--- title: Benchmark --- ### Benchmark Environments n1-highcpu-8 (8 vCPUs, 7.2 GB memory) on Google Cloud But we **only** used 4 cores to run APISIX, and left 4 cores for system and [wrk](https://github.com/wg/wrk), which is the HTTP benchmarking tool. ### Benchmark Test for reverse proxy Only used APISIX as the reverse proxy server, with no logging, limit rate, or other plugins enabled, and the response size was 1KB. #### QPS The x-axis means the size of CPU core, and the y-axis is QPS. ![benchmark-1](../../assets/images/benchmark-1.jpg) #### Latency Note the y-axis latency in **microsecond(μs)** not millisecond. ![latency-1](../../assets/images/latency-1.jpg) #### Flame Graph The result of Flame Graph: ![flamegraph-1](../../assets/images/flamegraph-1.jpg) And if you want to run the benchmark test in your machine, you should run another Nginx to listen 80 port. :::note You can fetch the `admin_key` from `config.yaml` and save to an environment variable with the following command: ```bash admin_key=$(yq '.deployment.admin.admin_key[0].key' conf/config.yaml | sed 's/"//g') ``` ::: ```shell curl http://127.0.0.1:9180/apisix/admin/routes/1 -H "X-API-KEY: $admin_key" -X PUT -d ' { "methods": ["GET"], "uri": "/hello", "upstream": { "type": "roundrobin", "nodes": { "127.0.0.1:80": 1, "127.0.0.2:80": 1 } } }' ``` then run wrk: ```shell wrk -d 60 --latency http://127.0.0.1:9080/hello ``` ### Benchmark Test for reverse proxy, enabled 2 plugins Only used APISIX as the reverse proxy server, enabled the limit rate and prometheus plugins, and the response size was 1KB. #### QPS The x-axis means the size of CPU core, and the y-axis is QPS. ![benchmark-2](../../assets/images/benchmark-2.jpg) #### Latency Note the y-axis latency in **microsecond(μs)** not millisecond. ![latency-2](../../assets/images/latency-2.jpg) #### Flame Graph The result of Flame Graph: ![flamegraph-2](../../assets/images/flamegraph-2.jpg) And if you want to run the benchmark test in your machine, you should run another Nginx to listen 80 port. ```shell curl http://127.0.0.1:9180/apisix/admin/routes/1 -H "X-API-KEY: $admin_key" -X PUT -d ' { "methods": ["GET"], "uri": "/hello", "plugins": { "limit-count": { "count": 999999999, "time_window": 60, "rejected_code": 503, "key": "remote_addr" }, "prometheus":{} }, "upstream": { "type": "roundrobin", "nodes": { "127.0.0.1:80": 1, "127.0.0.2:80": 1 } } }' ``` then run wrk: ```shell wrk -d 60 --latency http://127.0.0.1:9080/hello ``` For more reference on how to run the benchmark test, you can see this [PR](https://github.com/apache/apisix/pull/6136) and this [script](https://gist.github.com/membphis/137db97a4bf64d3653aa42f3e016bd01). :::tip If you want to run the benchmark with a large number of connections, You may have to update the [**keepalive**](https://github.com/apache/apisix/blob/master/conf/config.yaml.example#L241) config by adding the configuration to [`config.yaml`](https://github.com/apache/apisix/blob/master/conf/config.yaml) and reload APISIX. Connections exceeding this number will become short connections. You can run the following command to test the benchmark with a large number of connections: ```bash wrk -t200 -c5000 -d30s http://127.0.0.1:9080/hello ``` For more details, you can refer to [Module ngx_http_upstream_module](http://nginx.org/en/docs/http/ngx_http_upstream_module.html). :::