I had a problem in HTMLUnit when some JavaScript libraries were breaking 
[function was not found] so check to see if there are any javascript errors in 
the console when loading the pages via a browser...

Hope that helps,

James



-----Original Message-----
From: Jesse Alexander (KSFD 121) [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tue 6/6/2006 5:16 PM
To: MyFaces Discussion
Subject: RE: Load Testing JSF?
 
I did it exactly in that way... worked sweetly...
 
regards
Alexander


________________________________

        From: Yee CN [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
        Sent: Tuesday, June 06, 2006 7:00 PM
        To: 'MyFaces Discussion'
        Subject: RE: Load Testing JSF?
        
        

        JMeter actually comes with a proxy server that can sniff and record 
request parameters including cookies. I recorded a simple session and tried 
playing back - but could not even get pass through the login page yet. I will 
do a bit more digging tomorrow.

         

        Regards,

        Yee

         

        
________________________________


        From: Mert Çaliskan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
        Sent: Wednesday, June 07, 2006 12:31 AM
        To: MyFaces Discussion
        Subject: Re: Load Testing JSF?

         

        You can check out OpenSTA. It records the usage of a web app. and then 
you can ramp up the virtual users for the load test.

         

        Here are the first things that came up to my mind..

        It has a scripting language. If you want to read username-password for 
ex. from a file, you have to do some scripting.

        It has nice graphical outputs.

        It can do https..

        Both the openSTA and jMeter doesn't support the simulation of 
fileupload.

         

        Regards,

         

        Mert

         

         

        On 6/6/06, Dennis Byrne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

        What part are you having trouble with? JMeter or JSF ;)
        
        I would suggest using tcpmon to sniff the request parameters off the 
wire.  You can obtain this from the apache axis project.  Then take the request 
parameters and plug them in to JMeter.  You'll also want to configure JMeter 
for POST - this seems to have troubled me several times before. 
        
        Dennis Byrne
        
        >-----Original Message-----
        >From: Yee CN [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
        >Sent: Tuesday, June 6, 2006 10:49 AM
        >To: ''MyFaces Discussion'' 
        >Subject: Load Testing JSF?
        >
        >Hi,
        >
        >
        >
        >I am trying out jMeter with JSF - but not having much success so far. I
        >would appreciate if anybody could share your experience regarding load 
        >testing JSF applications so I don't have sweet blood to reinvent the 
wheel.
        >I promise I will compile a Wiki on this.
        >
        >
        >
        >Many thanks in advance.
        >
        >
        >
        >Regards, 
        >
        >Yee
        >
        >
        
        

         


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