Provided by: httperf_0.9.0-9_amd64 bug

NAME

       httperf - HTTP performance measurement tool

SYNOPSIS

       httperf   [--add-header   S]   [--burst-length   N]  [--client  I/N]  [--close-with-reset]
       [-d|--debug  N]  [--failure-status  N]  [-h|--help]  [--hog]  [--http-version  S]  [--max-
       connections  N] [--max-piped-calls N] [--method S] [--no-host-hdr] [--num-calls N] [--num-
       conns N] [--period [d|u|e]T1[,T2]]  [--port  N]  [--print-reply  [header|body]]  [--print-
       request [header|body]] [--rate X] [--recv-buffer N] [--retry-on-failure] [--send-buffer N]
       [--server S] [--server-name S] [--session-cookie]  [--ssl]  [--ssl-ciphers  L]  [--ssl-no-
       reuse]  [--think-timeout  X] [--timeout X] [--uri S] [-v|--verbose] [-V|--version] [--wlog
       y|n,F] [--wsess N,N,X] [--wsesslog N,X,F] [--wset N,X]

DESCRIPTION

       httperf is a tool to measure web server performance.  It speaks the HTTP protocol both  in
       its  HTTP/1.0  and  HTTP/1.1  flavors  and  offers a variety of workload generators. While
       running, it keeps track of a number of performance metrics that are summarized in the form
       of  statistics  that  are  printed  at the end of a test run.  The most basic operation of
       httperf is to generate a fixed number of HTTP GET requests and to measure how many replies
       (responses) came back from the server and at what rate the responses arrived.

       IMPORTANT:  To  obtain correct results, it is necessary to run at most one httperf process
       per client machine.  Also, there should be as few background processes as possible both on
       the client and server machines.

EXAMPLES

       httperf --hog --server www
              This  command causes httperf to create a connection to host www, send a request for
              the root document (http://www/), receive the reply, close the connection, and  then
              print some performance statistics.

       httperf --hog --server www --num-conns 100 --ra 10 --timeout 5
              Like above, except that a total of 100 connections are created and that connections
              are created at a fixed rate of 10 per second.  Note that option ``--rate'' has been
              abbreviated to ``--ra''.

       httperf --hog --server=www --wsess=10,5,2 --rate 1 --timeout 5
              Causes  httperf  to  generate  a  total  of  10 sessions at a rate of 1 session per
              second.  Each session consists of 5 calls that are spaced out by 2 seconds.

       httperf --hog --server=www --wsess=10,5,2 --rate=1 --timeout=5 --ssl
              Like above, except that httperf contacts server  www  via  SSL  at  port  443  (the
              default port for SSL connections).

       httperf     --hog    --server    www    --wsess=10,5,2    --rate=1    --timeout=5    --ssl
       --ssl-ciphers=EXP-RC4-MD5:EXP-RC2-CBC-MD5 --ssl-no-reuse --http-version=1.0
              Like above, except that httperf will inform the server that it can only select from
              two  cipher  suites (EXP-RC4-MD5 or EXP-RC2-CBC-MD5); furthermore, httperf will use
              HTTP version 1.0 which requires a new TCP connection for each request.   Also,  SSL
              session  ids  are  not  reused,  so the entire SSL connection establishment process
              (known as the SSL handshake) occurs for each connection.

OPTIONS

       The operation of httperf can be controlled through a number of options.  The tool supports
       both  short  (one-character)  and long (arbitrary-length) option names.  Short options are
       prefixed with a single leading dash (-), long options with a double-dash  (--).   Multiple
       short  options can be grouped together (e.g., ``-vV'' is equivalent to ``-v -V'') and long
       options can be abbreviated so long as they remain unique.  Parameters to  options  can  be
       specified  either  by  following the long option name with an equal sign and the parameter
       value (e.g., --burst=10) or by separating the option name and value with whitespace (e.g.,
       --burst 10).

       --add-header=S
              Specifies  to include string S as an additional request header.  It is necessary to
              specify the terminating carriage-return/line-feed sequence explicitly.  This can be
              done  by  using  the  escape  sequence  ``\n''.   This makes it possible to include
              multiple  request  headers.   For  example,  ``--add-header  "Referer:   foo\nAuth:
              secret\n"''  would  add  two  request  headers  (``Referer''  and ``Auth'') to each
              request.  Other supported escape sequences  are  ``\r''  (carriage-return),  ``\a''
              (line-feed), ``\\'' (backslash), and ``\N'' where N is the code the character to be
              inserted (in octal).

