Mike, That's fine, I am running the code from CVS HEAD.
I see the Modifiers now - I obviously wasn't looking hard enough. The CVS code seems to have some excellent enhancements over the 1.7 release. I have it working on win2k, but I hit some problems on Mac OS X - I will try and post these later. Thanks, Scott -- Scott Eade Backstage Technologies Pty. Ltd. > From: "Stover, Michael" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Date: Mon, 01 Jul 2002 10:33:14 -0400 > To: "'JMeter Users List'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, > "'[EMAIL PROTECTED]'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Subject: RE: Load testing with unique users > > These components are called "Modifiers", and only appear in the "Add" menu > of certain components. Also, I am referring to JMeter 1.7.1 unstable > release. I don't think these components were available with JMeter 1.7. > > -Mike > >> -----Original Message----- >> From: Scott Eade [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] >> Sent: Monday, July 01, 2002 9:53 AM >> To: JMeter Users List >> Subject: Re: Load testing with unique users >> >> >> Thanks for the reply Mike. Can you please give me a clue as to how I access >> the two components you mention - I don't see them anywhere in the "Add" >> context menu. >> >> Cheers, >> >> Scott >> -- >> Scott Eade >> Backstage Technologies Pty. Ltd. >> >>> From: "Stover, Michael" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >>> >>> There are a couple of components in JMeter that will allow you to do what >>> you want. One is the HTML User Parameter Modifier, and the other is the >>> HTML Parameter Mask Modifier. One works by incrementing a number and >>> appending it to a value, and the other works by using an XML file populated >>> with data. What you described below could easily be accomplished with the >>> HTML Parameter Mask Modifier. >>> >>> But, yes, in general, the idea of variables in requests is a good one that I >>> would like to enhance JMeter with. >>> >>> -Mike -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> For additional commands, e-mail: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>