ob-restclient.el
bruno
Our great sponsors
ob-restclient.el | bruno | |
---|---|---|
5 | 55 | |
207 | 18,684 | |
- | 33.6% | |
5.8 | 9.9 | |
4 months ago | 1 day ago | |
Emacs Lisp | JavaScript | |
- | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
ob-restclient.el
- Emacs as REST API client?
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Postman is limiting local collection runner to 25 runs for basic plans
The readme mentions someone wrote an ob-restclient.el https://github.com/alf/ob-restclient.el
- Hurl, run and test HTTP requests with plain text
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HTTPie/cURL client for Emacs?
Adding to that, there is also ob-restclient , which could be useful.
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Bikeshedding Friday: How do you organize your init file?
Between org babel SQL and ob-restclient literate integration testing and devops have become a (small) part of my team's dev-QA loop. For some things, it's turned out to be indispensable. If you haven't used org-mode and restclient for API documentation yet... give it a whirl. Beautiful exports use read-the-org HTML export theme.
bruno
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π οΈNon-AI Open Source Projects that are π₯
Bruno is a Git-friendly API client. Feature-wise, what makes it stand out from other popular GUI API clients out there is that Bruno stores your collections directly in a folder on your filesystem and it's a desktop app made for offline use.
- What happens when an HTTP client raises $225M at a $5.6B valuation
- FLaNK AI for 11 March 2024
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When 'open core' projects reject contributions for competing with the EE
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39653718 https://www.usebruno.com/
Good timing to find alternatives.
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Bruno
Especially once a VC gets into the fold.
We will never take VC funding. We received around 10 inbound reach outs from VCs till date and have denied funding from all of them. We will remain independent and I have written about it in detail here https://www.usebruno.com/blog/bootstrapping
> I didn't stick with Bruno. I think it was due to not having an equivalent to Postman's pre-request scripts.
Bruno has come a long way, we support pre-request scripts and a lot more
> But can it handle oauth2? I had to write a httpie script recently just to test an oauth2 api.
We have released oauth2 support, some rough edges are being polished
> Good thing it's open source. Money being involved, I don't have long term hopes for it's openness.
I understand this is a hard problem. We are fully bootstrapped and independent. We earn money via selling the Golden Edition. We will build more developer products in the long term, and the goal is to make even the golden edition features also open source in the future. In the unlikely case of me going dark (dead/incapacitated to lead the project), I have instructed our small team (2 FT employees) and my family to release our golden edition features too to the community as opensource. I am committed to this cause.
Some good links where I have discussed about opensource, freedom and monetization
- https://www.usebruno.com/blog/bootstrapping
- https://github.com/usebruno/bruno/discussions/269
If you'd like to pre-order the golden edition: https://www.usebruno.com/pricing
Thank you for all the love and kind words, HN!
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Ask HN: What Underrated Open Source Project Deserves More Recognition?
Have you heard of the Bruno project? It's an open-source alternative to subscription-based API testing applications like Postman and Insomnia. It's gaining popularity and deserves more attention. Plus, since it's open-source, users can enjoy full privacy. Check it out at https://github.com/usebruno/bruno.
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Tools that Make Me Productive as a Software Engineer
Now, I'm looking at trying Bruno, a new tool I heard about. Bruno has all the features you'd want, like support for websockets. What's great about Bruno is it only costs $19 for a one-time payment, which seems like a good deal. I want to see how well it works for me and if it's as good as it sounds. I'm excited to try it out and maybe talk about it later.
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15 open-source tools to elevate your software design workflow
In contrast to Postman, Bruno aims to be an offline-first API client which stores requests in a local folder. You can still collaborate using Git, but everything else happens on your machine. Bruno turns out to be a great solution when you just want to run HTTP requests. It supports a lot of features you might know from Postman or Insomnia (set environment variables, several authentication methods, and scripted tests, to name a few). Looking at the roadmap, the amount of these is only going to increase.
- Bruno: Re-Inventing the API Client
- Bruno is a Fast and Git-Friendly open source API client
What are some alternatives?
straight.el - π Next-generation, purely functional package manager for the Emacs hacker.
insomnium - Insomnium is a fast local API testing tool that is privacy-focused and 100% local. For testing GraphQL, REST, WebSockets and gRPC. This is a fork of Kong/insomnia
dotfiles - Yet another dotfile-repository
Postwoman - π½ Open source API development ecosystem - https://hoppscotch.io
dotfiles
insomnia - The open-source, cross-platform API client for GraphQL, REST, WebSockets, SSE and gRPC. With Cloud, Local and Git storage.
dotemacs - My emacs configuration.
Restfox - Offline-First Minimalistic HTTP & Socket Testing Client for the Web & Desktop
dotemacs
httpie - π₯§ HTTPie CLI β modern, user-friendly command-line HTTP client for the API era. JSON support, colors, sessions, downloads, plugins & more.
.emacs.d - Portable Emacs configuration
milkman - An Extensible Request/Response Workbench