How to get the result in Monitor result (Jmeter)? - asp.net

Am Using asp.net application, i have to view the result in Monitor results(Jmeter). Is there any possible ways to get result in Monitor result.

As per Monitor Results listener documentation
Monitor Results is a new Visualizer for displaying server status. It is designed for Tomcat 5, but any servlet container can port the status servlet and use this monitor.
So there is no simple way to make it work with IIS.
You can use either built-in Windows monitoring tools to check IIS server and underlying OS health or consider using JMeter's Server Performance Monitoring plugin.
I also believe ASP.NET Login Testing with JMeter will be extremely useful

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HTTP response times GUI

I'm looking for an application available on CentOS, that allows me to check periodic connectivity response times between that server and a specific port of a remote server (in this case servers a SOAP API).
Something that preferentially allows me to send periodic API calls, but if not possible, just telnet's that remote port, but shows results in a graphic.
Does someone know about an application that allows this, without the need for me to create a script that writes results to a log file that is less readable in terms of time perspective?
After digging and testing a bit more, ended up using netdata:
https://www.netdata.cloud/
Awesome tool, extremely simple to use and install.

How to load test Aspnetcore.signalr application?

We need to load test aspnetcore signalR application. I saw about crank but that
seems to help only with aspnet signalR. Can someone help me with this.
Most probably you need a load testing tool which supports WebSocket protocol as this is what SignalR will be doing by default.
It could be also Server Sent Events, Forever Frame or Long Polling so you need to clarify the NFRs and identify which protocols are in scope and what are the requirements which need to be tested.
Depending on your skills you can go for:
Gatling which has support of WebSocket, but you will need to do some programming in Scala
Apache JMeter which supports WebSocket via the plugin, JMeter allows you to create tests using simple GUI. You will be able to also test Long Polling and Server Sent Events using JMeter, check out How to Load Test Async Requests with JMeter for more details.

ways of making a communication between a webserver to a windows application in .NET

I need to find the most efficient way to communicate from an asp.net web server and a windows C++ application. The windows application does not have any permission to access the database of the asp.net web server.
When the user presses a button, that action with some bytes should be received by the C++ application.
In return, after processing the data on the C++ application, it will send back the result to the web server.
The only way I can think of at the moment is as following:
The asp.net web server will have two web service methods:
the C++ application will call that web service for a method for an interval. if there is a change, then the C++ application will process.
after the C++ application finished its process, it will call a method on that web service to inform about the result.
Any other ways to solve this kind of communication?
Thanks in advance.
If the C++ Application is also on Windows, named pipes would be a good solution. They can be configured to be durable so they can queue messages if either side is not ready to receive the message and they are quite easy to use. They basically look like files that you can read or write from and the data appears on the other side of the "pipe".
Take a look at the documentation (C++) here: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa365781(v=VS.85).aspx
On the ASP.NET side you would use .NET API's. Here's a nice example to get you started: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb546085.aspx (This example includes both client and server code.)
Named pipes would be a great solution if the C++ application is located in the same physical server as the ASP.NET application. In that case the OS would be just moving memory between processes for you so it could be very quick.
Additionally, I would configure the C++ Application as a Windows Service so it's always available and can be restarted when the server it's running on is restarted. If keeping it running is very important you could integrate Performance Counters and then have your ops team monitor the counters to make sure it is operating within expected thresholds.
The C++ application can also make a simple GET or POST request with enough information that the webserver can handle in case you don't want to expose a webservice.
You could use network sockets. It's been a long time since I have done anything with them so I can't be much help. Research Winsock (aka Windows Sockets API).
You could use WCF services and connect to them using your C++ client. You will have to research consuming WCF services from C++ client.
As #parapura suggested you could use simple HTTPRequest get & post methods. You could create your own http handler for these request to customize the response.
As you suggested you could use simple web services.

How to create a receiver application in .NET that would accept messages or requests from ASP.NET page?

