1、需要下载一个jar包,放入到lib /ext文件中 JMeterPlugins-Standard.jar
2、在服务器上安装 perfmon server agent
这里监控内存我们使用的是:jp@gc - PerfMon Metrics Collectot
在使用之前,我们需要运行/serverAgent/startAgent.bat这个文件,我们需要将serverAgent目录及下面的文件复制到我们测试的服务器上,然后点击打开
3、 创建监控器时选择如图:
PerfMon Server AgentInstallationYou do not need any root/admin privilege. You can just unzip the the ServerAgent-X.X.X.zip somewhere on the server. Then launch the agent using startAgent.sh script on Unix, or startAgent.bat script on Windows.The agent is written in Java, so you will need JRE 1.4+ to run it. Note you can create yourself the agent package which includes its own JRE so you don't have to install java on the server (We tested it on windows platform). To do this, just create a JRE folder in the agent folder and copy one installed JRE inside. Change the java command inside the .bat file to the path to the java executable and it will work. Once the agent is running, you can use the PerfMon Metrics Collector Listener to connect to the agents. You can add multiple servers to monitor, one graph can display several kinds of metrics (cpu, memory, etc...), auto-zooming rows for best view. UsageTo start the agent, simply run startAgent bat/sh file. It will open UDP/TCP server ports where JMeter will connect and query the metrics. Some information will be printed to standard output, informing you on problems gathering metrics (logging verbosity regulated with --loglevel parameter). You can specify the listening ports as arguments (0 disables listening), default is 4444: $ ./startAgent.sh --udp-port 0 --tcp-port 3450 INFO 2011-11-25 19:02:14.315 [kg.apc.p] (): Binding TCP to 3450 You can use the --auto-shutdown option when starting the agent to automatically stop it once the test is finished. It is recommended to use this feature only with TCP connections: $ undera@undera-HP:/tmp/serverAgent$ ./startAgent.sh --udp-port 0 --auto-shutdown INFO 2011-11-25 19:48:59.321 [kg.apc.p] (): Agent will shutdown when all clients disconnected INFO 2011-11-25 19:48:59.424 [kg.apc.p] (): Binding TCP to 4444 You can use the --sysinfo option to view available system objects: $ ./startAgent.sh --sysinfo INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:25.517 [kg.apc.p] (): *** Logging available processes *** INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:25.542 [kg.apc.p] (): Process: pid=24244 name=bash args=-bash INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:25.543 [kg.apc.p] (): Process: pid=25086 name=dash args=/bin/sh ./startAgent.sh --sysinfo INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:25.543 [kg.apc.p] (): Process: pid=25088 name=java args=java -jar ./CMDRunner.jar --tool PerfMonAgent --sysinfo INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:25.549 [kg.apc.p] (): *** Logging available filesystems *** INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:25.551 [kg.apc.p] (): Filesystem: fs=/dev type=devtmpfs INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:25.551 [kg.apc.p] (): Filesystem: fs=/ type=ext4 INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:25.551 [kg.apc.p] (): Filesystem: fs=/var/run type=tmpfs INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:25.551 [kg.apc.p] (): Filesystem: fs=/home type=ext4 INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:25.552 [kg.apc.p] (): Filesystem: fs=/var/lock type=tmpfs INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:25.552 [kg.apc.p] (): Filesystem: fs=/proc type=proc INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:25.553 [kg.apc.p] (): *** Logging available network interfaces *** INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:25.554 [kg.apc.p] (): Network interface: iface=lo addr=127.0.0.1 type=Local Loopback INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:25.554 [kg.apc.p] (): Network interface: iface=eth0 addr=192.168.0.1 type=Ethernet INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:25.555 [kg.apc.p] (): *** Done logging sysinfo *** INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:25.555 [kg.apc.p] (): Binding UDP to 4444 INFO 2011-11-25 19:51:26.560 [kg.apc.p] (): Binding TCP to 4444 The --interval <seconds> argument can be used to change metrics collection frequency. Using Server Agent With Other ApplicationsServer Agent uses simple plain-text protocol, anyone can use agent's capabilities implementing client, based on kg.apc.perfmon.client.Transport interface. If anyone's interested, start the topic on the support forums and I'll describe how to connect third-party client app to agent. ServerAgent has simple text protocol and can work on UDP and TCP transports. Most of cases will use TCP. To have your first talk with the agent, start it locally. Then use telnet utility to connect to it: user@ubuntu:~$ telnet localhost 4444 Trying 127.0.0.1... Connected to localhost. Escape character is '^]'. If connection has succeeded, you should see "Accepting new TCP connection" message in ServerAgent console log. Type "test" and press Enter in telnet chat, server should answer with short "Yep": test Yep Type "exit": exit Connection closed by foreign host. That's it. You sending a command line, server answering. Command line consists of command, sometimes with parameters. Parameters are separated from command with a colon sign. Possible commands are:
Specifying MetricsMetrics list consists of metric specifications, separated by TAB character. Metric collection output consists of float values, TAB separated. Example: metrics-single:cpumemory 22.0573689416419457.52359562205553 Each metric specification consists of several fields, colon-separated. Short example: metrics-single:cpu:idle memory:free 80.02238388360381 57.52359562205553 Fields number is metric-type specific. Possible metric types are:
Fields corresponding to each metric type are described at metrics page. Last example (Yep, ServerAgent can be shell exec vulnerability. If you have issue with this, ask me and I'll introduce 'secure' mode, disabling insecure metric types): metrics-single:exec:/bin/sh:-c:free | grep Mem | awk '{print $7}' 1152488 |