Surely the same applies to any IP services - the initial request goes
to a well-known port, and response go to the port chosen by the
client.

The firewall has to take this into account.

Or is RMI fundamentally different?

S.
On 26/03/06, Oliver Erlewein (DSLWN) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Problem being there that the RMI uses random ports above 1024. Only if
> you can get RMI to "behave" can you tell the firewall what to do. For
> now I'd go with your first suggestion.
>
> O.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: sebb [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Friday, 24 March 2006 23:25
> To: JMeter Users List
> Subject: Re: Distributed Testing
>
> You could run separate non-GUI JMeter instances on each of the nodes,
> and combine the test results later.
>
> Otherwise, you are going to have to work out which ports and hosts are
> used and open the firewalls appropriately.
>
> S.
>
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