keycloak-scim/testsuite/performance
Marko Strukelj b29edc7056
Merge pull request #5049 from tkyjovsk/KEYCLOAK-6165
KEYCLOAK-6165 Ability to load performance provisioning and test parameters from a properties file
2018-03-07 15:20:57 +01:00
..
db/mariadb KEYCLOAK-6582 Specify exact version of MariaDB server in the performance tests 2018-02-19 11:53:45 +01:00
db-failover
infinispan KEYCLOAK-5968 Move configuration of Infinispan server from Dockerfile to maven 2018-02-14 16:48:22 +01:00
keycloak KEYCLOAK-6165 Ability to load performance provisioning and test parameters from a properties file 2018-03-06 19:19:24 +01:00
load-balancer
monitoring
tests Merge pull request #5049 from tkyjovsk/KEYCLOAK-6165 2018-03-07 15:20:57 +01:00
docker-compose-db-failover.yml
pom.xml KEYCLOAK-6165 Ability to load performance provisioning and test parameters from a properties file 2018-03-06 19:19:24 +01:00
README.docker-compose.md
README.log-tool.md KEYCLOAK-6512 Open workload injection model + LogProcessor fixes 2018-03-06 13:20:20 +01:00
README.md Merge pull request #5049 from tkyjovsk/KEYCLOAK-6165 2018-03-07 15:20:57 +01:00
README.provisioning-parameters.md

Keycloak Performance Testsuite

Requirements:

  • Bash 2.05+
  • Maven 3.1.1+
  • Keycloak server distribution installed in the local Maven repository. To do this run mvn install -Pdistribution from the root of the Keycloak project.

Docker Compose Provisioner

  • Docker 1.13+
  • Docker Compose 1.14+

Getting started for the impatient

Here's how to perform a simple tests run:

# Clone keycloak repository if you don't have it yet
# git clone https://github.com/keycloak/keycloak.git

# Build Keycloak distribution - needed to build docker image with latest Keycloak server
mvn clean install -DskipTests -Pdistribution

# Now build, provision and run the test
cd testsuite/performance
mvn clean install

# Make sure your Docker daemon is running THEN
mvn verify -Pprovision
mvn verify -Pgenerate-data -Ddataset=100u2c -DnumOfWorkers=10 -DhashIterations=100
mvn verify -Ptest -Ddataset=100u2c -DusersPerSec=2 -DrampUpPeriod=10 -DuserThinkTime=0 -DbadLoginAttempts=1 -DrefreshTokenCount=1 -DmeasurementPeriod=60 -DfilterResults=true

Now open the generated report in a browser - the link to .html file is displayed at the end of the test.

After the test run you may want to tear down the docker instances for the next run to be able to import data:

mvn verify -Pteardown

You can perform all phases in a single run:

mvn verify -Pprovision,generate-data,test,teardown -Ddataset=100u2c -DnumOfWorkers=10 -DhashIterations=100 -DusersPerSec=4 -DrampUpPeriod=10

Note: The order in which maven profiles are listed does not determine the order in which profile related plugins are executed. teardown profile always executes last.

Keep reading for more information.

Provisioning

Provision

Provisioners

Depending on the target environment different provisioners may be used. Provisioner can be selected via property -Dprovisioner=PROVISIONER.

Default value is docker-compose which is intended for testing on a local docker host. This is currently the only implemented option. See README.docker-compose.md for more details.

Deployment Types

Different types of deployment can be provisioned. The default deployment is singlenode with only a single instance of Keycloak server and a database. Additional options are cluster and crossdc which can be enabled with a profile (see below).

Usage

Usage: mvn verify -P provision[,DEPLOYMENT_PROFILE] [-Dprovisioning.properties=NAMED_PROPERTY_SET].

The properties are loaded from tests/parameters/provisioning/${provisioning.properties}.properties file. Individual parameters can be overriden from command line via -D params.

Default property set is docker-compose/4cpus/singlenode.

To load a custom properties file specify -Dprovisioning.properties.file=ABSOLUTE_PATH_TO_FILE instead of -Dprovisioning.properties. This file needs to contain all properties required by the specific combination of provisioner and deployment type. See examples in folder tests/parameters/provisioning/docker-compose/4cpus.

Available parameters are described in README.provisioning-parameters.md.

Examples:

  • Provision a single-node deployment with docker-compose: mvn verify -P provision
  • Provision a cluster deployment with docker-compose: mvn verify -P provision,cluster
  • Provision a cluster deployment with docker-compose, overriding some properties: mvn verify -P provision,cluster -Dkeycloak.scale=2 -Dlb.worker.task-max-threads=32
  • Provision a cross-DC deployment with docker-compose: mvn verify -P provision,crossdc
  • Provision a cross-DC deployment with docker-compose using a custom properties file: mvn verify -P provision,crossdc -Dprovisioning.properties.file=/tmp/custom-crossdc.properties

Provisioned System

The provision operation will produce a provisioned-system.properties inside the tests/target directory with information about the provisioned system such as the type of deployment and URLs of Keycloak servers and load balancers. This information is then used by operations generate-data, import-dump, test, teardown.

