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# Updated by Siege %_VERSION%, %_DATE% # Copyright 2000-2016 by %_AUTHOR% # # Siege configuration file -- edit as necessary # For more information about configuring and running this program, # visit: http://www.joedog.org/ # # Variable declarations. You can set variables here for use in the # directives below. Example: # PROXY = proxy.joedog.org # Reference variables inside ${} or $(), example: # proxy-host = ${PROXY} # # # You can also reference ENVIRONMENT variables without actually # declaring them, example: # # logfile = $(HOME)/var/siege.log # # Verbose mode: With this feature enabled, siege will print the # result of each transaction to stdout. (Enabled by default) # # ex: verbose = true|false # verbose = true # # Color mode: This option works in conjunction with verbose mode. # It tells siege whether or not it should display its output in # color-coded output. (Enabled by default) # # ex: color = on | off # color = on # # Quiet mode: With this featured enabled, siege goes mostly silent. # It will display the opening message and the final stats but nothing # else. If you enable quiet mode with -g/--get then siege will be # completely silent (ideal for scripting). In order to gauge the # success of the run, you'll have to rely on the exit status: # # #!/bin/sh # # SIEGE=/home/jdfulmer/bin/siege # # $SIEGE -g https://www.joedog.org/ # if [ $? -eq 0 ] ; then # echo "Whoo hoo!" # else # echo "D'oh!" # fi # # This is the same as running siege with -q/--quiet # # Ex: quiet = true # quiet = false # # JSON output - With this feature enabled, siege will print the final stats as # JSON to stdout. It monopolizes stdout, superceding verbose and debug modes. # # The default value is false. # # ex: json_output = true | false # json_output = false # # Show logfile location. By default, siege displays the logfile # location at the end of every run when logging. You can turn this # message off with this directive. # # ex: show-logfile = false # show-logfile = true # # Default logging status, true turns logging on. # ex: logging = true|false # logging = false # # Logfile, the default siege logfile is $PREFIX/var/siege.log This # directive allows you to choose an alternative log file. Environment # variables may be used as shown in the examples: # # ex: logfile = /home/jeff/var/log/siege.log # logfile = ${HOME}/var/log/siege.log # logfile = ${LOGFILE} # logfile = ${HOME}/siege.log # # Get method: Use this directive to select an HTTP method for siege # when it's run in get mode, i.e., siege -g/--get URL. You may select # GET or HEAD. The default method is HEAD. As expected HEAD prints just # the headers and GET prints the entire page. # # NOTE: This only applies when siege is invoked with -g/--get. All # other requests methods will be made on the basis of the URL. # # example: gmethod = GET # gmethod = HEAD # # Parser # This directive allows you to turn on the html parser. With this # feature enabled, siege will harvest resources like style sheets, # images, javascript, etc. and make additional requests for those # items. # # HTML parsing was added to version 4.0.0 It is enabled by default. # When the parser is enabled, care must be given to other features. # For example, we allow to set accept-encoding to anything you'd like # but if you want to parse those pages, then you MUST set the encoding # to a supported one. # # With the default options set, you should be able to enable the parser # with success. # # Use this feature to enable it. (true = on, false = off) # # Example: parser = true # parser = true # # No-follow # When the parser is enabled, siege will grab HTML resources within # the page and download those elements as well. This directive allows # you to specify hostnames to which you do NOT want to make requests. # # You can repeat this directive as many times as you like. Enter one # per line with 'key = value' syntax. # # Example: nofollow = www.joedog.org # nofollow = ad.doubleclick.net nofollow = pagead2.googlesyndication.com nofollow = ads.pubsqrd.com nofollow = ib.adnxs.com # # CSV Verbose format: with this option, you can choose to format # verbose output in traditional siege format or