       --burst-length=N
              Specifies the length of bursts.  Each burst consists of N calls to the server.  The
              exact  meaning  of  this  parameter depends on the workload generator.  For regular
              request-oriented workloads, see the description of option --wsess.

       --no-host-hdr
              Specifies that the "Host:" header should not  be  included  when  issuing  an  HTTP
              request.

       --num-calls.
              For session-oriented workloads, see the description of option --wsess.

       --client=I/N
              Specifies  that  the  machine httperf is running on is client I out of a total of N
              clients.  I should be in the range from 0 to N-1.  Some of the workload  generators
              (e.g.,  --wset)  use  the  client  identity  as a bias value to ensure that not all
              clients generate perfectly  identical  workloads.   When  performing  a  test  that
              involves  several  client  machines,  it  is  generally a good idea to specify this
              option.

       --close-with-reset
              Requests that httperf closes TCP connections by sending a RESET  instead  of  going
              through  the  normal TCP connection shutdown handshake.  Turning on this option can
              have ill effects such as data  corruption,  stuck  TCP  control  blocks,  or  wrong
              results.   For  this  reason,  the  option  should  not  be  used unless absolutely
              necessary and even then it should not be used unless  its  implications  are  fully
              understood.

       -d=N

       --debug=N
              Set debug level to N.  Larger values of N will result in more output.

       --failure-status=N
              Specifies  that  an  HTTP  response status code of N should be treated as a failure
              (i.e., treated as if the request had timed out, for example).   For  example,  with
              ``--failure-status=504''  responses with an HTTP status of ``504 Gateway Time-out''
              would be considered failures.  Caveat:  this  option  is  currently  supported  for
              session workloads only (see the --wsess and --wsesslog options).

       -h

       --help Prints a summary of available options and their parameters.

       --hog  This  option  requests  to  use  up  as  many TCP ports as necessary.  Without this
              option, httperf is typically limited to using ephemeral ports (in  the  range  from
              1024  to  5000).   This limited port range can quickly become a bottleneck so it is
              generally a good idea to specify this  option  for  serious  testing.   Also,  this
              option  must  be  specified  when  measuring  NT  servers  since  it  avoids  a TCP
              incompatibility between NT and UNIX machines.

       --http-version=S
              Specifies the version string that should be included in the requests  sent  to  the
              server.   By  default,  version  string ``1.1'' is used.  This option can be set to
              ``1.0'' to force the generation of HTTP/1.0 requests.  Setting this option  to  any
              value other than ``1.0'' or ``1.1'' may result in undefined behavior.

       --max-connections=N
              Specifies  that  at most N connections are opened for each session.  This option is
              meaningful in conjunction with options --wsess and --wsesslog only.

       --max-piped-calls=N
              Specifies that at most N pipelined calls  are  issued  on  each  connection.   This
              option is meaningful in conjunction with options --wsess and --wsesslog only.

       --method=S
              Specifies  the  method  that  should be used when issuing an HTTP request.  If this
              option is not specified, the GET method is used.  The method S can be an  arbitrary
              string but is usually one of GET, HEAD, PUT, POST, etc.

       --num-calls=N
              This  option  is  meaningful for request-oriented workloads only.  It specifies the
              total number of calls to issue on each connection  before  closing  it.   If  N  is
              greater  than 1, the server must support persistent connections.  The default value
              for this option is 1.  If --burst-length is set to B, then the N calls  are  issued
              in bursts of B pipelined calls each.  Thus, the total number of such bursts will be
              N/B (per connection).

       --num-conns=N
              This option is meaningful for request-oriented workloads only.   It  specifies  the
              total  number  of  connections  to create.  On each connection, calls are issued as
              specified by options --num-calls and --burst-length.  A test stops as soon as the N
              connections  have  either  completed or failed.  A connection is considered to have
              failed if any activity on the connection fails to make forward  progress  for  more
              than  the time specified by the timeout options --timeout and --think-timeout.  The
              default value for this option is 1.

       --period=[D]T1[,T2]
              Specifies the time interval  between  the  creation  of  connections  or  sessions.
              Connections  are  created  by default, sessions if option --wsess or --wsesslog has
              been specified.  This connection/session ``interarrival time'' can alternatively be
              specified  by  the  --rate  option,  although  more  flexibility  is available with
              --period.  The D  parameter  specifies  the  interarrival  time  distribution.   If
              omitted  or set to ``d'', a deterministic (i.e., fixed) period is used as specified
              by parameter T1 in units of seconds.  If D is set to ``e'', an  exponential  (i.e.,
              Poisson)  distribution  is used with a mean interarrival time of T1.  Finally, if D
              is set to ``u'', a uniform distribution over the interval [T1,T2) is used  for  the
              interarrival  time.  In all cases, a period of 0 results in connections or sessions
              being generated sequentially (a new connection/session is initiated as soon as  the
              previous  one  completes).   The  default  value  for  this option is 0.  Note that
              specifying, for example, --rate=5 is  equivalent  to  specifying  --period=d0.2  or
              --period=0.2.  By specifying --period=u1,3, the interarrival times will be randomly
              chosen from the interval between  1  and  3  seconds.   The  specific  sequence  of
              (pseudo-)random interarrival times are identical from one httperf run to another as
              long as the values for the --period and --client options are identical.

