On 13/11/2008, André Mud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>  I found it.
>  However, I'm not a programmer. How do I adjust it?
>  I can download the Source from the website and change it there, but how do I
>  compile the stuff after I've changed it?
>

Read the file README.txt

It's not a trivial process for a non-programmer, so you may be better
off using other utilities to calculate the percentile.

Feel free to create a Buzilla enhancement request to make the %age
value variable; it might find its way into a future release.

>  Andre
>
>
>
>  sebb-2-2 wrote:
>  >
>
> > On 13/11/2008, André Mud <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>  >>
>  >>  Hello,
>  >>
>  >>  In the Aggregate Graph table there is a column with the 90% line.
>  >>  For my reporting I need the 95% line. I can calculate it by hand by
>  >> saving
>  >>  the results to a file and then calculate it for al transactions in
>  >> excel.
>  >>  This is an enormous work because i have a lot of transactions. I've done
>  >> it
>  >>  yesterday and it took me 3 hours to complete that.
>  >>  Is there a way in which i can change some settings (or code) so that the
>  >> 95%
>  >>  line is calculated and not the 90%line.
>  >
>  > Settings - no.
>  >
>  > Code - yes
>  >
>  > If you press ^W (Help / What's this node?) whilst the listener is
>  > selected, you should see the class names in the console window, for
>  > example:
>  >
>  > org.apache.jmeter.reporters.ResultCollector
>  > org.apache.jmeter.visualizers.StatGraphVisualizer
>  >
>  > The latter is the GUI.
>  >
>  > At line 167 or thereabouts in the constructor there is the code:
>  >
>  >          new Object[] { new Float(.900) }),
>  >
>  > which you can change. However, this won't change the headings; for
>  > that you would need to replace
>  >
>  > JMeterUtils.getResString("aggregate_report_90%_line")
>  >
>  > with
>  >
>  > "95% Line"
>  >
>  > wherever it appears.
>  >
>  > However, note that the Aggregate Graph uses a lot of memory.
>  > For longer tests, you may find it better to output to CSV and use a
>  > statistical package to analyse the data.
>  >
>  >>  With regards,
>  >>  André Mud
>  >>
>  >> --
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>  >> 
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>  >>
>  >>
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