Pavel,

There use to be a simple Windows program call pmon.exe, short for
process monitor.  I just tried it on my Windows 2000 Professional and
couldn't find it.  I use to use it on Windows 95/NT many moons ago when
I was doing Windows/M$ development, but I've since fallen behind with
regards to Windows/Visual Studio development.

Bottom line, pmon.exe is probably still around and it should give you a
clearer picture of processes on your Windows box then Task Manager...

hth,



Adym Lincoln
I/S Corporate - I/S Internal Applications
603-245-8245
Ext : 58245
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

...
It's a bug planet...it's an ugly planet...ever feel like your software
project is going in the wrong direction.
...


-----Original Message-----
From: Pavel Gouchtchine [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 22, 2006 12:43 PM
To: JMeter Users List
Subject: Re: Thread number and Ramp-up time relationship?

Thank you for the question.
The threads just start at once. It is  true. Now I understand it.
And I don't know how to monitor the number of started (running) threads.
Does any body know? Please, give an advise.

Pavel


On 2/22/06, sebb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> But do the threads *start* earlier than expected, or is it just that
> the threads are created all at once?
>
> S.
> On 22/02/06, Pavel Gouchtchine <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi All.
> > I am using JMeter 2.1.1 on Windows XP.
> >
> > According JMeter documentation:
> > " The ramp-up period tells JMeter how long to take to "ramp-up" to
the
> full
> > number of threads chosen. If 10 threads are used, and the ramp-up
period
> is
> > 100 seconds, then JMeter will take 100 seconds to get all 10 threads
up
> and
> > running. Each thread will start 10 (100/10) seconds after the
previous
> > thread was begun. If there are 30 threads and a ramp-up period of
120
> > seconds, then each successive thread will be delayed by 4 seconds."
> >
> > I have started to monitor number of threads using Task Manager and I
see
> > that all threads starts at once, and  ramp-up time doesn't play any
role
> > here.
> > For example, when I have Number of Threads: 1000 and Ramp up time 60
> sec, I
> > am expecting to get all 1000 threads up and running only in 60 sec.
> That  I
> > see is different: all 1000 threads started at once.
> >
> > Is it something, that I am missing in configuration or it is a
problem?
> >
> > Thank you.
> > Pavel Gouchtchine
> >
> >
>
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