PerfKit Benchmarker is an open effort to define a canonical set of benchmarks to measure and compare cloud offerings. It's designed to operate via vendor provided command line tools. The benchmark default settings are not tuned for any particular platform or instance type. These settings are recommended for consistency across services. Only in the rare case where there is a common practice like setting the buffer pool size of a database do we change any settings.
This README is designed to give you the information you need to get running with the benchmarker and the basics of working with the code. The [wiki] (https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/PerfKitBenchmarker/wiki) contains more detailed information:
- [FAQ] (https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/PerfKitBenchmarker/wiki/FAQ)
- [Tech Talks] (https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/PerfKitBenchmarker/wiki/Tech-Talks)
- [Governing rules] (https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/PerfKitBenchmarker/wiki/Governing-Rules)
- [Community meeting decks and notes] (https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/PerfKitBenchmarker/wiki/Community-Meeting-Notes-Decks)
- [Design documents] (https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/PerfKitBenchmarker/wiki/Design-Docs)
- You are always welcome to [open an issue] (https://github.com/GoogleCloudPlatform/PerfKitBenchmarker/issues), or to join us on #PerfKitBenchmarker on freenode to discuss issues you're having, pull requests, or anything else related to PerfKitBenchmarker
PerfKit Benchmarker provides wrappers and workload definitions around popular benchmark tools. We made it very simple to use and automate everything we can. It instantiates VMs on the Cloud provider of your choice, automatically installs benchmarks, and runs the workloads without user interaction.
Due to the level of automation you will not see prompts for software installed as part of a benchmark run. Therefore you must accept the license of each of the benchmarks individually, and take responsibility for using them before you use the PerfKit Benchmarker.
In its current release these are the benchmarks that are executed:
aerospike
: Apache v2 for the client and GNU AGPL v3.0 for the serverbonnie++
: GPL v2cassandra_ycsb
: Apache v2cassandra_stress
: Apache v2cloudsuite3.0
: CloudSuite 3.0 licensecluster_boot
: MIT Licensecoremark
: EEMBCcopy_throughput
: Apache v2fio
: GPL v2hadoop_terasort
: Apache v2hpcc
: Original BSD licenseiperf
: BSD licensememtier_benchmark
: GPL v2mesh_network
: HP licensemongodb
: Deprecated. GNU AGPL v3.0mongodb_ycsb
: GNU AGPL v3.0multichase
: Apache v2netperf
: HP licenseoldisim
: Apache v2object_storage_service
: Apache v2ping
: No license needed.silo
: MIT Licensescimark2
: public domainspeccpu2006
: SPEC CPU2006sysbench_oltp
: GPL v2tomcat
: Apache v2unixbench
: GPL v2wrk
: Modified Apache v2ycsb
(used bymongodb
,hbase_ycsb
, and others): Apache v2
Some of the benchmarks invoked require Java. You must also agree with the following license:
openjdk-7-jre
: GPL v2 with the Classpath Exception
CoreMark setup cannot be automated. EEMBC requires users to agree with their terms and conditions, and PerfKit
Benchmarker users must manually download the CoreMark tarball from their website and save it under the
perfkitbenchmarker/data
folder (e.g. ~/PerfKitBenchmarker/perfkitbenchmarker/data/coremark_v1.0.tgz
)
SPEC CPU2006 benchmark setup cannot be
automated. SPEC requires that users purchase a license and agree with their
terms and conditions. PerfKit Benchmarker users must manually download
cpu2006-1.2.iso
from the SPEC website, save it under the
perfkitbenchmarker/data
folder (e.g.
~/PerfKitBenchmarker/perfkitbenchmarker/data/cpu2006-1.2.iso
), and also
supply a runspec cfg file (e.g.
~/PerfKitBenchmarker/perfkitbenchmarker/data/linux64-x64-gcc47.cfg
).
Alternately, PerfKit Benchmarker can accept a tar file that can be generated
with the following steps:
- Extract the contents of
cpu2006-1.2.iso
into a directory namedcpu2006
- Run
cpu2006/install.sh
- Copy the cfg file into
cpu2006/config
- Create a tar file containing the
cpu2006
directory, and place it under theperfkitbenchmarker/data
folder (e.g.~/PerfKitBenchmarker/perfkitbenchmarker/data/cpu2006v1.2.tgz
).
