Skip to content

rabbitmq/rabbitmq-perf-test

RabbitMQ Performance Testing Tool

Test against RabbitMQ stable

This repository contains source code of the RabbitMQ Performance Testing Tool. The client is maintained by the RabbitMQ team at Broadcom.

PerfTest uses the AMQP 0.9.1 protocol to communicate with a RabbitMQ cluster. Use Stream PerfTest if you want to test RabbitMQ Streams with the stream protocol.

Installation

This is a standalone tool that is distributed in binary form using GitHub releases and as a JAR file on Maven Central (see below). PerfTest requires at least Java 8, but some features require Java 11. The latest LTS Java version is recommended.

A Docker image is available as well.

The latest snapshot is also available.

Documentation

Usage

Running Performance Tests

Download the latest snapshot:

wget https://github.com/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-java-tools-binaries-dev/releases/download/v-rabbitmq-perf-test-latest/perf-test-latest.jar

Launch a performance test with 1 producer and 1 consumer:

java -jar perf-test-latest.jar

Use

java -jar perf-test-latest.jar --help

to see all supported options.

Producing HTML Output of Runs

The HTML Performance Tools are a set of tools that can help you run automated benchmarks by wrapping around the PerfTest benchmarking framework. You can provide benchmark specs, and the tool will take care of running the benchmark, collecting results and displaying them in an HTML page. Learn more here.

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md for an overview of the development process.

Building from Source

To build the uber JAR:

./mvnw clean package -P uber-jar -Dgpg.skip=true -Dmaven.test.skip

The generated file is target/perf-test.jar.

To build the JAR file:

./mvnw clean package -Dmaven.test.skip

The file is then in the target directory.

Running tests

The test suite needs to execute rabbitmqctl to test connection recovery. You can specify the path to rabbitmqctl like the following:

./mvnw clean verify -Drabbitmqctl.bin=/path/to/rabbitmqctl

You need a local running RabbitMQ instance.

Running tests with Docker

Start a RabbitMQ container:

docker run -it --rm --name rabbitmq -p 5672:5672 rabbitmq:4.0

Run the test suite:

./mvnw clean verify -Drabbitmqctl.bin=DOCKER:rabbitmq

Files are then in the target directory.

Maven Artifact

Maven Central

perf-test search.maven.org

Logging

PerfTest depends transitively on SLF4J for logging (through RabbitMQ Java Client). PerfTest binary distribution ships with Logback as a SLF4J binding and uses Logback default configuration (printing logs to the console). If for any reason you need to use a specific Logback configuration file, you can do it this way:

java -Dlogback.configurationFile=/path/to/logback.xml -jar perf-test.jar

As of PerfTest 2.11.0, it is possible to define loggers directly from the command line. This is less powerful than using a configuration file, yet simpler to use and useful for quick debugging. Use the rabbitmq.perftest.loggers system property with name=level pairs, e.g.:

java -Drabbitmq.perftest.loggers=com.rabbitmq.perf=debug -jar perf-test.jar

It is possible to define several loggers by separating them with commas, e.g. -Drabbitmq.perftest.loggers=com.rabbitmq.perf=debug,com.rabbitmq.perf.Producer=info.

It is also possible to use an environment variable:

export RABBITMQ_PERF_TEST_LOGGERS=com.rabbitmq.perf=info

The system property takes precedence over the environment variable.

Use the environment variable with the Docker image:

docker run -it --rm --network perf-test \
  --env RABBITMQ_PERF_TEST_LOGGERS=com.rabbitmq.perf=debug,com.rabbitmq.perf.Producer=debug \
  pivotalrabbitmq/perf-test:latest --uri amqp://rabbitmq

If you use PerfTest as a standalone JAR in your project, please note it doesn't depend on any SLF4J binding, you can use your favorite one.

Versioning

This tool uses semantic versioning.

Support

See the RabbitMQ Java libraries support page for the support timeline of this library.

License

This package, the RabbitMQ Performance Testing Tool library, is triple-licensed under the Mozilla Public License 2.0 ("MPL"), the GNU General Public License version 2 ("GPL") and the Apache License version 2 ("ASL").