El vie, 09-12-2005 a las 18:10, sebb escribió:
> n 09/12/05, Iago Toral Quiroga <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > El vie, 09-12-2005 a las 15:17, Peter Lin escribió:
> > > I'm not sure I understand why you have 100 thread groups.
> > >
> > > you can put the requests in sequence in 1 threadGroup and increase the
> > > thread count to 100 with 0 second ramp up.
> > > peter
> >
> > Because the requests must be different. If I do what you say,
> > all the 100 threads within the threadgroup will send the same
> > request (the first one in the sequence).
> 
> Not necessarily. You can use variables in the requests, and read the
> variables from a file using CSV Data Set. Each thread will get a
> different line from the file (unless it wraps round).

mmm... really interesting, that could save me a lot problems. Where can
I get more information about it?

> > I tried using an interleave controller to avoid such problem, but the
> > interleave controller just deals requests for each thread, so the result
> > is the same.
> 
> > Anyway, I've also tried having one thread group and 100 threads within
> > it sending the same HTTP request, but I still have the performance
> > problem I commented in my previous email.
> >
> > Iago.
> >
> >
> > >
> > > On 12/9/05, Iago Toral Quiroga <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > hi!,
> > > >
> > > > I'm using Jmeter to perform a peak test of my web server (100 http
> > > > requests at the same time). To do such, I've created 100 thread groups,
> > > > each one with one thread that sends a different http request. At the web
> > > > server I log the time (in milliseconds) at which each request is
> > > > received.
> > > >
> > > > I need these requests to be sent to the web server as close as posible
> > > > but I noticed they are are logged at the web server in a period of time
> > > > that varies but is never lesser than 0.8 secs.
> > > >
> > > > ¿Shouldn't jmeter be able to send 100 requests in a leesser period of
> > > > time? ¿Is there any way to boost the launching of these requests?
> > > >
> > > > I've also noticed that, if I enable the option to parse HTML in each
> > > > HTTP request (HTTPSampler.image_parser in jmx file), my web server log
> > > > tells me that jmeter needs 2 or even more seconds to send all the 100
> > > > requests, which leads me to think that some threads start processing its
> > > > response before all requests have been sent ¿can I change this
> > > > behaviour? This is a big problem, because this way, Jmeter is limited in
> > > > its capacity to send the requests as soon as posible to stress the
> > > > server.
> > > >
> > > > My test machine has the following features:
> > > > CPU: 2.4 GHz
> > > > RAM: 512 MB
> > > > OS:  Debian Linux. Kernel 2.6.12.
> > > >
> > > > Thanks in advance for your help.
> > > > --
> > > > Abel Iago Toral Quiroga
> > > > Igalia http://www.igalia.com
> > > >
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> > > >
> >
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-- 
Abel Iago Toral Quiroga 
Igalia http://www.igalia.com

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