Load Testing Blog

Velocity Conference – Day 1

My first day at Velocity was long, but fun. I breathed a sigh of relief when my luggage finally arrived…10 hours after I did.
I attended part of a Load Testing workshop early in the afternoon that raised some interesting topics:

Why are steady ramps bad? They showed some examples of how this approach can result in the wrong conclusions about system capacity. I agreed heartily – I’ve blogged on the merits of a stepped ramp in load tests previously.
Abandonment rates – This is a feature that I’d like to get into Load Tester sooner rather than later. A basic … Continue reading »

Local Network Connections

We recently had a customer that exhibited a particular error message whenever the site went past 60-70 simultaneous users.   There were two servers under test, a webserver and a database/application server.  The only symptom we could see in the load test reports was a large number of failed TCP connections on the webserver, but not on the database server.
Their webserver was using CGI to build and display pages.  The CGI script would make a local TCP connection to a  communications service running on the same machine, which would then seek out a remote application server to service the request.   At … Continue reading »

Sharepoint Performance Case Study

Is your Sharepoint website slow? Are the servers under-utilized and the database shows no locking, but response times for the pages are still poor? Is Sharepoint unstable under load? We recently helped a client through the grueling process of optimizing and stabilizing a large Sharepoint installation. Once we discovered the underlying causes, the fixes were rather easy, but finding the performance bottlenecks was time consuming. We’ve described the process and the findings, so you can skip the hard part!
Read the case study.

Measuring the Performance Effects of Dynamic Compression in IIS 7.0

Enabling dynamic compression in IIS 7.0 can reduce the bandwidth usage on a particular file by up to 70%, but also reduces the maximum load a server can handle and may actually reduce site performance if the site compresses large dynamic files. Read the full report for a complete analysis.

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