On 25 March 2011 07:32, Vikas Malik <vikas.ma...@shop2020.in> wrote:
> Hi David,
>
> Thanks for the response,
>
>>(1) Capture them all in a Results Tree sampler. I think I would do this
> twice for one and two as you list below, then compare the output files
>
> I have many requests(test cases) in my automated test suite. At the end of
> test-run, I want to get a list of failed test cases/requests.
> In this case, I guess it would be needed to do some extra work "parse and
> compare" the two xmls etc.
>
> This requirement is a very general use case. Does jmeter provide a simpler
> way to go about it?

Have you looked at the documentation, particularly the component reference?

There is a Listener (Save Results) that can do just this.

> For load testing also, I think it would be useful because to verify that
> under a heavy load also your website sends expected response is important.
>
> Please let me know if I am trying to do something differently or missing
> something.
>
> Thanks.
>
>
> On Fri, Mar 25, 2011 at 11:50 AM, David Patrick <david.m1...@mac.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi Vikas,
>>
>> To record the responses, I think you have two options:
>> (1) Capture them all in a Results Tree sampler. I think I would do this
>> twice for one and two as you list below, then compare the output files
>>
>> or
>>
>> (2) Use Badboy (badboy.com.au) to record the transactions in record phase.
>> Then, after exporting this to a JMX file, you will be able to run it and
>> compare the results you get.
>>
>> If you are looking to do both your steps in each iteration, then I think
>> that extending my option (1) above is the way to go - possibly using REGEX
>> samples, variables and assertions to capture the response, re-request it and
>> check again.
>>
>> I hope I have been of help.
>>
>> --
>> David Patrick
>> david.m1...@mac.com
>>
>> On 25 Mar 2011, at 06:11, Vikas Malik wrote:
>>
>> > Hello,
>> >
>> > I am using jmeter for functional testing the website. I am trying to
>> store
>> > the responses while recording the HTTP request traffic using HTTP proxy
>> > server, but there does not seem to be any option in jmeter to store
>> > responses.
>> >
>> > Basically I am trying to do the following. Please let me know if it is
>> > possible to do so using jmeter, if yes, any pointers how to go about it
>> will
>> > be very useful.
>> >
>> > 1. Store the http traffic(both request and response) using HTTP proxy.
>> Store
>> > the responses as samples.
>> > 2. Re-run the recorded HTTP requests in testing phase and compare the
>> > responses we get now against the samples stored in step 1. Any mismatch
>> > should fail the test.
>> >
>> > Thanks.
>> > Vikas Malik
>>
>>
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