![]() ![]() However they are all recorded as POST batch request. I won’t go into details about how to do that in this blog.īut when I run that application from webide, I already see the requests popping into my history You need to create a destination for the ES5 system and then you can close the repository if you want to. I’ve created a very simple CRUD application based on the GWSAMPLE_BASIC odata service in ES5. This way you will automatically get the requests directly in the native postman app. IF you are really need, then register and sign in on both versions of postman. Now all requets made in the browser that fits your filter will be shows in the history of the extension. Now in the Chrome extension version of Postman click the interceptor button in the top right corner So it is only odata requests that i’m capturing. Now as soon as you install the interceptor you can set a filter on what requests you want to intercept. ![]() Now while it will say that it is deprecated, it’s pretty useful together with the interceptor to record requests. You need to install the Postman Intercepter and the Postman Chrome extension Luckily there is another way which probably is needed for most of us since we are often behind a company proxy. It seem’s like for the current native Postman app you can only capture HTTP requests and not HTTPs. Well you are in luck, of course we can do that. It’s a bit of a pain to manually capture the requests from the debugger and copy them into Postman, Wouldn’t it be cool if we could use like a macro recorder for it? In this blog I will show you a few tricks to speed of the task of capturing the requests to the backend. How to record http requests to be used in Postman.Using environment and variables in Postman.This is my second blog in the blog series around Postman. ![]()
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