The WiredTiger distribution includes a tool that can be used to simulate workloads in WiredTiger, in the directory bench/wtperf
.
The wtperf
utility generally has two phases, the populate phase which creates a database and then populates an object in that database, and a workload phase, that does some set of operations on the object.
For example, the following configuration uses a single thread to populate a file object with 500,000 records in a 500MB cache. The workload phase consists of 8 threads running for two minutes, all reading from the file.
conn_config="cache_size=500MB"
table_config="type=file"
icount=500000
run_time=120
populate_threads=1
threads=((count=8,reads=1))
In most cases, where the workload is the only interesting phase, the populate phase can be performed once and the workload phase run repeatedly (for more information, see the wtperf create
configuration variable).
The conn_config
configuration supports setting any WiredTiger connection configuration value. This is commonly used to configure statistics with regular reports, to obtain more information from the run:
conn_config="cache_size=20G,statistics=(fast,clear),statistics_log=(wait=600)"
report_interval=5
Note quoting must be used when passing values to Wiredtiger configuration, as opposed to configuring the wtperf
utility itself.
The table_config
configuration supports setting any WiredTiger object creation configuration value, for example, the above test can be converted to using an LSM store instead of a B+tree store, with additional LSM configuration, by changing conn_config
to:
table_config="lsm=(chunk_size=5MB),type=lsm,os_cache_dirty_max=16MB"
More complex workloads can be configured by creating more threads doing inserts and updates as well as reads. For example, to configure two inserting threads two threads doing a mixture of inserts, reads and updates:
threads=((count=2,inserts=1),(count=2,inserts=1,reads=1,updates=1))
Example wtperf
configuration files can be found in the bench/wtperf/runners/
directory.
There are also a number of command line arguments that can be passed to wtperf:
- -C config
- Specify configuration strings for the wiredtiger_open function. This argument is additive to the
conn_config
parameter in the configuration file.
- -h directory
- Specify a database home directory. The default is
./WT_TEST.
- -m monitor_directory
- Specify a directory for all monitoring related files. The default is the database home directory.
- -O config_file
- Specify the configuration file to run.
- -o config
- Specify configuration strings for the
wtperf
program. This argument will override settings in the configuration file.
- -T config
- Specify configuration strings for the WT_SESSION::create function. This argument is additive to the
table_config
parameter in the configuration file.
Monitoring wtperf
Like all WiredTiger applications, the wtperf
command can be configured with statistics logging, and the resulting output displayed using the wtstats
visualization tool. For more information, see Visualizing performance with wtstats.
In addition to statistics logging, wtperf
can monitor performance and operation latency times. Monitoring is enabled using the sample_interval
configuration. For example to record information every 10 seconds, set the following on the command line or add it to the wtperf
configuration file:
Enabling monitoring causes wtperf
to create a file monitor
in the database home directory (or another directory as specified using the -m
option to wtperf
).
The same visualization tool, wtstats
, can be used to view a combined chart with both the monitor
output and the statistics logging output at the same time.
The following example shows how to run the medium-btree.wtperf
configuration with monitoring enabled, and then generate a graph.
# Change into the WiredTiger directory.
cd wiredtiger
# Configure and build WiredTiger if not already built.
./configure && make
# Remove and re-create the run directory.
rm -rf WTPERF_RUN && mkdir WTPERF_RUN
# Run the medium-btree.wtperf workload, sampling performance every 5 seconds.
bench/wtperf/wtperf \
-h WTPERF_RUN \
-o sample_interval=5 \
-O bench/wtperf/runners/medium-btree.wtperf
# Use the visualization tool to create HTML graph output; the output file is
# named wtstats.html.
python tools/wtstats/wtstats.py WTPERF_RUN/monitor
# Possible alternatives if statistics logging also enabled:
# python tools/wtstats/wtstats.py WTPERF_RUN/monitor WTPERF_RUN/WiredTigerStat*
# python tools/wtstats/wtstats.py WTPERF_RUN
The python command creates a file named wtstats.html
in the current working directory. You can open the generated HTML document in your browser and see the generated statistics.