comma separated # format. The latter will allow you to redirect output to a file # for import into a spread sheet, i.e., siege > file.csv # # ex: csv = true|false (default false) # # csv = true # # Timestamp format: with this option, you can choose to print a # timestamp each line of output. # # example: timestamp = true|false (default false) # # [Sat, 2010-11-20 10:39:13] HTTP/1.1 200 0.12 secs: 4003 bytes ==> / # # timestamp = true # # Full URL verbose format: By default siege displays the URL path and # not the full URL. With this option, you can instruct siege to show # the complete URL. # # ex: fullurl = true|false (default false) # # HTTP/1.1 301 0.34 secs: 311 bytes ==> GET https://www.joedog.org/ # # fullurl = true # # Display id: in verbose mode, display the siege user id associated # with the HTTP transaction information # # ex: display-id = true|false # # 100) HTTP/1.1 200 0.31 secs: 35338 bytes ==> GET /images/bbc.jpg # # display-id = # # Limit: This directive places a cap on the number of threads siege # will generate. The default value is 255 which corresponds with # apache's default value. If you schedule more clients than apache is # configured to handle, then requests will back up and you will make a # mess. DO NOT INCREASE THIS NUMBER UNLESS YOU CONFIGURED APACHE TO # HANDLE MORE THAN 256 SIMULTANEOUS REQUESTS. # # ex: limit = 1023 (default is 255) # limit = 255 # # HTTP protocol. Options HTTP/1.1 and HTTP/1.0. Some webservers have # broken implementation of the 1.1 protocol which skews throughput # evaluations. If you notice some siege clients hanging for extended # periods of time, change this to HTTP/1.0 # # ex: protocol = HTTP/1.1 # protocol = HTTP/1.0 # protocol = HTTP/1.1 # # Chunked encoding is required by HTTP/1.1 protocol but siege allows # you to turn it off as desired. This feature is generally more useful # to siege developers than siege users. You should probably leave it # set to 'true' # # ex: chunked = true # chunked = true # # Cache revalidation. Siege supports cache revalidation for both ETag # and Last-modified headers. If a copy is still fresh, the server # responds with 304. While this feature is required for HTTP/1.1, it # may not be welcomed for load testing. We allow you to breach the # protocol and turn off caching # # HTTP/1.1 200 0.00 secs: 2326 bytes ==> /apache_pb.gif # HTTP/1.1 304 0.00 secs: 0 bytes ==> /apache_pb.gif # HTTP/1.1 304 0.00 secs: 0 bytes ==> /apache_pb.gif # # Siege also supports Cache-control headers. Consider this server # response: Cache-Control: max-age=3 # That tells siege to cache the file for three seconds. While it # doesn't actually store the file, it will logically grab it from # its cache. In verbose output, it designates a cached resource # with (c): # # HTTP/1.1 200 0.25 secs: 159 bytes ==> GET /expires/ # HTTP/1.1 200 1.48 secs: 498419 bytes ==> GET /expires/Otter_in_Southwold.jpg # HTTP/1.1 200 0.24 secs: 159 bytes ==> GET /expires/ # HTTP/1.1 200(C) 0.00 secs: 0 bytes ==> GET /expires/Otter_in_Southwold.jpg # # NOTE: with color enabled, cached URLs appear in green # # ex: cache = true # cache = false # # Connection directive. Options "close" and "keep-alive" Starting with # version 2.57, siege implements persistent connections in accordance # to RFC 2068 using both chunked encoding and content-length directives # to determine the page size. # # To run siege with persistent connections set this to keep-alive. # # CAUTION: Use the keep-alive directive with care. # DOUBLE CAUTION: This directive does not work well on HPUX # TRIPLE CAUTION: We don't recommend you set this to keep-alive # ex: connection = close # connection = keep-alive # connection = close # # Default number of simulated concurrent users. This feature # corresponds with the -c NUM / --concurrent=NULL command line # argument. The command line takes precedent over this directive. # # ex: concurrent = 50 # concurrent = 25 # # Default duration of the siege. The right hand argument has a modifier # which specifies the time units, H=hours, M=minutes, and S=seconds. If # a modifier is not specified, then minutes are assumed. # # NOTE: The command line argument -t5m / --time=5m takes precedence # over this directive # # ex: time = 50M # # time = # # Repetitions. The length of siege may be specified in client reps # rather than a time duration. Instead of specifying a time span, # you can tell each siege instance to hit the server X number of times. # So if you chose 'reps = 20' and you've selected 10 concurrent users, # then siege will hit the server 200 times. # # NOTE: The command line argument -r 5 / --reps=5 / --reps=once takes # precedence over this directive # # ex: reps = 20 # # reps = # # URLs file: Set at configuration time, the default URLs file is # PREFIX/etc/urls.txt So if you configured the siege build with # --prefix=/usr/local then the urls.txt file is installed in # /usr/local/etc/urls.txt. Use the "file = " directive to configure # an alternative URLs file. You may use environment variables # as shown in the examples below: # # ex: file = /export/home/jdfulmer/MYURLS.txt # file = $HOME/etc/urls.txt # file = $URLSFILE # # NOTE: The command line -f FILE / --file=FILE takes precedence over # this directive # # file = # # Default URL, this is a single URL that you want to test. This is # usually set at the command line with the -u option. When used, this # option overrides the urls.txt (-f FILE/--file=FILE) option. You will # HAVE to comment this out for in order to use the urls.txt file option. # # NOTE: you may do the same thing by passing a URL to siege at the # command line: # $ siege -c10 -r10 "www.joedog.org/" # # Generally, it's a good idea to wrap a command line URL in quotes # # ex: url = https://shemp.whoohoo.com/docs/index.jsp # # url = # # Default delay between each request by a single thread. This value # is not included in the request time. If a thread sleeps for two # seconds then completes a 0.5 second request, the time of the request # is 0.5 seconds, not 2.5 seconds. # # NOTE: the command line -d NUM / --delay=NULL takes precedent over # this directive # # ex: delay = 1.5 # delay = 5 # delay = 0.0 # # Connection timeout value. Set the value in seconds for socket # connection timeouts. The default value is 30 seconds. # # ex: timeout = 30 # # timeout = # # Session expiration: This directive allows you to delete all cookies # after you pass through the URLs. This means siege will grab a new # session with each run through its URLs. The default value is false. # # ex: expire-session = true # # expire-session = # # Cookie support: by default siege accepts cookies. This directive is # available to disable that support. Set cookies to 'false' to refuse # cookies. Set it to 'true' to accept them. The default value is true. # If you want to maintain state with the server, then this MUST be set # to true. # # ex: cookies = false # # cookies = # # Failures: This is the number of total connection failures allowed # before siege aborts. Connection failures (timeouts, socket failures, # etc.) are combined with 400 and 500 level errors in the final stats, # but those errors do not count against the abort total. If you set # this total to 10, then siege will abort after ten socket timeouts, # but it will NOT abort after ten 404s. This is designed to prevent a # run-away mess on an unattended siege. # # The default value is 1024 # # ex: failures = 50 # # failures = # # Internet simulation. If true, siege clients will hit the URLs in the # urls.txt file randomly, thereby simulating internet usage. If false, # siege will run through the urls.txt file in order from first to last # and back again. # # ex: internet = true # internet = false # # Default benchmarking value, If true, there is NO delay between server requests, # siege runs as fast as the web server and the network will let it. Set this to # false for load testing. # # ex: benchmark = true # benchmark = false # # User-agent: With this directive you can set the siege user-agent The default # agent is: JoeDog/1.40 [en] (X11; I; Siege #.