HTTP Toolkit is a beautiful & open-source tool for debugging, testing and building with HTTP(S) on Windows, Linux & Mac :tada: Open an issue here to give feedback or ask for help.
HTTP Toolkit is an open-source tool for debugging, testing and building with HTTP(S) on Windows, Linux & Mac.
You can use it to intercept, inspect & rewrite HTTP(S) traffic, from everything to anywhere. Explore Android app traffic, mock requests between your microservices, and x-ray your browser traffic to debug, understand and test anything.
:arrow_right: Find out more and try it out now at httptoolkit.com :arrow_left:
Want to give feedback, report bugs, or get help? File an issue.
Want to contribute to HTTP Toolkit's development yourself? Dive in.
With HTTP Toolkit, you can:
:arrow_right: Find out more and try it out now at httptoolkit.com :arrow_left:
HTTP Toolkit is driven by its community of users and their feedback. Have some ideas, problems or questions about HTTP Toolkit? Post an issue in this repo. If that's too public, you can also send a message directly.
Would you like to help design the perfect HTTP debugging tool? Take a look through the open issues, and add a :+1: on topics you care about to prioritize them.
Want to go further, to build & contribute the HTTP Toolkit features & fixes you're looking for yourself? HTTP Toolkit is 100% open source, so you can help shape it directly! All contributors get free HTTP Toolkit Pro (more background on this over here).
That includes code contributions, but documentation improvements, article & blog posts elsewhere about the project, bug & security reports, and anything else that helps drive HTTP Toolkit forwards. The goal is to reward anything that helps drive HTTP Toolkit development or bring it to new people. To claim your Pro account, get in touch once you've made your contribution, with the email you'd like associated with your account. Feel free to get in touch with any other questions about this too.
This github organization contains the entire project.
Yes, even the account management servers, even the paid features, everything. All of that is open source, licensed as a mixture of copyleft AGPL (for the HTTP Toolkit-specific components, ensuring all direct derivative projects are open-source too) and permissive Apache-2/MIT licenses (for all the general-purpose reusable libraries).
The main repos you might be interested in are:
Each repo has its own readme explaining how to get set up and outlining how the component works. Check out the issues in this repo for ideas, feel free to ask questions, and dive in!