A request in a script file is specified using this syntax:
Relative_URI [ Delay_ms [ POST_lines [ Session_ID ] ] ]
where:
Relative_URI
is the relative URI of the file to request, with optional parametersDelay_ms
is the number of milliseconds to pausePOST_lines
specifies the number of following lines to use as POST dataSession_ID
designates an Oracle Commerce Platform session ID
The URIs in a recorded script must be relative to the document root. Note also that when the -cookies
option is used, all of the session IDs in a script are replaced by the current session ID for the given thread; each thread will have a new unique session created for it.
Comments in Scripts
A line that begins with the #
character is considered a comment and will be ignored (with the exception of lines that begin with #include
; see next section). You can add comments to your scripts to document the purpose, author, usage, etc.
Including Scripts within Scripts
A line that begins with the #include
keyword includes a specified script within the current script. For example:
#include subfile.txt
adds the contents of the script subfile.txt
to the current script at that position. This is especially useful for simplifying a long script into a hierarchy of easy-to-understand parts.