Skip to content

sergelogvinov/gor

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Build Status

About

Gor is a simple http traffic replication tool written in Go. Its main goal is to replay traffic from production servers to staging and dev environments.

Now you can test your code on real user sessions in an automated and repeatable fashion.
No more falling down in production!

Gor consists of 2 parts: listener and replay servers.

The listener server catches http traffic from a given port in real-time and sends it to the replay server. The replay server forwards traffic to a given address.

Diagram

Basic example

# Run on servers where you want to catch traffic. You can run it on each `web` machine.
sudo gor listen -p 80 -r replay.server.local:28020 

# Replay server (replay.server.local). 
gor replay -f http://staging.server -p 28020

Advanced use

Rate limiting

Both replay and listener supports rate limiting. It can be useful if you want forward only part of production traffic and not overload your staging environment. You can specify your desired requests per second using the "|" operator after the server address:

# staging.server will not get more than 10 requests per second
gor replay -f "http://staging.server|10"
# replay server will not get more than 10 requests per second
# useful for high-load environments
gor listen -p 8080 -r "replay.server.local:28020|10"

Forward to multiple addresses

You can forward traffic to multiple endpoints. Just separate the addresses by comma.

gor replay -f "http://staging.server|10,http://dev.server|5"

Additional help

$ gor listen -h
Usage of ./bin/gor-linux:
  -i="any": By default it try to listen on all network interfaces.To get list of interfaces run `ifconfig`
  -p=80: Specify the http server port whose traffic you want to capture
  -r="localhost:28020": Address of replay server.
$ gor replay -h
Usage of ./bin/gor-linux:
  -f="http://localhost:8080": http address to forward traffic.
	You can limit requests per second by adding `|#{num}` after address.
	If you have multiple addresses with different limits. For example: http://staging.example.com|100,http://dev.example.com|10
  -ip="0.0.0.0": ip addresses to listen on
  -p=28020: specify port number

Latest releases (including binaries)

https://github.com/buger/gor/releases

Building from source

  1. Setup standard Go environment http://golang.org/doc/code.html and ensure that $GOPATH environment variable properly set.
  2. go get github.com/buger/gor.
  3. cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/buger/gor
  4. go build gor.go to get binary, or go run gor.go to build and run (useful for development)

FAQ

What OS are supported?

For now only Linux based. *BSD (including MacOS is not supported yet, check buger#22 for details)

Why does the gor listener requires sudo or root access?

Listener works by sniffing traffic from a given port. It's accessible only by using sudo or root access.

Do you support all http request types?

Yes. Right now it supports only "GET" requests.

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Added some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request

Companies using Gor

About

HTTP traffic replay in real-time. Replay traffic from production to staging and dev environments.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published