HP proliant bl685c g5 Manual De Usuario

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Test tools 
To facilitate the placement and management of simulated loads on an HP SBC server, HP used 
Terminal Services Scalability Planning Tools (TSScaling), a suite of tools developed by Microsoft to 
help organizations with Microsoft Windows® Server 2003 Terminal Server capacity planning.  
Table 1 describes these tools. 
Table 1.  Components of TSScaling 
Component Description 
Automation tools 
Robosrv.exe 
Drives the server-side of the load simulation 
 
Robocli.exe 
Helps drive the client-side of the load simulation 
Test tools 
Qidle.exe 
Determines if any scripts have failed and require 
operator intervention 
 Tbscript.exe 
A script interpreter that helps drive the client-side load 
simulation 
Help files 
TBScript.doc 
Terminal Server bench scripting documentation 
 
TSScalingSetup.doc 
A scalability test environment set-up guide 
 
TSScalingTesting.doc 
A testing guide 
 
More information 
• 
Roboserver (Robosrv.exe) and Roboclient (Robocli.exe): 
• 
TSScaling: 
 
User profiles 
To simulate typical workloads in this environment, HP used scripts based on the Heavy, Medium, and 
Light User profiles described in Table 2. 
Table 2. User profiles incorporated into the test scripts 
User class 
Activities 
Heavy User 
Heavy Users (also known as Structured Task Workers) tend to open multiple applications 
simultaneously and remain active for long periods. Heavy Users often leave applications open 
when not in use.  
Medium User 
Medium Users (also known as Knowledge Workers) are defined as users who gather, add value 
to, and communicate information in a decision-support process. Cost of downtime is variable but 
highly visible. These resources are driven by projects and ad-hoc needs towards flexible tasks. 
These workers make their own decisions on what to work on and how to accomplish the task. 
Sample tasks include: marketing, project management, sales, desktop publishing, decision 
support, data mining, financial analysis, executive and supervisory management, design, and 
authoring. 
Light User 
Light Users (also known as Data Entry Workers) input data into computer systems. Activities 
include transcription, typing, order entry, clerical work and manufacturing.  
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