As you can see so far, a lot goes into planning an effective
performance test.

Below are the most important elements that need exploring while
planning a performance test. Focusing on them will ensure the test
is effictive and efficient.
- Identify the types of performance tests required (stress / load
/ endurance) based on the business requirements provided.
- Ensure that you have up-to-date performance targets and any
Service Level Agreements (SLAs) determined before starting the
performance tests.
- Note: If your organization does not
have Service Level Agreements for performance in place, you should
work on identifying and documenting one.
- Note: Your technical team(s) must be
aware of, and discuss SLAs and their feasibility with all
stakeholders before plans are final, or updated.
- Performance tests should not occur on production environment
sites and servers except for acute or specific scenarios;
- Ensure that the performance test environment is an exact (or
close to exact) replica of production environment;
- Base all performance tests on business targets, objectives, or
potential issues that require validating - don't try to conduct
tests without a clear objective or scope;
- Add "ThinkTime" and "pacing time" to scripts. They should
replicate the production scenarios;
- Use co-relation points and data files to make scripts more
dynamic and the test scenario more like production;
- The test environment should be manually tested to ensure that
workflows execute properly with one user;
- Clear all logs from the controller and load generator machines
after every 3-4 tests so that the test numbers are not affected in
a negative manner
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