Kevin Rose Load Tests Gmail
SishGupta writes "Load Testing Gmail - fillmybox@gmail.com
A few weeks ago, Kevin Rose of the The Screen Savers decided to load test Google's new email service, Gmail. He asked everyone to email him their favourite 5MB attachments to 'fillmybox@gmail.com.'
The test Gmail account is now 102% maxed out.
You can read about the test and the results at Kevin Rose.com (his weblog)."
Bet he wasn't expecting that!
And I was thinking the fact I was at 13% was quite impressive.
Jay | http://oldos.org
I've had little success with GMail's "auto ignore" option. Check this mozilla screengrab out:
http://etrade.malformed.org/Screenshot.png
With a gmail address of "fillmybox", I wonder what kind of file attachments he received!
Why does anyone listen to him...he's half security, half pirate, half hacker.
That's more then 100%!!!
~Eric
...may the Gmail privacy flaming begin!
The preceding message was based on actual events. Only the names, locations and events have been changed.
Why, just last night I wrote a little program that load tests Google.
Regards,
Arthur MyDoom, Jr.
"In spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart." - Anne Frank
... since Google advertises the service as 1GB of email storage 1023MB is technically under the limit and not 102% of the limit.
Mod me down as flamebait if you really must, but what really was the point of this exercise ? I'm sure Google would find it an interesting test -assuming they've not already tried it themselves - but as the author says, he's never actually told anybody at google about it. It just doesn't strike me as particularly constructive...
Never, ever lose a file again. Ever.
is to let everyone on Slashdot have an account, at once.
--
# Canmephians for a better Linux Kernel
$Stalag99{"URL"}="http://stalag99.net";
...Kevin and co-host of the day finish talking about fillmybox@gmail.com and switch back over to Sarah for the news...
/me ROFL
Sarah: "Fill my box"
Kevin: "I will later"
Co-host of the day turns red.
Any words Kevin?
Im dreaming ofa big bndwdth, That can resist the
Haven't heard that from the wife in ages!
Thanks, folks, I'll be here all week! Tip your waitresses!
I received over 2,000 complaints from people who actually took the time to dig around and find my personal email address, I'm thinking we hit Gmail with around 50-75,000+, 5MB+ emails in a 10-15min window.
Think of all the spam that one of these accounts could hold. I propose testing Gmail's spam filters next: disseminate your Gmail addy to porn sites, and everywhere else it will likely be harvested by a spam bot. Sit back, and let the spam roll in. It should be interesting to see just how fast this sucker fills up with ads for penis enlargers.
That post would have sucked a whole lot less ass if I had entered my numbers right. 1 GiB is not 10^30 bytes, it's 2^30 bytes. My sincerest apologies for correcting you in a way that requires correction itself.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
we all want to know how google does it, don't we?
here's what he thinks:
Google knows that 80% of mail messages are text, and we all know that text is highly compressible. That said, they probably only have around 2-300MB of storage allocated for each 1GB account (obviously this will fluctuate up to 1GB depending on the user's mail content). My take on this, is that they have a huge series of RAID arrays at their server farm. Every time an email comes in, it is compressed and stored in that users account on the RAID.
this should be closer to the truth: Venti: a new approach to archival storage
[beavisandbutthead]
uh huh huh
uh huh huh
"fill my box"
uh huh huh
[/beavisandbutthead]
>24 megabytes is a substantial difference for most email users.
It is if you have 10MB or 100MB,
but not when you have 1000 megabytes.
100K of memory was alot when all you had was 640K, but 100k is nothing to most users nowadays.
I hammered my own gmail account by forwarding up all my old messages using an Eudora filter. I was sending as many as 2,000 messages in a 15 minute period at one stage. While Gmail didn't lock me out, some messages took a particularly long time to appear. These messages were typically old automated receipts, such as eBay messages, that all look very similar but are in fact separate conversations. I'm guessing that there's a lot of overhead when a message arrives to determine if it's related to existing messages.
The question has finally been answered.
Why is Gmail the best free webmail?
ANSWER: Your inbox goes to 102%!!!
If you have kids named Arthur MyDoom, are you going to stick to the old standard (Arthur MyDoom the 3rd, the 4th, etc), or the new approach - Arthur MyDoom.B, Arthur MyDoom.C, Arthur MyDoom.D...?
I doubt that the space is all that the users care about. I was quite content with 5 megs of space until the spam-bots got a hold of my Yahoo account.
No, the real deal is archiving all of your old email and the ability to search through it all, as well as targeted advertising... I detest picture-advertising... most kinds, that is. pr0n's another story.
