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Users of Loadmill can use this node module to:
Using npm:
npm install loadmill --save
Using yarn:
yarn add loadmill
The following code runs a very simple load test that gets a single page from www.myapp.com
every second for one minute:
const loadmill = require('loadmill')({token: process.env.LOADMILL_API_TOKEN});
// You may also give a path to a valid JSON file instead:
loadmill.run({requests: [{url: "www.myapp.com"}]}, (err, id) => {
if (!err) {
console.log("Load test started: " + id);
}
});
The JSON test configuration may be exported from the loadmill test editor or from an old test run. Read more about the configuration format here.
Every function that accepts a callback will return a promise instead if no callback is provided (and vice versa):
loadmill.run("./load-tests/simple.json")
.then(id => console.log("Load test started: ", id))
.catch(err => console.error("Something bad: ", err));
Since load tests usually run for at least a few minutes, the loadmill client does not wait for them to finish by default.
You can explicitly wait for a test to finish using the wait
function:
loadmill.run("./load-tests/long_test.json")
.then(loadmill.wait)
// -> {id: string, passed: boolean, url: string}
.then(result => console.log(result));
You may also use a test configuration to run a functional test (i.e. a single iteration of requests) - this is usually useful for testing your API for regressions after every new deployment. Functional tests are expected to be shorter and thus are awaited on by default:
loadmill.runFunctional("./load-tests/api_test.json")
// -> {id: string, passed: boolean, url: string}
.then(result => console.log(result));
You will usually want some part of your test to be dynamic, e.g. the host name of the tested server. With Loadmill, this is made easy by using parameters. You may set/override parameter defaults for a test by passing a hash mapping parameter names to values:
// Parameters may come before or instead of a callback:
loadmill.run("./load-tests/parametrized_test.json", {host: "test.myapp.com", port: 4443}, (err, id) => {/*...*/});
// You may also use predefined parameter values as well:
loadmill.runFunctional("./load-tests/parametrized_test.json", {host: "test.${parentDomain}"});
Coming Soon...
FAQs
A node.js module for running load tests and functional tests on loadmill.com
The npm package loadmill receives a total of 965 weekly downloads. As such, loadmill popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that loadmill demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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