Scroll to navigation

WBOX(1) General Commands Manual WBOX(1)

NAME

wbox - HTTP testing tool and configuration-less HTTP server

SYNOPSIS

wbox <url> [ options ]
wbox servermode webroot <path> [serverport <portnumber> (def 8081)]

DESCRIPTION

wbox aims to help you having fun while testing HTTP related stuff. You can use it to perform many tasks, including the following:

- Benchmarking how much time it takes to generate content for your web application.

- Web server and web application stressing.

- Testing virtual domains configuration without the need to alter your local resolver.

- Use it as a configuration-less HTTP server to share files!

OPTIONS

<number>
Stop after <number> requests
Send Accept-Encoding: gzip,deflate in request
Show the HTTP reply header
Show the HTTP reply header + body
Don't show status lines
Use the HEAD method instead of GET
Use HTTP/1.0 instead of HTTP/1.1
Close the connection after reading few bytes
Use <hostname> as Host: field in HTTP request
Show transfer times for different data chunks
Wait <number> seconds between requests. Default 1.
Spawn <number> concurrent clients (via fork()).
Send the specified referer header.
Set cookie name=val, can be used multiple times.
Max concurrent clients in server mode (default 20).
Show this help.
Show version.

USAGE EXAMPLES

wbox wikipedia.org (simplest, basic usage)

wbox wikipedia.org 3 compr wait 0 (three requests, compression, no delay)

wbox wikipedia.org 1 showhdr silent (just show the HTTP reply header)

wbox wikipedia.org timesplit (show split time information)

wbox 1.2.3.4 host example.domain (test a virtual domain at 1.2.3.4)

wbox servermode webroot /tmp/mydocuments (Try it with http://127.0.0.1:8081)

TUTORIAL

Wbox is trivial to use but, in order to understand better what wbox is and how to use it, you may want to read the TUTORIAL inside the /usr/share/doc/wbox/ directory.

AUTHOR

wbox was written by Salvatore 'antirez' Sanfilippo <antirez@gmail.com>.

This manual page was written by Alberto Furia <straluna@email.it>, for the Debian project (and may be used by others).

December 10, 2009