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Artemis Benchmarking-Tool

The Artemis Benchmarking-Tool is a web application that can be used to simulate the workload of a large number of students on an Artemis instance. The application provides functionality to evaluate the performance of Artemis and to identify bottlenecks. It is part of the Artemis project, which is developed at the Chair of Applied Software Engineering at the Technical University of Munich.

The tool`s main functionality is to simulate exam conductions on Artemis with a large number of students. It does so by mirroring the actions of students on Artemis, such as logging in, starting an exam, submitting exercises, and submitting the exam by sending HTTP requests to the Artemis server. During the simulation, the tool collects performance metrics such as the response times of the Artemis server and the number of requests. It can also be connected to Prometheus to collect additional metrics such as the CPU usage of the Artemis server.

To simplify the simulation process, the tool can create courses and exams on Artemis. It can also be used to create test users on Artemis, which are used to simulate the students.

The Benchmarking-Tool is a Jhipster application. For more information about Jhipster, see the JHipster Homepage and latest documentation.

Setup

The Benchmarking Tool is a Spring Boot application with an Angular client. It requires a MySQL database server. To start a MySQL server in a Docker container, run:

docker compose -f src/main/docker/mysql.yml up -d

Configuration

Before running the application, you need to specify some configuration options. The configuration files are located in src/main/resources/config/.

Some of these values are confidential and should not be committed to the repository. For a development setup, you can use the src/main/resources/config/application-local.yml file to store these values. The application-local.yml file is already added to the .gitignore file and will be used when running the application in the local profile. For a production environment, the configuration should be set using environment variables.

  • For the database (in a development environment, the default config should be sufficient):
    • spring.datasource.url: The URL of the database.
    • spring.datasource.username: The username to connect to the database.
    • spring.datasource.password: The password to connect to the database.
  • For the connection to Prometheus:
    • prometheus.api-url: The URL of the Prometheus server.
    • prometheus.auth-token: The base64 encoded basic-auth token to authenticate with the Prometheus server.
  • For the mail service:
    • spring.mail.host: The host of the mail server.
    • spring.mail.port: The port of the mail server.
    • spring.mail.username: The username to connect to the mail server.
    • spring.mail.password: The password to connect to the mail server.
    • jhipster.mail.from: The email address to send emails from.
    • jhipster.mail.base-url: The base URL of the application.
  • Security:
    • jhipster.security.authentication.jwt.base64-secret: The base64 encoded secret to sign the JWT tokens. If the application is not reachable from the internet, the default value should be sufficient.

The Benchmarking Tool can be connected to a number of Artemis Servers (currently TS1, TS3, TS7, TS8, STAGING, STAGING2, PRODUCTION). For each server, a number of configuration values needs to be set. Prefix all the following keys with artemis.{server}., e.g., artemis.ts1.:

  • url: The URL of the Artemis Server.
  • cleanup-enabled: Whether the tool should clean up (i.e., delete created courses and exams) after the simulation. Since deleting large courses and exams can cause massive load on the Artemis system, we recommend to disable this option. If enabled, the CI Status will not be available.
  • is-local: Whether the Artemis server uses the Integrated Code Lifecycle setup. This is important for fetching the CI Status after the simulation.
  • prometheus-instances.artemis: The name of the Prometheus instance for the Artemis Server.
  • prometheus-instances.vcs: The name of the Prometheus instance for the Version Control System of the Artemis Server.
  • prometheus-instances.ci: The name of the Prometheus instance for the CI system of the Artemis Server.

Building for production

To build the application as a JAR for production, run:

./gradlew -Pprod clean bootJar

This will create a JAR file in the build/libs directory.

Alternatively, you can build a WAR file by running:

./gradlew -Pprod -Pwar clean bootWar

After executing the JAR or WAR file, the application will be available on http://localhost:8080.

Running with IntelliJ run configurations

For development, the recommended way to run the application is to use the provided IntelliJ run configurations. They all use the local profile, which is configured to use the application-local.yml file for configuration.

  • Benchmarking (Server): Starts the application with the dev profile.
  • Benchmarking (Server-Prod): Starts the application with the prod profile.
  • Benchmarking (Client): Starts the client separately. This allows to use Angular's live-reload feature.

