NginX 1.2.0 versus Resin 4.0.29 performance tests

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Recently, we decided to spend some extra time improving Resin's performance and scalability. Since we like challenges, we set a goal of meeting or beating nginx, a fast C-based web server. When working on performance, we use benchmarks to see which proposed changes improve Resin's performance, and which proposed changes do not. The autobench/httperf benchmark is particularly interesting because it simulates high load rates and exposes scalability issues better than some other benchmarks like ab. After completing the Resin performance work, it turned out that we exceeded our goal and were actually able to beat nginx, and thought we'd share our results.

We have recently run some performance benchmarks comparing Resin 4.0.29 versus NginX 1.2.0. These benchmarks show that Resin Pro matches or exceeds NginX's throughput.


Contents

Benchmark tools

The benchmark tests used the following tools:

  • httperf
  • AutoBench


httperf

httperf is tool produced by HP for measuring web server performance. The httperf tool supports HTTP/1.1 keepalives and SSL protocols.


AutoBench

Autobench is a tool for automating the process of performing a comparative benchmark test against two a web servers. Autobench uses httperf. Autobench runs httperf against each host. AutoBench increases the number of requests per seconds on each iteration. AutoBench delivers output in a format that can be easily consumed by spreadsheet tools. AutoBench has a mode where it can drive multiple clients against a set of servers to minimize the possibility of testing your client throughput instead of server throughput. The command autobenchd is used to run a daemon on client machines. The autobench_admin command drives many clients to run test at same time by communicating with autobenchd.

Setup Overview

Setup benchmark diagram.png

Configuration

The only change that was made was the worker_processes were set to 8 for NginX to improve throughput.

Hardware Software Specifications

Client HW/OS specs:

  • i7 4 core / 8 HT, 2.8 GHZ, 8Meg Cache, 8 GB RAM.
  • Ubuntu 12 / Linux Kernel 3.2.0-26-generic

Server HW specs:

  • i7 4 core / 8 HT, 2.8 GHZ, 8Meg Cache, 8 GB RAM.
  • Ubuntu 12 / Linux Kernel 3.2.0-26-generic

Test software:

  • Autobench 2.1.1
  • httperf 0.9.0

Software under test:

  • Resin Pro 4.0.29
  • nginx 1.2.0

0k test

We want to make sure Resin can handle as many concurrent connections as possible without glitches or blocking. The tiny 0k file is a good test for high concurrency, because it spends less time on network overhead and more time stressing the threading and internal locks. Because we used an 8-core machine, we can be certain that we're avoiding unnecessary locks or timing problems.

For most sites, the small file stress test simulates heavy ajax use, and small file use. As sites become more interactive, this small file test becomes ever more important.

Command Line Arguments

0k.sh

./admin.sh 300000 2000 20000 1000 0k

admin.sh

autobench_admin
--clients xen:4600,lancre:4600
--uri1 /file_$5.html
--host1 ch_resin --port1 8080
--uri2 /file_$5.html
--host2 ch_nginx --port2 80
--num_conn $1
--num_call 10
--low_rate $2
--high_rate $3
--rate_step $4
--timeout 3
--file out_con$1_start$2_end$3_step$4_$5.tsv

Above is used to setup 300,000 connections at a rate of 20,000 to 200,000 requests per second. Each iteration increases the rate by 10,000 from 20,000 to 200,000.

0k html file file_0k.html

 <html> 
 <body>
 <pre></pre>
 </body>
 </html>

0k full Results for 0K test

Resin nginx 0k full2.png

Resin nginx response time.png

Nginx resin 0k IO throughput.png

Nginx resin errors 0k.png


1K test

Command line

1k.sh

./admin.sh 200000 1000 10000 250 1k


admin.sh

autobench_admin
--clients xen.caucho.com:4600,lancre.caucho.com:4600 
--uri1 /file_$5.html
--host1 ch_resin --port1 8080
--uri2 /file_$5.html
--host2 ch_nginx --port2 80
--num_conn $1
--num_call 10
--low_rate $2
--high_rate $3
--rate_step $4
--timeout 3
--file out_con$1_start$2_end$3_step$4_$5.tsv


1k.html

html>
<body>
<pre>
0 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 
1 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 
2 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 
3 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 
4 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 
5 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 
6 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 
7 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 
8 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 
9 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 0123456789 
</pre>
</body> 
</html>

1k full Results for 1K test

Resin nginx 1k requests per second.png

Resin nginx 1k response time.png

Resin nginx IO 1k.png

Resin nginx 1k errors.png

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