To send the output to a file use >
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wget To Measure Throughput With HTTPD:\software\wget>wget http://churchill/300mb--2013-09-27 21:24:05-- http://churchill/300mb
Resolving churchill... 10.44.10.94
Connecting to churchill|10.44.10.94|:80... connected.
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK
Length: 333202944 (318M) [application/octet-stream]
Saving to: `300mb'
100%[======================================>] 333,202,944 1.47M/s in 3m 20s
2013-09-27 21:27:25 (1.59 MB/s) - `300mb' saved [333202944/333202944]
D:\software\wget>wget http://churchill/8mb--2013-09-27 21:35:07-- http://churchill/8mb
Resolving churchill... 10.44.10.94
Connecting to churchill|10.44.10.94|:80... connected
HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK
Length: 9062704 (8.6M) [application/octet-stream]
Saving to: `8mb.1'
100%[======================================>] 9,062,704 1.38M/s in 6.9s
2013-09-27 21:35:14 (1.25 MB/s) - `8mb.1' saved [9062704/9062704]
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