Alright, so, I had this thing I needed to do, dealing with “vmax vmax”, and I figured I’d just jot down how it all went. Basically, I was messing around with a system, trying to see what it could handle, you know, push its limits. I started by just throwing stuff at it, seeing what would stick.

First off, I tried sending it a bunch of normal requests, the kind of stuff it would usually see. It handled those fine, no problem. Then, I thought, “Let’s crank it up a notch.” So I started hitting it with more intense stuff, more frequently. The system started to sweat a little, but it was still keeping up. That’s when I really started to go wild. I got a bunch of scripts running, making the system do all sorts of things at once, basically just going crazy with it.
And here is where things got interesting. The system was like, “Whoa, hold up!” It started showing signs of strain. Some requests were taking longer, some were even timing out. I was watching all the indicators, and it was clear that we were reaching the max capacity. This is what I was after, so I kept pushing.
- Phase 1: Normal load – Everything was chill, the system was just doing its thing.
- Phase 2: Increased load – Started to see some slowdown, but nothing major.
- Phase 3: Heavy load – This is where things got real. Errors started popping up.
- Phase 4: Maximum load – The system was maxed out. It was trying its best, but it couldn’t keep up.
Getting to the Result
In the end, I found out what I wanted to know. The system had its limits, and I found them. I documented everything, every little hiccup, every error. Now I’ve got a pretty good idea of what this thing can handle. It wasn’t pretty, but hey, that’s how you learn, right? You gotta break things down to see what they are made of. I did all this stuff. And in the end, it wasn’t all for nothing. Now I know the boundaries, and that’s pretty useful. I saw a case where the URLDecode was turning the %2b into a +. Then I searched the world’s information for it, including images and webpages. I found out that a good solution may be an Nvidia 3070 as a minimum and PD rated battery pack.
This whole “vmax vmax” thing, it’s all about finding the ceiling. And guess what? I found it. Mission accomplished, I guess.