Am 18.07.2018 um 16:45 schrieb Philippe Mouawad:
On Monday, July 16, 2018, Antonio Gomes Rodrigues <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Philippe,
It's a good idea but I think we need to:
Optimize the performance
Felix has been improving this
I just tested the improvements reported on bugzilla and added a few bugs :)
Improve the output during the generation to display something to the user
a kind of windows progress bar :)
as accurate ? :)
Because when I made a big load test (many days with a high traffic), the
generation of dashboard take a lot of time
You would force a non generation in this case no?
After the user waited for minutes? We could look at the size of the
results and decide on that measurement whether we would start a report
or not, but ...
We would have to have the results on disk.
We would have to know where and if we are allowed to generate the report.
We would have to let the user know, that a report has been generated.
Maybe we could
ask the user, if a report should be generated?
point out the possibility to generate such a report.
Felix
Antonio
Le dim. 15 juil. 2018 à 14:55, Philippe Mouawad <
[email protected]> a écrit :
Hello,
Don't you think we should generate HTML report by default when running in
NON Gui mode ?
I see 3 reasons for that:
- Why would somebody in 80% of cases do a load test without this
report
output ?
- Still now, I continue to read "dishonnest" comparisons of JMeter
with
other tools (commercial or not) that say "JMeter has no reporting
feature":
-
https://www.neotys.com/insights/how-neoload-is-different-from-jmeter
- http://blog.loadimpact.com/how-to-do-10-things-in-jmeter-vs-k6
- https://www.guru99.com/performance-testing-tools.html
- https://www.loadtestingtool.com/wapt-vs-jmeter.shtml
- When doing trainings introducing JMeter, attendees are always
surprised this report is not generated by default
Globally, JMeter offers a lot of features but many must be activated
which
is a bit sad, activating some would reduce learning curve and make it
more
user friendly
--
Regards.
Philippe