On 22 June 2013 16:39, umesh prajapati <[email protected]> wrote:
> Thank you very much for a quick response. Ok , i am trying to follow the
> 2nd step that you have mentioned which is add save response as MD5 hash?
> But I am being unable to find that option.
>
> Like you have mentioned. I have to run the test once to be able to get that
> option. So I ran the test once. and I right click on Http Sampler and
> clicked ADD and I checked on all of them but was unable to locate save
> response as MD5 hash.

Bottom right of HTTP Sampler GUI.

> I do see MD5Hex Assertion under Assertion. I am not sure if this is the one
> your talking about.

Yes, for one of the possible options.

>
>
> On Sat, Jun 22, 2013 at 8:22 AM, sebb <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> On 22 June 2013 16:02, umesh prajapati <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > I would really appreciate if i could get some help on assertion.
>> >
>> > For example:
>> > I have 100 users to test.
>> > I run the test for 100 user in 5 seconds interval and save the
>> > response in to a file.
>> >
>> > Now, I would like to do a load test with the same 100 users without 5
>> > seconds interval
>> > How can I use assertion or how can i assert that the response I am
>> > getting now during the load test matches or contains the same data
>> > before.(that was saved to a file)
>>
>> That's not possible currently in JMeter.
>>
>> Why not save the response files in two separate directories and the
>> use a standard compare tool?
>>
>> Alternatively, if you are looking for an *exact* match, you could use
>> the "Save response as MD5 hash?" option in the HTTP Sampler, and add
>> an assertion to check that the response body is as expected. You would
>> have to run the test once to get the hashes, and then add a Response
>> Assertion to check the hash. You could then re-run with different
>> settings for delays etc.
>>
>> If you want to still store the result, you could replace the Response
>> Assertion with MD5 Assertion; of course then you need to uncheck the
>> "Save response as MD5 hash?" option as you want the hash of the sample
>> response not the hash of the hash created by the sampler. If you see
>> what I mean.
>>
>> > Another thing that I noticed was, when I use save response to a file.
>> > It saves each user response to separate file. Is there a way that I
>> > can save all the user response to one single file
>>
>> You can configure Listeners to save the response data; it's not the
>> default because of the likely size and resources needed to do so.
>>
>> > and later when I run
>> > the load test assert the response with that single file.
>>
>> No.
>>
>> But you could configure a listener to save as XML and only enable the
>> response data.
>> Then compare output from test runs.
>>
>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected]
>> For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]
>>
>>

---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected]
For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]

Reply via email to