![]() ![]() I typically prefer using ssh to tunnel/forward traffic for situations like this. Altair looks promising, but it appears to be typically installed on Linux as a Snap (which doesn't work well under WSL2). However, if your API is GraphQL-based, then I'm not sure I can offer up a better alternative than Postman at the moment. Highly recommended - I recently used it several times working with the Stack Exchange API, and I'm not sure I'll ever need jq again. Nushell for parsing JSON and many other structured data types.jq - the standard and powerful tool for parsing JSON data.It's a much richer alternative to curl or wget. HTTPie for the REST operations that interact with your API. ![]() Nothing wrong with that, and we'll still see if we can come up with answer for that. That's not to say that your use-case might be different, or that you might just prefer Postman since you are familiar with it. I've used Postman in the past, but since using WSL, I really haven't found a need for it personally. Your needs might be met (and potentially better served) in Ubuntu with actual Linux tools. The other, when I figure it out (or if someone else does) will address the actual networking question.īut for this answer, let me suggest that you might not actually need Postman on Ubuntu/WSL2 if your API is REST-based. I think I'm probably going to answer your question twice. ![]()
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