       --port=N
              This option specifies the port number N on which the web server  is  listening  for
              HTTP requests.  By default, httperf uses port number 80.

       --print-reply[=[header|body]]
              Requests  the  printing  of  the  reply  headers, body, and summary.  The output is
              directed to standard output.  Reply header lines are prefixed by "RH",  reply  body
              lines  are  prefixed  by "RB", and the reply-size summary is prefixed by "RS".  The
              prefix is followed by a serial number that uniquely identifies the  call  that  the
              reply  line  is  for  and  a  colon (":") character that marks the beginning of the
              actual reply line.  To print only reply  headers,  pass  argument  header  to  this
              option.  To print only the reply body, pass argument body to this option.

       --print-request[=[header|body]]
              Requests  the  printing  of  the  request  headers,  body  (if one is present), and
              summary.  The output is directed to standard  output.   Request  header  lines  are
              prefixed  by "SH", request body lines are prefixed by "SB", and the request summary
              is prefixed by "SS".  The prefix is followed by the  call's  serial  number  and  a
              colon  (":") character that marks the beginning of the actual reply line.  To print
              only request headers, pass argument header to  this  option.   To  print  only  the
              request body, pass argument body to this option.

       --rate=X
              Specifies the fixed rate at which connections or sessions are created.  Connections
              are created  by  default,  sessions  if  option  --wsess  or  --wsesslog  has  been
              specified.   In  both  cases  a  rate of 0 results in connections or sessions being
              generated sequentially (a new  session/connection  is  initiated  as  soon  as  the
              previous one completes).  The default value for this option is 0.

       --recv-buffer=N
              Specifies  the  maximum  size  of  the  socket receive buffers used to receive HTTP
              replies.  By default, the  limit  is  16KB.   A  smaller  value  may  help  memory-
              constrained clients whereas a larger value may be necessary when communicating with
              a server over a high-bandwidth, high-latency connection.

       --retry-on-failure
              This option  is  meaningful  for  session  workloads  only  (see  the  --wsess  and
              --wsesslog  options).   If specified, a call that results in a failure response (as
              defined by the --failure-status option) is retried immediately instead  of  causing
              the session to fail.

       --send-buffer=N
              Specifies  the  maximum size of the socket send buffers used to send HTTP requests.
              By default, the limit is 4KB.  A smaller value may help memory-constrained  clients
              whereas  a larger value may be necessary when generating large requests to a server
              connected via a high-bandwidth, high-latency connection.

       --server=S
              Specifies the IP hostname of the server.  By default, the hostname ``localhost'' is
              used.  This option should always be specified as it is generally not a good idea to
              run the client and the server on the same machine.

       --server-name=S
              Specifies the (default) server name that appears in the  "Host:"  header  of  every
              request  sent  by  httperf.   Without  this  option,  the host name (or IP address)
              specified by option --server is used instead.

       --session-cookie
              When this option is turned on, cookie management is enabled on a per-session basis.
              What  this  means  is  that if a reply to a request that was generated by session X
              contains a cookie, then all future requests sent by session  X  will  include  this
              cookie as well.  At present, the cookie manager in httperf supports only one cookie
              per session.  If a second  cookie  is  received,  the  new  cookie  overwrites  the
              existing one and a warning message is printed if ``--debug 1'' is on.

       --ssl  Specifies  that all communication between httperf and the server should utilize the
              Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) protocol.  This option is available only if httperf  was
              compiled with SSL support enabled.

       --ssl-ciphers=L
              This  option  is  only meaningful if SSL is in use (see --ssl option).  This option
              specifies the list L of cipher suites that httperf may use in negotiating a  secure
              connection  with  the server.  If the list contains more than one cipher suite, the
              ciphers must be separated by a colon.  If the server does not  accept  any  of  the
              listed  cipher suites, the connection establishment will fail and httperf will exit
              immediately.  If this option is not specified when the --ssl option is present then
              httperf  will  use  all  of  the SSLv3 cipher suites provided by the underlying SSL
              library.

