Hi, Peter, Thank you for your reply. :)
I'm using Tomcat 7, but it seems it's really getting data from tomcat. My server doesn't look dead, but I really don't understand why thread and health lines don't change. I'd like to understand better how to analyse this graph, I've searched on internet and I didn't find anything about it. I've found an example where the graph looks like mine: http://www.tutorialspoint.com/jmeter/pdf/jmeter_monitor_test_plan.pdf (the last graph in the last page). Thank you, Patricia 2014-02-21 12:53 GMT-03:00 Peter Lin <[email protected]>: > the monitor performance is meant to talk to tomcat's JMX and get the basic > stats it publishes. > > if the server looks dead, double check that it is actually getting data > from tomcat. I wrote that a long time back and it worked with tomcat 5 and > 6. I don't know if it still works with newer releases of tomcat. > > > On Fri, Feb 21, 2014 at 10:47 AM, Patricia Dousseau <[email protected] > >wrote: > > > Hello :) > > > > I have some doubts concerning the monitor performance graph. I've > > performed some tests, and I come out with a graph like the one attached > and > > I was wondering why my thread line stays always "dead" and the health > line > > also doesn't change. > > > > And what's the meaning of the load line? Nearer to 100% means that > > it's overloaded? > > > > Any help is appreciated, > > Thank you, > > Patricia > > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] > > For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected] > > >
