Practise the standard verbs for scheduling and reviewing load tests safely.
0 / 5 completed
1 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ a load test outside peak traffic hours, rather than a spike nobody's actually cleared with the on-call team.'
We 'schedule a load test' — the standard, simple collocation for planning a stress test at a safe time. The other options are less idiomatic here.
2 / 5
Fill in: 'Running a load test without notifying on-call can ___ the team paged for a spike nobody's actually a real incident.'
We say an unannounced test will 'leave' the team paged for a false alarm — the standard, natural collocation for the resulting confusion. The other options aren't idiomatic here.
3 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ the target throughput before the test starts, rather than a number nobody's actually agreed defines success.'
We 'define throughput' — the standard, simple collocation for setting a clear target before a load test. The other options are less idiomatic here.
4 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ every test result against the baseline metrics, rather than a number nobody's actually compared to normal load.'
We 'check a result' — the standard, simple collocation for comparing load-test output against a known baseline. The other options are less idiomatic here.
5 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ load test cadence quarterly against traffic growth, rather than a schedule nobody's actually adjusted in months.'
We 'review cadence' — the standard, simple collocation for keeping test frequency aligned with real growth. The other options aren't idiomatic here.