. How do you determine if an application or system will meet the needs of the business before going live?
. Are undetected application bottlenecks resulting in slowtime or downtime in production?
. Are you struggling to deploy business systems smoothly, with no performance surprises?
. How do you know if an application or system can scale to the desired level of usage in production?
Mercury LoadRunner® prevents costly performance problems in production by detecting bottlenecks before a new system or upgrade is deployed. You can verify that new or upgraded applications will deliver intended business outcomes before go-live, preventing over-spending on hardware and infrastructure. It is the industry-standard load testing solution for predicting system behavior and performance, and the only integrated load testing, tuning, and diagnostics solution in the market today. With LoadRunner web testing software, you can measure end-to-end performance, diagnose application and system bottlenecks, and tune for better performance – all from a single point of control. It supports a wide range of enterprise environments, including Web Services, J2EE, and .NET.
With LoadRunner, you can:
. Obtain an accurate picture of end-to-end system performance.
. Verify that new or upgraded applications meet specified performance requirements.
. Identify and eliminate performance bottlenecks during the development lifecycle.
Reduce Scripting Time by 80 Percent
LoadRunner now includes game-changing technology that reduces the script creation process down to a few simple mouse clicks. Web (Click and Script) for LoadRunner enables you to record scripts at a higher presentation layer. It automatically captures the most valuable scripting information to create succinct, intuitive, and self-explanatory scripts, reducing scripting time and maintenance by an average of 80 percent. These scripts are also much easier to maintain – since anyone can look at the scripts and quickly see what is going on in each statement. In addition, Web (Click and Script) lowers the technical skills needed to perform load tests.
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