Set the port with the port you established in Postman in Step 1. Set the IP address with the IP you retrieved from your computer in the second step.
Open the wireless settings of your mobile device and update the configuration of the wireless connection to use HTTP Proxy. Step 3: Configure HTTP proxy on your mobile device The IP address of your system will be something like the example here 192.168.0.101. On OS X, the computer’s IP address can be found in System Preferences > Network.
This will cause all your requests to be captured and stored in the History sidebar panel. In this case, let’s keep it at the default port 5555. Keep a note of the port mentioned in the proxy settings. Open the PROXY SETTINGS modal in the Postman app (MacOS) by clicking the icon in the header toolbar.
To get started, make sure your computer and mobile are connected to the same local wireless network. In this tutorial, we will use Postman’s proxy feature to inspect HTTP communication going out from your phone. In this scenario, the Postman app is the proxy, and you can inspect HTTP communication going out from your phone like in the following example, and log all network requests under the History tab of the sidebar. Similar to the Interceptor Chrome extension, the Postman app proxy also INTERCEPTS and captures your requests.
Postman native apps include all of the functionality of Postman Chrome, and much, much more. NEW FEATURES AVAILABLE IN THE NATIVE APPS When you sign in with the Postman account associated with Postman Chrome, your collections and data will automatically sync with the app.
Download the Postman Native Apps for MacOS, Windows, and Linux at EASILY TRANSFER YOUR COLLECTIONS TO THE POSTMAN NATIVE APP Postman Chrome is deprecated and is missing essential, new Postman features. Postman Chrome is deprecated and is missing essential, new… POSTMAN CHROME IS DEPRECATED