Run JMeter tests in Java code
A look at how a JMeter test can be written in Java: build tests that run as part of the application code base to support agile development practises.
Save about 50 to 70% of your time using OctoPerf instead of Apache JMeter™ for the Thread Groups creation (aka Virtual Users).
Our team of experts has spent years optimizing the JMeter™ experience to cover all your requirements.
It's cheaper than automating your own JMeter™ tests in AWS.
The most customizable reporting in the industry from your browser.
OctoPerf’s analysis metrics lets you identify performance bottlenecks in minutes, live during test execution. Create your own customized reports.
Types of graphs with line charts, tops, pie charts, tables, trees...
Filters covered with geographical locations, user profiles, hits and containers or even specific user actions.
Dozens of features with time filters, comparison reports, SLA, logs and errors. All you need to analyse your load tests.
Metrics and types with user load, response time, hits and errors, averages, percentiles, Apdex...
You can import / export your OctoPerf's Virtual Users as JMeter thread groups in no time.
We charge for load testing, not for your infrastructure monitoring. Even for on premise!
Sign up for a free account. You can run up to 50 concurrent users per test and have access to all features.
Schedule your load tests.
Execute within your CI pipeline.
Automate through our open API.
Monitoring the infrastructure while running a load test provides invaluable information about what’s happening on server side. OctoPerf supports monitoring a variety of web servers, databases, and more. As well as many APM solutions and CI/CD platforms.
A look at how a JMeter test can be written in Java: build tests that run as part of the application code base to support agile development practises.
A look at how JMeter logging can be configured and used to support test creation and debugging. Logging can assist in debugging your tests and understanding how you configure this is useful!
How to use JMeter test results to inform decisions on how future performance testing load profiles can be defined.