PerfKit Benchmarker will use the tar file if it is present. Otherwise, it will search for the iso and cfg files.
Before you can run the PerfKit Benchmarker, you need account(s) on the cloud provider(s) you want to benchmark:
You also need the software dependencies, which are mostly command line tools and credentials to access your accounts without a password. The following steps should help you get the CLI tool auth in place.
If you are running on Windows, you will need to install GitHub Windows
since it includes tools like openssl
and an ssh
client. Alternatively, you can
install Cygwin since it should include the same tools.
If you are running on Windows, get the latest version of Python 2.7
here. This should have pip
bundled
with it. Make sure your PATH
environment variable is set so that you can use
both python
and pip
on the command line (you can have the installer do it
for you if you select the correct option).
Most Linux distributions and recent Mac OS X versions already have Python 2.7 installed. If Python is not installed, you can likely install it using your distribution's package manager, or see the Python Download page.
If you need to install pip
, see these instructions.
Instructions: https://windows.github.com/
Make sure that openssl
/ssh
/scp
/ssh-keygen
are on your path (you will need to update the PATH
environment variable).
The path to these commands should be
C:\\Users\\\<user\>\\AppData\\Local\\GitHub\\PortableGit\_\<guid\>\\bin
Download PerfKit Benchmarker from GitHub.
$ cd /path/to/PerfKitBenchmarker
$ sudo pip install -r requirements.txt
This section describes the setup steps needed for each cloud system. Note that you only need to perform setup steps on the clouds you wish to test. If you only want to test Google Cloud, you only need to install and configure gcloud
.
- Google Cloud
- OpenStack
- Kubernetes
- Mesos
- Cloudstack
- AWS
- Azure
- AliCloud
- DigitalOcean
- RackSpace
- ProfitBricks
After configuring the clouds you intend to use, skip to Running a Single Benchmark, unless you are going to use an object storage benchmark, in which case you need to configure a boto file.
Instructions: https://developers.google.com/cloud/sdk/. If you're using OS X or Linux, you can run the command below:
$ curl https://sdk.cloud.google.com | bash
When prompted, pick the local folder, then Python project, then the defaults for all the rest.
Restart your shell window (or logout/ssh again if running on a VM)
On Windows, visit the same page and follow the Windows installation instructions on the page.
Next, create a project by visiting Google Cloud Console. After that, run:
$ gcloud init
which helps you authenticate, set your project, and set some defaults.
Alternatively, if that is already set up, and you just need to authenticate, you can use:
$ gcloud auth login
For help, see gcloud
docs.
Make sure you have installed pip (see the section above).
Install OpenStack CLI utilities via the following command:
$ sudo pip install -r perfkitbenchmarker/providers/openstack/requirements.txt
To setup credentials and endpoint information simply set the environment
variables using an OpenStack RC file. For help, see OpenStack
docs
Perfkit uses the kubectl
binary in order to communicate with a Kubernetes cluster - you need to pass the path to the kubectl
binary using the --kubectl
flag. It's recommended to use version 1.0.1.
Authentication to a Kubernetes cluster is done via a kubeconfig
file. Its path is passed using the --kubeconfig
flag.
Image prerequisites
Please refer to the Image prerequisites for Docker based clouds.
Kubernetes cluster configuration
If your Kubernetes cluster is running on CoreOS:
-
Fix
$PATH
environment variable so that the appropriate binaries can be found:$ sudo mkdir /etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d $ sudo vim /etc/systemd/system/kubelet.service.d/10-env.conf
Add the following line to the
[Service]
section:Environment=PATH=/opt/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/sbin:$PATH
-
Reboot the node:
$ sudo reboot
Note that some benchmarks must be run within a privileged container. By default Kubernetes doesn't allow containers to be scheduled in privileged mode - you have to add the --allow-privileged=true
flag to kube-apiserver
and each kubelet
startup command.
