Hi, Josef, Thank you for your reply.
To be honest, i am a PhD student and i've been designing and developing my own protocol for two Web Services. Basically, to apply my protocol, the two Web Services should be both Web Services (i would call them as a service provider and a service requester instead of a server or a client). Due to the unique characteristics of my protocol, each Web Service can determine whether or not to send out a response message after processing a receiving message. To enable each Web Service to decide whether to send out a response message, i tried using the function fireAndForget(element) with the RawXMLInOnlyMessageReceiver, since this function can send out a message without any concerns about receiving a response, after processing an incoming message through the use of the RawXMLInOnlyMessageReceiver. In order to verify my protocol, i only want to test its performance. i then found the JMeter, which seemed as an appropriate testing tool for testing the performance of Web Services, and i've gone through the tutorial already. Normally, in order to use the fireAndForget() function, a receiver's EndpointReference as an address is required. There is no issue to enable two Web Services to communicate in this deployment, since i can set the EndpointReference of the counterpart in each Web Service. However, when the JMeter is used to simulate an initial message sender that can send a message to a Web Service and wait for the reply, i would assume that the Web Service should be able to know the address of the JMeter. That's why i asked my initial question. By the way, since i'm using Mac OS, so software and tools for Windows OS may not be suitable to my testing platform. Hope you can understand my situation and give me more suggestions on the performance testing. Best wishes, Yunxi On 29 Jan 2013, at 19:06, Stadelmann Josef wrote: > Good you understand that. > > To be honest and say the true, I never used JMeter but I used Visual Studios > Universal Test and Performance Measurement facilites to get a clue about how > well we designed our .NET WCF-3.5 Web-Service SOAP/XML Client talking to > or OpenVMS / TOMCAT / Apache Axis2 / Spezpla Web Service Server - talking > to our integrated SPg-Legacy (some 120'000 Lines of Pascal Code on OpenVMS > of course ;-)). > > This tools are somewhat complex to explain in 5 minutes, but I have read > just briefly over the NetBeans Tutorial and I come fast into the Apache > User Guide for JMeter, also real worth to read, as released by Apache. > > JMeter Plugin brings almost a lot components one needs to understand a bit > This my impression;; > > The Help is therefore real worth to read; > The components available to JMeter should be understood first > (at least the big picture needs to be understood in proper context (your > setup)); > > Else I think you AND I get lost in space. > > You can measure whatever you want ! i.e. access times to remote running FTP > servers to catch down 2 files by 3 concurrent users each catching down a file > 3 times ... get the recording and show a graphical output. > > So you need to know what you want to measure! I would not suggest to start > first with Web Services but get familiar with the tools as such and more > simpler things. > > BUT you can measure the time from when a SOAP/XML package leaves the > client and when it returns to client code control. > > and if you like do a great job you should best start at > http://jmeter.apache.org/usermanual/index.html > > then read click you to the user manual > http://jmeter.apache.org/usermanual/index.html > > Or take the NetBeans Tour > http://netbeans.org/kb/docs/javaee/ecommerce/test-profile.html > > AND > > Just by doing a very simple example taking the NetBeans On-Line Help; > an awful a lot of information is provided. > > So Question: what are you all doing with so many component? > > You need to understand the big picture first! > > A sampler which will sample data for you, in your case it is a > sampler able to sample SOAP messages as they arrive from the server. > > Be warned: I just saw Axis but not Axis2 > > So that's all for today/night - interesting - isn't it? > AND > if you can give me more details - then I might be able to help you > for what to look for. > > Josef > > 18.1 Samplers > FTP Request > HTTP Request > JDBC Request > Java Request > SOAP/XML-RPC Request > WebService(SOAP) Request > LDAP Request > LDAP Extended Request > Access Log Sampler > BeanShell Sampler > BSF Sampler > JSR223 Sampler > TCP Sampler > JMS Publisher > JMS Subscriber > JMS Point-to-Point > JUnit Request > Mail Reader Sampler > Test Action > SMTP Sampler > > 18.2 Logic Controllers > Simple Controller > Loop Controller > Once Only Controller > Interleave Controller > Random Controller > Random Order Controller > Throughput Controller > Runtime Controller > If Controller > While Controller > Switch Controller > ForEach Controller > Module Controller > Include Controller > Transaction Controller > Recording Controller > > 18.3 Listeners > Sample Result Save Configuration > Graph Full Results > Graph Results > Spline Visualizer > Assertion Results > View Results Tree > Aggregate Report > View Results in Table > Simple Data Writer > Monitor Results > Distribution Graph (alpha) > Aggregate Graph > Mailer Visualizer > BeanShell Listener > Summary Report > Save Responses to a file > BSF Listener > JSR223 Listener > Generate Summary Results > Comparison Assertion Visualizer > > 18.4 Configuration Elements > CSV Data Set Config > FTP Request Defaults > HTTP Authorization Manager > HTTP Cache Manager > HTTP Cookie Manager > HTTP Request Defaults > HTTP Header Manager > Java Request Defaults > JDBC Connection Configuration > Login Config Element > LDAP Request Defaults > LDAP Extended Request Defaults > TCP Sampler Config > User Defined Variables > Random Variable > Counter > Simple Config Element > 18.5 Assertions > Response Assertion > Duration Assertion > Size Assertion > XML Assertion > BeanShell Assertion > MD5Hex Assertion > HTML Assertion > XPath Assertion > XML Schema Assertion > BSF Assertion > JSR223 Assertion > Compare Assertion > SMIME Assertion > > 18.6 Timers > Constant Timer > Gaussian Random Timer > Uniform Random Timer > Constant Throughput Timer > Synchronizing Timer > BeanShell Timer > BSF Timer > JSR223 Timer > > 18.7 Pre Processors > HTML Link Parser > HTTP URL Re-writing Modifier > HTML Parameter Mask > HTTP User Parameter Modifier > User Parameters > BeanShell PreProcessor > BSF PreProcessor > JSR223 PreProcessor > 18.8 Post-Processors > Regular Expression Extractor > XPath Extractor > Result Status Action Handler > BeanShell PostProcessor > BSF PostProcessor > JSR223 PostProcessor > > 18.9 Miscellaneous Features > Test Plan > Thread Group > WorkBench > SSL Manager > HTTP Proxy Server > HTTP Mirror Server > Property Display > Debug Sampler > Debug PostProcessor > > 18.10 Reports > Report Plan > Report Table > HTML Report Writer > Report Page > Line Graph > Bar Chart > > > -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- > Von: Yunxi Zhang [mailto:zhangyx...@hotmail.com] > Gesendet: Dienstag, 29. Januar 2013 12:19 > An: java-user@axis.apache.org > Betreff: Re: AW: a question about Axis2 performance test with JMeter > > Hi, Josef, > > Thank you for your reply. > > So, according to your explanation, should i use RawXMLInOutMessageReceiver. > If i am going to use RawXMLInOutMessageReceiver, will the Axis2 reply to > JMeter automatically or do i need to set the reply address manually? > > Many Thanks, > > Yunxi > > > On 29 Jan 2013, at 08:32, Stadelmann Josef wrote: > >> The RawXMLInonlyMessageReceiver hais by definition no SOAP/XML return >> message! >> There is a return to the client on the TCP/IP layer as an ACK, saying >> that the TCP/IP package has arrived and its content, the SOAP Message has >> been delivered. >> But that's it. >> Josef >> >> >> -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- >> Von: Yunxi Zhang [mailto:zhangyx...@hotmail.com] >> Gesendet: Montag, 28. Januar 2013 15:14 >> An: java-user@axis.apache.org >> Betreff: a question about Axis2 performance test with JMeter >> >> Hi, >> >> I've developed my own Web Service by using the POJO method of Axis2, and the >> receiver i'm using is the RawXMLInonlyMessageReceiver. Now i want to use >> JMeter to test the performance of my Web Service. I know JMeter can send >> soap messages to a Web Service, but how should i set the responding address >> in my Web Service to enable JMeter to obtain the correct response soap >> message? Has anyone got any idea about it? >> >> Regards >> >> Yunxi >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe, e-mail: java-user-unsubscr...@axis.apache.org >> For additional commands, e-mail: java-user-h...@axis.apache.org >> >> >> --------------------------------------------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe, e-mail: java-user-unsubscr...@axis.apache.org >> For additional commands, e-mail: java-user-h...@axis.apache.org >> >> > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: java-user-unsubscr...@axis.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: java-user-h...@axis.apache.org > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: java-user-unsubscr...@axis.apache.org > For additional commands, e-mail: java-user-h...@axis.apache.org > >