       --ssl-no-reuse
              This option is only meaningful if SSL and sessions are in use (see --ssl,  --wsess,
              --wsesslog).   When  an SSL connection is established the client receives a session
              identifier (session id) from the server.  On subsequent SSL connections, the client
              normally  reuses  this  session  id  in order to avoid the expense of repeating the
              (slow) SSL handshake to establish a new SSL session and obtain another  session  id
              (even  if  the  client  attempts  to  re-use a session id, the server may force the
              client to renegotiate a session).  By default httperf reuses the session id  across
              all  connections  in  a  session.   If the --ssl-no-reuse option is in effect, then
              httperf will not reuse the session  id,  and  the  entire  SSL  handshake  will  be
              performed for each new connection in a session.

       --think-timeout=X
              Specifies  the  maximum time that the server may need to initiate sending the reply
              for a given request.  Note that this timeout value is added to the  normal  timeout
              value (see option --timeout).  When accessing static web content, it is usually not
              necessary to specify this option.  However, when performing tests with long-running
              CGI  scripts,  it may be necessary to use this option to allow for larger response-
              times.  The default value for this option is zero seconds, meaning that the  server
              has to be able to respond within the normal timeout value.

       --timeout=X
              Specifies  the  amount  of  time  X  that  httperf  is willing to wait for a server
              reaction.  The timeout is specified in seconds  and  can  be  a  fractional  number
              (e.g.,  --timeout  3.5).   This  timeout  value  is  used  when  establishing a TCP
              connection, when sending a request, when waiting for a reply, and when receiving  a
              reply.   If during any of those activities a request fails to make forward progress
              within the alloted time, httperf considers the request to  have  died,  closes  the
              associated  connection  or  session and increases the client-timo error count.  The
              actual timeout value used when waiting for a reply is the sum of this  timeout  and
              the  think-timeout  (see option --think-timeout).  By default, the timeout value is
              infinity.

       --uri=S
              Specifies that URI S should be accessed on the server.  For some  of  the  workload
              generators  (e.g.,  --wset),  this  option  specifies the prefix for the URIs being
              accessed.

       -v

       --verbose
              Puts httperf into verbose mode.  In  this  mode,  additional  output  such  as  the
              individual reply rate samples and connection lifetime histogram are printed.

       -V

       --version
              Prints the version of httperf.

       --wlog=B,F
              This  option  can be used to generate a specific sequence of URI accesses.  This is
              useful to replay  the  accesses  recorded  in  a  server  log  file,  for  example.
              Parameter  F  is the name of a file containing the ASCII NUL separated list of URIs
              that should be accessed.  If parameter B is set to ``y'', httperf will wrap  around
              to the beginning of the file when reaching the end of the list (so the list of URIs
              is accessed repeatedly).  With B set to ``n'', the test will  stop  no  later  than
              when reaching the end of the URI list.

       --wsess=N1,N2,X
              Requests the generation and measurement of sessions instead of individual requests.
              A session consists of a sequence of bursts which are spaced out by the user  think-
              time.   Each  burst  consists  of  a  fixed  number  L of calls to the server (L is
              specified by option --burst-length).  The calls in a burst are issued  as  follows:
              at  first,  a  single  call  is issued.  Once the reply to this first call has been
              fully received, all remaining calls in the  burst  are  issued  concurrently.   The
              concurrent  calls  are  issued  either as pipelined calls on an existing persistent
              connection or as individual calls on separate connections.   Whether  a  persistent
              connection  is used depends on whether the server responds to the first call with a
              reply that includes a ``Connection:  close''  header  line.   If  such  a  line  is
              present, separate connections are used.

              The  option  specifies the following parameters: N1 is the total number of sessions
              to generate, N2 is the number of calls per session, and X is  the  user  think-time
              (in  seconds)  that  separates  consecutive  call bursts.  For example, the options
              ``--wsess=100,50,10 --burst-len 5'' would result in 100 sessions with a total of 50
              calls  each.   Since  each burst has a length of 5 calls, a total of 10 call bursts
              would be generated per session.  The user think-time between call bursts  would  be
              10  seconds.   Note  that  user think-time X denotes the time between receiving the
              last reply of the previous call burst and the sending of the first request  of  the
              next burst.

              A  test  involving sessions finishes as soon as the requested number N1 of sessions
              have either failed or completed.  A session is considered to  have  failed  if  any
              operation  in  a  session  takes  longer  than  the  timeouts  specified by options
              --timeout and --think-timeout.  In addition, a session also  fails  if  the  server
              returns  a reply with a status code matching the one specified by option --failure-
              status.

