This sample shows you how to deploy Locust, a modern load testing framework, to Amazon Elastic Container Service (ECS).
- ✅ From small to massive-scale load test with AWS serverless technologies
- ✅ Highly cost-efficient with Fargate spot capcity
- ✅ Instant deployment using AWS CDK
It leverages a serverless compute engine Fargate with spot capacity, which allows you to run massive-scale load test without managing infrastructure and with relatively low cost (70% cheaper than using on-demand capacity).
Below is the architecture diagram of this sample.
We deploy Locust with distributed mode, hence two ECS services - Locust master and worker service.
The Locust master consists of a single Fargate task, and its Web GUI can be accessed via Application Load Balancer.
Unlike master node, there can be N Locust worker nodes, which is usually the dominant factor of load test infrastructure cost. We use Fargate spot capacity for Locust workers, allowing you to run load tests at most 70% cheaper than on-demand capacity.
Note that all the access from Locust workers go through NAT Gateway, which makes it easy to restrict access by IP addresses on load test target servers, because all the Locust workers shares the same outbound IP address.
To deploy this sample to your own AWS account, please follow the steps below.
Before you deploy, make sure you install the following tools in your local environment.
- Docker
- Node.js (v14 or newer)
- AWS CLI
Also you need Administorator IAM policy to deploy this sample.
You need to set several parameters to configure the system.
Please open bin/load_test.ts and find property named allowedCidrs
.
This property specifies the CIDRs which can access the Locust web UI ALB.
You should set this as narrrow as possible because otherwise unwanted users can access your Locust control panel.
To change the AWS region to deploy this samples to, please replace us-west-2
in env.region
property to your desired region.
For additional security, you can set certificateArn
and env.account
to protect ALB with TLS.
By default Locust Web GUI can be accessed with HTTP. You can make it HTTPS by those properties.
You can also enable basic authentication for Locust web UI by specifying webUsername
and webPassword
properties.
After confirming the parameters, you can proceed to CDK deployment.
First, you need to setup CDK environment by the following command:
npm ci
npx cdk bootstrap
You only need those commands once for your AWS environment (pair of account ID and region.)
Now you can deploy your CDK project.
npx cdk deploy
Deployment usually takes less than 10 minutes.
After a successful deployment, you can find some stack outputs like below in your terminal:
✅ LoadTestStack
✨ Deployment time: 109.55s
Outputs:
LoadTestStack.EcsClusterArn = arn:aws:ecs:ap-northeast-1:123456789012:cluster/LoadTestStack-ClusterEB0386A7-xxxxxx
LoadTestStack.MasterServiceLoadBalancerDNSD23C49A7 = LoadT-Maste-1MZQ6IPOOJ262-xxxxxxx.ap-northeast-1.elb.amazonaws.com
LoadTestStack.MasterServiceServiceURL66A06FCF = http://LoadT-Maste-1MZQ6IPOOJ262-xxxxxxx.ap-northeast-1.elb.amazonaws.com
LoadTestStack.WorkerServiceName = LoadTestStack-WorkerService3F60922A-xxxxxxx
You need the value of EcsClusterArn
and WorkerServiceName
in later steps, so it is recommended that you take a note of those values.
After that, please make sure that you can open the URL in LocustMasterServiceURLCA3E9210
and view Locust Web GUI like below image.
Now the deployment is completed! You can start to use Locust load tester.
There are a few things you need to know to use this sample effectively.
Depending on the amount of load you want to generate, you may need to increase Locust worker capacity.
It can be adjusted with the following command:
aws ecs update-service --cluster <EcsClusterArn> --service <WorkerServiceName> --desired-count <the number of workers>
Please replace <EcsClusterArn>
and <WorkerServiceName>
with the value you took a note when deployment, and <the number of workers>
with any integer you desire for the worker count.
Please also be aware that your default quota for the number of Fargate tasks is 1000. If you need more tasks, you can request a limit increase from Service Quotas console. You can read further detail here.
It is expected that sometimes Fargate spot fails to allocate the required capacity for your Locust workers because of insufficient capacity. That issue should resolve if you wait for certain time. However, if it continues for unacceptable time, you can always add on-demand capacity to fill your desired task count.
Please open lib/constructs/locust_worker_service.ts
and find the lines below:
capacityProviderStrategies: [
{
capacityProvider: 'FARGATE_SPOT',
weight: 1,
},
{
capacityProvider: 'FARGATE',
weight: 0,
},
],
You can specify the ratio of spot (FARGATE_SPOT
) vs on-demand (FARGATE
) by the weight
properties. The default is to use spot 100% (1:0).
Default locustfile is placed on ./app/locustfile.py
.
You can modify this file as you like. To deploy your change, run cdk deploy
again.
Also, you can build and run Locust locally by the following commands:
cd app
docker build . -t locust
docker run -p 8089:8089 locust
To avoid incurring future charges, clean up the resources you created.
You can remove all the AWS resources deployed by this sample running the following command:
npx cdk destroy --force
See CONTRIBUTING for more information.
This library is licensed under the MIT-0 License. See the LICENSE file.