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TRAFFIC_REPLAY(7) User Commands TRAFFIC_REPLAY(7)
NAME
traffic_replay - Samba traffic generation tool.
SYNOPSIS
traffic_replay [-F, --fixed-password <test-password>]
[-T, --packets-per-second <number>]
[-S, --scale-traffic <scale by factor>]
[-r, --replay-rate <scale by factor>] [-D, --duration <seconds>]
[--traffic-summary <output file>] [-I, --instance-id <id>]
[-K, --prefer-kerberos] [-B, --badpassword-frequency <frequency>]
[--dns-rate <rate>] [-t, --timing-data <file>] [--random-seed <seed>]
[-U, --username user] [--password <password>]
[-W --workgroup <workgroup>] [--realm <realm>]
[-s, --config-file <file>] [-k, --kerberos <kerberos>]
[--ipaddress <address>] [-P, --machine-pass] [--option <option>]
[-d, --debuglevel <debug level>] [--conversation-persistence <0-1>]
[--latency-timeout <seconds>] [--stop-on-any-error] {summary-file}
{dns-hostname}
traffic_replay [-G, --generate-users-only]
[-F, --fixed-password <test-password>]
[-n, --number-of-users <total users>]
[--number-of-groups <total groups>]
[--average-groups-per-user <average number>]
[--group-memberships <total memberships>] [--max-members <group size>]
{dns-hostname}
traffic_replay {-c|--clean-up} {dns-hostname}
traffic_replay [-h, --help] [-V, --version]
DESCRIPTION
This tool is part of the samba(7) suite.
This tool generates traffic in order to measure the performance of a
Samba DC, and to test how well Samba will scale as a network increases
in size. It can simulate multiple different hosts making multiple
different types of requests to a DC.
This tool is intended to run against a dedicated test DC (rather than a
live DC that is handling real network traffic).
Note that a side-effect of running this tool is that user accounts will
be created on the DC, in order to test various Samba operations. As
creating accounts can be very time-consuming, these users will remain
on the DC by default. To remove these accounts, use the --clean-up
option.
OPTIONS
-h|--help
Print a summary of command line options.
summary-file
File containing the network traffic to replay. This should be a
traffic-model (generated by traffic_learner). Based on this file,
this tool will generate 'conversations' which represent Samba
activity between a network host and the DC.
-F|--fixed-password <test-password>
Test users are created when this tool is run, so that actual Samba
activity, such as authorizing users, can be mimicked. This option
specifies the password that will be used for any test users that
are created.
Note that any users created by this tool will remain on the DC
until you run the --clean-up option. Therefore, the fixed-password
option needs to be the same each time the tool is run, otherwise
the test users won't authenticate correctly.
random-seed
A number to seed the random number generator with. When traffic is
generated from a model-file, use this option to keep the traffic
consistent across multiple test runs. This allows you to compare
the performance of Samba between different releases.
Traffic Model Options
When the summary-file is a traffic-model (produced by
traffic_learner), use these options to alter the traffic that gets
generated.
-D|--duration <seconds>
Specifies the approximate duration in seconds to generate
traffic for. The default is 60 seconds.
-T|--packets-per-second <number>
Generate this many packets per second, regardless of the
traffic rate of the sample on which the model was based. This
cannot be used with -S.
-S|--scale-traffic <factor>
Increases the number of conversations by this factor, relative
to the original traffic sample on which the model was based.
This option won't affect the rate at which packets get sent
(which is still based on the traffic model), but it will mean
more conversations get replayed. It cannot be combined with -T,
which sets the traffic rate in a different way.
-r|--replay-rate <factor>
Replays the traffic faster by this factor. This option won't
affect the number of packets sent, but it will squeeze them
into fewer conversations, which may reduce resource usage.
--traffic-summary <output-file>
Instead of replaying a traffic-model, this option generates a
traffic-summary file based on what traffic would be sent. Using
a traffic-model allows you to scale the packet rate and number
of packets sent. However, using a traffic-model introduces some
randomness into the traffic generation. So running the same
traffic_replay command multiple times using a model file may
result in some differences in the actual traffic sent. However,
running the same traffic_replay command multiple times with a
traffic-summary file will always result in the same traffic
being sent.
For taking performance measurements over several test runs,
it's recommended to use this option and replay the traffic from
re-interpreted as a long pause with this probability.