       --wsesslog=N,X,F
              This specifies a session workload generator similar to --wsess  (please  read  that
              description  first).   With  --wsesslog  though,  many  aspects  of  user sessions,
              including the number and sequence of URI's, request method, think-time  and  burst-
              length  parameters,  can be specified in an input file F.  Two other parameters are
              retained from --wsess, namely N, the number of sessions to  initiate,  and  X,  the
              burst-to-burst  user  think  time  (note that this becomes a default time since the
              input file F can also specify user think  time  on  a  per-burst  basis.   A  small
              example input file can most-easily show the settable parameters:

              # Comment lines start with a ``#'' as the first
              # character.  Lines with only whitespace delimit
              # sessions (multiple blank lines do not generate
              # ``null'' sessions).  All other lines specify a
              # uri-sequence (1 uri per line).  If the first
              # character of the line is whitespace (e.g. space
              # or tab), the uri is considered to be part of a
              # burst that is sent out after the previous
              # non-burst uri.

              # session 1 definition (this is a comment)
              /foo.html think=2.0
                   /pict1.gif
                   /pict2.gif
              /foo2.html method=POST contents='Post data'
                   /pict3.gif
                   /pict4.gif

              # session 2 definition
              /foo3.html method=POST contents="Multiline\ndata"
              /foo4.html method=HEAD

              The  above  description  specifies 2 sessions.  The first session will start with a
              request for /foo.html.  When the /foo.html  response  comes  back,  a  burst  of  2
              requests will follow (/pict1.gif and /pict2.gif).  When the last of those responses
              is received, a two second user think time is inserted before the  next  request  of
              /foo2.html  is  issued.   This  request  is sent as a POST.  The posted data can be
              contained between single- or double-quotes.  Newlines can appear within posted data
              as  ``\n''  or  as  a  ``\<CR>''.   The  /foo2.html response is followed by a burst
              request of /pict3.gif and /pict4.gif, which concludes  this  session.   The  second
              session  is  started  some  time  after  the  first,  as specified by the --rate or
              --period options.

              The second session consists of 2 requests separated by the default user think  time
              as  specified  by  the X parameter of the --wsesslog option.  If the N parameter of
              --wsesslog is greater than the number of sessions defined in input file F, then the
              defined  sessions are used repeatedly until N sessions have been created (i.e., the
              defined sessions are used in a round-robin fashion).

              One should avoid using --wsesslog in conjunction with other  httperf  options  that
              also  control  session behavior and workload URI's, namely --burst-length, --wsess,
              --wlog, and --wset.

       --wset=N,X
              This option can be used to walk through a list of URIs at a given rate.   Parameter
              N  specifies  the  number of distinct URIs that should be generated and X specifies
              the rate at which new URIs are accessed.  A rate of 0.25 would mean that  the  same
              URI  would  be accessed four times in a row before moving on to the next URI.  This
              type of access pattern is useful in generating a workload that induces a relatively
              predictable  amount  of traffic in the disk I/O subsystem of the server (assuming N
              and the accessed files are big enough to exceed the server's  buffer  cache).   The
              URIs  generated  are  of  the form prefix/path.html, where prefix is the URI prefix
              specified by option --wset and path is generated as follows: for the i-th  file  in
              the  working set, write down i in decimal, prefixing the number with as many zeroes
              as necessary to get a string that has as many digits as N-1.  Then insert  a  slash
              character  between  each  digit.   For  example,  the  103rd  file in a working set
              consisting of 1024 files would result in a path of ``0/1/0/3''.  Thus, if the  URI-
              prefix  is  /wset1024, then the URI being accessed would be /wset1024/0/1/0/3.html.
              In other words, the files on the server need to be organized as a 10ary tree.

OUTPUT

       This section describes the statistics output at the end  of  each  test  run.   The  basic
       information shown below is printed independent of the selected workload generator.

              Total: connections 30000 requests 29997 replies 29997 test-duration 299.992 s

              Connection rate: 100.0 conn/s (10.0 ms/conn, <=14 concurrent connections)
              Connection time [ms]: min 1.4 avg 3.0 max 163.4 median 1.5 stddev 7.3
              Connection time [ms]: connect 0.6
              Connection length [replies/conn]: 1.000

              Request rate: 100.0 req/s (10.0 ms/req)
              Request size [B]: 75.0

              Reply rate [replies/s]: min 98.8 avg 100.0 max 101.2 stddev 0.3 (60 samples)
              Reply time [ms]: response 2.4 transfer 0.0
              Reply size [B]: header 242.0 content 1010.0 footer 0.0 (total 1252.0)
              Reply status: 1xx=0 2xx=29997 3xx=0 4xx=0 5xx=0

