Using JMeter in non-GUI mode uses fewer resources than client-server mode.
If all the hosts have clocks that are the same (or nearly) then it is easy to combine the CSV files for further analysis. On 08/05/07, Oliver Erlewein (DSLWN) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello Abhay, I've had problems with that. What I did to circumvent the problem is install 3 or more jmeters on one machine and use them as jmeter-servers on different rmi ports. Then you have one Jmeter client driving them. Now you have less issues with the threading. You'll need a lot of RAM for that though. You also solve the problem that Java can only do 2000 TCP connections. Cheers Oliver -----Original Message----- From: Abhay Patil [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, 7 May 2007 16:48 To: [email protected] Subject: Require help on Jmeter Threading. Hi, I want to spawn Jmeter threads into different JVM on same machine. As per my knowledge it is directly not possible. It will be great if some one can provide workaround for the same. Also, it will be really grateful if anyone provides information about mechanism by which Jmeter uses to generate concurrent requests? Does each run spawn multiple threads to make it happen? Any help will be greatly appreciated. Thanks, Abhay --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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