If you use the simple data writer and save the data to a csv file, you will see 
the data can include the thread name, which will end in like 1-1, 1-2, 1-3...  
The -1, -2, -3, etc are the individual users.  So you can easily do a pivot 
summary with this.   I think someone needs to write a save-to-sql listener!!!  
For now I have a tear-down thread calling an EXE that reads the saved data file 
and inserts the data (improved for reporting) into an SQL table.  'Opportunity' 
with performance testing is that is makes a LOT of data.

Jim 
-----Original Message-----
From: rxfillpharm [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, August 25, 2014 12:50 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Jmeter reporting

Hi Group, 
I posted a question some days ago and guess it was not clear what I need. 
New to performance testing and jmeter. I have a bunch of test plans that work 
fine. 


My test logs on, runs a small query, then logs off. 
That takes @ 5 seconds as per my manual test and the jmeter test. 

When I increase threads (users) to 10, I want to know with all users running 
concurrently, 
how long each individual user takes to complete the test (log on, run query, 
log off).
  There should not be that much of a different. 

When I increase threads to 100, I should see a difference in the total time per 
users. 
Increase to 500 users, I should see the timer for each user take longer still. 

Is there a listener in jmeter that can tell me that, ie time per user. I'm 
thinking one 
row of raw data for each thread.  I am not interested in the per http call 
speed.

Thank you and I hope that my question is clear(er).


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