Provisioning operation is idempotent for a specific combination of provisioner+deployment. When running multiple times the system will be simply updated based on the new parameters. However when switching between different provisioiners or deployment types it is always necessary to tear down the currently running system.

Note: When switching deployment type from singlenode or cluster to crossdc (or the other way around) it is necessary to update the generated Keycloak server configuration (inside keycloak/target directory) by adding a clean goal to the provisioning command like so: mvn clean verify -Pprovision …. It is not necessary to update this configuration when switching between singlenode and cluster deployments.

Collect Artifacts

Usage: mvn verify -Pcollect

Collects artifacts such as logs from the provisioned system and stores them in tests/target/collected-artifacts/${deployment}-TIMESTAMP/. When used in combination with teardown (see below) the artifacts are collected just before the system is torn down.

Teardown

Usage: mvn verify -Pteardown [-Dprovisioner=<PROVISIONER>]

Note: Unless the provisioned system has been properly torn down the maven build will not allow a cleanup of the tests/target directory because it contains the provisioned-system.properties with information about the still-running system.

Testing

Generate Test Data

Usage: mvn verify -P generate-data [-Ddataset=NAMED_PROPERTY_SET] [-DnumOfWorkers=N]. The default dataset is 2u2c. Workers default to 1.

The parameters are loaded from tests/parameters/datasets/${dataset}.properties file. Individual properties can be overriden from command line via -D params.

To use a custom properties file specify -Ddataset.properties.file=ABSOLUTE_PATH_TO_FILE instead of -Ddataset.

Dataset Parameters

Property Description Value in the Default Dataset
numOfRealms Number of realms to be created. 1
usersPerRealm Number of users per realm. 2
clientsPerRealm Number of clients per realm. 2
realmRoles Number of realm-roles per realm. 2
realmRolesPerUser Number of realm-roles assigned to a created user. Has to be less than or equal to realmRoles. 2
clientRolesPerUser Number of client-roles assigned to a created user. Has to be less than or equal to clientsPerRealm * clientRolesPerClient. 2
clientRolesPerClient Number of client-roles per created client. 2
hashIterations Number of password hashing iterations. 27500

Examples:

  • Generate the default dataset. mvn verify -P generate-data
  • Generate the 100u2c dataset. mvn verify -P generate-data -Ddataset=100u2c
  • Generate the 100u2c dataset but override some parameters. mvn verify -P generate-data -Ddataset=100u2c -DclientRolesPerUser=5 -DclientRolesPerClient=5

Export Database

To export the generated data to a data-dump file enable profile -P export-dump. This will create a ${DATASET}.sql.gz file next to the dataset properties file.

Example: mvn verify -P generate-data,export-dump -Ddataset=100u2c

Import Database

To import data from an existing data-dump file use profile -P import-dump.

Example: mvn verify -P import-dump -Ddataset=100u2c

If the dump file doesn't exist locally the script will attempt to download it from ${db.dump.download.site} which defaults to https://downloads.jboss.org/keycloak-qe/${server.version} with server.version defaulting to ${project.version} from pom.xml.

Warning: Don't override dataset parameters (with -Dparam=value) when running export/import because then the contents of dump file might not match the properties file.

Run Tests

Usage: mvn verify -P test [-Dtest.properties=NAMED_PROPERTY_SET]. Default property set is basic-oidc.

The parameters are loaded from tests/parameters/test/${test.properties}.properties file. Individual properties can be overriden from command line via -D params.

To use a custom properties file specify -Dtest.properties.file=ABSOLUTE_PATH_TO_FILE instead of -Dtest.properties.

When running the tests it is also necessary to define a dataset to use. Usage is described in the section above.

