Mine finally did too at the end of last year! Apparently they had checked Postman back in the day when it didn’t require a login and deemed it fine, but totally missed their move into being a cloud service.
I had to prod the Cloud Service Security guy for months until he finally took a look at it
@lorty@webdev you ever run into issues/cases where a third-party you integrate with sends you a Postman collection and expects you to use it for testing?
Not from a third party, but I did have to adapt a lot of collections to use on Insomnia. It does allow importing from the postman v3 collection format, but it’s a bit hit or miss on wether it works 100%. I had a few problems with sequential requests, but they were easy enough to fix in my case.
If it’s just for testing, I’d try that. If they require Postman it for validation purposes, then there really isn’t much you can do.
My company banned the use of postman for a few years now.
If it requires a login, you can be sure it is scraping everything it can.
Mine finally did too at the end of last year! Apparently they had checked Postman back in the day when it didn’t require a login and deemed it fine, but totally missed their move into being a cloud service. I had to prod the Cloud Service Security guy for months until he finally took a look at it
@lorty @webdev you ever run into issues/cases where a third-party you integrate with sends you a Postman collection and expects you to use it for testing?
Not from a third party, but I did have to adapt a lot of collections to use on Insomnia. It does allow importing from the postman v3 collection format, but it’s a bit hit or miss on wether it works 100%. I had a few problems with sequential requests, but they were easy enough to fix in my case.
If it’s just for testing, I’d try that. If they require Postman it for validation purposes, then there really isn’t much you can do.