We recommend running the server and client separately during development by running Benchmarking (Server) (or Server-Prod) and Benchmarking (Client). The application will be available on http://localhost:9000 with Angular's live-reload feature enabled.

Docker Setup

You can build a Docker image of the application by running

npm run java:docker

or

npm run java:docker:arm64

for arm64 processors like Mac with the M1 processor family.

This will create a Docker image named artemis-benchmarking in the production profile. To run the Docker image, you can use the docker-compose file src/main/docker/app.yml. This will also start a MySQL server.

After starting the containers with

docker compose -f src/main/docker/app.yml up -d

the application will be available on http://localhost:8080.

Instead of creating a Docker image, you can use the latest published Docker image from the GitHub Container Registry. To start a container with that image, you can use the docker-compose file docker-compose.yml by running

docker compose up -d

This will also start a MySQL server. The application will be available on http://localhost:8080. When using this docker-compose file, you can set the environment variables in the files config/benchmarking.env and config/mysql.env. The published Docker image is not compatible with arm64 processors and will not work on Mac with the M1 processor family.

User Management

On the first start with a new database, the application will create a default admin user with the username admin and the password admin. If the application is reachable from the internet, it is necessary to change the password of the admin user immediately after the first login.

The application comes with two user roles: ROLE_ADMIN and ROLE_USER, but only the ROLE_ADMIN has access to the application's functionality.

Administrators can create new users in the Administration > User Management section of the application. New users can not register themselves.

Development

Please read the Setup section to learn how to configure and run the application for development.

The application consists of a Spring Boot server and an Angular client. The server is located in the src/main/java directory and the client in the src/main/webapp directory.

Server

The server is a Spring Boot application written in Java. The file structure is organized as follows:

  • artemisModel: Contains the models of Artemis entities. These models are used to map the JSON responses from the Artemis Server to Java objects.
  • config: Contains the configuration classes of the application.
  • domain: Contains the JPA entities of the application. In most cases, these entities are mapped to tables in the database.
  • repository: Contains the Spring Data repositories of the application. These repositories are used to access the database.
  • prometheus: Contains classes that are used to retrieve data from Prometheus. The JSON responses from Prometheus are mapped to Java objects.
  • service: Contains the service classes of the application. These classes contain the business logic of the application. They will be explained in more detail in the next section.
  • util: Contains utility classes.
  • web.rest: Contains the REST controllers of the application. These controllers are used to handle HTTP requests.
  • web.websocket: Contains the service responsible for sending messages to the client using WebSockets.

The service layer is the most important part of the server. It contains the business logic of the application. The service classes are organized as follows:

  • artemis: Contains the classes that are responsible for the interaction with Artemis.
    • interaction: Contains the classes that are responsible for interacting with Artemis. Objects of these classes represent Artemis users and send HTTP requests to Artemis.
    • util: Contains utility classes for the interaction with Artemis.
    • ArtemisUserService: The SpringBoot service that is responsible for the management of Artemis users. It is used to manage the credentials of the Artemis users that are used to interact with Artemis.
    • ArtemisConfiguration: The configuration that includes the information about the Artemis servers that the application can interact with.
  • simulation:
    • SimulationDataService: The service responsible for creating simulations and runs, fetching simulation data etc.
    • SimulationExecutionService: The service responsible for executing a simulation run. It initializes the Artemis users and instructs them to interact with Artemis.
    • SimulationQueueService: The service responsible for managing the simulation queue. It adds new runs to the queue and starts the next run when the previous run is finished.
    • SimulationResultService: The service responsible for calculating the results of a simulation run afterwards.
    • SimulationScheduleService: The service responsible for scheduling simulations.
  • CiStatusService: The service responsible for fetching the CI status after a simulation run.
  • PrometheusService: The service responsible for fetching workload data from Prometheus.

The following diagram shows the hierarchy of the services involved in the simulation process:

Service-Layer

Client

The client is an Angular application written in TypeScript. The Angular Components are structured as follows:

The "Simulations" page is the most important page of the application. It is represented by the SimulationsOverviewComponent. This component uses the SimulationsService to interact with the server.

The page for managing the Artemis Users is represented by the ArtemisUsersComponent. It uses the ArtemisUserService to interact with the server.

The subcomponents of the pages are located in the layouts directory.

The entities of the application are located in the entities directory.