              CPU time [s]: user 94.31 system 205.26 (user 31.4% system 68.4% total 99.9%)
              Net I/O: 129.6 KB/s (1.1*10^6 bps)

              Errors: total 3 client-timo 0 socket-timo 0 connrefused 3 connreset 0
              Errors: fd-unavail 0 addrunavail 0 ftab-full 0 other 0

       There  are  six  groups  of  statistics:  overall  results (``Total''), connection related
       results (``Connection''), results relating to the issuing of HTTP requests  (``Request''),
       results  relating  to  the  replies  received  from  the server (``Reply''), miscellaneous
       results relating to the CPU (``CPU'') and network (``Net I/O'') utilization and, last  but
       not least, a summary of errors encountered (``Errors'').

       Total Section
              This  section  summarizes  how  many TCP connections were initiated by httperf, how
              many requests it sent out, how many replies it received, and what  the  total  test
              duration  was.  In the example output shown above, 30,000 connections were created,
              29,997 requests were sent out and 29,997 replies were received.   The  duration  of
              the test was almost exactly 5 minutes (300 seconds).

       Connection Section
              This  section conveys information related to TCP connections generated by the tool.
              Specifically,  the  ``Connection  rate''  line  shows  that  new  connections  were
              initiated  at  a  rate of 100.0 connections per second.  This rate corresponds to a
              period of 10.0 milliseconds per connection.  The last number  in  this  line  shows
              that at most 14 connections were open at any given time.

              The first line labeled ``Connection time'' gives lifetime statistics for successful
              connections.  The lifetime of a connection is the time between a TCP connection  is
              initiated  and  the  time  the  connection  is  closed.  A connection is considered
              successful if it had at least one call that completed successfully.  In the example
              output,  the  line indicates that the minimum (``min'') connection lifetime was 1.4
              milliseconds, the average (``avg'') lifetime  was  3.0  milliseconds,  the  maximum
              (``max'')  was  163.4  milliseconds,  the  median  (``median'')  lifetime  was  1.5
              milliseconds,  and  that  the  standard  deviation  of  the   lifetimes   was   7.3
              milliseconds.   The  median  lifetime  is  computed  based  on a histogram with one
              millisecond resolution and a maximum lifetime of 100 seconds.  Thus, the median  is
              accurate  to  within  half  a  millisecond  if  at  least  half  of  the successful
              connections have a lifetime of no more than 100 seconds.

              The next statistic in this section is the average time it took to establish  a  TCP
              connection.   Only  successful  TCP  connection establishments are counted.  In the
              example, the second line labeled ``Connection time'' shows  that,  on  average,  it
              took 0.6 milliseconds to establish a connection.

              The  final  line  in  this  section is labeled ``Connection length.''  It gives the
              average number of replies received on each connection that received  at  least  one
              reply  (i.e.,  connections  that  failed  before  yielding  the first reply are not
              counted).  This number can be bigger than 1.0 due to persistent connections.

       Request Section
              The line labeled ``Request rate'' gives the rate at which HTTP requests were issued
              and  the  period  that this rate corresponds to.  In the example above, the request
              rate was 100.0 requests per second, which  corresponds  to  10.0  milliseconds  per
              request.   As  long  as no persistent connections are employed, the results in this
              section are very similar  or  identical  to  results  in  the  connection  section.
              However,  when persistent connections are used, several calls can be performed on a
              single connection in which case the results would be different.

              The line labeled ``Request size'' gives the average size of the  HTTP  requests  in
              bytes.  In the example above, the average request size was 75 bytes.

       Reply Section
              For simple measurements, this section is often the most interesting one as the line
              labeled ``Reply rate'' gives various statistics for the reply rate.  In the example
              above,  the  minimum  (``min'') reply rate was 98.8 replies per second, the average
              (``avg'') was 100 replies per second, and the  maximum  (``max'')  rate  was  101.2
              replies per second.  The standard deviation was 0.3 replies per second.  The number
              enclosed in parentheses shows  that  60  reply  rate  samples  were  acquired.   At
              present,  httperf  collects  a  rate  sample  once every five seconds.  To obtain a
              meaningful standard deviation, it is recommended to run tests  long  enough  so  at
              least thirty samples are obtained.  This corresponds to a test duration of at least
              150 seconds.

              The line labeled ``Reply Time'' gives information on  how  long  it  took  for  the
              server  to  respond  and how long it took to receive the reply.  In the example, it
              took on average 2.4 milliseconds between sending the first byte of the request  and
              receiving  the  first  byte  of  the reply.  The time to ``transfer'', or read, the
              reply was too short to be measured, so it shows up as zero.  The  is  typical  when
              the entire reply fits into a single TCP segment.

