Try turning on "Functional Testing" in the Test Plan element.  This
should cause all these details to be logged.  Just don't be surprised
that the resulting .jtl file becomes large fast.

-Mike

On Fri, 2005-02-25 at 07:31, Leo Leo wrote:
> Hello Sebb!
>  
> > > 1.) The timestamp in the logfile (.jtl). Is is the time, the request was
> > > sent to the server, or the time Jmeter got an answer?
> > > 
> > 
> > Can be either. 
> > 
> > By default it is the end, but this can be changed in jmeter.properties
> 
> Great, found it
>  
> > Can either set the "Functional Test Mode"  flag on the Test Plan
> > element, or you can add the Post-Processor "Save Responses to a file"
> > in the scope of all the samplers you want to save results from.
> > 
> > Functional mode saves everything in the same file, which gets rather
> > big and messy.
> > 
> > Save Responses creates a new file for each sample result, which makes
> > it suitable for comparison checking.
> 
> Well, what I want are not the responses (those work), I'd like to have all
> REQUESTS and the SAMPLER result in a log-file (GETs, POSTs, Cookie-Infos
> etc.). Something like this:
> 
> REQUEST:
> ========
> 
> POST https://<IP>/<path>
> Query data:
> <Var1>=<Value1>&<Var2>=<Value2>
> 
> Cookie Data:
> JSESSIONID=<SESSIONID>
> 
> 
> SAMPLER Result (for the above request)
> ======================================
> 
> Load time: 31
> HTTP response code: 200
> HTTP response message: OK
> 
> HTTP response headers:
> HTTP/1.1 200 OK
> Content-Type: text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1
> Date: Fri, 25 Feb 2005 12:28:07 GMT
> Server: Apache-Coyote/1.1
> 
> 
> ==> Can I log this data somehow?
> 
> Thanks, Leo
-- 
Michael Stover <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Apache Software Foundation


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