Database

The application uses a MySQL database. The database schema is managed by Liquibase. The changelog files are located in the src/main/resources/config/liquibase directory. When creating a new changeset, orientate yourself on the existing changesets and follow the naming convention. Add the new changeset to the master.xml file.

The following diagram shows the current database schema:

Database-Scheme

Dependency Management

On the server side, the application uses Gradle for dependency management. The dependencies are defined in the build.gradle file. The versions of the most important dependencies are defined in the gradle.properties file. Updating them usually requires to upgrade the project to a new JHipster version. This is a non-trivial task and should be done with caution in accordance with the JHipster upgrade guide.

On the client side, the application uses NPM for dependency management. The dependencies are defined in the package.json file.

We use the GitHub Dependabot to keep the dependencies up to date. It creates pull requests with updated dependencies once per week. The configuration is located in the .github/dependabot.yml file.

CI/CD

The application uses GitHub Actions for CI/CD. The workflows are located in the .github/workflows directory.

Each pull request to the main branch triggers the ci.yml workflow. This workflow builds the application and runs the tests. The results are visible in the pull request.

Each push to the main branch triggers the deploy.yml workflow. This workflow builds a Docker image of the application and pushes it to the GitHub Container Registry. A container with the new image is deployed to and started on the production server. To manually trigger the deployment, simply re-run the workflow Build and deploy to Prod in the GitHub Actions tab. To rollback to a previous version, run the workflow for the respective commit.

Adding new Artemis Servers

To add a new Artemis Server to the Benchmarking Tool, changes in four places are necessary. The changes are trivial and should not cause any problems.

  1. In the configuration (e.g., application.yml), add a new section for the new server. Orientate yourself on the existing servers. See the Configuration for more information.
  2. In the server-side enum ArtemisServer (src/main/java/de/tum/cit/ase/util/ArtemisServer.java), add a new value for the new server.
  3. In the ArtemisConfiguration class (src/main/java/de/tum/cit/ase/service/artemis/ArtemisConfiguration.java), add new fields for the new server. Orientate yourself on the existing servers.
  4. In the client-side enum ArtemisServer (src/main/webapp/app/core/util/artemisServer.ts), add a new value for the new server. It must have the same name as the value in the server-side enum.

Removing an Artemis Server from the Benchmarking Tool is a similar process. Remove the corresponding sections from the configuration and the enums. Please note that TS1 is used as the default server in some places and for testing. If you remove TS1, you need to replace it with another server in these places.

Coding and Design Guidelines

Please follow the coding and design guidelines of the Artemis project. The guidelines are documented in the Artemis Docs.

Usage

Artemis User Management

The Benchmarking Tool needs to interact with Artemis to perform the simulations. Therefore, it needs the credentials of Artemis users (students and admins / instructors) to log in and perform actions on Artemis.

The management of the Artemis users is done in the "Artemis Users" section of the application. Here, you can create new Artemis users, edit their credentials, and delete them.

For each Artemis server you can:

  • Store the credentials of an admin user. This user is used for the preparation of the exam and the creation of the course and exam on Artemis.
  • Add student users. These users are used to simulate the students that participate in the exam. There are three ways to add student users:
    • Manually add a user by entering its credentials.
    • Add users by defining patterns for the username and password. The tool will create users with the specified patterns.
    • Add users by uploading a CSV file with user data. The tool will read the user data from the file and create the users.
  • Edit or delete users.

Each user has an ID. The ID is used to determine which users will participate in a simulation:

  • If you specify the number of users in the simulation form, the tool will use the users with IDs 1 to n.
  • If you specify the exact users that should participate in the simulation, you need to enter the IDs of the users.
  • See Creating a Simulation for more information.

The following image shows the form for adding users with patterns:

Create-Users

When you add users with patterns, you can additionally check the box Create users on Artemis. You will then be able to provide patterns for first name, last name, and email. The tool will try to create the users on Artemis with the specified patterns. This is useful if your Artemis instance does not yet have the necessary amount of test users registered. This feature is only available if an Admin user is available for the respective Artemis server. Please note that editing and deleting users in the Benchmarking Tool does not affect the users on Artemis.