Ceph integration
When you run benchmarks with the standard scratch disk type (--scratch_disk_type=standard
- which is a default option), Ceph storage will be used. There are some configuration steps you need to follow before you will be able to spawn Kubernetes PODs with Ceph volume. On each Kubernetes node, and on the machine which is running the Perfkit benchmarks, do the following:
-
Copy
/etc/ceph
directory from Ceph-host. -
Install
ceph-common
package so thatrbd
command is available:
-
If your Kubernetes cluster is running on CoreOS, then you need to create a bash script called
rbd
which will run therbd
command inside a Docker container:#!/usr/bin/bash /usr/bin/docker run -v /etc/ceph:/etc/ceph -v /dev:/dev -v /sys:/sys --net=host --privileged=true --rm=true ceph/rbd $@
Save the file as
rbd
and run:$ chmod +x rbd $ sudo mkdir /opt/bin $ sudo cp rbd /opt/bin
Install
rbdmap
:$ git clone https://github.com/ceph/ceph-docker.git $ cd ceph-docker/examples/coreos/rbdmap/ $ sudo mkdir /opt/sbin $ sudo cp rbdmap /opt/sbin $ sudo cp ceph-rbdnamer /opt/bin $ sudo cp 50-rbd.rules /etc/udev/rules.d $ sudo reboot
You have two Ceph authentication options available:
-
Keyring - pass the path to the keyring file using
--ceph_keyring
flag -
Secret. In this case you have to create a secret first:
Retrieve base64-encoded Ceph admin key:
$ ceph auth get-key client.admin | base64 QVFEYnpPWlZWWnJLQVJBQXdtNDZrUDlJUFo3OXdSenBVTUdYNHc9PQ==
Create a file called
create_ceph_admin.yml
and replace thekey
value with the output from the previous command:apiVersion: v1 kind: Secret metadata: name: my-ceph-secret data: key: QVFEYnpPWlZWWnJLQVJBQXdtNDZrUDlJUFo3OXdSenBVTUdYNHc9PQ==
Add secret to Kubernetes:
$ kubectl create -f create_ceph_admin.yml
You will have to pass the Secret name (using
--ceph_secret
flag) when running the benchmakrs. In this case it should be:--ceph_secret=my-ceph-secret
.
Mesos provider communicates with Marathon framework in order to manage Docker instances. Thus it is required to setup Marathon framework along with the Mesos cluster. In order to connect to Mesos you need to provide IP address and port to Marathon framework using --marathon_address
flag.
Provider has been tested with Mesos v0.24.1 and Marathon v0.11.1.
Overlay network
Mesos on its own doesn't provide any solution for overlay networking. You need to configure your cluster so that the instances will live in the same network. For this purpose you may use Flannel, Calico, Weave, etc.
Mesos cluster configuration
Make sure your Mesos-slave nodes are reachable (by hostname) from the machine which is used to run the benchmarks. In case they are not, edit the /etc/hosts
file appropriately.
Image prerequisites
Please refer to the Image prerequisites for Docker based clouds.
$ sudo pip install -r perfkitbenchmarker/providers/cloudstack/requirements.txt
Get the API key and SECRET from Cloudstack. Set the following environement variables.
export CS_API_URL=<insert API endpoint>
export CS_API_KEY=<insert API key>
export CS_API_SECRET=<insert API secret>
Specify the network offering when running the benchmark. If using VPC
(--cs_use_vpc
), also specify the VPC offering (--cs_vpc_offering
).
$ ./pkb.py --cloud=CloudStack --benchmarks=ping --cs_network_offering=DefaultNetworkOffering
Make sure you have installed pip (see the section above).
Follow instructions at http://aws.amazon.com/cli/ or run the following command (omit the 'sudo' on Windows)
$ sudo pip install -r perfkitbenchmarker/providers/aws/requirements.txt
Navigate to the AWS console to create access credentials: https://console.aws.amazon.com/ec2/
- On the console click on your name (top left)
- Click on "Security Credentials"
- Click on "Access Keys", the create New Access Key. Download the file, it contains the Access key and Secret keys to access services. Note the values and delete the file.
