8 projects tagged "Quality Assurance"
Hammerhead is a stress testing tool for Web sites. It initiates connections from multiple IP aliases and simulates a user from each alias. It is fully configurable, and there are numerous other options for creating problems with a site. Extensive data collection is also available.
The Open Hardware Certification Program (OHCP) Test Suite is a collection of tests to verify the compatibility of your hardware with Open Source operating systems. Tests have been contributed by multiple authors and organizations, and are bundled with documentation, test procedures, and some automation scripts to help run the tests.
RT is an industrial-grade trouble ticketing system. It lets a group of people intelligently and efficiently manage requests submitted by a community of users. RT is used by systems administrators, customer support staffs, NOCs, developers, and even marketing departments to track issues, outages, bugs, requests, and all kinds of other things at thousands of sites around the world.
YourKit Java Profiler is a CPU and memory profiler that makes it easy to solve wide range of CPU- and memory-related performance problems. It features automatic leak detection, powerful tools for the analysis of memory distribution, an object heap browser, comprehensive memory tests as part of your JUnit testing process, extremely low profiling overhead, transparent deobfuscation support, and integration with Eclipse, JBuilder, IntelliJ IDEA, NetBeans, and JDeveloper IDEs.
CScout is a source code analyzer and refactoring browser for collections of C programs. It can process workspaces of multiple projects, mapping the complexity introduced by the C preprocessor back into the original C source code files. CScout performs an analysis of C source code that is more detailed and accurate than current compilers and linkers, as it takes into account the identifier scopes introduced by the C preprocessor and the C language proper scopes and namespaces.
pcapsipdump is a tool for dumping (recording) SIP sessions (and RTP traffic, if available) to disk in a fashion similar to "tcpdump -w" (the format is exactly the same). The difference is that the data is saved with one file per SIP session. Even if there are thousands of concurrect SIP sessions, each goes to separate file.