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| |__) | | | | \| | | | | (___
| ___/| | | | . ` | | | |\___ \
| | | |__| | |\ | |__| |____) |
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Ponos is an Erlang application that exposes a flexible load generator API. Ponos [1] is named after the Greek god of hard labor and toil (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ponos).
Written by Jonathan Olsson jonathan@klarna.com with contributions from Cons Åhs cons@klarna.com
The main place to find information about ponos is the github page.
Documentation is available as edoc as well as on the ponos wiki.
$> git clone https://github.com/klarna/ponos.git
$> cd ponos
$> make
$> erl -pa ebin -s ponos
1> Args = [ {name, unique_name_of_type_atom}
1> , {task, fun() -> ok end}
1> , {load_spec, ponos_load_specs:make_constant(10.0)}
1> ].
2> ponos:add_load_generators([Args]).
3> ponos:init_load_generators().
4> application:stop(ponos).
Ponos is a simple yet powerful erlang application used to generate load at configurable frequencies. It's designed to be lightweight, straight forward to use and to require minimal configuration.
There are only three required parts of a load generator:
Name
- A unique identifier (of type
atom()
) used to reference the load generator.
- A unique identifier (of type
Task
- A callback function of arity 0; the work to be performed in
accordance with
LoadSpec
.
- A callback function of arity 0; the work to be performed in
accordance with
LoadSpec
- The load specification defines the characteristic of the load. It
is a function that maps time to intensity:
fun(T) -> I
whereT
is passed time in milliseconds andI
is the intensity expressed as calls per second. The user may define its own specification, but ponos provides typical load patterns such as constant load, bursts, staircase, and sawtooth. Seeponos_load_specs
for a full list of load specifications.
- The load specification defines the characteristic of the load. It
is a function that maps time to intensity:
1> Name = foo.
2> Task = fun() -> do_your_thing end.
3> LoadSpec = ponos_load_specs:make_sawtooth(10, 20.0).
4> Options = [{duration, 60*1000}, {auto_init, false}].
5> Args = [{name,Name},{task,Task},{load_spec,LoadSpec},{options,Options}].
6> [ok] = ponos:add_load_generators([Args]).
7> ponos:init_load_generators([Name]).
ponos:add_load_generators/1
takes a list of proplists where each
proplist denotes the arguments needed to add a new load generator to
ponos. The options
argument is optional, and may contain all or none
of the available options.
Options:
auto_init
- Defaults tofalse
. If set totrue
, the load generator will start generating load immediately. Otherwiseponos:init_load_generators/0|1
have to be called to start generating load.duration
- Defaults toinfinity
. By default the load generator will run until removed or paused. If set to apos_integer
, the load generator will generate load for that many milliseconds.max_concurrent
- Aninteger()
used to limit how many concurrently ongoing tasks the load generator may spawn. Note that this potentially affects the intensity in a negative way, i.e. you may get a lower output than theload_spec
describes. By default, the load generator may have an infinite amount of concurrently ongoing tasks.task_runner
- Defaults toponos_default_task_runner
. Must be amodule()
implementing theponos_task_runner_callbacks
behaviour.task_runner_args
- Defaults to[]
. May be of type any(). The value is passed to thetask_runner
'sinit
function.
For convenience, all operations on load generators permits referring to a single load generator or a list of generators.
This module provides a set of predefined constructors for typical load
patterns. A load specification defines the characteristics of load and
is implemented as a function that maps time to intensity: fun(T) -> I
where T
is passed time in milliseconds and I
is the intensity
expressed as calls per second. The user may implement its own load
specifications.
A load generator is implemented as a gen_server receiving a tick every
millisecond. The LoadSpec
- which is a function of time - thus gets
sampled at every tick to determine whether load should be sent or
not. At each tick the load generator may decide to generate multiple
calls, so it is - at least in theory - possible to produce arbitrary
large amount of cps.
In practice however the load generator itself will become CPU limited above a point that depends on your CPU and/or OS. It is better to use two - or more - generators to leverage the power of multi-core CPUs if such high load is required.
There are other factors that may prevent a load generator to exactly reproduce the specified load pattern.
One of the factors is how timers are implemented in the Erlang VM: a
timer may never fire early, but may get delayed indefinitely. This
means when the load generator decides to sleep for 1 ms, it will
usually end up sleeping for somewhat longer. This will reduce the
actual sampling frequency of the LoadSpec
. Even if the system is not
otherwise overloaded you may not assume sampling frequencies above 500
Hz in practice.
The other limiting factor is that the load generator will favor higher
intensities over lower ones when the LoadSpec
is not constant. This
effect is best explained via an example.
Consider a LoadSpec
that for even seconds specifies intensity 0.5
and for odd seconds 4.0. This means ponos will try to trigger tasks at
1000, 1250, 1500, 1750, and 3000 milliseconds. The actual intensity
will be therefore 4.0 for odd seconds, but for even seconds it will
only fall to 0.8, not to 0.5. The low intensity interval is simply too
short.
In essence, ponos
gathers load generators under a supervisor and
makes sure they get a chance to execute their task at the requested
interval. Instead of executing the task itself, ponos hands over to a
task runner at certain points, e.g. when it is time to trigger a
task. For convenience, ponos
provides two implementations of the
ponos_task_runner_callbacks
interface:
- ponos_default_task_runner - takes no extra arguments and simply
applies the provided
Task
. - ponos_file_task_runner - applies the provided
Task
as well as logs the various events to file.
The ponos_task_runner_callbacks
behaviour defines the following interface:
ponos_task_runner_callbacks behaviour |
---|
call(Name, Task, State) -> ok |
concurrency_limit(Name, State::any()) -> ok |
init(Name, Args) -> {ok, State::any()} |
pause(Name, State) -> ok |
start(Name, State) -> {ok, NewState::any() |
terminate(Name, State) -> ok |
The API allows for modifying the state of the task runner at two
occasions: init
and start
. In all other instances, the task runner
may view the state but has no possibility to modify it.
Please refer to ponos_default_task_runner.erl
and
ponos_file_task_runner.
for further reference.
Ponos is versioned according to semantic versioning.
[1] The author is aware of the Russian meaning of the word ponos. I leave it to the Russian to fight this down with the Greek. Needless to say, a suitable name is a suitable name.