HP LoadRunner

For the video game, see Lode Runner. For the Citroën CX Loadrunner, see Citroën CX.
HP LoadRunner
Developer(s) Hewlett-Packard, HP Software Division
Stable release 12.50
Operating system Microsoft Windows and Linux (Load Generator only)
Available in 11 languages
Type Load testing tools
License Proprietary
Website HP LoadRunner software

HP LoadRunner is a software testing tool from Hewlett-Packard. It is used to test applications, measuring system behaviour and performance under load. HP acquired LoadRunner as part of its acquisition of Mercury Interactive in November 2006.[1][2]

HP LoadRunner can simulate thousands of users concurrently using application software, recording and later analysing the performance of key components of the application.

LoadRunner simulates user activity by generating messages between application components or by simulating interactions with the user interface such as keypresses or mouse movements. The messages/interactions to be generated are stored in scripts. LoadRunner can generate the scripts by recording them, such as logging HTTP requests between a client web browser and an application's web server.[3]

Architecture

The key components of HP LoadRunner are:

Modules are available to enable HP LoadRunner to capture, replay and script different application and networking technologies. These include support for:[4]

HP LoadRunner can be run standalone or multiple instances can pooled for use by several people under the control of HP PerformanceCenter.

History

Version Service Pack Release date Notes
5.0 N/A April 2000  
6.5 N/A June 2000 Added "TurboLoad" technology.
7.8 N/A September 2003  
7.8 Feature Pack 1 September 2003 Added support for Windows XP.
8.0 N/A August 2004 Added "Additional Attributes" to Runtime Settings.
9.10 N/A February 2008  
9.51 N/A July 6, 2009  
9.52 N/A June 14, 2010  
11.0 N/A September 2010  
11.0 Patch 1 January 6, 2011  
11.0 Patch 2 February 22, 2011 Added support for Visual Studio 2010 and Protocol Updates to Ajax TruClient, Citrix, Flex, Web.
11.0 Patch 3 June 20, 2011 Added support for IE9, Mobile protocols, GraniteDS.
11.0 Patch 4 November 2011 HP SV (Service Virtualization Integration) with Controller, GWT-DFE(Google Web Toolkit- Data Format Extension), RTMP Tunneled, Messaging support, Streaming support, Flex Correlations.
11.50 N/A November 2011 Added New VuGen IDE, Ajax TruClient for IE, Web Protocol Asynchronous Support, Flex, Mobile, .NET, Web Services, 64-bit applications recording, IPv6 support.
11.50 Patch 1 July 20, 2012 Added Ajax TruClient IE protocol.
12.00 N/A March 18, 2014 Added ability to instantiate instances on Amazon EC2 directly from LoadRunner UI.
12.02 N/A January 21, 2015 Added ability to instantiate instances on Microsoft Azure directly from LoadRunner UI.
12.50 N/A August 2015
  • JavaScript as a new scripting language for the Web-HTTP/HTML protocol
  • Chrome TruClient support added
  • Google Compute Engine supported as cloud provider
  • Ability to record a TruClient script with one browser and replay it with any
  • Integrated Network Virtualization solution (formerly known as Shunra)
  • Docker-based Linux installation
  • Generating scripts from HAR files
  • Major enhancements in .NET and Citrix protocols

HP LoadRunner in the Cloud

From 2010 HP started to offer on-demand versions of LoadRunner available by cloud computing services such as Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud and later Microsoft Azure.[5][6] Version 12.50 added the use of Google Compute Engine. Selected HP partners are also able to provide LoadRunner in the Cloud as an on-demand service from their SaaS platforms.

Scripting Languages

HP LoadRunner client emulation scripts are usually created using the ANSI C programming language. However, Java and .Net programs can also be run by HP LoadRunner. Version 12.50 added the use of JavaScript for Web-HTTP/HTML scripts.

Scripts from other testing tools such as Apache JMeter, NUnit, and Selenium can be run by LoadRunner by declaring an interface library. This enables scripts to send key-value pairs to the Controller as the script runs, enabling response times to be associated with specific conditions such as the number of items displayed in the User Interface.

LoadRunner scripts can also be called from within Jenkins.

References

  1. Krazit, Tom. "HP snaps up Mercury Interactive". CNET. CBS Interactive Inc. Retrieved 2 April 2015.
  2. "HP To Acquire Mercury Interactive For $4.5 Billion". Information Week. UBM Tech. Retrieved 2 April 2015.
  3. Mar, Wilson. "LoadRunner architecture". Wilsonmar.com. Retrieved 2 April 2015.
  4. Colantonio, Joe. "LoadRunner 11.50 Licensing Change and Protocol Bundles". JoeColantonio.com. Retrieved 2 April 2015.
  5. Broersma, Matthew. "HP puts LoadRunner in the cloud". ZDNet. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2 April 2015.
  6. Fulton, Scott M. "HP Aims to Redefine Apps Performance Testing with Cloud Platform". ReadWrite. Wearable World Inc. Retrieved 2 April 2015.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, March 31, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.