dbbench is a fast, lightweight database workload generator that executes a
workload defined a flexible configuration file. Using this dbbench, simple
'jobs' can be defined to describe a workload run
against a server. Each job represents a single query; by composing multiple
jobs together, an arbitrary workload can be described. The jobs are executed
against the server and timed to produce
aggregated benchmarking information that is emitted periodically and when the
test completes. Exact job run data can also be logged for additional offline
analysis.
Note that since dbbench is a workload driver, it does not randomly generate
queries, tables, data, etc. Any random data generation or setup can be easily
done with SQL queries.
To install, first install the dependencies (golang-go and git).
sudo apt-get -y install golang
sudo apt-get -y install gitDbbench uses context package which is included in golang version > 1.7
Check the golang version
go versionIf your distribution comes with an older version of golang or the required version is not included in the repository, download and install golang manually.
sudo curl -O https://storage.googleapis.com/golang/go1.9.1.linux-amd64.tar.gz
sudo tar -xvf go1.9.1.linux-amd64.tar.gz
sudo mv go /usr/localIf you are installing go for the first time, you will also need
to set your GOPATH environment
variable and add $GOPATH/bin to
your PATH.
mkdir $HOME/go
export GOPATH=$HOME/go
export PATH=$PATH:$GOPATH/binOnce go has been set up, use the go tool to get dbbench.
go get github.com/memsql/dbbenchYou can also use the go tool to update dbbench:
go get -u github.com/memsql/dbbenchTo learn how to run dbbench, follow the tutorial.
dbbench is heavily inspired by fio. It
was written by Alex Reece awreece@gmail.com (Performance Engineer at MemSQL)
to enable flexible testing of a database. He got tired of writing specific test
applications to simulate a given workload, and found that the existing database
benchmark/test tools out there weren't flexible enough to do what he wanted. For more
context about the ethos of dbbench, see the
blog post that introduced it.