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pageicon Saturday Apr 11, 2009

Verbose Descriptions on the "Schedule a New Job" form

I have added a new feature to the SLAMD "Schedule a New Job" form - job parameter descriptions and helpful text above the input field for that job parameter. I have also added a parameter to activate/de-activate this feature with the idea that long-time users of SLAMD may not want to have the form "enlarged" by all the descriptive text, but might occasionally want to see the descriptions without hovering over the input field to produce the tooltip.

The following screenshot is of the user interface configuration page showing the checkbox, parameter, and description of the attribute that activates and deactivates the verbose job parameter descriptions:

SLAMD user interface configuration screenshot

The following screenshot is of the "Schedule a New Job" page showing the the verbose job parameter descriptions:

SLAMD user interface configuration screenshot

The following screenshot is of the "Schedule a New Job" page showing the the verbose job parameter descriptions de-activated:

SLAMD user interface configuration screenshot

This feature is only available in SLAMD3: Slamd with Struts

About SLAMD

The SLAMD Distributed Load Generation Engine (SLAMD) is a Java-based application designed for stress testing and performance analysis of network-based applications. Initial development of SLAMD was performed at Sun Microsystems, with recent development sponsored primarily by UnboundID Corp. Recent development work is by Terry Gardner and Neil Wilson.

SLAMD is available under the terms of the Sun Public License, which is an OSI-approved open source license. The main site for obtaining information about SLAMD is available at its home page, and it is available as a java.net project.

SLAMD was originally developed for the purpose of benchmarking and analyzing the performance of LDAP directory servers, and it is the most powerful and flexible tool available for this task. However, it is also well-suited for testing other kinds of network applications and has been used for things like Web servers and Web-based applications, relational databases, and mail servers. It can also be used for non-network based applications (and in fact, it is used for comparing things like CPU power and memory latency across a number of different kinds of systems), although its distributed nature makes it ideal for systems that can be accessed remotely.

SLAMD provides a Java-based API to make it possible to quickly develop custom workloads, and it also contains an embedded scripting engine that can make it easy to stress applications using protocols like LDAP, HTTP, SMTP, IMAP, and POP, or any database that can be accessed via JDBC. It also includes tools for recording and playing back TCP traffic, and a utility for intercepting LDAP communication and writing it as a script that may be executed in the SLAMD scripting engine.

SLAMD2 is being converted to use a web framework, in this case Struts. This involves separating the HTML generation from the database access code, in short, conversion to MVC. It is a big task, but a fun one. When complete, SLAMD - tentatively called SLAMD3 since I am not very imaginative - will have its display (view) completely separate from the model and the controller. The virtues of this are profound: easy to change the view without mucking about in the database code, easy to localize (only Southern United States English so far, but a Klingon locale is coming), easy to change the model without affecting the view and vice-versa, and a host of other benefits.

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