INTRODUCTION: PERFORMANCE ENGINEERING BUILT FOR HYBRID CLOUD ENTERPRISES
OpenText Enterprise Performance Engineering, LoadRunner Enterprise CE 25.3, represents a meaningful shift toward AI-assisted, observable-by-default performance engineering aligned to hybrid cloud realities. For enterprises managing large application portfolios with compressed release cycles, these updates reduce scripting and analysis cycle time, improve production risk visibility, and provide tighter control over cloud capacity, accessibility, and governance.
AI-POWERED SCRIPTING WITH VUGEN AVIATOR
VuGen Aviator is an embedded AI assistant that supports the full scripting lifecycle, including protocol selection, error analysis, remediation guidance, coding support, optimization, and script summarization.
For enterprises, this reduces bottlenecks caused by reliance on a small number of senior performance engineers. Teams can distribute performance testing across product squads while maintaining consistency and quality. Faster script creation enables broader risk-based coverage, allowing organizations to test critical APIs and services earlier and more frequently.
In daily work, engineers resolve correlation and authentication issues faster by interacting directly with Aviator instead of searching documentation or escalating to specialists. New hires and vendor teams onboard more quickly, lowering dependency on tribal knowledge and improving overall delivery velocity.
AI-ASSISTED PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS IN OPENTEXT CORE PERFORMANCE ENGINEERING
Analysis Aviator introduces conversational, AI-driven analysis directly within performance dashboards. Engineers can ask natural language questions and receive contextual summaries, trends, anomaly detection, and KPI insights.
This capability shortens the path from test failure to root cause by surfacing likely problem areas without requiring deep tool or architecture expertise. Leadership benefits from clearer summaries that translate raw performance data into actionable release risk insights suitable for CAB reviews, SLA discussions, and incident retrospectives.
Day to day, non-specialists can investigate performance behavior independently, while new engineers and SREs quickly understand historical baselines and regression patterns without relying solely on centralized performance centers of excellence.

