I've been bashing against a brick wall on this ever since Monday, when the customer told me that we needed to simulate up to 50,000 pseudo-concurrent entities for the purposes of performance testing. This is the setup. I have text files full of JSON objects containing JSON data that looks a bit like this:
{"customerId"=>"900", "assetId"=>"NN_18_144", "employee"=>"", "visible"=>false,
"GenerationDate"=>"2012-09-21T09:41:39Z", "index"=>52, "Category"=>2...}
It's one object to a line. I'm using JMeter's JMS publisher to read the lines sequentially:
${_StringFromFile(${PATH_TO_DATA_FILES}scenario_9.json)}
from the each of which contain a different scenario.
What I need to do is read the files in and substitute assetId's value with a randomly selected value from a list of 50,000 non-sequential, pre-generated strings (I can't possibly have a separate file for each assetId, as that would involve littering the load injector with 50,000 files and configuring a thread group within JMeter for each). Programatically, it's a trivial matter to perform the substitution but it's not so simple to do it in JMeter on the fly.
Normally, I'd treat this as the interesting technical challenge that it is and spend a few days working it out, but I only have the weekend, which I suspect I'll spend sleeping overnight in the office anyway.
Can anyone help me with this, please?
Thanks.
