Jatin ,
Thank you and am looking in to this now . . .
Thanking You
With warm regards,
Vijayakumar.C
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jatin Davey" <[email protected]>
To: "JMeter Users List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, November 16, 2009 6:54 PM
Subject: Re: Connections released on HTTP Requests
One more thing to add :
Perfmon cannot tell you about DB locking but some of the performance
counters like high CPU , High disk usage would mean that there is an
imminent DB deadlock that is about to happen.
Thanks
Jatin
Jatin Davey wrote:
Hi
If you are using windows XP then you could use the default performance
monitoring tool that comes with all windows boxes, It is called as
"Perfmon". You can monitor all counters for your DB process and find the
trend of how various counters behave when your DB is running. Some of the
counters include the following:
Creating process ID , Elapsed time , handle count , Process ID , IO Data
bytes / sec , IO Data operations / sec , IO Read / Write operations / sec
and many more.
Have a look at some of the performance counters at the microsoft site as
given below:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc768048.aspx
Thanks
Jatin
vijayakumar wrote:
Hi Ivan / Hi All
Am not using linux , we are using Windows XP Professional and Java
appication with Oracle Database .
So can you guys please let me know what to do to monitor ( or release
connection after test properly ) the connections during the test .
More over , using JMeter can we find the CPU Performance , I/O Delay ,
DATABASE LOCKING ( I want to know about this specially ) and other
issues at the database server !
Thanking you all in Advance
With warm regards,
Vijayakumar.C
----- Original Message ----- From: "Ivan Rancati" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, November 12, 2009 10:13 PM
Subject: Re: Connections released on HTTP Requests>
BC.Vijayakumar wrote:
Can you please let me know how can I monitor the number of connections
being used by JMeter during the test and after test ?
If you are using linux on the client and/or the server, this command
netstat -antp | awk '{print $5}'
will print the foreign addresses for all connections
You could add a grep for the address you want to monitor, a wc -l to
get a
number of lines, and a watch to update every n seconds
View this message in context:
http://old.nabble.com/Connections-released-on-HTTP-Requests-tp26315557p26322032.html
Sent from the JMeter - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
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