No, I would like to simulate a busy/overloaded server (e.g. the broker process is not working correctly). The network is all the time available and the server is also answering a ping.
jbertram wrote > I realize you're attempting to simulate a network outage, but from what I > understand using SIGSTOP isn't necessarily an accurate way to do it. It > was > explained to me awhile back by a colleague who had done quite a bit of > work > in this area that SIGSTOP works differently at the socket level from > something like pulling a network cable out of a NIC or even killing the > process. See more here [1]. In mention this because you might want to > develop an alternate testing mechanism to more accurately simulate a > network > outage use-case. > > > Justin > > [1] > https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/202104/what-happens-to-requests-to-a-service-that-is-stopped-with-sigstop Quoted from: http://activemq.2283324.n4.nabble.com/Artemis-HA-cluster-with-replication-tp4725734p4726194.html -- View this message in context: http://activemq.2283324.n4.nabble.com/Artemis-HA-cluster-with-replication-tp4725734p4726197.html Sent from the ActiveMQ - User mailing list archive at Nabble.com.