2008/4/28 wvaibhav <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: It's very difficult to tell who wrote what, so please either adjust you e-mail client so it prefixes lines with >, or don't reply in-line.
> > > Hello All, > > > > I am simulating 10K hits using jmeter distrubuted environment (1 master > > three slaves) I have planned the task and tried to execute, but having > > some > > trouble in execution... and also wanted to confirm the scenario which i > > have > > executed....and will be improving gradually > > > > 10K hits in how long? > > 10 k in 2000 seconds > > > > I have recorded a script using jmeter proxy. I wanted a rampup period for > > the execution to be 10 threads per two seconds. So, I selected 50 > > threads, > > ramp up period 10 and used a loop count for 2000. it takes around 6-7 > > hours > > to complete the job.... If I increase the number of threads and rampup > > period and reduce the loop count, i receive out of memory error > > where do you get OOM? > > JMeter client? JMeter server(s)? all 4? or web server? > > Jmeter server only > Do you mean the JMeter master? i.e. client? > > > and server > > in distributed environment gets preety slow completion of @ 60% of job > > say > > 100 requests in one hour. PF usage is 1.2 GB for 1 GB RAM and cpu usage > > is > > around 55 %. How is the scenario? > > Which host are you referring to? > > PF usage for jmeter server, I am using Jetty server for my web application > Do you mean the JMeter master, i.e. client? > > > How much rampup period jmeter consider after completion of first loop? > > whether it considers same rampup period for all the loops? > > Ramp-up only applies to first sample in a thread. > > The Ramp-up is divided by the number of threads, and each thread is > delayed by the result. > > If rampup is divided by number of threads, then my whole calculation is > wrong. i have 50 threads, 10 rampup and a loop of 200 for 10000 users. Under > the assumption that threads are divided by rampup period. I wanted 10000 > threads in 2000 seconds. If there is one sample in the test plan, then this will generate 10000 samples. 10000 samples in 2000 seconds is 5 samples per second. You'll need to add a timer; easiest is probably to add a http://jakarta.apache.org/jmeter/usermanual/component_reference.html#Constant_Throughput_Timer > > > What are standard maximum number of threads, rampup period and loop count > > for heavy loads.... > > Depends on the test plan, but it should be possible to run several > hundred threads in one instance of JMeter. > > Also depends on how you are running the plan - standalone non-GUI mode > is cheapest. > > I will try it in non gui mode, i donot know how to do it but i will learn > and execute... > It's all described in the documentation: http://jakarta.apache.org/jmeter/usermanual/get-started.html#non-gui It's a lot easier than client-server mode... > > > Another question is while recording scripts through jmeter, it collects > > all > > the image files and other requests from the web page to whom we are > > having > > hits. For actual testing whether we are suppose to consider all other > > request other than the html page? > > Depends on what you are trying to test. > > Trying to test accessibility of web page for 10000 hits in specified time > period.. > Is this to simulate 10000 different users? In which case you do want to load the images - and other embedded resources - each time. > -- > View this message in context: > http://www.nabble.com/10k-Hits-for-web-site-tp16920984p16930375.html > > > Sent from the JMeter - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com. > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]