First of all thanks for taking the time to read my question. Here is what I am trying to accomplish followed by what I have so far on this.
What I want to do is create a Windows application (or server of sorts) that would listen for requests from an ASP.NET application. The windows application would be installed and would listen for messages from ASP.NET application and then do some processing. The flow is like this:
A user downloads the desktop application and registers their IP address on my web site. After downloading the desktop app, the ASP.NET application can then send requests to that particular desktop client for further processing. I think further processing is independent of the resolution in this case that's why i have skipped over details on what processing would be done. But if you think it is important, please let me know and I will add those details as well.
I have looked into creating a TCP server that would listen for requests. Because the user has already registered their IP address on my web site, my web site assigns them a unique identifier and stores the ID alongwith IP address in database. Now, the ASP.NET site can send requests to that desktop application.
I have looked into creating a TCP server for this purpose. While researching I also came across PNRP and it seems something like what I am trying to do.
Can you guys recommend some solutions or where I should be looking at for this scenario? Should I create a simple TCPLISTENER or may be go with PNRP approach? Or something else?
The basic requirement is for a web application to be able to communicate with a desktop application. The web application would be servicing numerous users and each user would have a desktop application installed. Which user for which desktop client question would be addressed by the web application that would maintain a database of unique user id's and their corresponding IP Address.
Thanks in advance for your help.
You could use .NET remoting or a web-service in the desktop app. Use WCF or WSE for the latter. You can use COM to add windows firwall rules.
Whatever you do, take firewalling/NAT into account. It might be easier for the client application to poll the server (initiate the connection) otherwise you open a can of worms by trying to have a remotely-accessible server in your user's computer without having to do some very manual configurations on the user's networking equipment.
Once you have that part sorted out, what I used in your situation was .NET Remoting. At the time WCF had not come out and when it did it was to crippled for my needs. TCP IP sockets were too raw (I had to write too much code) and so Remoting solved my problem ideally (a hand full lines of code to set up the connection, and everything was automatic from there on).
EDIT: I use an excellent third party library that makes Remoting even more flexible (flexible enough that I am still waiting for WCF to catch up with the featureset so that I stop using Remoting, and no luck yet!). Check out http://www.genuinechannels.com/ to see all the features they have. It includes making calls from server to client, and that sounds exactly like what you need to do. Check it out.

Wcf ThreadPool and async

I've got an asp.net web page that is making 7 async requests to a WCF service on another server. Both boxes are clean without anything else installed.
I've also increased maxconnections in web.config to 20.
I run a single call through the system and the page returns in 800ms. The long and short of it is I think that the threadpool is being being overwhelmed as, once placed underload I cannot get more that 8 requests per second, even though both quad core boxes are running at 20% CPU load and the sql server it's connected to is returning the querys in under 10ms per call.
I've changed the service behaviour to concurrency.multiple but that's not seeming to help.
Any ideas anyone.
There are many different factors that could be in play here. Taking a stab at the remark that changing your instancing model on the service had zero effect (big IF here) then its possible the 'bottleneck' is upstream from the service. Either at the web server, or the client load generator.
You've got several areas to review for tuning: client, web server, wcf service server - that's assuming there are no network devices in the middle. Pick an end and work towards the other end. Since I'm already making an assumption that its not the service, then I'd start at the client and work my way towards the wcf service.
Client
What machine is driving the load against the web server? A laptop? A desktop? A dedicated test agent, or a shared one? The client acting as the load generator for purposes of this test is also susceptible to maxConnections limitation as this is a client setting.
What is the CPU utilization of the client generating load? Could it be that the test driver is just unable to generate enough load to push these boxes? Can you add additional test clients to your test?
Web Server
What does the system.net/processModel element look like in machine.config on the ASP.NET web server? Try setting autoConfig = true. This will allow the configuration to auto size based on the 'size' of the machine its running on.
WCF Service
Review WCF service for any throttling defaults that might be in play and tweak appropriately. See ServiceThrottlingBehavior on MSDN.
Let us know any changes in behavior you might observe (if any) if you make any changes!
The real answer here that everyone missed is that you're using an ASP.NET web page. That means your client is some form of web browser. Modern web browsers have a limit of 2 concurrent async requests at any time. This means that 5 of your requests were queued up and waiting for the first two to finish. Once those first two, it served the next two, then the next two, then the last one.
All of these round-trips and handshakes simply take time. I'm guessing that your roundtrip time is around 200ms, unfortunately you have to do it 4 times.
I also really dislike the "max 2" browser limitation on making webservice calls.
Is this service hosted in IIS, WAS or a Windows Service?
You should try to set Windows to run services on a higher priority. Your WCF Service is probably creating the threads it needs but they should be running at a low priority.
Hope that helps.

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