Configure the CLI using the keys from the previous step:
$ aws configure
You first need to install node.js and NPM. This version of Perfkit Benchmarker is known to be compatible with Azure CLI version 0.10.4, and will likely work with any version newer than that.
Go here, and follow the setup instructions.
Next, run the following (omit the sudo
on Windows):
$ sudo npm install azure-cli -g
$ azure login
Test that azure
is installed correctly:
$ azure vm list
Finally, make sure Azure is in Resource Management mode and that your account is authorized to allocate VMs and networks from Azure:
$ azure config mode arm
$ azure provider register Microsoft.Compute
$ azure provider register Microsoft.Network
Make sure you have installed pip (see the section above).
Run the following command to install aliyuncli
(omit the sudo
on Windows)
-
Install python development tools:
In Debian or Ubuntu:
$ sudo apt-get install -y python-dev
In CentOS:
$ sudo yum install python-devel
-
Install aliyuncli tool and python SDK for ECS:
$ sudo pip install -r perfkitbenchmarker/providers/alicloud/requirements.txt
To check if AliCloud is installed:
$ aliyuncli --help
Check if
aliyuncli ecs
command is ready:$ aliyuncli ecs help
If you see the "usage" message, you should follow step 3. Otherwise, jump to step 4.
-
Dealing with an exception when it runs on some specific version of Ubuntu. Get the python lib path:
/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages
$ python > from distutils.sysconfig import get_python_lib > get_python_lib() '/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages'
Copy to the right directory (for Python 2.7.X):
$ sudo cp -r /usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/aliyun* /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/
Check again:
$ aliyuncli ecs help
-
Navigate to the AliCloud console to create access credentials:
- Login first
- Click on "AccessKeys" (top right)
- Click on "Create Access Key", copy and store the "Access Key ID" and "Access Key Secret" to a safe place.
- Configure the CLI using the Access Key ID and Access Key Secret from the previous step
$ aliyuncli configure
-
Install
doctl
, the DigitalOcean CLI, following the instructions athttps://github.com/digitalocean/doctl
. -
Authenticate with
doctl
. The easiest way is runningdoctl auth login
and following the instructions, but any of the options at thedoctl
site will work.
In order to interact with the Rackspace Public Cloud, PerfKitBenchmarker makes use of RackCLI. You can find the instructions to install and configure RackCLI here: https://developer.rackspace.com/docs/rack-cli/
To run PerfKit Benchmarker against Rackspace is very easy. Simply make sure
Rack CLI is installed and available in your PATH, optionally use the flag
--rack_path
to indicate the path to the binary.
For a Rackspace UK Public Cloud account, unless it's your default RackCLI
profile then it's recommended that you create a profile for your UK account.
Once configured, use flag --profile
to specify which RackCLI profile to use.
You can find more details here: https://developer.rackspace.com/docs/rack-cli/configuration/#config-file
Note: Not all flavors are supported on every region. Always check first if the flavor is supported in the region.
Get started by running:
$ sudo pip install -r perfkitbenchmarker/providers/profitbricks/requirements.txt
PerfKit Benchmarker uses the Requests module to interact with ProfitBricks' REST API. HTTP Basic authentication is used to authorize access to the API. Please set this up as follows:
Create a configuration file containing the email address and password associated with your ProfitBricks account, separated by a colon. Example:
$ less ~/.config/profitbricks-auth.cfg
email:password
The PerfKit Benchmarker will automatically base64 encode your credentials before making any calls to the REST API.
PerfKit Benchmarker uses the file location ~/.config/profitbricks-auth.cfg
by default. You can use the --profitbricks_config
flag to
override the path.
Docker instances by default don't allow to SSH into them. Thus it is important to configure your Docker image so that it has SSH server installed. You can use your own image or build a new one based on a Dockerfile placed in tools/docker_images
directory - in this case please refer to Docker images document.
In order to run object storage benchmark tests, you need to have a properly configured ~/.boto
file. The directions require that you have installed google-cloud-sdk
. The directions for doing that are in the gcloud installation section.
