How do i get the load time of my test from jmeter into my influxdb. I am able to see data in influxdb that has been added from jmeter but how do i see the "load time" for my test case. The thing is if i run my test case 20 times, as number of threads:20, in influxdb 20 are divided based on number of threads per second, how can i change that. I want to see my load time for each test case in Influxdb-Grafana.
In Jmeter just add a Summary Report to the existing Recording Controller. Then run the testcase. You'll see a row for each request and there would be a lot of information about the test including response time (Average, Min and Max)
Related
Just starting with jmeter and making some experiments I found something that looks kind of odd to me. I connected jmeter with influxdb and measured the avg. time response of one single request in a infinite loop. When I stopped the test I realized that the last time in the results csv created by jmeter is not the same as the one taken by influxdb. Specifically jmeter last measure is 13s higher than the one registered by influxdb. Any ideas on what could be happening?
I've tried to google it but haven't found any documentation or problem related
JMeter sends aggregated metrics, to wit it doesn't send each and every SampleResult but collects the results within some "window", default value is 5 seconds, controllable via backend_influxdb.send_interval JMeter Property
And metrics which are being sent are described here
You can try decreasing the 5 seconds window by amending the aforementioned backend_influxdb.send_interval JMeter property and setting it i.e. to 1000 ms so JMeter would send the data more often but it will create extra overhead so make sure that JMeter has enough headroom to operate and increasing metrics sending rate doesn't affect the overall throughput.
When I run the test in GUI, i see the Average, Min, Max in GUI. But when I run in console, is there a way to add these to the csv file?
These values are being calculated so you will be able to see the values only when you open .jtl results file after test finishes in the listener of your choice, i.e. Aggregate Report or Summary Report.
If you want to see the interim statistics while your test is being executed you have the following choices:
JMeter Summarizer output. JMeter reports some numbers into stdout while your test is being running
You can get some extended information if you run your JMeter test using Taurus tool as a wrapper
Both console and web interface options are available, in order to see current test execution stats in browser start your test like:
bzt yourtest.jmx -report
And finally you can use Backend Listener to send your results into database, message queue or web service and use custom plotting application to print out either raw or parsed statistics, here you are limited only by your fantasy:
More information:
JMeter: Real Time Results
How to Use Grafana to Monitor JMeter Non-GUI Results
JMeter produces some basic fields/result_field. JMeter doesn't create everything you see in different types of Listeners.
You can give this a try.
Create a plan
Generate atleast 100 samples (As large amount of data is required for some listeners), using a single sampler (request)
Use as many Listeners as you want of different types (say 15 types of listeners)
Run the plan....
Now in the filename field of all the listeners give series of names of files like a1.jtl a2.jtl
and so on....
see the screen shot
enter image description here
Now again run the plan. Go to the files and open them in some good editors like notepad++.
For your surprise you will find the same data in all the files irrespective of the type of listener generating the file.
Crux of the matter is : JMeter gathers only handful of information from the run, the rest information which is shown in different Listeners is COMPUTED by the JMeter.
So you can read the *.jtl file into any of the listener.
In JMeter, the new way since 3.0 to have results is to use the Web report generated at end of test:
http://jmeter.apache.org/usermanual/generating-dashboard.html
I'm using Jmeter for various performance and load tests and would like to save summary of Summary report and aggregate report automatically when test is done.
Usually summary table when you running form GUI looks like this :
Label | Samples | Average | Min |Max |Error |Throughput |etc.
When I use Write results to file/ Read form file filed , generated report will contain all http requests I generate, it can be millions. File would be huge and even then, no summary on the end . **No average time **
Same situation for aggregate report, I can not auto generate Summary of aggregate reports same as when you use GUI mode. Saved file contain all requests which is not useful at all.
Can I force Jmeter to save those two summaries when test is over ?
thanks in advance
First of all, don't run your test using GUI. Run your JMeter test using command-line non-GUI mode as
jmeter -n -t /path/to/testplan.jmx -l /path/to/results/jtl
Second, disable all the listeners during test run. Once test execution is finished you will be able to open JMeter's GUI, add Listener of your choice to Test Plan or Workbench and use "Browse" button to locate your results.jtl file.
JMeter cannot display only summary as all the "Total" fields are being calculated.
№ Samples - is count of all executed requests
Average - is arithmetical mean of all requests time (sum of all samples elapsed time divided by count)
etc. See JMeter Glossary for metrics explanation
So you got the idea right, it is better to store the necessary minimum, but you need to store something in order to be able to perform results analysis.
You can control what to store by amending properties which names start with jmeter.save.saveservice.. See jmeter.properties file in bin folder of your JMeter installation for the details.
We're running a test case for load testing, over different servers. What we want to do is, given that test case, stop if we can see a performance decrease, based on a response time threshold.
What we have now is threadgroup defined, and inside it, an HTTP request defined plus a view table for output. What should I do to put this control in there?
Add Duration Assertion and specify threshold there
In your Thread Group set "Action to be taken after a Sampler error" to Stop Test.
Above steps will stop your test after first occurrence of response time exceeding the threshold.
See How to Use JMeter Assertions in Three Easy Steps article for more information on how to conditionally set pass/fail criteria in your JMeter test.
P.S.
Remove View Results Table listener (or disable it) during load test execution as it consumes a lot of resources.
Run your load test in non-GUI mode as JMeter GUI is not designed for running the actual load test and may be a bottleneck in case of more or less severe load.
Is it possible to automate the load tests in Jmeter and increase the number of threads until the first error is observed?
For example I start with testing 16 threads for every seconds and increase the number until i receive an error. But instead of doing this manually can I let this run automatically?
Looking into Pre-defined Properties section of JMeter's User Manual on Functions there is a JMeterThread.last_sample_ok variable holding result of the last sampler execution.
So if you build your test plan as follows:
Sampler which does test action
If Controller checking whether previous sampler was successful
If not - relevant actions (stop test, send email, stop ramping up virtual users, etc.)
The value you need to put in "Condition" input of If Controller should look like
"${JMeterThread.last_sample_ok}"=="false"
See How to use JMeter's 'IF' Controller and get Pie for more information on JMeter's If Controller.
Regarding threads in jmeter You may find those 2 links interesting:
What is the highest number of threads that is reasonable to simultaneously run in Jmeter?
JMeter max. thread limit
Regarding your methodology, why not use slow rampup and see the limit using what Dmitri T has provided ?