You are viewing a plain text version of this content. The canonical link for it is here.
Posted to user@jmeter.apache.org by Maria Alejandra Trozzi <ma...@gmail.com> on 2010/01/04 15:20:13 UTC

Re: Simulated Bandwidth

It seems that char per second is similar to bytes per second... I wanted to
be sure of that.
Thank you very much !!
Best regards,

2009/12/30 Milamber <mi...@gmail.com>

> Hello,
>
> 512 Kbits/s mean 512 x 1000 = 512000 bits/s
> 8 bits = 1 byte
> 1024 bytes = 1KB
>
> 512000 / 8 / 1024 = ~62.5 KB/s or cps (character per second)
>
> 256 Kbits/s = ~31.25 KB/s or cps
>
> Milamber
>
>
> Le 30/12/2009 12:49, Maria Alejandra Trozzi a ecrit :
>
> Hello! Thank you very much!!
>> How many cps do you suggest to emulate a 512 or 256 KB conection ??
>> Thanks!
>>
>>
>>
>> 2009/12/28 Milamber<mi...@gmail.com>
>>
>>
>>
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> http://jakarta.apache.org/jmeter/usermanual/component_reference.html#HTTP_Request
>>> See : *"Emulating slow connections"
>>>
>>> *Milamber*
>>> *
>>> Le 28/12/2009 19:49, Maria Alejandra Trozzi a ecrit :
>>>
>>> Hi
>>>
>>>
>>>> Is there a way in Jmeter to simulate low bandwidths ?
>>>> Thanks !
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
> To unsubscribe, e-mail: jmeter-user-unsubscribe@jakarta.apache.org
> For additional commands, e-mail: jmeter-user-help@jakarta.apache.org
>
>

Re: Simulated Bandwidth

Posted by Milamber <mi...@gmail.com>.
Hello,

Yes, it's similar.

"cps" is a old notation for printing speeds (for old printers) where one 
character is encoded to one Byte
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Characters_per_second#Printing_speed

Thus in JMeter context "cps" mean Bytes (sent) per second

Milamber

Le 04/01/2010 14:20, Maria Alejandra Trozzi a ecrit :
> It seems that char per second is similar to bytes per second... I wanted to
> be sure of that.
> Thank you very much !!
> Best regards,
>
> 2009/12/30 Milamber<mi...@gmail.com>
>
>    
>> Hello,
>>
>> 512 Kbits/s mean 512 x 1000 = 512000 bits/s
>> 8 bits = 1 byte
>> 1024 bytes = 1KB
>>
>> 512000 / 8 / 1024 = ~62.5 KB/s or cps (character per second)
>>
>> 256 Kbits/s = ~31.25 KB/s or cps
>>
>> Milamber
>>
>>
>> Le 30/12/2009 12:49, Maria Alejandra Trozzi a ecrit :
>>
>> Hello! Thank you very much!!
>>      
>>> How many cps do you suggest to emulate a 512 or 256 KB conection ??
>>> Thanks!
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> 2009/12/28 Milamber<mi...@gmail.com>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>        
>>>> Hello,
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> http://jakarta.apache.org/jmeter/usermanual/component_reference.html#HTTP_Request
>>>> See : *"Emulating slow connections"
>>>>
>>>> *Milamber*
>>>> *
>>>> Le 28/12/2009 19:49, Maria Alejandra Trozzi a ecrit :
>>>>
>>>> Hi
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>          
>>>>> Is there a way in Jmeter to simulate low bandwidths ?
>>>>> Thanks !
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>            
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>          
>>>
>>>        
>>
>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: jmeter-user-unsubscribe@jakarta.apache.org
>> For additional commands, e-mail: jmeter-user-help@jakarta.apache.org
>>
>>
>>      
>    


---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: jmeter-user-unsubscribe@jakarta.apache.org
For additional commands, e-mail: jmeter-user-help@jakarta.apache.org