Here is how:
- Create the
~/.boto
file (If you already have ~/.boto, you can skip this step. Consider making a backup copy of your existing .boto file.)
To create a new ~/.boto
file, issue the following command and follow the instructions given by this command:
$ gsutil config
As a result, a .boto
file is created under your home directory.
Open the .boto
file and edit the following fields:
-
In the [Credentials] section:
gs_oauth2_refresh_token
: set it to be the same as therefresh_token
field in your gcloud credential file (~/.config/gcloud/credentials), which was setup as part of thegcloud auth login
step.aws_access_key_id
,aws_secret_access_key
: set these to be the AWS access keys you intend to use for these tests, or you can use the same keys as those in your existing AWS credentials file (~/.aws/credentials
). -
In the
[GSUtil]
section:default_project_id
: if it is not already set, set it to be the google cloud storage project ID you intend to use for this test. (If you usedgsutil config
to generate the.boto
file, you should have been prompted to supply this information at this step). -
In the
[OAuth2]
section:client_id
,client_secret
: set these to be the same as those in your gcloud credentials file (~/.config/gcloud/credentials
), which was setup as part of thegcloud auth login
step.
PerfKit Benchmarker can run benchmarks both on Cloud Providers (GCP, AWS, Azure, DigitalOcean) as well as any "machine" you can SSH into.
$ ./pkb.py --project=<GCP project ID> --benchmarks=iperf --machine_type=f1-micro
$ cd PerfKitBenchmarker
$ ./pkb.py --cloud=AWS --benchmarks=iperf --machine_type=t1.micro
$ ./pkb.py --cloud=Azure --machine_type=ExtraSmall --benchmarks=iperf
$ ./pkb.py --cloud=AliCloud --machine_type=ecs.s2.large --benchmarks=iperf
$ ./pkb.py --cloud=DigitalOcean --machine_type=16gb --benchmarks=iperf
$ ./pkb.py --cloud=OpenStack --machine_type=m1.medium \
--openstack_network=private --benchmarks=iperf
$ ./pkb.py --cloud=Kubernetes --benchmarks=iperf --kubectl=/path/to/kubectl --kubeconfig=/path/to/kubeconfig --image=image-with-ssh-server --ceph_monitors=10.20.30.40:6789,10.20.30.41:6789 --kubernetes_nodes=10.20.30.42,10.20.30.43
$ ./pkb.py --cloud=Mesos --benchmarks=iperf --marathon_address=localhost:8080 --image=image-with-ssh-server
./pkb.py --cloud=CloudStack --benchmarks=ping --cs_network_offering=DefaultNetworkOffering
$ ./pkb.py --cloud=Rackspace --machine_type=general1-2 --benchmarks=iperf
$ ./pkb.py --cloud=ProfitBricks --machine_type=Small --benchmarks=iperf
You must be running on a Windows machine in order to run Windows benchmarks. Install all dependencies as above and set TrustedHosts to accept all hosts so that you can open PowerShell sessions with the VMs (both machines having each other in their TrustedHosts list is necessary, but not sufficient to issue remote commands; valid credentials are still required):
set-item wsman:\localhost\Client\TrustedHosts -value *
Now you can run Windows benchmarks by running with --os_type=windows
. Windows has a
different set of benchmarks than Linux does. They can be found under
perfkitbenchmarker/windows_benchmarks/
.
The target VM OS is Windows Server 2012 R2.
Juju is a service orchestration tool that enables you
to quickly model, configure, deploy and manage entire cloud environments.
Supported benchmarks will deploy a Juju-modeled service automatically, with no
extra user configuration required, by specifying the --os_type=juju
flag.
$ ./pkb.py --cloud=AWS --os_type=juju --benchmarks=cassandra_stress
Benchmark/Package authors need to implement the JujuInstall() method inside
their package. This method deploys, configures, and relates the services to be
benchmarked. Please note that other software installation and configuration
should be bypassed when FLAGS.os_type == JUJU
. See
perfkitbenchmarker/linux_packages/cassandra.py
for an example implementation.
