I need to test a various links of a site (no need to login) with 100\'s of users and loop it for some number of times using JMeter. I want to put those links in a \"CSV file
Prepare kind of csv-file with list of your test-params and use it to parametrize your test-samplers, using at least the following:
CSV Data Set Config
Look into the following links for details:
How to get Jmeter to use CSV data for GET parameters?
Use jmeter to test multiple Websites
use csv parameters in jmeter httprequest path
Force a thread to use same input line when using CSV Data Set Config
Jmeter functions:
Variables From CSV sampler from jmeter-plugins.
1. Prepare your test-urls in csv-file, e.g. in the following format:
url1
url2
...
urlN
Ensure that test-URLs don't contain http://
prefix (as per HTTP Request params -> Server).
2. Use schema for your script as below:
CSV Data Set Config:
Filename: [path to your csv-file with test-urls]
Variable Names: testURL
Recycle on EOF?: True
Stop thread on EOF?: False
Sharing mode: Current thread
Thread Group:
Number of Threads: N
Loop Count: M
HTTP Request // your http call
Server Name or IP: ${testURL} // use variable with extracted URL
This will start N users, each users will read M entries from list of test-urls. If M > number of entries in list of test-urls then user will recycle the list on EOF.
In one of the comments, it's mentioned that you can't read the CSV more than once per loop. You can go and have multiple threads, each reading the CSV file once, but then the file is close and won't be read on the next loop. Also, if you set the CSV to recycle, then CSV file is read over and over again indefinitely. So the question becomes how do you loop a CSV file a certain number of times as opposed to indefinitely?
I posted my answer to that in another post (https://stackoverflow.com/a/64086009/4832515), but I'll copy & paste it incase that link doesn't work in the future.
I couldn't find a simple solution to this. I ended up using beanshell scripts, which let you use code very similar to java to do some custom stuff. I made an example JMeter project to demonstrate how to do this (yes it's ridiculously complicated, considering all I want to do is repeat the CSV read):
my file structure:
JMeterExample
|
⊢--JMeterTests.jmx // the JMeter file
⊢--example.csv // the CSV file
contents of my CSV:
guest-id-1,"123 fake street",
guest-id-2,"456 fake street",
guest-id-3,"789 fake street",
so in this thread group, I'm going to just have 1 user, and I'll loop 2 times. I intend to send 1 request per CSV line. So there should be 6 requests sent total.
This is kind of optional, but the filepath is subject to change, and I don't like changing my scripts just for a change in configuration. So I store the CSV filename in a "User Defined Variables" node.
If you are storing the CSV file in the same directory as your JMeter test, you can just specify the filename only.
If you are saving the CSV in a folder other than the directory containing your JMeter file, you will need to supply an absolute path, and then slightly modify the beanshell script below: you'll need to comment out the line that loads the file relatively, and comment in the line that loads from an absolute path.
Add a Beanshell Sampler which will basically take in a path, and parse & store each line as a variable. The first line will be stored as a variable called csv_line_0
, the 2nd line will be csv_line_1
and so on. I know it's not a clean solution but... I can't find any clean simple way of doing this clean simple task. I copied and pasted my code below.
import org.apache.jmeter.services.FileServer;
import java.text.*;
import java.io.*;
import java.util.*;
String temp = null;
ArrayList lines = new ArrayList();
BufferedReader bufRdr;
ArrayList strList = new ArrayList();
// get the file
try {
// you can use this line below if your csvFilePath is an absolute path
// File file = new File(${csvFilePath});
// you can use this line below if your csvFilepath is a relative path, relative to where you saved this JMeter file
File file = new File(org.apache.jmeter.services.FileServer.getFileServer().getBaseDir() + "/" + ${csvFilePath});
if (!file.exists()) {
throw new Exception ("ERROR: file " + filename + " not found");
}
bufRdr = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(new FileInputStream(file), "UTF8"));
} catch(Exception e){
log.error("failed to load file");
log.error(e.getMessage());
return;
}
// For each CSV line, save it to a variable
int counter = 0;
while(true){
try{
temp = bufRdr.readLine();
if(temp == null || temp.equals("<EOF>")){
break;
}
lines.add(temp);
vars.put("csv_line_" + String.valueOf(counter), temp);
counter++;
} catch(Exception e){
log.error("failed to get next line");
log.error(e.getMessage());
break;
}
}
// store the number of CSV lines there are for the loop counter
vars.put("linesCount", String.valueOf(lines.size()));
Add a Loop Controller that loops once for each CSV line. ${linesCount}
is a count of the number of CSV lines and is calculated from the above beanShell script.
This script will run once per CSV line. It will go and grab the current line, and parse out whatever data is on it. You'll have to modify this script to get the data you want. In my example, I only had 2 columns, where column 1 is a "guestId", and column 2 is an "address".
__jm__loopController__idx
is a variable JMeter defines for you, and is the index of the loop controller. The variable name is __jm__{loop controller name}__idx
.
String index = vars.get("__jm__loopController__idx");
String line = vars.get("csv_line_" + index);
String [] tokens = line.split(",");
vars.put("guestId", tokens[0]);
vars.put("address", tokens[1]);
Here's the HTTP request that's using the data extracted.
When running this, as desired, I end up sending 6 http requests over to the endpoint I defined.