ab man page on Minix

Man page or keyword search:  
man Server   6208 pages
apropos Keyword Search (all sections)
Output format
Minix logo
[printable version]

ab(8)									 ab(8)

NAME
       ab - Apache HTTP server benchmarking tool

SYNOPSIS
       ab [ -k ] [ -e ] [ -q ] [ -S ] [ -i ] [ -s ] [ -n requests ] [ -t time‐
       limit ] [ -c concurrency ] [ -p POST file ]  [  -A  Authenticate	 user‐
       name:password  ]	 [  -X proxy [ :port ] ] [ -P Proxy Authenticate user‐
       name:password ] [ -H Custom header ] [ -C Cookie name=value ] [ -T con‐
       tent-type ] [ -v verbosity ] [ -w output HTML ] [ -g output GNUPLOT ] [
       -e output CSV ] [ -x <table> attributes ] [ -y <tr> attributes ]	 [  -z
       <td> attributes ] [http[s]://]hostname[:port]/path

       ab [ -V ] [ -h ]

DESCRIPTION
       ab  is a tool for benchmarking the performance of your Apache HyperText
       Transfer Protocol (HTTP) server.	 It does this by giving you an indica‐
       tion  of	 how  many  requests  per  second your Apache installation can
       serve.

OPTIONS
       -k	   Enable the HTTP KeepAlive feature; that is, perform	multi‐
		   ple	requests  within  one  HTTP  session.  Default	is  no
		   KeepAlive.

       -d	   Do not display the "percentage served within	 XX  [ms]  ta‐
		   ble". (legacy support).

       -S	   Do  not  display  the median and standard deviation values,
		   nor display the warning/error messages when the average and
		   median  are	more than one or two times the standard devia‐
		   tion apart. And default to the min/avg/max values.  (legacy
		   support).

       -s	   When	 compiled  in  (ab  -h will show you) use the SSL pro‐
		   tected https rather than the http protocol. This feature is
		   experimental and very rudimentary. You propably do not want
		   to use it.

       -k	   Enable the HTTP KeepAlive feature; that is, perform	multi‐
		   ple	requests  within  one  HTTP  session.  Default	is  no
		   KeepAlive.  -i Use  an  HTTP	 'HEAD'	 instead  of  the  GET
		   method. Cannot be mixed with POST.

       -n requests The number of requests to perform for the benchmarking ses‐
		   sion.  The default is to perform just one  single  request,
		   which will not give representative benchmarking results.

       -t timelimit
		   The	number	of  seconds  to spend benchmarking. Using this
		   option automatically set the number	of  requests  for  the
		   benchmarking	 session  to 50000.  Use this to benchmark the
		   server for a fixed period of time.  By default, there is no
		   timelimit.

       -c concurrency
		   The number of simultaneous requests to perform. The default
		   is to perform one HTTP request at at time, that is, no con‐
		   currency.

       -p POST file
		   A  file  containing	data that the program will send to the
		   Apache server in any HTTP POST requests.

       -A Authorization username:password
		   Supply Basic Authentication credentials to the server.  The
		   username  and  password  are separated by a single ':', and
		   sent as uuencoded data.  The string is sent	regardless  of
		   whether  the	 server	 needs	it;  that  is,	has sent a 401
		   Authentication needed.

       -X proxy[:port]
		   Route all requests through the proxy (at optional port).

       -P Proxy-Authorization username:password
		   Supply Basic Authentication	credentials  to	 a  proxy  en-
		   route.  The username and password are separated by a single
		   ':', and sent  as  uuencoded	 data.	 The  string  is  sent
		   regardless of whether the proxy needs it; that is, has sent
		   a 407 Proxy authentication needed.

       -C Cookie name=value
		   Add a 'Cookie:' line to the request. The argument is	 typi‐
		   cally a 'name=value' pair. This option may be repeated.

       -p Header string
		   Append  extra headers to the request. The argument is typi‐
		   cally in the form of a valid header line, usually  a	 colon
		   separated  field value pair, for example, 'Accept-Encoding:
		   zip/zop;8bit'.

       -T content-type
		   The content-type header to use for POST data.

       -g gnuplot file
		   Write all measured values out as a 'gnuplot'	 or  TSV  (Tab
		   separate  values)  file.  This  file can easily be imported
		   into packages like Gnuplot, IDL, Mathematica, Igor or  even
		   Excel. The labels are on the first line of the file.

       -q	   When	 processing  more  than	 150  requsts;	ab  outputs  a
		   progress count on stderr every 10% or 100 requests  or  so.
		   The -q flag qill suppress these messages.

       -e CSV file Write a Comma separated value (CSV) file which contains for
		   each percentage (from 1% to 100%) the time (in  milli  sec‐
		   onds)  it  took  to	serve that percentage of the requests.
		   This is usually more usefull than the  'gnuplot'  file;  as
		   the results are already

       -v	   Sets	 the verbosity level.  Level 4 and above prints infor‐
		   mation on headers, level 3 and above prints response	 codes
		   (for example, 404, 200), and level 2 and above prints warn‐
		   ings and informational messages.

       -w	   Print out results in HTML tables.  The default table is two
		   columns wide, with a white background.

       -x attributes
		   The	string	to  use as attributes for <table>.  Attributes
		   are inserted <table here >

       -y attributes
		   The string to use as attributes for <tr>.

       -z attributes
		   The string to use as attributes for <td>.

       -V	   Display the version number and exit.

       -h	   Display usage information.

BUGS
       There are various statically declared buffers of fixed length. Combined
       with  inefficient  parsing  of the command line arguments, the response
       headers from the server, and other external inputs, these buffers might
       overflow.

       Ab  does	 not  implement	 HTTP/1.x fully; instead, it only accepts some
       'expected' forms of responses.

       The rather heavy use of strstr(3) by the program may  skew  performance
       results,	 since it uses significant CPU resources.  Make sure that per‐
       formance limits are not	hit  by	 ab  before  your  server's  limit  is
       reached.

       The HTML output is not as complete as the text output.

       Up to version 1.3d ab has propably reported values way too low for most
       measurements; as a single timeout (which is usually  in	the  order  of
       seconds)	 will  shift  several  thousands of millisecond responses by a
       considerable factor. This was further componded by  a  serious  integer
       overrun	which  would for realistic run's (i.e. those longer than a few
       minutes) produce believable but totally bogus results. Thanks to Sander
       Temme for solving this riddle.

SEE ALSO
       httpd(8)

				 February 2004				 ab(8)
[top]

List of man pages available for Minix

Copyright (c) for man pages and the logo by the respective OS vendor.

For those who want to learn more, the polarhome community provides shell access and support.

[legal] [privacy] [GNU] [policy] [cookies] [netiquette] [sponsors] [FAQ]
Tweet
Polarhome, production since 1999.
Member of Polarhome portal.
Based on Fawad Halim's script.
....................................................................
Vote for polarhome
Free Shell Accounts :: the biggest list on the net