The #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6 are preloaded baselines used for default comparison. If you open PerformanceTest and go to Manage Baselines, you can see there are several baselines that are automatically selected. You can disable this within PerformanceTest by changing the option in configuration.
Auto load reference baselines
By default PerformanceTest loads a set of reference baselines to compare against at startup. This behavior can be enabled or disabled using this checkbox.
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So what do all these #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6 mean in the html baseline
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So what do all these #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #6 mean in the html baseline
Hello,
I am new to Performancetest 9.0. I just bought a few copies for the company I work for. Now I am in the process of trying to setup a usable benchmark test to evaluate machines.
While playing around with the tool some questions arise. I created a test script that looks as follows:
SETCOMPUTERNAME "Win10"
SETITERATIONS 1
SETDURATION 2
SETDISK "D:"
SETCPUTESTPROCESSES 2
RUN CPU_ALL
RUN ME_ALL
RUN DI_WRITE
RUN DI_READ
RUN DI_RANDOM
EXPORTHTML "D:\workspace\PerformanceTest\Results\iterations_1 \win10.html"
EXPORTTEXT "D:\workspace\PerformanceTest\Results\iterations_1 \win10.txt"
EXPORTTEXTF "D:\workspace\PerformanceTest\Results\iterations_1 \win10F.txt"
EXPORTCSV "D:\workspace\PerformanceTest\Results\iterations_1 \win10.csv"
EXPORTBASELINE "D:\workspace\PerformanceTest\Results\iterations_1 \win10.ptx"
EXIT
When evaluating the output data of the HTML baseline output, I noticed there are columns tagged #1, #2, #3, #4, #5 and #6 (see below). All are filled with values. What do these mean? First I thought that The #numbers were referring to iterations, but that cannot be since my script only executes one iteration.
I also noticed that when I run the script more then once, only the values under "Win10" change when comparing baseline runs. The figures under the #numbers do not seem to change. So what do they represent?
Regards,
Peet
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