--latency-timeout <seconds>
Wait this long at the end of the run for outstanding reply
packets. The number of conversations that have not finished at
the end of the timeout is a failure metric.
--generate-users-only
Add extra user/groups on the DC to increase the DB size. By
default, this tool automatically creates test users that map to the
traffic conversations being generated. This option allows extra
users to be created on top of this. Note that these extra users may
not actually used for traffic generation - the traffic generation
is still based on the number of conversations from the
model/summary file.
Generating a large number of users can take a long time, so it this
option allows this to be done only once.
Note that the users created will remain on the DC until the tool is
run with the --clean-up option. This means that it is best to only
assign group memberships once, i.e. run --clean-up before assigning
a different allocation of group memberships.
-n|--number-of-users <total-users>
Specifies the total number of test users to create (excluding
any machine accounts required for the traffic). Note that these
extra users simply populate the DC's DB - the actual user
traffic generated is still based on the summary-file.
--number-of-groups <total-groups>
Creates the specified number of groups, for assigning the test
users to. Note that users are not automatically assigned to
groups - use either --average-groups-per-user or
--group-memberships to do this.
--average-groups-per-user <average-groups>
Randomly assigns the test users to the test groups created. The
group memberships are distributed so that the overall average
groups that a user is member of matches this number. Some users
will belong to more groups and some users will belong to fewer
groups. This option is incompatible with the --group-membership
option.
--group-memberships <total-memberships>
Randomly assigns the test users to the test groups created. The
group memberships are distributed so that the total groups that
a user is member of, across all users, matches this number. For
example, with 100 users and 10 groups, --group-memberships=300
would assign a user to 3 groups on average. Some users will
belong to more groups and some users will belong to fewer
groups, but the total of all member linked attributes would be
300. This option is incompatible with the
--average-groups-per-user option.
--max-members <group size>
Limit the largest group to this size, even if the other group
options would have it otherwise.
Use this option to run multiple instances of the tool on the same
DC at the same time. This adds a prefix to the test users generated
to keep them separate on the DC.
-K|--prefer-kerberos
Use Kerberos to authenticate the test users.
-B|--badpassword-frequency <frequency>
Use this option to simulate users trying to authenticate with an
incorrect password.
--dns-rate <rate>
Increase the rate at which DNS packets get sent.
-t|--timing-data <file>
This writes extra timing data to the file specified. This is mostly
used for reporting options, such as generating graphs.
Samba Common Options
-d|--debuglevel=level
level is an integer from 0 to 10. The default value if this
parameter is not specified is 1.
The higher this value, the more detail will be logged to the
log files about the activities of the server. At level 0, only
critical errors and serious warnings will be logged. Level 1 is
a reasonable level for day-to-day running - it generates a
small amount of information about operations carried out.
Levels above 1 will generate considerable amounts of log data,
and should only be used when investigating a problem. Levels
above 3 are designed for use only by developers and generate
HUGE amounts of log data, most of which is extremely cryptic.
Note that specifying this parameter here will override the log
level parameter in the smb.conf file.
-s|--configfile=<configuration file>
The file specified contains the configuration details required
by the server. The information in this file includes
server-specific information such as what printcap file to use,
as well as descriptions of all the services that the server is
to provide. See smb.conf for more information. The default
configuration file name is determined at compile time.
--option=<name>=<value>
Set the smb.conf(5) option "<name>" to value "<value>" from the
command line. This overrides compiled-in defaults and options
read from the configuration file.
--realm=REALM
Set the realm name
-V|--version
Prints the program version number.
Credential Options
-U USERNAME|--username=USERNAME
Username
-W WORKGROUP|--workgroup=WORKGROUP
Workgroup
-k|--kerberos
Try to authenticate with kerberos. Only useful in an Active
Directory environment.
--ipaddress=IPADDRESS
IP address of the server
-P|--machine-pass
Use stored machine account password.
OPERATIONS
Generating a traffic-summary file
To use this tool, you need either a traffic-summary file or a
traffic-model file. To generate either of these files, you will need a
packet capture of actual Samba activity on your network.
Use Wireshark to take a packet capture on your network of the traffic
you want to generate. For example, if you want to simulate lots of
users logging on, then take a capture at 8:30am when users are logging
in.
Next, you need to convert your packet capture into a traffic summary
file, using traffic_summary.pl. Basically this removes any sensitive
information from the capture and summarizes what type of packet was
sent and when.