The following image shows the form for creating users in Artemis via a pattern:

Create-Users-Artemis

When you add users through a CSV file, the file must have the following format:

username,password
user1,password1
user2,password2
user3,password3

Optionally, you can include the IDs of the users in the file. If you do not specify the IDs, the tool will assign the lowest free ID to each user.

id,username,password
1,user1,password1
2,user2,password2

This video explains the User Management in more detail:

user-video.mp4

IMPORTANT
The Benchmarking Tool stores the credentials of the Artemis users in the database. Therefore, it is important to keep the database secure. The credentials are stored in plain text and can be accessed by anyone who has access to the database. The Benchmarking Tool should only be used in a secure environment. The database must only be accessible for people who are authorized to see the Artemis users' credentials. Only credentials of test users should be stored in the Benchmarking Tool.

Particularities for the Artemis production instance
For security reasons, it is not possible to store the credentials of an admin user of the Artemis production instance in the Benchmarking Tool. Instead, those credentials can be entered when starting a simulation run. They will not be stored in the database and will only be used for the respective simulation run.

If you want to create schedules for a simulation against the Artemis production instance, that is only possible for simulation modes that do not require admin rights. The credentials of an Instructor (e.g. for the mode Existing course, create exam) can be specified when creating the simulation (or later). They will be stored in the database! Make sure to use an account that only has Instructor rights in the course that you want to use for the simulation.

Creating a Simulation

To create a new simulation, navigate to the "Simulations" page and click the "Create Simulation" button. Fill in the form and click the "Create Simulation" button again. The simulation will be added to the list of simulations.

Explanation of the form fields:

  • Name: A name for the simulation.
  • Artemis Server: The Artemis Server to run the simulation against.
  • Simulation Mode: The mode of the simulation. The mode determines the preparation steps that the tool will perform before the simulation. The modes are:
    • CREATE_COURSE_AND_EXAM: The tool will create a course on Artemis and an exam in the course. The exam will contain 4 exercises (1 programming exercise, 1 modeling exercise, 1 quiz exercise, and 1 text exercise). The necessary number of students will be registered for the course and exam. In this mode, you do not need to perform any preparation steps on Artemis. The tool needs Admin permissions on Artemis (see Artemis User Management).
    • EXISTING_COURSE_CREATE_EXAM: The tool will create an exam in an existing course on Artemis. The exam will contain 4 exercises (1 programming exercise, 1 modeling exercise, 1 quiz exercise, and 1 text exercise). The necessary number of students will be registered for the exam. In this mode, you need to create a course on Artemis manually and register the necessary users for the course. The tool needs Instructor permissions in the course (see Artemis User Management).
    • EXISTING_COURSE_UNPREPARED_EXAM: The tool will not create a course or exam on Artemis. You need to create a course and an exam on Artemis manually and register the necessary users for the course and exam. The tool will perform the preparation of the exam (i.e., generating student exam and preparing the exercises for conduction). The tool needs Instructor permissions in the course (see Artemis User Management).
    • EXISTING_COURSE_PREPARED_EXAM: The tool will not create a course or exam on Artemis. You need to create a course and an exam on Artemis manually and register the necessary users for the course and exam. The tool will not perform any preparation steps on Artemis. Instead, it assumes that the exam is already fully prepared for conduction.
  • IDE Type: The type of IDE that the students will use for the programming exercises. The type determines how/if students clone the repository, push commits, etc. The types are:
    • OFFLINE: An offline IDE, i.e. not the Artemis-integrated online IDE. The students will clone the repository, push commits, etc. from their local machine.
    • ONLINE: The Artemis online IDE. The students will use the online IDE to work on the exercises.
  • Users: The users that will participate in the simulation.
    • If the box Customize is not checked, you simply need to specify the number of users that will participate in the simulation. The tool will use the users with IDs 1 to n (see Artemis User Management).
    • If the box Customize is checked, you can specify the exact users that will participate in the simulation. You need to specify the user IDs of the users that will participate in the simulation (see Artemis User Management). The user IDs must be specified in the format 1,2,3-7,10,15,20-22.
  • Depending on the selected mode, you might need to fill in the courseId and examId fields.
  • If you want to simulate against the Artemis Production instance and chose a mode that requires Instructor rights, you can optionally specify the necessary credentials. They will be stored in the database! Please refer to the Artemis User Management section for more information. This step is optional and can be done later.
  • Number of commits and pushes: The range of pushes that users will perform per programming exercise. The tool will randomly choose a number of pushes for each user in the range.

