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Re: measuring oracle transactions

From: Jim Smith <jim_at_jimsmith.demon.co.uk>
Date: Sun, 3 Oct 2004 12:06:01 +0100
Message-ID: <L1Rne5MZ09XBFwUS@jimsmith.demon.co.uk>


In message <1096733875.865076_at_yasure>, Daniel Morgan <damorgan_at_x.washington.edu> writes
>Jim Smith wrote:
>
>> In message <1096593761.373160_at_yasure>, Daniel Morgan
>><damorgan_at_x.washington.edu> writes
>>
>>> Ronald wrote:
>>>
>>>> Sorry if it was not clear enough.
>>>> I want to reproduce manual transactions and know start and end time on
>>>> a 11i oracle application.
>>>> Version is actually not interesting because reproducing human
>>>> activities and measure the time it took to response.
>>>> bad example but like a: dataload sheet that query specific product and
>>>> logs the start time and time when query is answered. This to measure
>>>> transaction time how the users are experience on specific time fence.
>>>> Hope this clarifies.
>>>> Regards,
>>>> Ronald.
>>>
>>>
>>> That you have 11i is irrelevant to your question. The relevant version
>>> is that of the database and is required to give you a specific answer.
>>>
>> The database version is not relevant. If you read his message, you
>>will see he wants to measure user transactions, i.e. "type in some
>>data and hit save". This is DBMS independent.
>> I don't know the answer, but there are various web application bench
>>marking tools which may be able to do the job.
>
>For someone that acknowledges that he doesn't know the answer you seem
>awfully sure of the fact that the database version is unimportant.
>
>As someone that does know the answer ... I respectfully disagree.
>

I'm not sure you are answering the right question. Perhaps you could explain how knowing the DBMS version helps to the answer the question.

-- 
Jim Smith
Because of their persistent net abuse, I ignore mail from
these domains (among others) .yahoo.com .hotmail.com .kr .cn .tw
For an explanation see <http://www.jimsmith.demon.co.uk/spam>
Received on Sun Oct 03 2004 - 06:06:01 CDT

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