Run without the --benchmarks
parameter and every benchmark in the standard set will run serially which can take a couple of hours (alternatively, run with --benchmarks="standard_set"
). Additionally, if you don't specify --cloud=...
, all benchmarks will run on the Google Cloud Platform.
Named sets are are groupings of one or more benchmarks in the benchmarking directory. This feature allows parallel innovation of what is important to measure in the Cloud, and is defined by the set owner. For example the GoogleSet is maintained by Google, whereas the StanfordSet is managed by Stanford. Once a quarter a meeting is held to review all the sets to determine what benchmarks should be promoted to the standard_set
. The Standard Set is also reviewed to see if anything should be removed.
To run all benchmarks in a named set, specify the set name in the benchmarks parameter (e.g., --benchmarks="standard_set"
). Sets can be combined with individual benchmarks or other named sets.
The following are some common flags used when configuring PerfKit Benchmarker.
Flag | Notes |
---|---|
--helpmatch=pkb |
see all global flags |
--helpmatch=hpcc |
see all flags associated with the hpcc benchmark. You can substitute any benchmark name to see the associated flags. |
--benchmarks |
A comma separated list of benchmarks or benchmark sets to run such as --benchmarks=iperf,ping . To see the full list, run ./pkb.py --help |
--cloud |
Cloud where the benchmarks are run. See the table below for choices. |
--machine_type |
Type of machine to provision if pre-provisioned machines are not used. Most cloud providers accept the names of pre-defined provider-specific machine types (for example, GCP supports --machine_type=n1-standard-8 for a GCE n1-standard-8 VM). Some cloud providers support YAML expressions that match the corresponding VM spec machine_type property in the YAML configs (for example, GCP supports --machine_type="{cpus: 1, memory: 4.5GiB}" for a GCE custom VM with 1 vCPU and 4.5GiB memory). Note that the value provided by this flag will affect all provisioned machines; users who wish to provision different machine types for different roles within a single benchmark run should use the YAML configs for finer control. |
--zones |
This flag allows you to override the default zone. See the table below. |
--data_disk_type |
Type of disk to use. Names are provider-specific, but see table below. |
The default cloud is 'GCP', override with the --cloud
flag. Each cloud has a default
zone which you can override with the --zones
flag, the flag supports the same values
that the corresponding Cloud CLIs take:
Cloud name | Default zone | Notes |
---|---|---|
GCP | us-central1-a | |
AWS | us-east-1a | |
Azure | East US | |
AliCloud | West US | |
DigitalOcean | sfo1 | You must use a zone that supports the features 'metadata' (for cloud config) and 'private_networking'. |
OpenStack | nova | |
CloudStack | QC-1 | |
Rackspace | IAD | OnMetal machine-types are available only in IAD zone |
Kubernetes | k8s | |
ProfitBricks | AUTO | Additional zones: ZONE_1, ZONE_2, or ZONE_3 |
Example:
./pkb.py --cloud=GCP --zones=us-central1-a --benchmarks=iperf,ping
The disk type names vary by provider, but the following table summarizes some useful ones. (Many cloud providers have more disk types beyond these options.)
Cloud name | Network-attached SSD | Network-attached HDD |
---|---|---|
GCP | pd-ssd | pd-standard |
AWS | gp2 | standard |
Azure | premium-storage | standard-disk |
Rackspace | cbs-ssd | cbs-sata |
Also note that --data_disk_type=local
tells PKB not to allocate a separate
disk, but to use whatever comes with the VM. This is useful with AWS instance
types that come with local SSDs, or with the GCP --gce_num_local_ssds
flag.
If an instance type comes with more than one disk, PKB uses whichever does not
hold the root partition. Specifically, on Azure, PKB always uses /dev/sdb
as
its scratch device.
If the VM guests do not have direct Internet access in the cloud
environment, you can configure proxy settings through pkb.py
flags.
To do that simple setup three flags (All urls are in notation ): The
flag values use the same <protocol>://<server>:<port>
syntax as the
corresponding environment variables, for example
--http_proxy=http://proxy.example.com:8080
.
