Apparently, my mail program encoded the addresses, below and the mailing list filter displayed the link inline. I have cleared the issue, below.
> On Apr 2, 2015, at 7:17 AM, Bob Nance <[email protected]> wrote: > > I have been tasked to create a script that will load-test a sign-up process. > I have captured the process and need to alter it to create a new user for > each thread. > > I have two issues, one I think I understand how to do, the other, not so much. > > 1) The unique email is being handled by a Counter object when the form is > POSTed. The Counter is referenced as “usercounter” starting at 101, > incrementing by 1. The username I am posting is: registration[email] jmeter${usercounter}@bogusemail.com I am 75% sure that this will do what I want, with each thread using an incrementing number for its run (the first will sign-up a user named “[email protected]” and the 10th will sign-up a user named “[email protected]” ) > > > 2) The form, however, passes a hidden variable to the browser that has to be > passed back in the POST. The number is unique and has to match what was > handed to it. > > <input class="hidden form-control" id="registration_enrollment_id" > name="registration[enrollment_id]" type="hidden" value="2”> > > The developer sent me that snippet. The “value=‘2’ ” is unique for this > registration and I need to be able to extract that data from the page source > so that I can pass it back through the thread’s POST. At this point, I am > LOST! Where do I find this in the recorded transactions? It was obviously > extracted, since the POST that I sent back in the first test included the > pair: > > registration[enrollment_id] 2 > > Can anyone provide me a method for pulling the page source information for > the form so that I can get this unique number? The enrollment fails without > it and I can’t even test if my ${usercounter} works, either, since I can’t > see the registration pass with the missing enrollment_id. The registration > for the first user, the one created during the recording, worked great, since > my browser handed back the correct number (that time the number was 2214) > > I have used jmeter to load-test page loads and form fills, before, but this > is the first time I have had to manipulate the data. I need help! > > -Bob >