              The  next  line,  labeled ``Reply size'' contains statistics on the average size of
              the replies---all numbers are in reported bytes.  Specifically, the line lists  the
              average length of reply headers, the content, and footers (HTTP/1.1 uses footers to
              realize the ``chunked'' transfer encoding).  For  convenience,  the  average  total
              number  of  bytes in the replies is also given in parentheses.  In the example, the
              average header length (``header'')  was  242  bytes,  the  average  content  length
              (``content'')  was  1010  bytes,  and  there  were no footers (``footer'' length is
              zero).  The total reply length of 1252 bytes on average.

              The final line in this section is a histogram of the major status codes received in
              the  replies  from  the server.  The major status code is the ``hundreds''-digit of
              the full HTTP status code.  In the example, all 29,997 replies had a  major  status
              code  of  2.   It's  a  good  guess  that  all status codes were ``200 OK'' but the
              information in the histogram is not detailed enough to allow distinguishing  status
              codes with the same major code.

       Miscellaneous Section
              This  section  starts  with a summary of the CPU utilization on the client machine.
              In the example, the line labeled ``CPU time'' shows that 94.31 seconds  were  spent
              executing  in  user  mode (``user''), 205.26 seconds were spent executing in system
              mode (``system'') and that this corresponds to 31.4% user mode execution and  68.4%
              system  execution.   The  total utilization was 99.9%, which is expected given that
              httperf is a CPU hog.  A total CPU utilization of significantly less than 100% is a
              sign that there were competing processes that interfered with the test.

              The  line labeled ``Net I/O'' gives the average network throughput in kilobytes per
              second (where a kilobyte is 1024 bytes) and in megabits per second (where a megabit
              is  10^6  bits).  In the example, an average network usage of about 129.6 kilobytes
              per second was sustained.  The number in parentheses shows that this corresponds to
              about  1.1  megabits  per  second.  This network bandwidth is computed based on the
              number of bytes sent and received on the TCP connections.  In other words, it  does
              not account for the network headers or TCP retransmissions that may have occurred.

       Errors Section
              The  last  section contains statistics on the errors that were encountered during a
              test.  In the example, the two lines labeled ``Errors''  show  that  there  were  a
              total  of three errors and that all three errors were due to the server refusing to
              accept a  connection  (``connrefused'').   A  description  of  each  error  counter
              follows:

              client-timo:  The  number  of  times a session, connection, or call failed due to a
              client timeout (as specified by the --timeout and --think-timeout) options.

              socket-timo: The number of times  a  TCP  connection  failed  with  a  socket-level
              timeout (ETIMEDOUT).

              connrefused:   The  number  of  times  a  TCP  connection  attempt  failed  with  a
              ``connection refused by server'' error (ECONNREFUSED).

              connreset: The number of times a TCP connection failed due  to  a  RESET  from  the
              server.   Typically,  a  RESET is received when the client attempts to send data to
              the server at a time the server has already closed its end of the  connection.   NT
              servers  also  send  RESETs  when attempting to establish a new connection when the
              listen queue is full.

              fd-unavail: The number of times the httperf process was out  of  file  descriptors.
              Whenever  this  count  is  non-zero,  the  test results are meaningless because the
              client was overloaded (see section "CHOOSING TIMEOUT VALUES").

              addrunavail:  The  number  of  times  the  client  was  out  of  TCP  port  numbers
              (EADDRNOTAVAIL).  This error should never occur.  If it does, the results should be
              discarded.

              ftab-full: The number of times the system's file descriptor table is full.   Again,
              this error should never occur.  If it does, the results should be discarded.

              other:  The  number  of  times  some  other  type of error occurred.  Whenever this
              counter is non-zero, it is necessary to track down the real cause of the error.  To
              assist  in  doing  this, httperf prints the error code (errno) of the first unknown
              errors that occurs during a test run.

       When --wsess or --wsesslog is specified, httperf generates and measures  sessions  instead
       of  individual  calls  and  additional  statistics  are  printed at the end of a test.  An
       example output is shown below.

              Session rate [sess/s]: min 0.00 avg 0.59 max 2.40 stddev 0.37 (240/450)
              Session: avg 6.45 connections/session
              Session lifetime [s]: 123.9
              Session failtime [s]: 58.5
              Session length histogram: 4 7 4 ... 3 3 240

       The line labeled ``Session rate'' shows the minimum, average, and maximum  rate  at  which
       sessions  completed  (based  on a 5 second sampling interval).  It also shows the standard
       deviation of the session completion rate.   The  numbers  in  parentheses  show  how  many
       sessions  succeeded  and  how  many  sessions  were  initiated.  In the example above, the
       minimum, average, and maximum session completion rates were 0.00, 0.59, and 2.40  sessions
       per second, respectively.  The standard deviation was 0.37 sessions per second and 240 out
       of 450 sessions completed successfully (210 failed due to errors such as timeouts).

