Hello @Ahmad, Did you have the opportunity to test nightly build to see if it meets your requirement here ? Thank you Regards
On Sun, Oct 9, 2016 at 5:24 PM, Philippe Mouawad < [email protected]> wrote: > Hello, > Enhancement implemented in : > https://bz.apache.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=60229 > > You can test it and give feedback using nightly build: > - http://jmeter.apache.org/nightly.html > > Regards > Philippe M. > > > -- > Cordialement. > Philippe Mouawad. > Ubik-Ingénierie > > UBIK LOAD PACK Web Site <http://www.ubikloadpack.com/> > > UBIK LOAD PACK on TWITTER <https://twitter.com/ubikloadpack> > > > On Mon, Oct 3, 2016 at 5:18 PM, Ahmad A <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Hi I would argue that many users will benefit from adding a metric to >> calculate the sent bytes for PUT and POST. >> I was wondering can someone create a bug for this (or point me to how to >> create one? I have not created a jmeter bug before). >> Is there anytime line for this functionality? >> thanks >> Ahmad >> >> > Subject: Re: HTTP PUT bytes output does NOT include the uploaded file >> size >> > To: [email protected] >> > From: [email protected] >> > Date: Sat, 1 Oct 2016 21:36:34 +0200 >> > >> > HI , >> > >> > thumbs up for a new metric measuring output bytes. >> > It should not break any current report, but I have this need very >> often. >> > It is a common requirement for many application types like document >> management. >> > Also, it is not so simple to forecast the output size, when considering >> cookies, headers, content compression, etc. >> > >> > Regards >> > Sergio >> > >> > Il 01/10/2016 14.57, Philippe Mouawad ha scritto: >> > > Hello, >> > > See discussion "Add a new metric : sent bytes", there have been some >> > > feedback on this proposal. >> > > >> > > Even if it's some work, I believe it should be here. >> > > I am often asked to provide the outgoing traffic from JMeter. >> > > To provide it I have to rely on 3rd party tools. >> > > It would be nice to have it as we currently have a report that graphs >> > > incoming bytes. >> > > >> > > Regards >> > > >> > > On Sat, Oct 1, 2016 at 2:52 PM, sebb <[email protected]> wrote: >> > > >> > >> On 1 October 2016 at 08:35, Ivan Rancati <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> > >>> I would suggest: >> > >>> >> > >>> write a sampler in Java that does the http put, then you can access >> the >> > >>> Response object and set the size to a value you specify. >> > >>> I think it would also work with the scripting samples (like >> Beanshell, >> > >>> Javascript) >> > >>> >> > >>> I personally don't think there is anything to fix, as all samplers >> return >> > >>> the size of the response, and it would be confusing to have a model >> where >> > >>> the size is sometimes the request, sometimes the response, or a mix >> of >> > >> the >> > >>> two. I'm a JMeter user, not a developer, so that's just my opinion, >> maybe >> > >>> I'm missing something obvious >> > >> You have put it very well. >> > >> JMeter measures the server response size. >> > >> >> > >> I suppose there could be an option to include the request size, but >> > >> that would be a fair amount of work to add. >> > >> It's obviously not a huge need, otherwise there would have been more >> > >> requests to add it (and maybe a patch or two). >> > >> >> > >> Note that the size of file uploads will generally be known by the >> > >> tester, so can be allowed for if necessary. >> > >> Whereas the server response size is not known until the request >> completes. >> > >> >> > >>> On Fri, Sep 30, 2016 at 8:54 PM, Ahmad A <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> > >>> >> > >>>> Hi IvanThank you for your prompt response. >> > >>>> The content-length that is being returned with the PUT request is >> actually >> > >>>> 0 >> > >>>> Content-Length: 0 >> > >>>> So I am guessing Jmeter is calculating the response size of all the >> > >>>> headers and text returned which is consistent with the 464 bytes >> recorded >> > >>>> for all object PUTs. This calculation of bytes for PUT is not >> correct since >> > >>>> the measurement needs to be the amount of data sent (PUT, POST) not >> > >>>> received (GET). >> > >>>> Is it possible to get this fixed?? >> > >>>> thanks >> > >>>> Ahmad >> > >>>> >> > >>>> >> > >>>>> From: [email protected] >> > >>>>> Date: Fri, 30 Sep 2016 20:39:46 +0200 >> > >>>>> Subject: Re: HTTP PUT bytes output does NOT include the uploaded >> filesize >> > >>>>> To: [email protected] >> > >>>>> >> > >>>>> I would imagine JMeter returns the size of the http response, not >> the >> > >>>> size >> > >>>>> of the uploaded data. >> > >>>>> What does the Content-Length header return for your request? >> > >>>>> I would imagine it's a constant number, regardless of how many >> bytes >> > >> you >> > >>>> PUT >> > >>>>> Example with wget, it's similar with curl >> > >>>>> wget -S -O /dev/null --method=PUT >> > >>>>> --body-data="123456789012345678901234567890 >> > >>>> 123456789012345678901234567890" >> > >>>>> http://... >> > >>>>> >> > >>>>> best regards >> > >>>>> Ivan >> > >>>>> >> > >> ------------------------------------------------------------ >> --------- >> > >> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] >> > >> For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected] >> > >> >> > >> >> > > >> > >> > >> > -- >> > >> > Ing. Sergio Boso >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > --------------------------------------------------------------------- >> > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] >> > For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected] >> > >> >> > > > -- Cordialement. Philippe Mouawad. Ubik-Ingénierie UBIK LOAD PACK Web Site <http://www.ubikloadpack.com/> UBIK LOAD PACK on TWITTER <https://twitter.com/ubikloadpack>