One of the other factors that makes the service so appealing to me is I trust Google, unlike Microsoft or Yahoo, to not sell my email address. When the company who gave you the email address is handing it out to the spammers (or spamming the box themselves), something is wrong.
- Yolegoman
What is the point in his test ? Did he think that Google hadn't done any testing at all ? Did he think that if a mailbox hit 100% something dreadful would happen ? Of course it's going to work just fine, 1Mb, 10Mb, 100Mb, 1000Mb or even 10,000Mb is just a tiny dribble in the ocean that is Googles' infrastructure. He's just looking for some kind of kudos ... "Hey dude I filled up my Gmail account!" "Wow! That's so ... so ... actually that's pretty lame .."
I signed up my GMail account to every Apple mailing list, mainly because I am a developer and want a searchable archive of exactly the mailing lists i want.
If you have the clip e-mail me at admin (at) uneasysilence.com I would love to host it
_dan
http://www.uneasysilence.com
That great sigh of disappointment you hear is the sound of thousands of porn site administrators realizing that one of the gmail account names they really wanted has been taken...
-S
--- What parts of "shall make no law", "shall not be infringed", and "shall not be violated" don't you understand?
G4TechTV sux0rz. Curse you, Comcast! Curse you!
(Yeah, I know he's on KFI Radio here in LA. Whatever, I miss him on TSS.)
Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
done.
enjoy.
rob.
porn2.mog
.mog, half man, half dog, I'm my own best friend.
I'm a
Nobody can read 1GB of text. Therefore the only way to use a gig of email is if either a) it isn't text, or b) you're not actually reading it.
For instance people getting MPEGs in the mail won't notice the difference between 1000MB and 1024MB. Similarly, people subscribed to a dozen mailinglists, hoping to use google to quickly find any message, won't notice the difference since a few days email will fill up the difference.
To make it really clear... say you can read 100 text emails a day. Now, if those emails are text they'll be about 5k, or around half a meg a day. So you're talking about six _years_ worth of email before you fill your box, with the extra 24MB getting you an extra month on your six years. For people getting ten text emails a day worth keeping, 1GB will probably hold enough email for life.
[Peter Griffin]
eh heh heh
eh heh heh
"fill my box"
eh heh heh
eh heh heh
"diarrhea"
eh heh heh
[/Peter Griffin]
Montreal - Best city to live in!
Here's the segment from g4techtv captured by me: http://www.members.shaw.ca/fog_dogg_69/fillmybox.w mv
SI rules. Of course it makes sense to have water freeze at 32 degrees instead of 0, and boil at 212 instead of 100... And why the hell would you want to mess with turning 1 kilometer into 1,000 meters, when you can turn 1 mile into 5,280 feet! And to realize that 1 liter is 1,000 milliliters is stupid, since we can instead make 1 gallon (US, liquid - or 0.86 gallon US dry - or 0.83 gallon UK) into 128 fl.oz. I rest my case.
Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur.
Yes, I know, -1 Offtopic, but I'd appreciate a hookup! ninenine_99@yahoo.com
Thanks!
Good test? Old news. A friend of mine, Milo, did this two weeks ago. I even submitted a Slashdot article. But it got rejected. Why? Some guy in the Netherlands isn't as important as the all mighty Kevin Rose of the Screen Savers I guess. :-\
You're right, I wouldn't steal a car. But if it were possible, I sure as hell would download one!
http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=115848&cid= 9808280
Except when they don't.
I've seen base 3, 10, 40, 100, 256.
Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
Giving them a unit they can be honest with, you mean? Rather than using "kilobyte" to mean "1000 bytes" like HD manufacturers do now, just to confuse and con the public?
I've done a little bit of my own stress testing. However, I've done it a little bit different. I wanted to see how Gmail handled huge conversations. I e-mailed my brother and we spammed each other back and forth in the same thread, seeing if we could influence the Ads. After a while we started adding more people to the conversation (our current test thread has nine people). We started out by hitting Reply All and saving the quotes from the previous e-mail. It became a huge list of >>> near the bottom and eventually Gmail clipped the messages. After a few hundred replies, opening the thread became slower and slower. When it reached 426 replies, it took me a week to finally get into it. With that I made one last reply and closed the thread. Hey, just out of curiosity, I opened the thread now and it loaded pretty easily. I wonder if they have optimized their behind the scenes engine to make it faster for large conversations. Maybe I'll continue the thread. Also, if you want to be part of the new test thread, just send an e-mail to adpowers@gmail.com.
Anyway, here is my Gmail stress test.
Also, you'll notice I have a few mailing lists on the side. I only read the Freenet one, but I subscribed to the Linux Kernel list and some others because I know them to be high traffic. Gmail is pretty impressive and they seem to be optimizing it even more.