Hi Thomas,

I've met similar problem.

The first thing you can try is to add in the /etc/hosts file of your
server (where jmeter-server run) it's name with it's real IP address
(not only 127.0.0.1).
It seems that when it was not configured on mine, I got the same error
than you have in the jmeter.log on the client and nothing in the
jmeter log on the server.

Bruno




On 2/13/07, Thomas Kellerer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Thanks for the answer.

I have searched the archives already, but couldn't find anything that
solved my problem.

Colleagues of mine have successfully used Grinder for this, and I think
I'm going to switch. It seems a lot easier to setup distributed testing.

Thomas


On 12.02.2007 18:13 sebb wrote:
> I've seen this reported before; not sure if it was solved or not. Try
> searching the archives for some of the stack trace.
>
> Or you can just run the tests separately using non-GUI mode, and then
> combine the results.
>
>
> On 12/02/07, Thomas Kellerer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I'm in the process of setting up remote (http) tests using JMeter.
>>
>> My test plan runs fine on my client (Windows) machine and also runs fine
>> on the commandline of the server machines (CentOS).
>>
>> As I want a combined report over everything I wanted to run the tests
>> remotely.
>>
>> I started the jmeter server on each client using jmeter-server (using
>> nohup)
>>
>> Then on my Windows workstation I added each server's ip address to
>> jmeter.properties.
>>
>> Then I started the GUI on my Windows workstation, opened my testplan and
>> selected Run -> Remote Start All
>>
>> Nothing happened. Then I removed all but one of the IP addresses from
>> the remote_hosts list. Same thing (nothing happens) again.
>>
>> Looking at the jmeter.log of the client (Windows workstation) I can see
>> an error:
>>
>> 2007/02/12 16:43:16 ERROR - jmeter.engine.ClientJMeterEngine:
>> java.rmi.ConnectException: Connection refused to host: 127.0.0.1; nested
>> exception is:
>>        java.net.ConnectException: Connection refused: connect
>>        at
>> sun.rmi.transport.tcp.TCPEndpoint.newSocket(TCPEndpoint.java:574)
>>        at
>> sun.rmi.transport.tcp.TCPChannel.createConnection(TCPChannel.java:185)
>>        at
>> sun.rmi.transport.tcp.TCPChannel.newConnection(TCPChannel.java:171)
>>        at sun.rmi.server.UnicastRef.invoke(UnicastRef.java:94)
>>        at
>> org.apache.jmeter.engine.RemoteJMeterEngineImpl_Stub.setHost(Unknown
>> Source)
>>        at
>> org.apache.jmeter.engine.ClientJMeterEngine.run(ClientJMeterEngine.java:122)
>>
>>        at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:595)
>>
>> Now, 127.0.0.1 is not in the list of my remote hosts and even if I
>> explicitely select one of the remote hosts I get this error message.
>>
>> The message also appears when I start a JMeter server on my workstation,
>> so I assume that this error actually comes from the server.
>>
>> There is no entry in the log file of the server I'm trying to access.
>> The above exception is only visible in the Client's log file.
>>
>> What am I missing here?
>>
>> JMeter versions are identical on client and server (I simply copied the
>> directory from my workstation to the servers). The only difference I can
>> currently see between the environments, is that I'm running 1.5.0_08 on
>> my Windows workstation and 1.5.0_11 on the servers
>>
>>
>>
>> Any help is greatly appreciated!
>>
>> Thanks
>> Thomas
>>
>>
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