Common Test Run Parameters

Parameter Description Default Value
gatling.simulationClass Classname of the simulation to be run. keycloak.BasicOIDCSimulation
dataset Name of the dataset to use. (Individual dataset properties can be overridden with -Ddataset.property=value.) default
usersPerSec Arrival rate of new users per second. Can be a floating point number. 1.0 for BasicOIDCSimulation, 0.2 for AdminConsoleSimulation
rampUpPeriod Period during which the users will be ramped up. (seconds) 15
warmUpPeriod Period with steady number of users intended for the system under test to warm up. (seconds) 15
measurementPeriod A measurement period after the system is warmed up. (seconds) 30
filterResults Whether to filter out requests which are outside of the measurementPeriod. false
userThinkTime Pause between individual scenario steps. 5
refreshTokenPeriod Period after which token should be refreshed. 10

Test Run Parameters specific to BasicOIDCSimulation

Parameter Description Default Value
badLoginAttempts 0
refreshTokenCount 0

Examples:

  • Run test with default test and dataset parameters:

mvn verify -P test

  • Run test specific test and dataset parameters:

mvn verify -P test -Dtest.properties=basic-oidc -Ddataset=100u2c

  • Run test with specific test and dataset parameters, overriding some from command line:

mvn verify -P test -Dtest.properties=admin-console -Ddataset=100u2c -DrampUpPeriod=30 -DwarmUpPeriod=60 -DusersPerSec=0.3

Monitoring

JMX

To enable access to JMX on the WildFly-backed services set properties management.user and management.user.password during the provisioning phase.

JVisualVM

  • Set JBOSS_HOME variable to point to a valid WildFly 10+ installation.
  • Start JVisualVM with jboss-client.jar on classpath: ./jvisualvm --cp:a $JBOSS_HOME/bin/client/jboss-client.jar.
  • Add a local JMX connection: service:jmx:remote+http://localhost:9990. [*]
  • Check "Use security credentials" and set admin:admin. (The default credentials can be overriden by providing env. variables DEBUG_USER and DEBUG_USER_PASSWORD to the container.)
  • Open the added connection.

[*] For singlenode this points to the JMX console of the Keycloak server. To get the connection URLs for cluster or crossdc deployments see the JMX section in the generated provisioned-system.properties file.

  • Property keycloak.frontend.servers.jmx contains JMX URLs of the Load Balancers.
  • Property keycloak.backend.servers.jmx contains JMX URLs of the clustered Keycloak servers.
  • Property infinispan.servers.jmx contains JMX URLs of the Infinispan servers, in Cross-DC deployment.

Docker Monitoring

There is a docker-based solution for monitoring CPU, memory and network usage per container. It uses CAdvisor service to export container metrics into InfluxDB time series database, and Grafana web app to query the DB and present results as graphs.

  • To enable run: mvn verify -Pmonitoring
  • To disable run: mvn verify -Pmonitoring-off[,delete-monitoring-data]. By default the monitoring history is preserved. If you wish to delete it enable the delete-monitoring-data profile when turning monitoring off.

To view monitoring dashboard open Grafana UI at: http://localhost:3000/dashboard/file/resource-usage-combined.json.

Sysstat metrics

To enable recording of sysstat metrics use -Psar. This will run the sar command during the test and process its binary output to produce textual and CSV files with CPU utilisation stats. To also enable creation of PNG charts use -Psar,gnuplot. For this to work Gnuplot needs to be installed on the machine. To compress the binary output with bzip add -Dbzip=true to the commandline.

Results will be stored in folder: tests/target/sar.

Developing tests in IntelliJ IDEA

Add scala support to IDEA

Install the correct Scala SDK

First you need to install Scala SDK. In Scala land it's very important that all libraries used are compatible with specific version of Scala. Gatling version that we use uses Scala version 2.11.7. In order to avoid conflicts between Scala used by IDEA, and Scala dependencies in pom.xml it's very important to use that same version of Scala SDK for development.

Thus, it's best to download and install this SDK version

Install IntelliJ's official Scala plugin

Open Preferences in IntelliJ. Type 'plugins' in the search box. In the right pane click on 'Install JetBrains plugin'. Type 'scala' in the search box, and click Install button of the Scala plugin.

Run BasicOIDCSimulation from IntelliJ

Make sure that performance maven profile is enabled for IDEA to treat performance directory as a project module.

You may also need to rebuild the module in IDEA for scala objects to become available.

Then find Engine object In ProjectExplorer (you can use ctrl-N / cmd-O). Right click on class name and select Run or Debug as if it was a JUnit tests.

You'll have to edit a test configuration, and set 'VM options' to a list of -Dkey=value pairs to override default configuration values in TestConfig class.

Make sure to set 'Use classpath of module' to 'performance-test'.

When tests are executed via maven, the Engine object is not used. It exists only for running tests in IDE.

If test startup fails due to not being able to find the test classes try reimporting the 'performance' module from pom.xml (right click on 'performance' directory, select 'Maven' at the bottom of context menu, then 'Reimport')

If you want to run a different simulation - not DefaultSimulation - you can edit Engine object source, or create another Engine object for a different simulation.

Troubleshoot

Verbose logging

You can find logback-test.xml file in tests/src/test/resources directory. This files contains logging information in log4j xml format. Root logger is by default set to WARN, but if you want to increase verbosity you can change it to DEBUG or INFO.