Wtperf configuration options
The following is a list of the currently available wtperf
configuration options:
- async_threads (unsigned int, default=0)
- number of async worker threads
- checkpoint_interval (unsigned int, default=120)
- checkpoint every interval seconds during the workload phase.
- checkpoint_stress_rate (unsigned int, default=0)
- checkpoint every rate operations during the populate phase in the populate thread(s), 0 to disable
- checkpoint_threads (unsigned int, default=0)
- number of checkpoint threads
- conn_config (string, default=create)
- connection configuration string
- compact (boolean, default=false)
- post-populate compact for LSM merging activity
- compression (string, default=none)
- compression extension. Allowed configuration values are: 'none', 'bzip', 'lz4', 'snappy', 'zlib'
- create (boolean, default=true)
- do population phase; false to use existing database
- database_count (unsigned int, default=1)
- number of WiredTiger databases to use. Each database will execute the workload using a separate home directory and complete set of worker threads
- icount (unsigned int, default=5000)
- number of records to initially populate. If multiple tables are configured the count is spread evenly across all tables.
- insert_rmw (boolean, default=false)
- execute a read prior to each insert in workload phase
- key_sz (unsigned int, default=20)
- key size
- min_throughput (unsigned int, default=0)
- abort if any throughput measured is less than this amount. Requires sample_interval to be configured
- max_latency (unsigned int, default=0)
- abort if any latency measured exceeds this number of milliseconds.Requires sample_interval to be configured
- pareto (boolean, default=false)
- use pareto 80/20 distribution for random numbers
- populate_ops_per_txn (unsigned int, default=0)
- number of operations to group into each transaction in the populate phase, zero for auto-commit
- populate_threads (unsigned int, default=1)
- number of populate threads, 1 for bulk load
- random_range (unsigned int, default=0)
- if non zero choose a value from within this range as the key for insert operations
- random_value (boolean, default=false)
- generate random content for the value
- report_interval (unsigned int, default=2)
- output throughput information every interval seconds, 0 to disable
- run_ops (unsigned int, default=0)
- total read, insert and update workload operations
- run_time (unsigned int, default=0)
- total workload seconds
- sample_interval (unsigned int, default=0)
- performance logging every interval seconds, 0 to disable
- sample_rate (unsigned int, default=50)
- how often the latency of operations is measured. One for every operation,two for every second operation, three for every third operation etc.
- sess_config (string, default=)
- session configuration string
- table_config (string, default=key_format=S,value_format=S,type=lsm,exclusive=true,allocation_size=4kb,internal_page_max=64kb,leaf_page_max=4kb,split_pct=100)
- table configuration string
- table_count (unsigned int, default=1)
- number of tables to run operations over. Keys are divided evenly over the tables. Default 1, maximum 99.
- threads (string, default=)
- workload configuration: each 'count' entry is the total number of threads, and the 'insert', 'read' and 'update' entries are the ratios of insert, read and update operations done by each worker thread; If a throttle value is provided each thread will do a maximum of that number of operations per second; multiple workload configurations may be specified; for example, a more complex threads configuration might be 'threads=((count=2,reads=1)(count=8,reads=1,inserts=2,updates=1))' which would create 2 threads doing nothing but reads and 8 threads each doing 50% inserts and 25% reads and updates. Allowed configuration values are 'count', 'throttle', 'reads', 'inserts', 'updates'. There are also behavior modifiers, supported modifiers are 'ops_per_txn'
- transaction_config (string, default=)
- transaction configuration string, relevant when populate_opts_per_txn is nonzero
- table_name (string, default=test)
- table name
- value_sz (unsigned int, default=100)
- value size
- verbose (unsigned int, default=1)
- verbosity
- warmup (unsigned int, default=0)
- How long to run the workload phase before starting measurements