Refer to the traffic_summary.pl --help help for more details, but the
basic command will look something like:
tshark -r capture.pcapng -T pdml | traffic_summary.pl >
traffic-summary.txt
Replaying a traffic-summary file
Once you have a traffic-summary file, you can use it to generate
traffic. The traffic_replay tool gets passed the traffic-summary file,
along with the full DNS hostname of the DC being tested. You also need
to provide some user credentials, and possibly the Samba realm and
workgroup (although the realm and workgroup may be determined
automatically, for example from the /etc/smb.conf file, if one is
present). E.g.
traffic_replay traffic-summary.txt my-dc.samdom.example.com
-UAdmin%password -W samdom --realm=samdom.example.com
--fixed-password=blahblah123!
This simply regenerates Samba activity seen in the traffic summary. The
traffic is grouped into 'conversations' between a host and the DC. A
user and machine account is created on the DC for each conversation, in
order to allow logon and other operations to succeed. The script
generates the same types of packets as those seen in the summary.
Creating users can be quite a time-consuming process, especially if a
The benefit of this tool over simply using tcprelay is that the traffic
generated is independent of any specific network. No setup is needed
beforehand on the test DC. The traffic no longer contains sensitive
details, so the traffic summary could be potentially shared with other
Samba developers.
However, replaying a traffic-summary directly is somewhat limited in
what you can actually do. A more flexible approach is to generate the
traffic using a model file.
Generating a traffic-model file
To create a traffic-model file, simply pass the traffic-summary file to
the traffic_learner script. E.g.
traffic_learner traffic-summary.txt -o traffic-model.txt
This generates a model of the Samba activity in your network. This
model-file can now be used to generate traffic.
Replaying the traffic-model file
Packet generation using a traffic-model file uses the same command as a
traffic-summary file, e.g.
traffic_replay traffic-model.txt my-dc.samdom.example.com
-UAdmin%password
By default, this will generate 60 seconds worth of traffic based on the
model. You can specify longer using the --duration parameter.
The traffic generated is an approximation of what was seen in the
network capture. The traffic generation involves some randomness, so
running the same command multiple times may result in slightly
different traffic being generated (although you can avoid this, by
specifying the --random-seed option).
As well as changing how long the model runs for, you can also change
how many conversations get generated and how fast the traffic gets
replayed. To roughly double the number of conversations that get
replayed, use --scale-traffic=2 or to approximately halve the number
use --scale-traffic=0.5. To approximately double how quickly the
conversations get replayed, use --replay-rate=2, or to halve this use
--replay-rate=0.5
For example, to generate approximately 10 times the amount of traffic
seen over a two-minute period (based on the network capture), use:
traffic_replay traffic-model.txt my-dc.samdom.example.com
-UAdmin%password --fixed-password=blahblah123! --scale-traffic=10
--duration=120
Scaling the number of users
The performance of a Samba DC running a small subset of test users will
be different to a fully-populated Samba DC running in a network. As the
number of users increases, the size of the DB increases, and a very
large DB will perform worse than a smaller DB.
To increase the size of the Samba DB, this tool can also create extra
users and groups. These extra users are basically 'filler' for the DB.
They won't actually be used to generate traffic, but they may slow down
--number-of-users=5000
You can also create groups and assign users to groups. The users can be
randomly assigned to groups - this includes any extra users created as
well as the users that map to conversations. Use either
--average-groups-per-user or --group-memberships to specify how many
group memberships should be assigned to the test users.
For example, to assign the users in the replayed conversations into 10
groups on average, use a command like:
traffic_replay traffic-model.txt my-dc.samdom.example.com
-UAdmin%password --fixed-password=blahblah123! --generate-users-only
--number-of-groups=25 --average-groups-per-user=10
The users created by the test will have names like STGU-0-xyz. The
groups generated have names like STGG-0-xyz.
VERSION
This man page is complete for version 4.13.17 of the Samba suite.
SEE ALSO
traffic_learner(7).
AUTHOR
The original Samba software and related utilities were created by
Andrew Tridgell. Samba is now developed by the Samba Team as an Open
Source project similar to the way the Linux kernel is developed.
The traffic_replay tool was developed by the Samba team at Catalyst IT
Ltd.
The traffic_replay manpage was written by Tim Beale.
Samba 4.13.17 01/31/2022 TRAFFIC_REPLAY(7)