The AutobahnTestsuite provides a fully automated test suite to verify client and server implementations of The WebSocket Protocol for specification conformance and implementation robustness.
AutobahnTestsuite also provides a couple of other tools useful for WebSocket (and WAMP) implementors and developers.
The test suite will check an implementation by doing basic WebSocket conversations, extensive protocol compliance verification and performance and limits testing.
Contains about 300 test cases covering
- Framing
- Pings/Pongs
- Reserved Bits
- Opcodes
- Fragmentation
- UTF-8 Handling
- Limits/Performance
- Closing Handshake
- Opening Handshake (under development)
Besides the automated testsuite (aka "fuzzing" server/client), wstest also includes a number of other handy modes:
- WebSocket echo server and client
- WebSocket broadcast server (and client driver)
- Testee modes to test AutobahnPython against the test suite
- wsperf controller and master (see below for more)
- WAMP server and client, for developing WAMP implementations
- WebSocket Mass-Connect
AutobahnTestSuite is implemented in Python. It should run anywhere where Python is available.
You will need:
Recommended is using the latest Python 2.7 release, Python 2.6 works also fine, but Python 3 won't cut it.
On Windows, for best performance, you might want to run Twisted under IOCP reactor. For that, you will need
If you want to do tests involving secure WebSocket (wss), you will need
Open a command shell, and install from Python package index:
easy_install autobahntestsuite
Doing so automatically downloads and installs everything needed including any dependencies.
Alternatively, install from sources:
git clone git:https://github.com/tavendo/AutobahnTestSuite.git
cd AutobahnTestSuite
git checkout v0.5.2
cd autobahntestsuite
python setup.py install
Caution: Do NOT use current HEAD, but a tagged release like above.
The test suite is packaged up and installed as a command line tool wstest.
To get help and a list of options:
wstest --help
wstest has different modes in which it can run:
echoserver
echoclient
broadcastclient
broadcastserver
fuzzingserver
fuzzingclient
testeeserver
testeeclient
wsperfcontrol
wsperfmaster
wampserver
wampclient
massconnect
Server and client modes support TLS (that is WSS). For servers you will need to provide a server key and certificate file.
The automated WebSocket test suite comes under the modes:
fuzzingserver
fuzzingclient
For example, to test browsers (or other WebSocket clients):
wstest -m fuzzingserver
and point your browser to https://localhost:8080
.
The fuzzing modes are configured using a spec file. If you don't provide one, wstest will auto-generate one (and reuse that the next time).
You can provide your own, modified spec file by doing
wstest -m fuzzingserver -s <your spec file>
Reports will be generated as a set of HTML files. To create reports for multiple testee's, DO NOT restart wstest in between, since (currently), it will forget everything when stopped.
These modes are for testing AutobahnPython against the test suite.
The testeeserver
can be tested using a 2nd instance of wstest running
in fuzzingclient
mode.
For example, to test Autobahn along other WebSocket servers, i.e. do
wstest -m testeeserver ws:https://localhost:9001
start your other WebSocket servers on other ports, and then run the testsuite against all:
wstest -m fuzzingclient -s fuzzingclient.json
where you have edited fuzzingclient.json
for all servers under test, i.e.
{
"options": {"failByDrop": false},
"outdir": "./reports/servers",
"servers": [
{"agent": "AutobahnServer",
"url": "ws:https://localhost:9001",
"options": {"version": 18}},
{"agent": "MyAwesomeServer",
"url": "ws:https://localhost:9002",
"options": {"version": 18}}
],
"cases": ["*"],
"exclude-cases": [],
"exclude-agent-cases": {}
}
Likewise, the testeeclient
can be tested using a 2nd instance of wstest
running in fuzzingserver
mode.
WebSocket echo server that will just send back any text or binary message it receives from it's connected peer.
wstest -m echoserver -w ws:https://localhost:9000
WebSocket echo client
wstest -m echoclient -w <Your Server IP:Port>
The broadcastserver
mode will run a WebSocket server that will broadcast
any text or binary message it receives to all currently connected clients.
wstest -m broadcastserver -w ws:https://localhost:9000
The broadcastclient mode is intended as a test peer for the broadcastserver. It will dump any message it receives to console, and send a message every two seconds.
wstest -m broadcastclient -w <Your Server IP:Port>
This mode is used to control wsperf running in master mode. wsperf is a WebSocket performance probe developed as part of WebSocket++.
