prestige
httpbin
Our great sponsors
prestige | httpbin | |
---|---|---|
14 | 71 | |
376 | 12,384 | |
- | 0.9% | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 1 year ago | about 1 month ago | |
TypeScript | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | ISC 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.
prestige
- What is this app?
-
Show HN: Ezy – open-source gRPC client, alternative to Postman and Insomnia
I've not used it, but have heard of Prestige (https://github.com/sharat87/prestige). It bills itself as "A text-based HTTP client in the browser. An interface-less Postman." I hope that helps!
-
14 Essential Developer Tools to 10X Your Productivity 🚀✨
9. prestige
- Hoppscotch: Open-Source Alternative to Postman
-
Postman Now Supports gRPC
Shameless plug: There's also Prestige at https://prestigemad.com, which is very similar but works right in the browser. You can save your files as Gists as well. Templating with variables is also supported with `${}` syntax, like Javascript's template strings.
But gRPC support is not built yet. It's on the roadmap.
- Prestige
-
Awesome-loginless: internet services that don't require logins or registrations
There's also https://prestigemad.com, a text based API testing tool, like Postman. I'm the developer behind it and is open source at https://github.com/sharat87/prestige.
Login not required!
-
httpbin
Hey! I did the same thing, rewrite httpbin in Go, and put it up on https://httpbun.com. I did it because I needed a fast endpoint like httpbin, with a few extras, and with working redirect endpoints. I needed this for testing Prestige. (Sorry for inserting a shameless plug in here, but httpbun and httphub are just so close to each other I couldn't shut up 🙈).
-
Ask HN: Companies of one, what is your tech stack (2021)?
Still early days at https://prestigemad.com (recently discussed at https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27412445)
- Backend is a Django project, database is PostgreSQL.
- Frontend powered by Mithril.js and the editor by CodeMirror.
- Hosted on a $5 box on EC2.
- GoatCounter for analytics.
- CloudFlare for DNS, NameCheap for domain.
Also https://httpbun.com
- Backend is a vanilla Go project.
- Frontend is plain HTML and CSS, I don't recall it having any JS at all.
- Hosted on the same $5 box on EC2.
- No analytics (yet).
- CloudFlare for DNS, NameCheap for domain.
It is refreshing to see how much I can squeeze out of a $5 box. I don't intend to stay with EC2 for long, but when its cheap, I'd rather spend my time improving Prestige.
- sharat87/prestige
httpbin
- Bruno
-
Hardening Apache APISIX with the OWASP's Coraza and Core Ruleset
We proceed to define routes to https://httpbin.org/ to test our setup. Let's call the route to /get:
-
looking for resource site for GET-POST practice (html)
https://httpbin.org/ is an excellent tool for learning (and testing) the basics. Take a few minutes to explore the endpoints they provide. You can also use different response codes to test your apps error handling, etc
-
httpbin alternatives - go-httpbin and java-httpbin
3 projects | 12 Nov 2023
-
Crafting a Language Server in Golang: A VSCode LSP for Lama2
export FABI_PROD="http://httpbin.org/" export FABI_LOCAL="http://0.0.0.0:8000/"
-
Edge IoT with Rust on ESP: HTTP Client
use anyhow; use embedded_svc::http::client::Client; use embedded_svc::wifi::{AuthMethod, ClientConfiguration, Configuration}; use esp_idf_hal::peripherals::Peripherals; use esp_idf_svc::eventloop::EspSystemEventLoop; use esp_idf_svc::http::client::{Configuration as HttpConfig, EspHttpConnection}; use esp_idf_svc::nvs::EspDefaultNvsPartition; use esp_idf_svc::wifi::{BlockingWifi, EspWifi}; fn main() -> anyhow::Result<()> { esp_idf_sys::link_patches(); // Configure Wifi let peripherals = Peripherals::take().unwrap(); let sysloop = EspSystemEventLoop::take()?; let nvs = EspDefaultNvsPartition::take()?; let mut wifi = BlockingWifi::wrap( EspWifi::new(peripherals.modem, sysloop.clone(), Some(nvs))?, sysloop, )?; wifi.set_configuration(&Configuration::Client(ClientConfiguration { ssid: "SSID".into(), bssid: None, auth_method: AuthMethod::None, password: "PASSWORD".into(), channel: None, }))?; // Start Wifi wifi.start()?; // Connect Wifi wifi.connect()?; // Wait until the network interface is up wifi.wait_netif_up()?; // Print Out Wifi Connection Configuration while !wifi.is_connected().unwrap() { // Get and print connection configuration let config = wifi.get_configuration().unwrap(); println!("Waiting for station {:?}", config); } println!("Wifi Connected, Intiatlizing HTTP"); // HTTP Configuration // Create HTTPS Connection Handle let httpconnection = EspHttpConnection::new(&HttpConfig { use_global_ca_store: true, crt_bundle_attach: Some(esp_idf_sys::esp_crt_bundle_attach), ..Default::default() })?; // Create HTTPS Client let mut httpclient = Client::wrap(httpconnection); // HTTP Request Submission // Define URL let url = "https://httpbin.org/get"; // Prepare request let request = httpclient.get(url)?; // Log URL and type of request println!("-> GET {}", url); // Submit Request and Store Response let response = request.submit()?; // HTTP Response Processing let status = response.status(); println!("<- {}", status); match response.header("Content-Length") { Some(data) => { println!("Content-Length: {}", data); } None => { println!("No Content-Length Header"); } } match response.header("Date") { Some(data) => { println!("Date: {}", data); } None => { println!("No Date Header"); } } Ok(()) }
-
Down the rabbit hole of an Apache APISIX plugin
has_domain: whether the matched route references an upstream with a domain, e.g., http://httpbin.org, or not, e.g., 192.168.0.1
- Show HN: HTTP Status Code Generator
- Python Software Foundation forks httpbin
-
How to upload files using JavaScript
But where does the data go now? By default, the form data is sent to the URL of the page containing the form — the current page, actually. Generally, all the data should be sent to a server to store and be handled. We can set up a server like Next.js, but it's a big separate topic to discover. You can learn more about it in our tutorial. In this post, I suggest concentrating on uploading staff and using httpbin — a simple OSS HTTP Request & Response Service.
What are some alternatives?
Postwoman - 👽 Open source API development ecosystem - https://hoppscotch.io
echo-server - An HTTP and WebSocket "echo" server for testing proxies and HTTP clients.
httpyac - Command Line Interface for *.http and *.rest files. Connect with http, gRPC, WebSocket and MQTT
gabbi - Declarative HTTP Testing for Python and anything else
awesome-no-login-web-apps - 🚀 Awesome (free) web apps that work without login
novelai-api - Python API for the NovelAI REST API
budibase - Budibase is an open-source low code platform that helps you build internal tools in minutes 🚀
azure-docs - Open source documentation of Microsoft Azure
excalidraw - Virtual whiteboard for sketching hand-drawn like diagrams
echo-server - An HTTP and WebSocket "echo" server for testing proxies and HTTP clients.
insomnia - The open-source, cross-platform API client for GraphQL, REST, WebSockets, SSE and gRPC. With Cloud, Local and Git storage.
gunicorn - gunicorn 'Green Unicorn' is a WSGI HTTP Server for UNIX, fast clients and sleepy applications.