We're developing a web application which must tolerate noticeable amount of load. I'm running my tests on a HP (Proliant DL 380) server (two 3.6GHz Xeon cpus, 16 GBs of RAM, ...). I'm using Apache JMeter and pylot to run load tests (they kinda show similar results).
In one scenario, I configured the load testing program to hit my index page ,using just one thread, as much as it can. The index page is about 60KB and consists of about 10 ajax calls, lots of JavaScript and jQuery Codes, required CSS and etc. The results I got was, well, disappointing.
Full index.jsp page:
- Throughput (req/sec): 3.567
- Response Time (secs): 0.278
So I removed every ajax call, got rid of charts and also CSS (but not JS)
- Throughput (req/sec): 6.082
- Response Time (secs): 0.161
Still very low! So I built an static index page in HTML format which contains all the data with the same size (without any server side and client side computation)
- Throughput (req/sec): 20.787
- Response Time (secs): 0.046
Wow, that was a breakthrough! Now I added some of the JavaScript codes to the index.html page
- Throughput (req/sec): 9.617
- Response Time (secs): 0.103
Well, I think the bottleneck has been found, Java Script codes. I need to find out how many req/sec "the server" can handle and since java Script is run client side, I don't think I should include it in this test. So should load testing tools process JS codes? (they seem to be doing this)
Another key question is, according to hardware, content size and aforementioned configs, is this amount of throughput plausible? shouldn't I expect more? my expectation is 500 req/sec! is the only solution adding hardware?!
BTW, the webapp has been built using Java+Struts2+JSP+Hibernate+MySQL. it is also distributed over multiple servers using haproxy. but the aforementioned tests was run on a single server.