You are viewing a plain text version of this content. The canonical link for it is here.
Posted to jmeter-dev@jakarta.apache.org by Apache Wiki <wi...@apache.org> on 2009/02/17 06:27:21 UTC
[Jakarta-jmeter Wiki] Trivial Update of "LogAnalysis" by robertpnz
Dear Wiki user,
You have subscribed to a wiki page or wiki category on "Jakarta-jmeter Wiki" for change notification.
The following page has been changed by robertpnz:
http://wiki.apache.org/jakarta-jmeter/LogAnalysis
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
= Summarizing Huge Datasets =
attachment:perf-excel2.png
+ [[BR]]
As a software tester, sometimes you are called upon to performance test a web service (see [:../UserManual/BuildWSTest:BuildWSTest]) and present results in a nice chart to impress your manager. JMeter is commonly used to thrash the server and produce insane amounts of throughput data. If you're running 1000 tpm this can be rather a lot of data (180,000 transactions for a 3 hour test run). Even using the '''Simple Data Writer''', this is beyond the capability of JMeter's inbuilt graphics package and is too much to import to Excel.
- My solution is to group throughput per minute and average transaction time for each minute. Attached below is a script for processing a JTL log file from JMeter. It reduces a 3-hour test run to 180 data points which is much easier to represent with a chart program such as Excel.
+ My solution is to group throughput per minute and average transaction time for each minute. Attached below is a Bash script for processing a JTL log file from JMeter. It reduces a 3-hour test run to 180 data points which is much easier to represent with a chart program such as Excel.
[[BR]]
The script uses a few neat awk tricks, such as:
[[BR]]
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: jmeter-dev-unsubscribe@jakarta.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: jmeter-dev-help@jakarta.apache.org