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ngrok
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hastebin
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HookReplay.dev
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HookReplay.dev's answer
Still early โ just launched. Currently used by indie developers and small teams debugging Stripe and Shopify integrations. No big logos yet. Focused on building a great product first.
HookReplay.dev's answer
With ngrok, every code change means triggering another webhook. Add a log? Trigger again. Set a breakpoint? Too late, it timed out. Trigger again. With HookReplay, you trigger once. Then replay 100 times while you debug. Same webhook. Same payload. Unlimited attempts to get your code right. That's not a small difference โ it's hours saved per debugging session.
HookReplay.dev's answer
Developers who integrate third-party webhooks Stripe, Shopify, GitHub, Twilio, Paddle, etc. Basically anyone who's ever clicked "Send test webhook" more times than they'd like to admit.
HookReplay.dev's answer
11pm on a Sunday. A customer's Stripe payment went through, but their subscription wasn't created. I needed to debug the webhook handler. Set up ngrok. Triggered a test payment. Added a log statement. Triggered again. Set a breakpoint โ webhook timed out before I could step through. Triggered again. Changed the URL in Stripe because ngrok restarted. Triggered again. Three hours later, I found a typo in my event type check. I remember thinking: I just re-triggered the same webhook 40+ times. Why can't I just capture it once and replay it until I find the bug? That's the moment HookReplay was born. The tool I wished existed that night.
HookReplay.dev's answer
ASP.NET Core for the backend, PostgreSQL for storage, WebSockets for real-time forwarding to the CLI. The CLI is built in .NET and distributed via npm โ runs on macOS, Windows, and Linux. Nothing fancy. Boring tech that works.
HookReplay.dev's answer
Three things most webhook tools don't do: 1- Replay the same webhook unlimited times 2- Edit payloads before replaying (test edge cases) 3- Keep a full history of every webhook received HookReplay does all three, plus real-time forwarding like ngrok.
Based on our record, GitHub Gist seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 8 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
If you are learning things, you could also create github gists. That way your repos will only be coding related, while you can create tutorials / work exercises in gists. Source: over 3 years ago
I use Github, both for full repos and for short gists. Source: over 4 years ago
On the other hand, shared DartPads are just gists on GitHub so theoretically they can include code that works with different packages. Of course, such gists will not compile in DartPad and will be displayed as having errors :(. Source: over 4 years ago
Perhaps github gists? https://gist.github.com/discover. Source: over 4 years ago
I looked at Github gists, but they are focused in displaying the markdown sourcecode (so e.g. Hyperlinks won't be clickable [1] ). Options just don't seem to be focused on simply hosting PDFs/information with clickable references. Source: almost 5 years ago
hookVM - Receive, deliver, and debug webhooks with reliability, observability, and developer-first tooling.
Pastebin.com - Pastebin.com is a website where you can store text for a certain period of time.
Webhook.site - Instantly generate a free, unique URL and email address to test, inspect, and automate (with a visual workflow editor and scripts) incoming HTTP requests and emails.
PrivateBin - PrivateBin is a minimalist, open source online pastebin where the server has zero knowledge of...
ngrok - ngrok enables secure introspectable tunnels to localhost webhook development tool and debugging tool.
hastebin - Pad editor for source code.