Hey Namaskara~Nalama~Guten Tag
Please see below Deepak -- Keigu Deepak +91-9765089593 deic...@gmail.com http://www.simtree.net Skype: thumsupdeicool Google talk: deicool Blog: http://loveandfearless.wordpress.com Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/deicool "Contribute to the world, environment and more : http://www.gridrepublic.org " On Tue, Nov 2, 2010 at 6:00 PM, Felix Frank <f...@mpexnet.de> wrote: > On 11/02/2010 12:56 PM, sebb wrote: > > On 1 November 2010 21:43, <b.ram...@eventim.de> wrote: > >> Hi Sebb, > >> > >> I am not sure how I can interpret your answer. Is there a other way to > simulate this behaviour? > > Your question sounds suspiciously like "how can I make Jmeter measure > the time the browser will take to load my page and content"? > > There has been a lengthy discussion here on the topic a few weeks ago. > The bottom line is: Jmeter can't and won't do this for you. It's not > worth the hassle trying. > Induce your desired load, and see how your server performs. It's not > Jmeter's job to play browser and report accurate estimates on page > display time. > I would disagree. Thats what load testings tools are supposed to do. They are supposed to play browser and report accurate estimates on page time (simulating real time users) > > HTH, > Felix > > > No. > > > > JMeter threads each use different connections, as the represent different > users. > > Although you cannot run multiple connections to download page > > resources in a single thread, that's not generally a problem when > > testing servers, because this tends to average out over multiple > > users. > > > > Just make sure that JMeter generates the required load at the server. > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: jmeter-user-unsubscr...@jakarta.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: jmeter-user-h...@jakarta.apache.org > >