- https://www.zaphoyd.com/wsperf
- https://github.com/zaphoyd/websocketpp
- https://github.com/zaphoyd/websocketpp/wiki/wsperf
- https://github.com/zaphoyd/websocketpp/wiki/wsperf:-stress_test
Build wsperf:
git clone git:https://github.com/zaphoyd/websocketpp.git
cd websocketpp
scons
cd build/release/wsperf
Run wsperf in server mode:
wsperf -s
Start a testee server:
wstest -m testeeserver -w ws:https://127.0.0.1:9000
Start wstest to control wsperf:
wstest -m wsperfcontrol -w ws:https://127.0.0.1:9050
wsperf is running in server mode, which means it can be controlled
via wstest running in wsperfcontrol
mode.
wsperf will perform test against the testee as controlled from wstest.
The tests to be run are provided in a test specification. When wstest is run without providing a test specification, it will create an example (which has happened as we did above).
Here is the generated test spec:
{
"options": {
"debug": false
},
"servers": [
{
"name": "AutobahnPython",
"uri": "ws:https://127.0.0.1:9000",
"desc": "Autobahn WebSocket Python on localhost"
}
],
"testsets": [
{
"mode": "echo",
"options": {
"outfile": "report_echo.txt",
"digits": 0,
"sep": "\t",
"rtts": false,
"quantile_count": 10,
"count": 1000,
"timeout": 100000,
"binary": true,
"sync": true,
"verify": false
},
"cases": [
{"size": 0},
{"size": 64},
{"size": 1024}
]
}
]
}
A test spec must provide a list of servers and a list of testsets. Each testset must specify the test mode (currently only "echo"). Options specify tunables that apply to the complete testset:
outfile
- name of the output file to write resultsdigits
- numbers of digits to round results tosep
- seperator character used for writing resultsrtts
- output Round-trip times of each and every messagequantile_count
- number of quantiles in result statistics
A list of cases specifies the actual test cases. Test cases for echo have the following parameters:
count
- number of message to sendsize
- size of messages in bytestimeout
- WebSocket connection timeout in secondsbinary
- iff true, send binary WebSocket messages, else textsync
- iff true, wait for message echo before sending new messageverify
- iff true, verify the content of the echo reply, else only check length
When the parameter is present in the case
, that value applies. If not, the setting
from options
on testset
applies. At least one must be present.
Here is an example output:
name outcome count size min median max avg stddev q0 q1 q2 q3 q4 q5 q6 q7 q8 q9
AutobahnPython PASSED 1000 0 129 133 541 142 24 132 132 132 132 133 134 139 149 153 541
AutobahnPython PASSED 1000 64 177 193 650 197 25 179 180 190 191 193 194 195 204 219 650
AutobahnPython PASSED 1000 1024 490 543 907 548 53 497 498 501 508 543 571 579 591 600 907
All times are in microseconds. The single most import column is median
. The columns q0
to q9
give
the upper bounds of the respective quantile.
UNDER DEVELOPMENT
This mode is used to control distributed sets of wsperf (running in slave mode). wsperf is a WebSocket performance probe developed as part of WebSocket++.
Provides test WAMP client and server to aid in both learning WAMP and developing WAMP conforming implementations.
wstest -d -m wampserver -w ws:https://localhost:9000
wstest -d -m wampclient -w <Your Server IP:Port>
massconnect
mode can be used to test the maximum number of WebSocket connections a server can sustain and how many WebSocket opening handshakes a server can do per second.
The mode is controlled via a spec file. When no spec file is provided, a template is generated:
wstest -m massconnect
Edit the file for your needs, and restart
wstest -m massconnect -s massconnect.json
You can provide a list of servers.
The ramp up of WebSocket connections is controlled via 3 parameters:
batchsize
batchdelay
retrydelay
wstest will start batchsize
connections in a fast loop, then wait batchdelay
ms, and go on until connections
is reached.
Depending on network settings and server, this can quickly overwhelm a server, and the server will deny/fail connections. Those are retried after retrydelay
ms. Thus, wstest will not give up until connections
is reached.
The number of connections wstest can open on a server is limited by the number of epheremal ports on the machine on the outgoing interface / IP. Something like 64k at most. If you need to test the server with more connections, currently you will need to run multiple instances of wstest (on different machines).
On Windows, you will need to tune some settings for large numbers of outgoing TCP connections. Edit the registry entry
Computer/HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrenControlSet\Services\Tcpip\Parameters
and create or set the key MaxUserPort
to DWORD
with value 65534
. I forgot if you need to reboot .. probably.
For more information, current test reports and a list of users (over 30 projects/companies), please visit the project's homepage.
Get in touch on IRC #autobahn
on chat.freenode.net
or join the mailing list.