The following image shows the form for creating a simulation:

Create-Simulation

Running a Simulation

To run a simulation, find the simulation in the list of simulations and click the "Start Run" button. The new run will be added to the list of runs of the simulation. Click on the run to see the details. If the simulation is configured to run against production, you will need to confirm your choice and - depending on the mode - specify admin credentials through a dialog (see Artemis User Management for more information).

The icon next to the run indicates the status of the run:

  • Queued: The run is in the queue and will be started soon.
  • Running: The run is currently running.
  • Finished: The run has finished successfully.
  • Failed: The run has failed.
  • Cancelled: The run has been aborted.

During the simulation, the tool will perform the following steps for each student (in addition to the preparation steps):

Simulation-Steps

While the simulation is running, you can see some log messages indicating the progress of the simulation. They will also show if something went wrong. If the tool is connected to Prometheus, you can see the workload data of the configured Prometheus targets during the simulation.

The log message for a successful run will look similar to this:

Log messages

If a fatal error occurs, the run will be stopped and marked as failed. You will be able to see the cause of the error in the log messages. If an error occurs for a single student, the simulation will continue for the other students.

You can click on "Abort" to cancel the simulation run. The tool will stop the simulation run as soon as possible. Please note that this might leave the exam in an inconsistent state. Simulation results will not be calculated for aborted runs.

Evaluating Simulation Results

After a simulation run has finished, the tool will calculate the results of the run. The results consist of the number of requests and average response times for the following categories:

  • Authentication: Authentication requests. Please note that the tool only sends authentication requests if no valid token is available for the respective user.
  • Get Student Exam: Getting the student exam from Artemis.
  • Start Student Exam: Starting the student exam on Artemis.
  • Submit Exercise: Submitting an exercise to Artemis.
  • Submit Exam: Submitting the student exam to Artemis.
  • Clone: Cloning a repository for a programming exercise from the VCS.
  • Push: Pushing a commit for a programming exercise to the VCS.
  • Misc: Other, miscellaneous requests to Artemis.
  • Total: All requests together.

The results are displayed in the detail view of the run. The metrics are also available in a per-minute resolution. If enough data is available, you can see the metrics in line-charts over time.

The following image shows the simulation results in the category Push, first as a table and then as a line-chart:

Push-Table

Push-Chart

If the simulation is running against an Artemis instance that uses the Integrated Code Lifecycle setup, the tool will fetch the CI status after the simulation. The CI status is displayed in the detail view of the run. It includes the number of builds and the average builds per minute.

The following image shows the CI status:

CI-Status

The following video shows the process of creating, executing and evaluating simulations:

simulation-video.mp4

Scheduling Simulations

The Benchmarking Tool can be used to schedule simulations. This is useful if you want to run simulations at a specific time or at regular intervals.

To schedule a simulation, click on the calendar icon of the respective simulation. In the dialog that opens, you will see a list of existing schedules for the simulation. Click on "Create Schedule" to create a new schedule. In the form that opens, you can specify the following fields:

  • Cycle: The repetition cycle of the schedule. The cycle can be Daily or Weekly.
  • From: The start date of the time period in which the schedule will be active.
  • To: The end date of the time period in which the schedule will be active. When reached, the schedule will be automatically deleted. If omitted, the schedule will be active indefinitely.
  • Time of Day: The time of day at which the simulation will run.
  • Day of Week: The day of the week on which the simulation will run. This field is only available if the cycle is Weekly.

After creating the schedule, it will be added to the list of schedules for the simulation. You can edit or delete the schedule by clicking on the respective icons.

The schedule dialog looks like this:

Schedule-Dialog

This video shows how to create schedules:

schedule-video.mp4

Subscribing to a Schedule
Click on the Bell icon of the respective schedule to subscribe to it. You can specify your email address here. After subscribing, you will receive an email notification containing a summary of the simulation results after every scheduled run. To unsubscribe, click on the respective link in the email.

Particularities for the Artemis production instance:

  • Simulations against production that require admin rights cannot be scheduled.
  • For simulations that require instructor rights, the credentials need to be specified before creating the schedule.
  • See Artemis User Management for more information.

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