Hi,

On Wednesday, 5. March 2008, sebb wrote:
> On 05/03/2008, Tom Fernandes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> >  On Wednesday, 5. March 2008, sebb wrote:
> >  > On 05/03/2008, Tom Fernandes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >  > > Hello,
> >  > >
> >  > >  I'm trying to run jmeter remote. Setup as follows:
> >  > >
> >  > >  run jmeter-server on the remote machine (as it looks it binds
> >  > > default to port 1099)
> >  > >
> >  > >  on the node have one line
> >  > >
> >  > >  remote_hosts=127.0.0.1:1099
> >  > >
> >  > >  ssh port forwarding from 1099 of 127.0.0.1 on local machine to
> >  > > 127.0.0.1 on remote machine. The forwarding works (tested via
> >  > > portsniffing on the remote machine).
> >  >
> >  > RMI requires that the client can find the server, and the server can
> >  > find the client.
> >  >
> >  > The client sends a message to the server; this includes its return
> >  > address. The server has to be able to contact the client to return any
> >  > sample data.
> >  >
> >  > If either the client or the server thinks its ip address is a "local"
> >  > address, then the communication will fail to work fully.
> >  >
> >  > If possible, please try using client server mode without ssh
> >  > forwarding first.
> >
> > Hmm - sounds tricky. Node is in the office (internal IP behind a router)
> > - remote server is in the data center (in the same subnet where the
> > server we want to test is). What would you suggest? I dislike the idea of
> > having the jmeter server run on a public port and would rather not have
> > portforwarding from the office router to the jmeter node.
>
> I just meant to try the client-server set up between the current
> client and another node that is accessible without ssh. Ideally also
> use another client and the server without ssh.
>
> That should show if the individual nodes are working OK, and you can
> then worry about adding the ssh tunneling.
>
> >  But if necessary we'll open up things a bit. What what the configuration
> > be like. Is it possible to either bind jmeter-server onto the external
> > interface or do the portforwarding into the lan or would we have to do
> > both?
>
> Sorry, no idea. That's really an RMI/Networks issue; I have little
> knowledge of that.
>
> One alternative might be use JMeter in non-GUI mode on the server via
> ssh from the client.
>
> If you are only running one server that would be equivalent and would
> reduce the network traffic during the test.

but then there won't be any option to have the Listeners (statistics) run in 
real-time to look at, right?

would there be a way to log them and take a look at them later?


thanks lots so far :),


Tom

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