Thanks  sebbaz,

       One more doubt ,If rampup perriod is nothing to do with TPS then how
do i calculate my Load
i.e. How much is the Load(threads per sec) at which i am hitting my
server...with the following plan...

My understanding is 50 users(threads) accessing server
simultaneosly...meaning 50TPS...am i correct..

      Please clarify

On Fri, May 15, 2009 at 3:16 PM, sebb <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 15/05/2009, indireddysankar <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Hi,
> >         I have ceated my test plan as shown below
> >
> >  T(50)
> >  R(10)
>
> I assume you mean Threads=50 and Ramp-up=10?
>
> >  Loops(3600)
> >      HTTP Sampler
> >
> >  I am getting graph results as
> >     Average latency is 1985ms , Throughput as 22.9/sec  ..
> >
> >  My understanding is
> >  we loading the server with Threads per second(users)(50/10=5) i.e. TPS
> =5 ,
>
> No, the ramp-up has little or no bearing on the TPS, except possibly
> for the first iteration.
> It only controls how long JMeter takes to start all the threads, after
> that they are on their own.
>
> >  so at max the server has to show me max throughput it is handling as
> 5tps,
> >  since we are htting 5tps and if server is handling all requests
> successfully
> >  then throughput has to be 5/sec. How come throughput is 22.9
>
> Throughput is calculated as requests/elapsed time.
>
> >  i have gone through
> >  http://jakarta.apache.org/jmeter/usermanual/test_plan.html ...
> >  can anyone please interpret these results for me, where i am missing...
>
> See above.
>
> >    Thanks in  advance...
> >  -Siva
> >
>
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