##) With this directive, you can # mimic various browsers or you can make up something fun. Limey, our English # bulldog, was recovering from minor surgery at the time we added this feature # so we like to dedicate the example in his honor: # # ex: user-agent = Limey The Bulldog # # Other examples harvested from our logs: # Chrome: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/47.0.2526.111 Safari/537.36k # IE 6: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.1; .NET CLR 1.1.4322) # IE 7: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 7.0; Windows NT 5.1; .NET CLR 2.0.50727; .NET CLR 3.0.04506.30) # IE 8: Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 8.0; Windows NT 6.1) # IE 9: Mozilla/5.0 (MSIE 9.0; Windows NT 6.1; Trident/5.0) # IE 10: Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; MSIE 10.0; Windows NT 6.2; Trident/6.0) # FF 3.6: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.9.2.4410) Gecko/20110902 Firefox/3.6 # FF 9: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.6; rv:9.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/9.0 # Safari: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 6.1; tr-TR) AppleWebKit/533.20.25 Version/5.0.4 Safari/533.20.27 # Opera: Opera/9.80 (Windows NT 6.1; U; es-ES) Presto/2.9.181 Version/12.00 # iPhone: Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; U; CPU iPhone OS 4_3_2 like Mac OS X; en-us) Version/5.0.2 Mobile/8H7 Safari/6533.18.5 # Android: Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; U; Android 2.3; en-us) AppleWebKit/999+ (KHTML, like Gecko) Safari/999.9 # Kindle: Mozilla/5.0 (Linux; U; en-US) AppleWebKit/528.5+ (KHTML, like Gecko, Safari/528.5+) Version/4.0 Kindle/3.0 # Goolge: Googlebot/2.1 (+http://www.googlebot.com/bot.html) # Yahoo: Mozilla/5.0 (compatible; Yahoo! Slurp; http://help.yahoo.com/help/us/ysearch/slurp) # # user-agent = # # Accept-encoding. This option allows you to report to the server the # various content-encodings you support. If you're not using HTML parser # (parser = false), then you can specify any encoding. When the parser is # disabled, siege just reads the content then immediately discards it. # However, if you use the parser, then you MUST set a supported content # encoder. Currently, siege supports two: deflate and gzip. # # NOTE: We plan to add support for brotli and bzip2; you can hasten # that effort by showing us some love: # # # ex: accept-encoding = # accept-encoding = gzip # accept-encoding = deflate # accept-encoding = gzip, deflate accept-encoding = gzip, deflate # # URL escaping was first added to version 3.0.3. It was considered # experimental until version 3.0.9 when it was turned on by default. # # This feature remains in siege as a mechanism to turn off escape # encoding. Here is an example of two URLs. The first has spaces # included in the file name and in the second those spaces were # encoded to %20. # # http://www.joedog.org/jukebox.php?band=the days of new # http://www.joedog.org/jukebox.php?band=the%20days%20of%20the%20new # # ex: url-escaping = false # url-escaping = true # # WWW-Authenticate credentials. Currently siege supports two types # of HTTP authentication: digest and basic. It has partial support for # Microsoft's NTLM but in practice that only works with the -g/--get # option. (as of siege 3.1.1) # # When siege makes a request for a page that requires user authentication, # it will search its logins for a matching realm. If it finds credentials # for a realm, it will attempt to login with that username and password. # # If it fails to match the realm, it will use its default login credentials # (which are designated with the keyword "all" or no specified realm. # # If you do not supply a realm, then it will default to "all" which instructs # siege to send as default. # # You may enter many logins with each on its own separate line. The only # limitation is memory and realm name. You can't use the same realm name # more than once. # # ex: login = jdfulmer:topsecret:Admin # login = jeff:supersecret:all # login = jeff:supersecret # # login = # # Login URL. This feature was designed to provide a login url in order # to kick off a session with form-based authentication. If this directive # has a value, then every siege client will make a request to it BEFORE it # uses its list of URLs. # # NOTE: siege will only make this request once. After it's hit this URL # it will not request it again until its next start-up. # # ex: login-url = http://eos.joedog.org/login.jsp POST name=jeff&pass=foo # # Starting with version 2.69, siege can