stress testing webservice
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We have a webservice that seemed to be doing fine until it wasn't - and we are having a @@#$!! of a time figuring out what happened. We added "better" caching in and were fairly confident it was caching when it was supposed to and expiring when it was supposed to. The question is: how to do better upfront testing? How do you best go about stress testing your app before it embarasses you? Thanks.
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We have a webservice that seemed to be doing fine until it wasn't - and we are having a @@#$!! of a time figuring out what happened. We added "better" caching in and were fairly confident it was caching when it was supposed to and expiring when it was supposed to. The question is: how to do better upfront testing? How do you best go about stress testing your app before it embarasses you? Thanks.
There are many tools out there. I have used WebLoad[^] and it worked well for me.
Navaneeth How to use google | Ask smart questions
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We have a webservice that seemed to be doing fine until it wasn't - and we are having a @@#$!! of a time figuring out what happened. We added "better" caching in and were fairly confident it was caching when it was supposed to and expiring when it was supposed to. The question is: how to do better upfront testing? How do you best go about stress testing your app before it embarasses you? Thanks.
dd314159 wrote:
We have a webservice that seemed to be doing fine until it wasn't
Isn't that the case all the time?
dd314159 wrote:
How do you best go about stress testing your app before it embarasses you?
embarrass who? I always put 3 piece suite and look good in front of my customers. :) Seriously, Have you tried Web Application Stress Tool?[^]
Yusuf Oh didn't you notice, analogous to square roots, they recently introduced rectangular, circular, and diamond roots to determine the size of the corresponding shapes when given the area. Luc Pattyn[^]
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There are many tools out there. I have used WebLoad[^] and it worked well for me.
Navaneeth How to use google | Ask smart questions
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dd314159 wrote:
We have a webservice that seemed to be doing fine until it wasn't
Isn't that the case all the time?
dd314159 wrote:
How do you best go about stress testing your app before it embarasses you?
embarrass who? I always put 3 piece suite and look good in front of my customers. :) Seriously, Have you tried Web Application Stress Tool?[^]
Yusuf Oh didn't you notice, analogous to square roots, they recently introduced rectangular, circular, and diamond roots to determine the size of the corresponding shapes when given the area. Luc Pattyn[^]
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We have a webservice that seemed to be doing fine until it wasn't - and we are having a @@#$!! of a time figuring out what happened. We added "better" caching in and were fairly confident it was caching when it was supposed to and expiring when it was supposed to. The question is: how to do better upfront testing? How do you best go about stress testing your app before it embarasses you? Thanks.
I've heard some good things about Grinder. Open source. http://grinder.sourceforge.net/g3/features.html[^]
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I've heard some good things about Grinder. Open source. http://grinder.sourceforge.net/g3/features.html[^]
I am just planning to go to Minnesota for a food festival so I can see Judas Priest play all of British Steel for $10. So, when you said 'grinder'... ( grinder is a song on that album )
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista.