I am a fan of Insomnia. As far as I can tell it has most of the features I used in postman without all the paid upgrade nags
Seconding Insomnia. Sleeker interface imo, only thing it’s lacking in feature parity afaik is the cookie sniffer, but you can grab what you need in postman or js console and then plug it into insomnia np.
Also, cURL :]
ducaale/xh is excellent for anybody that likes to use HTTP from a CLI.
Yep, these command line tools seems really cool!
When I was using GUI API Testing tools, I prefer using APIDog, their UI is much easier to use and I can easily migrate my Postman scripts.
Insomnia is really good, never looked back at postman since i use Insomnia!
The one thing I find difficult in Insomnia is making the auth common across a group of requests. I end up duplicating existing requests which doesn't help if I need to update the process at all. Is there a way to use common auth routines yet?
Insomnia, or if you really love the command line and dont need to document or save your API requests, curl (don't recommend this for anything beyond simple testing).
If you like the command line but want something more user friendly than curl, I suggest httpie.
Oh this looks interesting. I will definitely give it a shot.
Insomnia is great and has an easy, simple interface. But I feel like creating complex collections with different environments is a lot simpler with postman
I'm the maintainer of HTTP Toolkit - it's not a Postman alternative (it's an open source project focused on intercepting & debugging traffic, not sending it) but I'm actually working on building a UI for exactly this right now, so this thread is perfectly timed!
Is there anything that any of you really love or hate about any of the tools suggested here?
What core features beyond just "edit method+URL+headers+body, send, view the response status+headers+body" are essential to you?
Anything you wish these tools could do better?
I'm planning on taking the client functionality live within a few weeks max, so if you want to help your perfect Postman alternative come to life now's the moment 😁
The big three for me are:
- For a given project, maintain a list of HTTP requests I often need to send
- Some way to save responses, so I can compare how the server does respond to how it previously responded.
- Both need to be shared with my colleagues. And this must not share any auth credentials/tokens/etc that are in every request (I want that do be done separately with something more secure).
Insomnia user here too, I've found it to be simple,clean and to my taste.
I recommend Visual Studio Code and one of the following two extensions:
Either one isn't really the full picture - you'll ned to combine it with other extensions - such as a good JSON language extension (which will give you syntax highlighting, error checking, code folding/etc.
The most important extension is CoPilot. That's the killer feature which makes Visual Studio Code vastly better than Postman.
Thunder is very similar to Postman. Not much to say other than it works well, it's free, millions of people use it.
It's not really my cup of tea, but I do think it's better than Postman because you can use your own version control servers to collaborate with colleagues, which is generally better (and cheaper) than Postman's collaboration service in my opinion (you get diffs, code review, pull requests, history, etc etc for all your most important API tests).
Personally I prefer REST Client (also free, and has even more users than Thunder).
REST Client is really simple. It adds a new "HTTP" text file type. You simply type a HTTP request into the file and hit a hotkey (or click a button) to execute the request. And it shows you the response. Easy.
HTTP requests and responses are just plain text, and you can simply save those as files in your project. REST Client also has basic support for variables, API credentials, etc. Not quite as user friendly as Postman or Thunder Client, but it makes up for that by being straightforward and flexible.
CoPilot Chat, works with both, but having everything in plain text gives it more control over REST Client than Thunder Clinet you can write (and edit) your requests with a series of simple plain english prompts. E.g. "JSON request with a blog post body" will give you:
POST https://example.com/blog/posts
Content-Type: application/json
{
"title": "My First Blog Post",
"body": "This is the content of my first blog post. It's not very long, but it's a start!",
"author": "John Doe",
"tags": ["blogging", "first post"]
}
You might follow that up with "Add a UUID" or "Add a JWT auth header".
Copilot can answer questions too - e.g. "How do I unsubscribe a user with the Mailchimp API?" They use the "HTTP PATCH" request type - WTF.
xh and tiny shell scripts.
Example: sign-up-forbidden-username.req
#!/bin/bash
xh POST http://0.0.0.0:2884/sign-up usename=admin password=pw
to run ./sign-up-forbidden-username.req
This returns 403 and "Username is unavailable"
xh is a rust implementation of httpie. They're going for full parity, and works really well for what I need it for so far You can also read input from a file. Which IMO makes GUI API testing seem silly.
I completely stopped using all those clients. We now just store the requests alongside the code in an http file and use the built in IntelliJ HTTP Client to make the call. No need for a separate program, integrates with your code, you can save responses to make sure they don't change, it's all stored in git. There's a ton of benefits and not many downsides.
Once I learned about http files I never went back. It's so easy to share and use, I primarily use JetBrains but there are extensions for VSCode that do the same thing that I have used as well.
What is an HTTP file?
I use Hurl. Everything is just a text file:
POST https://example.org/api/tests
{
"id": "4568",
"evaluate": true
}
HTTP 200
[Asserts]
header "X-Frame-Options" == "SAMEORIGIN"
jsonpath "$.status" == "RUNNING" # Check the status code
jsonpath "$.tests" count == 25 # Check the number of items
jsonpath "$.id" matches /\d{4}/ # Check the format of the id
I am alternating between Postman and https://hoppscotch.io, it's open source (https://github.com/hoppscotch/hoppscotch) and has great feature set.
As it's a web app, and a minor downside is that you have to have to install a browser extension (open-source as well) or use a proxy in order to aviod CORS issues.
Yeah it's called curl lol
This is the way.
If you’re on a Mac, I recommend the RapidAPI native HTTP client. It used to be called Paw and it recently got acquired by the RapidAPI team but it hasn’t changed much and still works pretty well IMO. I’ve been using it for years to test out APIs and i like it better than Postman.
Insomnia.kong
I mostly use httpie on the fish shell with autocompletion for quick requests, but it's no replacement
I also have been using httpie for a few years - it is really great.
Recently I have started using nushell which has a similar module builtin: https://www.nushell.sh/commands/docs/http_get.html Combined with rest of the nicities in nushell its a pretty good cli experience.
How’s nushell been for you so far? I took a look at it once when it was relatively new and was missing some features I needed, like shell scripts.
I like it. The docs are a bit scattered and I haven't switched to it completely, but it has proven to be very handy for some scenarios where I scrape some content from external sources and pull them into a local sqlite as a long term structured archive.
httpie now also has a postman-like UI! Been using it for a while and I'm liking it for what it is - https://httpie.io/app
I'm saying that Postman is bad. maybe not in terms of functionality, but damn if it doesn't run like a slug on my work computer, which is just fine handling a dozen Visual Studio and Rider instances. It seems like it works perfectly for about 5 minutes and then goes to crap.
So yeah, I'd be interested in an alternative too. I only really use it for basic functionality (creating, sharing, and running collections of requests with configurable parameters).
As a lot of other comments have already suggested, HTTP Toolkit is a good alternative and I used it quite a bit prior to discovering Postman..
I would use swagger in some instance tbh
I’m using the vscode extension called Thunderclient
This. Is the best GUI, via vs code extension
I mostly use the rest client extension for vscode
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