make multiple login request on a # thread-by-thread basis. As each thread is created it grab the next unused # login URL in the list. If you schedule more threads than login-urls, new # threads will wrap back around and loop back through the list. # # ex: login-url = http://www.haha.com/login.php?name=homer&pass=whoohoo # login-url = http://www.haha.com/login.php?name=marge&pass=ohhomie # login-url = http://www.haha.com/login.php?name=bart&pass=eatMyShorts # # login-url = # # FTP login - There are two ways to login to an ftp server with siege. You # can use this directive to set login credentials or you can set them in a # URL in RFC-1738 format: ftp://user:pass@host.com/ink.jpg # # The format for this directive is USER:PASS:HOST separated by colon ':' # The host field is optional. If you don't set a host, then siege will send # the same user:pass to every FTP server. You may use this directive MULTIPLE # times. Siege will store each instance in memory and send the appropriate # credentials at login time depending on the hostname in the URL. # # ex: ftp-login: jdfulmer:whoohoo:ftp.joedog.org # ftp-login: jdfulmer:password # # ftp-login = # # FTP unique - This directive determines whether siege will upload files with # the same name (and therefore overwrite whatever is on disk) or upload files # each with a unique name. If true, siege will rewrite the file name with a # timestamp in its name, i.e., p.jpg => p-3086060432.jpg # # The default value is true. # # ex: unique = false # unique = true # # SSL-cert: This optional feature allows you to specify a path to a client # certificate. It is not necessary to specify a certificate in order to use # https. If you don't know why you would want one, then you probably don't need # it. Use openssl to generate a certificate and key with the following command: # # $ openssl req -nodes -new -days 365 -newkey rsa:1024 -keyout key.pem -out cert.pem # # Specify a path to cert.pem as follows: # ex: ssl-cert = /home/jeff/.certs/cert.pem # # ssl-cert = # # SSL-key: Use this option to specify the key you generated with the command # above. ex: ssl-key = /home/jeff/.certs/key.pem You may actually skip this # option and combine both your cert and your key in a single file: # $ cat key.pem > client.pem # $ cat cert.pem >> client.pem # Now set the path for ssl-cert: # ex: ssl-cert = /home/jeff/.certs/client.pem # (in this scenario, you comment out ssl-key) # # ssl-key = # # SSL-timeout: This option sets a connection timeout for the ssl library # ex: ssl-timeout = 30 # # ssl-timeout = # # SSL-ciphers # You can use this feature to select a specific ssl cipher for HTTPs. To # view the ones available with your library run the following command: # # $ openssl ciphers # # ex: ssl-ciphers = EXP-RC4-MD5 # # ssl-ciphers = # # Proxy Host: You can use siege to test a proxy server but you need to # configure it to use one. You'll need to name a proxy host and the port # it's listening on. The settings are proxy-host and proxy-port. The # following example shows how to use them: # # ex: proxy-host = proxy.joedog.org # proxy-port = 3123 # # proxy-host = # proxy-port = # # Proxy-Authenticate: When siege hits a proxy server which requires # username and password authentication, it will this username and # password to the server. The format is username, password and optional # realm each separated by a colon. You may enter more than one proxy-login # as long as each one has a different realm. If you do not enter a realm, # then siege will send that login information to all proxy challenges. If # you have more than one proxy-login, then scout will attempt to match the # login to the realm. # # ex: proxy-login: jeff:secret:corporate # proxy-login: jeff:whoohoo # # proxy-login = # # Redirection support. By default, siege will follow a HTTP redirect to the # Location provided by the server. If it's parser is enabled, then it will # also follow and HTML META redirect. If, for some reason, you do not wish # wish to follow redirects, then set this redirective to false. # # NOTE: redirect support is enabled by default. # # ex: follow-location = false # # follow-location = # # end of siegerc
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