@Oliver/@Kiran : It is indeed Captcha
We are mocking this. It works absolutely fine. -Shabana On Fri, Nov 25, 2011 at 6:58 PM, Oliver Lloyd <[email protected]>wrote: > You do realise that the entire purpose of captchas is to prevent people > like > you using tools like JMeter to automate against the page that the captcha > sits on, right? (Google's recaptcha has other uses but putting that aside > for now). Because it does kind of seem like you are trying to automate > catpcha responses here, which is never going to work because JMeter is not > human and cannot read obfuscated text. And no, Kiran, he has not broken the > captcha by successfully writing the first AI JMeter script - he seems to be > giving it a go though. > > Now, if you just want to load the captcha and don't care about submitting > the correct response then ignore what I just wrote but, er, why? Do you > work > for Google? You should only be testing your own code and not spamming > Google's recaptcha service. > > Look, just disable the captcha during your testing, it will save you rather > a lot of time. You can either do that or another alternative might be to > load the image but not require that the submitted text be validated - not > sure if this is possible with this service but it's worthwhile if it is > because I have seen bottlenecks on the captcha load request before where > our > captcha framework code had a bug in it so it is a potential area where > issue > can occur. > > ----- > http://www.http503.com/ > -- > View this message in context: > http://jmeter.512774.n5.nabble.com/Extracting-from-JSON-using-Regular-expression-Extrator-tp5022431p5023505.html > Sent from the JMeter - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com. > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] > For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected] > >
