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Editing Load Test Using the Load Test Editor

You can edit existing load tests by using the Load Test Editor. Before you can edit a load test, you must first create one by using the New Load Test Wizard. For more information, see Creating Load Tests Using the New Load Test Wizard.

Load tests can contain both unit tests and Web performance tests. The main purpose of a load test is to simulate many users accessing a server at the same time. A load test gives you access to application stress and performance data. A load test can be configured to emulate various load conditions such as user loads and network types.

Load Test Editor Hierarchy

Load Test Architecture

Load Tests Created in the New Load Test Wizard

Any of the initial configuration options and settings that you specified in the New Load Test Wizard when you created a load test can be modified in the Load Test Editor after the wizard is finished. The Load Test Editor lets you to modify an existing load test's properties, and add more scenarios, counter sets, and run settings.

Tasks

Tasks

Associated topics

Edit load test scenario settings: A scenario is used to model how a group of users interacts with a server application. A scenario consists of a load pattern, a test mix model, a test mix, a browser mix, and network mix. A load test can have more than one scenario and a single scenario can contain Web performance tests and unit tests. By grouping similar settings together, a scenario lets you to group and run tests of a similar nature together.

Configure and manage performance counter sets specified for computers that are used in a load test: Load tests provide named counter sets, organized by technology, that are useful when you analyze performance counter data. The counter sets include Load Test, IIS, ASP.NET, and SQL. When you create a load test with the New Load Test Wizard, an initial set of predefined and important counter set are configured by default for the computers that you specify to include in the load test. You manage your counters in the Load Test Editor.

Configure and manage load test run settings: Run settings are a set of properties that influence the way a load test runs. Run settings are organized by categories in the Properties window.

Specify 64-bit processes for load testing: You can configure the test setting that you are using with your load test to specify that you want to use 64-bit processes.

Configuration considerations for load tests: You can configure load test to ideal settings by modifying such settings as sample rates and think times. You can also configure your load test for optimal settings if it includes Web performance tests.

Add profiling data to your load test: The Profiling Tools that are included in Visual Studio Premium let developers measure, evaluate, and target performance-related issues in their code. For more information, see Analyzing Application Performance by Using Profiling Tools.

With Visual Studio Ultimate you can create performance sessions on your Web application either using the Web Performance Test Editor or the Load Test Editor. To obtain the data that you need to analyze, you must first create a performance session and then run the session. The Performance Wizard lets you do both.

Configuring Load Test Run Settings

Run settings are a set of properties that influence the way a load test runs. Run settings are organized by categories in the Properties window.

Distributing Load Tests Across Multiple Test Machines Using Test Controllers and Test Agents

You can use a group of computers to generate simulated load for testing, and to run tests remotely and concurrently on several computers.

See Also

Other Resources

Creating and Editing Load Tests

Creating Load Tests Using the New Load Test Wizard

Load Test Walkthroughs