16
votes

I'm trying to setup JMeter in a distributed mode. I have a server running on an ec2 intance, and I want the master to run on my local computer. I had to jump through some hopes to get RMI working correctly on the server but was solved with setting the "java.rmi.server.hostname" to the IP of the ec2 instance.

The next (and hopefully last) problem is the server communicating back to the master.

The problem is that because I am doing this from an internal network, the master is sending its local/internal ip address (192.168.1.XXX) when it should be sending back the IP of my external connection (92.XXX.XXX.XXX).

I can see this in the jmeter-server.log:

ERROR - jmeter.samplers.RemoteListenerWrapper: testStarted(host) java.rmi.ConnectException: Connection refused to host: 192.168.1.50; nested exception is:

That host IP is wrong. It should be the 92.XXX.XXX.XX address. I assume this is because in the master logs I see the following:

2012/07/29 20:45:25 INFO - jmeter.JMeter: IP: 192.168.1.50 Name: XXXXXX.local FullName: 192.168.1.50

And this IP is sent to the server during RMI setup.

So I think I have two options:

  1. Tell the master to send the external IP
  2. Tell the server to connect on the external IP of the master.

But I can't see where to set these commands.

Any help would be useful.

4
This post details a solution: stackoverflow.com/questions/16618915/…SunSear

4 Answers

27
votes

For the benefit of future readers, don't take no for an answer. It is possible! Plus you can keep your firewall in place.

In this case, I did everything over port 4000.

How to connect a JMeter client and server for distributed testing with Amazon EC2 instance and local dev machine across different networks.

Setup:

  1. JMeter 2.13 Client: local dev computer (different network)
  2. JMeter 2.13 Server: Amazon EC2 instance

I configured distributed client / server JMeter connectivity as follows:

1. Added a port forwarding rule on my firewall/router:

  • Port: 4000
  • Destination: JMeter client private IP address on the LAN.

2. Configured the "Security Group" settings on the EC2 instance:

  • Type: Allow: Inbound
  • Port: 4000
  • Source: JMeter client public IP address (my dev computer/network public IP)

Update: If you already have SSH connectivity, you could use an SSH tunnel for the connection, that will avoid needing to add the firewall rules.

$ ssh -i ~/.ssh/54-179-XXX-XXX.pem ServerAliveInterval=60 -R 4000:localhost:4000 [email protected]

3. Configured client $JMETER_HOME/bin/jmeter.properties file RMI section:

note only the non-default values that I changed are included here:

#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Remote hosts and RMI configuration
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------

# Remote Hosts - comma delimited
# Add EC2 JMeter server public IP address:Port combo
remote_hosts=127.0.0.1,54.179.XXX.XXX:4000

# RMI port to be used by the server (must start rmiregistry with same port)
server_port=4000

# Parameter that controls the RMI port used by the RemoteSampleListenerImpl (The Controler)
# Default value is 0 which means port is randomly assigned
# You may need to open Firewall port on the Controller machine
client.rmi.localport=4000

# To change the default port (1099) used to access the server:
server.rmi.port=4000

# To use a specific port for the JMeter server engine, define
# the following property before starting the server:
server.rmi.localport=4000

4. Configured remote server $JMETER_HOME/bin/jmeter.properties file RMI section as follows:

#---------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Remote hosts and RMI configuration
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------

# RMI port to be used by the server (must start rmiregistry with same port)
server_port=4000

# Parameter that controls the RMI port used by the RemoteSampleListenerImpl (The Controler)
# Default value is 0 which means port is randomly assigned
# You may need to open Firewall port on the Controller machine
client.rmi.localport=4000

# To use a specific port for the JMeter server engine, define
# the following property before starting the server:
server.rmi.localport=4000

5. Started the JMeter server/slave with:

jmeter-server -Djava.rmi.server.hostname=54.179.XXX.XXX

where 54.179.XXX.XXX is the public IP address of the EC2 server

6. Started the JMeter client/master with:

jmeter -Djava.rmi.server.hostname=121.73.XXX.XXX

where 121.73.XXX.XXX is the public IP address of my client computer.

7. Ran a JMeter test suite.

enter image description hereJMeter GUI log output

Success!

6
votes

I had a similar problem: the JMeter server tried to connect to the wrong address for sending the results of the test (it tried to connect to localhost).

I solved this by setting the following parameter when starting the JMeter master:

-Djava.rmi.server.hostname=xx.xx.xx.xx

5
votes

It looks as though this wont work Distributed JMeter Testing explains the requirements for load testing in a distributed environment. Number 2 and 3 are particular to your use case I believe.

  1. The firewalls on the systems are turned off.
  2. All the clients are on the same subnet.
  3. The server is in the same subnet, if 192.x.x.x or 10.x.x.x ip addresses are used.
  4. Make sure JMeter can access the server.
  5. Make sure you use the same version of JMeter on all the systems. Mixing versions may not work correctly.
0
votes

Might be very late in the game but still. Im running this with jmeter 5.3.

So to get it work by setting up the slaves in aws and the controller on your local machine.

  1. Make sure your slave has the proper localports and hostname. The hostname on the slave should be the ec2 instance public dns.
  2. Make sure AWS has proper security policies.
  3. For the controller (which is your local machine) make sure you run with the parameter '-Djava.rmi.server.hostname='. You can get the ip by googling "my public ip address". Definately not those 192.xxx.xxx.x or 172.xx.xxx.
  4. Then you have to configure your modem to port forward your machine that is used to be your controller. The port can be obtained when from the slave log (the ones that has the FINE: RMI RenewClean....., yeah you have to set the log to verbose). OR set DMZ and put your controller machine. Dangerous, but convinient just for the testing time, don't forget to off it after that
  5. Then it should work.