Flag | Notes |
---|---|
--http_proxy |
Needed for package manager on Guest OS and for some Perfkit packages |
--https_proxy |
Needed for package manager or Ubuntu guest and for from github downloaded packages |
--ftp_proxy |
Needed for some Perfkit packages |
Each benchmark now has an independent configuration which is written in YAML. Users may override this default configuration by providing a configuration. This allows for much more complex setups than previously possible, including running benchmarks across clouds.
A benchmark configuration has a somewhat simple structure. It is essentially
just a series of nested dictionaries. At the top level, it contains VM groups.
VM groups are logical groups of homogenous machines. The VM groups hold both a
vm_spec
and a disk_spec
which contain the parameters needed to
create members of that group. Here is an example of an expanded configuration:
hbase_ycsb:
vm_groups:
loaders:
vm_count: 4
vm_spec:
GCP:
machine_type: n1-standard-1
image: ubuntu-14-04
zone: us-central1-c
AWS:
machine_type: m3.medium
image: ami-######
zone: us-east-1a
# Other clouds here...
# This specifies the cloud to use for the group. This allows for
# benchmark configurations that span clouds.
cloud: AWS
# No disk_spec here since these are loaders.
master:
vm_count: 1
cloud: GCP
vm_spec:
GCP:
machine_type:
cpus: 2
memory: 10.0GiB
image: ubuntu-14-04
zone: us-central1-c
# Other clouds here...
disk_count: 1
disk_spec:
GCP:
disk_size: 100
disk_type: standard
mount_point: /scratch
# Other clouds here...
workers:
vm_count: 4
cloud: GCP
vm_spec:
GCP:
machine_type: n1-standard-4
image: ubuntu-14-04
zone: us-central1-c
# Other clouds here...
disk_count: 1
disk_spec:
GCP:
disk_size: 500
disk_type: remote_ssd
mount_point: /scratch
# Other clouds here...
For a complete list of keys for vm_spec
s and disk_spec
s see
virtual_machine.BaseVmSpec
and
disk.BaseDiskSpec
and their derived classes.
User configs are applied on top of the existing default config and can be
specified in two ways. The first is by supplying a config file via the
--benchmark_config_file
flag. The second is by specifying a single setting to
override via the --config_override
flag.
A user config file only needs to specify the settings which it is intended to
override. For example if the only thing you want to do is change the number of
VMs for the cluster_boot
benchmark, this config is sufficient:
cluster_boot:
vm_groups:
default:
vm_count: 100
You can achieve the same effect by specifying the --config_override
flag.
The value of the flag should be a path within the YAML (with keys delimited by
periods), an equals sign, and finally the new value:
--config_override=cluster_boot.vm_groups.default.vm_count=100
See the section below for how to use static (i.e. pre-provisioned) machines in your config.
It is possible to run PerfKit Benchmarker without running the Cloud provisioning steps. This is useful if you want to run on a local machine, or have a benchmark like iperf run from an external point to a Cloud VM.
In order to do this you need to make sure:
- The static (i.e. not provisioned by PerfKit Benchmarker) machine is ssh'able
- The user PerfKitBenchmarker will login as has 'sudo' access. (*** Note we hope to remove this restriction soon ***)
Next, you will want to create a YAML user config file describing how to connect to the machine as follows:
static_vms:
- &vm1 # Using the & character creates an anchor that we can
# reference later by using the same name and a * character.
ip_address: 170.200.60.23
user_name: voellm
ssh_private_key: /home/voellm/perfkitkeys/my_key_file.pem
zone: Siberia
disk_specs:
- mount_point: /data_dir
- The
ip_address
is the address where you want benchmarks to run. ssh_private_key
is where to find the private ssh key.zone
can be anything you want. It is used when publishing results.disk_specs
is used by all benchmarks which use disk (i.e.,fio
,bonnie++
, many others).
