I am not familiar with jmeter, but just from client site you can get quite some information on performance by using solex (an eclipse plugin). Only, solex cannot cope with sessions, so when sessions are important, I use charles. I don't know if they meet your wishes.
Furthermore, I don't know what you are querying in your oracle, but if it is something that for example changes only once a day, you have some caching mechanism suitable for the job in cocoon. Also when you are having interactive stuff, with a sql database behind it, you can quite easily cache this. See the purge-cache at the end of http://cocoon.zones.apache.org/daisy/documentation/components/1063/g1/939.html Regards Ard Schrijvers > > Hi all, > > I'm doing some "load" tests (using jmeter) on my cocoon > application (in > tomcat) and I encountering a trouble. > For information, I'm using "esql" taglib to request an oracle > database. > > What is not working are particular URL launching from > JMETER;. The sql > request is created and executing but no reponse is coming > back from the > application 5 (I activated the debug). > What is weird is the fact that the requests are working > throught the web > browser. > > Is Jmeter stuck ? > > If so, can you send me to a new stress tool ? > > thx > > Lionel > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > 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]