Hi Sebb,
thanks! that was really helpful!

On 3/2/06, sebb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Ramp-Up time is nothing to do with throughput; it is just the total
> time to start all the threads.
>
> It needs to be long enough to avoid too large a work-load at the start
> of a test, and short enough that the last threads start running before
> the first ones finish (unless one wants that to happen).
>
> Start with Ramp-up = number of threads and adjust as needed.
>
> Throughput is controlled by Timers and the Throughput Controller, plus
> of course the number of threads.
>
> For meaningful performance results, the test duration should be
> considerably longer than the ramp-up.
>
> Search the archives for a way of using BeanShell to control the
> throughput at run-time.
>
> S.
> On 02/03/06, Rekha ShivKumar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > hi All,
> > I have a question: Im trying to determine ideal ramup time for my load
> test.
> > Im using 10 threads ,and data is taken in from a 3Million query file
> .The
> > test is pretty simple, its a query search scenario for a simple website
> .
> > An article online says first do a trial test run and determine average
> hit
> > rate.
> > Then  : Ideal rampup time  = No : of Threads / Avg Hit rate. My question
> is
> > what is  this Hit rate? is it same as throughput ? How do we get this
> value
> > ? im using Jmeter 2.1.1 on Linux ..
> >
> > Pls clarify ..
> >
>
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Rekha ShivKumar
SQA Engineer
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