Jmeter define X-axis value in graphs for two different use cases
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I am almost new to Jmeter. We have some tests scripts to handle HTTP request and verify the answer from our SUT which is basically a web application.
Our challenge is that we want to customize the graphs generated by Jmeter.
This is the test script:
a) Send a load of HTTP requests from an API to the application (but the API won't send directly to the database !, there is a process to handle the data)
b) Run SSH commands to monitor the processes
c) keep the load for 10 minutes and check the graphs
So , We want to be able to do two things:
1) Execute some SSH commands towards the server to monitor the HW usage (which is done already) and then display the output of this commands in a graph as function of a throughput defined in the test scenario
2) Display the usual graphs (response time) as function of test data value, means we want to configure the X-axis parameter for the graphs
I found some links but not really enough I think:
Set up X-axis and Y-axis on Jmeter graphic
https://jmeter-plugins.org/wiki/SettingsPanel/
jmeter performance-testing
New contributor
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up vote
0
down vote
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I am almost new to Jmeter. We have some tests scripts to handle HTTP request and verify the answer from our SUT which is basically a web application.
Our challenge is that we want to customize the graphs generated by Jmeter.
This is the test script:
a) Send a load of HTTP requests from an API to the application (but the API won't send directly to the database !, there is a process to handle the data)
b) Run SSH commands to monitor the processes
c) keep the load for 10 minutes and check the graphs
So , We want to be able to do two things:
1) Execute some SSH commands towards the server to monitor the HW usage (which is done already) and then display the output of this commands in a graph as function of a throughput defined in the test scenario
2) Display the usual graphs (response time) as function of test data value, means we want to configure the X-axis parameter for the graphs
I found some links but not really enough I think:
Set up X-axis and Y-axis on Jmeter graphic
https://jmeter-plugins.org/wiki/SettingsPanel/
jmeter performance-testing
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I am almost new to Jmeter. We have some tests scripts to handle HTTP request and verify the answer from our SUT which is basically a web application.
Our challenge is that we want to customize the graphs generated by Jmeter.
This is the test script:
a) Send a load of HTTP requests from an API to the application (but the API won't send directly to the database !, there is a process to handle the data)
b) Run SSH commands to monitor the processes
c) keep the load for 10 minutes and check the graphs
So , We want to be able to do two things:
1) Execute some SSH commands towards the server to monitor the HW usage (which is done already) and then display the output of this commands in a graph as function of a throughput defined in the test scenario
2) Display the usual graphs (response time) as function of test data value, means we want to configure the X-axis parameter for the graphs
I found some links but not really enough I think:
Set up X-axis and Y-axis on Jmeter graphic
https://jmeter-plugins.org/wiki/SettingsPanel/
jmeter performance-testing
New contributor
I am almost new to Jmeter. We have some tests scripts to handle HTTP request and verify the answer from our SUT which is basically a web application.
Our challenge is that we want to customize the graphs generated by Jmeter.
This is the test script:
a) Send a load of HTTP requests from an API to the application (but the API won't send directly to the database !, there is a process to handle the data)
b) Run SSH commands to monitor the processes
c) keep the load for 10 minutes and check the graphs
So , We want to be able to do two things:
1) Execute some SSH commands towards the server to monitor the HW usage (which is done already) and then display the output of this commands in a graph as function of a throughput defined in the test scenario
2) Display the usual graphs (response time) as function of test data value, means we want to configure the X-axis parameter for the graphs
I found some links but not really enough I think:
Set up X-axis and Y-axis on Jmeter graphic
https://jmeter-plugins.org/wiki/SettingsPanel/
jmeter performance-testing
jmeter performance-testing
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked Nov 19 at 11:17
SofianD
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1 Answer
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- Are you aware of SSHMon Listener? It should be able to plot the responses from your SSH commands to the test timeline
- There is a possibility to create a chart of a custom variable(s) which is being exposed via Sample Variables property
Finally it is possible to overwrite a "not-interesting" metric, i.e. Latency with a custom JMeter Variable using JSR223 PostProcessor and the code like:
prev.setLatency(123)
or
prev.setLatency(vars.get('your_variable') as long)
Once done you should be able to use Latency vs Request per second chart of the HTML Reporting Dashboard in order to visualize your information.
You can amend the chart title by manipulating
jmeter.reportgenerator.graph.latencyVsRequest.title
property
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
- Are you aware of SSHMon Listener? It should be able to plot the responses from your SSH commands to the test timeline
- There is a possibility to create a chart of a custom variable(s) which is being exposed via Sample Variables property
Finally it is possible to overwrite a "not-interesting" metric, i.e. Latency with a custom JMeter Variable using JSR223 PostProcessor and the code like:
prev.setLatency(123)
or
prev.setLatency(vars.get('your_variable') as long)
Once done you should be able to use Latency vs Request per second chart of the HTML Reporting Dashboard in order to visualize your information.
You can amend the chart title by manipulating
jmeter.reportgenerator.graph.latencyVsRequest.title
property
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
- Are you aware of SSHMon Listener? It should be able to plot the responses from your SSH commands to the test timeline
- There is a possibility to create a chart of a custom variable(s) which is being exposed via Sample Variables property
Finally it is possible to overwrite a "not-interesting" metric, i.e. Latency with a custom JMeter Variable using JSR223 PostProcessor and the code like:
prev.setLatency(123)
or
prev.setLatency(vars.get('your_variable') as long)
Once done you should be able to use Latency vs Request per second chart of the HTML Reporting Dashboard in order to visualize your information.
You can amend the chart title by manipulating
jmeter.reportgenerator.graph.latencyVsRequest.title
property
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
- Are you aware of SSHMon Listener? It should be able to plot the responses from your SSH commands to the test timeline
- There is a possibility to create a chart of a custom variable(s) which is being exposed via Sample Variables property
Finally it is possible to overwrite a "not-interesting" metric, i.e. Latency with a custom JMeter Variable using JSR223 PostProcessor and the code like:
prev.setLatency(123)
or
prev.setLatency(vars.get('your_variable') as long)
Once done you should be able to use Latency vs Request per second chart of the HTML Reporting Dashboard in order to visualize your information.
You can amend the chart title by manipulating
jmeter.reportgenerator.graph.latencyVsRequest.title
property
- Are you aware of SSHMon Listener? It should be able to plot the responses from your SSH commands to the test timeline
- There is a possibility to create a chart of a custom variable(s) which is being exposed via Sample Variables property
Finally it is possible to overwrite a "not-interesting" metric, i.e. Latency with a custom JMeter Variable using JSR223 PostProcessor and the code like:
prev.setLatency(123)
or
prev.setLatency(vars.get('your_variable') as long)
Once done you should be able to use Latency vs Request per second chart of the HTML Reporting Dashboard in order to visualize your information.
You can amend the chart title by manipulating
jmeter.reportgenerator.graph.latencyVsRequest.title
property
answered Nov 19 at 13:55
Dmitri T
66.6k33257
66.6k33257
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SofianD is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
SofianD is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
SofianD is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
SofianD is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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