In the same file, configure any number of benchmarks (in this case just iperf), and reference the static VM as follows:
iperf:
vm_groups:
vm_1:
static_vms:
- *vm1
I called my file iperf.yaml
and used it to run iperf from Siberia to a GCP VM in us-central1-f as follows:
$ ./pkb.py --benchmarks=iperf --machine_type=f1-micro --benchmark_config_file=iperf.yaml --zones=us-central1-f --ip_addresses=EXTERNAL
ip_addresses=EXTERNAL
tells PerfKit Benchmarker not to use 10.X (ie Internal) machine addresses that all Cloud VMs have. Just use the external IP address.
If a benchmark requires two machines like iperf, you can have two machines in the same YAML file as shown below. This means you can indeed run between two machines and never provision any VMs in the Cloud.
static_vms:
- &vm1
ip_address: <ip1>
user_name: connormccoy
ssh_private_key: /home/connormccoy/.ssh/google_compute_engine
internal_ip: 10.240.223.37
install_packages: false
- &vm2
ip_address: <ip2>
user_name: connormccoy
ssh_private_key: /home/connormccoy/.ssh/google_compute_engine
internal_ip: 10.240.234.189
ssh_port: 2222
iperf:
vm_groups:
vm_1:
static_vms:
- *vm2
vm_2:
static_vms:
- *vm1
You can now specify flags in configuration files by using the flags
key at the
top level in a benchmark config. The expected value is a dictionary mapping
flag names to their new default values. The flags are only defaults; it's still
possible to override them via the command line. It's even possible to specify
conflicting values of the same flag in different benchmarks:
iperf:
flags:
machine_type: n1-standard-2
zone: us-central1-b
iperf_sending_thread_count: 2
netperf:
flags:
machine_type: n1-standard-8
The new defaults will only apply to the benchmark in which they are specified.
PerfKit data can optionally be published to an Elasticsearch server. To enable this, the
elasticsearch
Python package must be installed.
$ sudo pip install elasticsearch
Note: The elasticsearch
Python library and Elasticsearch must have matching major versions.
The following are flags used by the Elasticsearch publisher. At minimum, all that is needed
is the --es_uri
flag.
Flag | Notes |
---|---|
--es_uri |
The Elasticsearch server address and port (e.g. localhost:9200) |
--es_index |
The Elasticsearch index name to store documents (default: perfkit) |
--es_type |
The Elasticsearch document type (default: result) |
Note: Amazon ElasticSearch service currently does not support transport on port 9200 therefore you must use endpoint with port 80 eg. search-<ID>.es.amazonaws.com:80
and allow your IP address in the cluster.
No additional packages need to be installed in order to publish Perfkit data to an InfluxDB server.
InfluxDB Publisher takes in the flags for the Influx uri and the Influx DB name. The publisher
will default to the pre-set defaults, identified below, if no uri or DB name is set. However,
the user is required to at the very least call the --influx_uri
flag to publish data to Influx.
Flag | Notes | Default |
---|---|---|
--influx_uri |
The Influx DB address and port. Expects the format hostname:port | localhost:8086 |
--influx_db_name |
The name of Influx DB database that you wish to publish to or create | perfkit |
First start with the CONTRIBUTING.md file. It has the basics on how to work with PerfKitBenchmarker, and how to submit your pull requests.
In addition to the CONTRIBUTING.md file we have added a lot of comments into the code to make it easy to:
- Add new benchmarks (e.g.:
--benchmarks=<new benchmark>
) - Add new package/os type support (e.g.:
--os_type=<new os type>
) - Add new providers (e.g.:
--cloud=<new provider>
) - etc.
Even with lots of comments we make to support more detailed documention. You will find the documentation we have on the wiki. Missing documentation you want? Start a page and/or open an issue to get it added.
If you wish to run unit or integration tests, ensure that you have tox >= 2.0.0
installed.
In addition to regular unit tests, which are run via
hooks/check-everything
, PerfKit Benchmarker has
integration tests, which create actual cloud resources and take time and money
to run. For this reason, they will only run when the variable
PERFKIT_INTEGRATION
is defined in the environment. The command
$ tox -e integration
will run the integration tests. The integration tests depend on having installed and configured all of the relevant cloud provider SDKs, and will fail if you have not done so.
Many... please add new requests via GitHub issues.