       The next line, labeled ``Session:'' shows the average length  of  a  session  measured  in
       connections.   In  the  example  above,  an  average  of 6.45 connections were required to
       complete a session.

       The line labeled ``Session lifetime'' gives  the  average  time  it  took  to  complete  a
       successful session.  In the example above, it took an average of 123.9 seconds.

       The  line  labeled  ``Session  failtime''  gives  the  average  time  it  took  before  an
       unsuccessful session failed.  In the example above, it took on average 58.5 seconds for  a
       session to fail.

       Finally,  the line labeled ``Session length histogram'' gives a histogram of the number of
       replies received by each session.  In the example above, 4 sessions ended after  receiving
       no  reply  at  all,  7  ended after receiving one reply, and so on (the ellipsis indicates
       additional histogram counts that were omitted from this manual for space  reasons).   Note
       that this histogram does not distinguish between successful and failed sessions.

CHOOSING TIMEOUT VALUES

       Since the machine that httperf runs on has only a finite set of resource available, it can
       not sustain arbitrarily high HTTP loads.  For example, one limiting factor is  that  there
       are  only  roughly 60,000 TCP port numbers that can be in use at any given time.  Since on
       most UNIX systems it takes one minute for a TCP connection to be fully closed  (leave  the
       TIME_WAIT  state),  the  maximum  rate  a client can sustain is at most 1,000 requests per
       second.

       The actual sustainable rate is often much lower than that because before  running  out  of
       TCP  ports,  the  machine is likely to run out of file descriptors (one file descriptor is
       used up for each open TCP connection).  By default, HP-UX 10.20  allows  1,024  open  file
       descriptors  per  process.   This  means  that  without  extra  precautions, httperf could
       potentially very quickly use up all available file descriptors, at which  point  it  could
       not  induce  any  additional  load on the server.  To avoid this problem, httperf provides
       option --timeout to set a timeout for all communication with the server.   If  the  server
       does  not  respond  before  the  timeout  expires,  the client considers the corresponding
       session, connection, or call to be ``dead,'' closes the  associated  TCP  connection,  and
       increases  the ``client-timo'' error count.  The only exception to this rule is that after
       sending an entire request to the server, httperf allows the server to take some additional
       time before it starts sending the reply.  This is to accommodate HTTP requests that take a
       long time to complete on the server.  This additional time is called  the  ``server  think
       time''  and can be specified by option --think-timeout.  By default, this additional think
       time is zero seconds, so the server would always have to respond within the  time  alloted
       by option --timeout.

       Timeouts  allow  httperf to sustain high offered loads even when the server is overloaded.
       For example, with a timeout of 2 seconds and  assuming  that  1,000  file-descriptors  are
       available,  the  offered  load  could  be  up to 500 requests per second (in practice, the
       sustainable load is often somewhat smaller than the theoretical value).  On the  downside,
       timeouts  artificially  truncate  the  connection  lifetime  distribution.   Thus,  it  is
       recommended to pick a timeout value that is as large as possible yet small enough to allow
       sustaining  the desired offered rate.  A timeout as short as one second may be acceptable,
       but larger timeouts (5-10 seconds) are preferable.

       It is important to keep in mind that timeouts do not guarantee that a client can sustain a
       particular  offered  load---there  are  many  other  potential  resource bottlenecks.  For
       example, in some cases the client machine may simply run out of CPU time.  To ensure  that
       a  given test really measured the server's capabilities and not the client's, it is a good
       idea to vary the number of machines participating in  a  test.   If  observed  performance
       remains  the  same as the number of client machines is varied, the test results are likely
       to be valid.

AUTHOR

       httperf was developed by David Mosberger and was heavily influenced  by  an  earlier  tool
       written  by Tai Jin.  Stephane Eranian contributed the log-file based URI generator.  Dick
       Carter contributed the --wsesslog workload generator,  the  support  behind  the  --period
       option, and bug fixes.  All four authors are with Hewlett-Packard Research Laboratories.

BUGS

       Probably  many.   Always  be sure to double-check results and don't fall prey to measuring
       client-performance instead of server performance!

       The user-interface definitely could be improved.  A simple workload  description  language
       might  be  more suitable than the dozens of little command-line options the tool has right
       now.

                                           30 Oct 2000                                 httperf(1)