Hi Steve,
Thanks for the suggestion. I've never used Fiddler before. Are there any
special configurations to watch a cfhttp request?
Thanks,
Donnie Carvajal
If you are doing this on a developer machine, install fiddler. Then
you can watch everything the request and response and look at
, October 14, 2014 11:21 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: CFHTTP Raw Request
Hi Steve,
Thanks for the suggestion. I've never used Fiddler before. Are there any
special configurations to watch a cfhttp request?
Thanks,
Donnie Carvajal
: Donnie Carvajal [mailto:donnie.carva...@transformyx.com]
Sent: Tuesday, October 14, 2014 11:21 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: CFHTTP Raw Request
Hi Steve,
Thanks for the suggestion. I've never used Fiddler before. Are there
any special configurations to watch a cfhttp request?
Thanks
...@transformyx.com]
Sent: Tuesday, October 14, 2014 11:53 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: CFHTTP Raw Request
I think I may be confused. I need to see the raw headers that CFHTTP is
creating. I installed Fiddler on the development and ran it. When I call
the CF page that includes the CFHTTP, I am
you will need a sniffer on the server to see any HTTP request from CF. If
you are doing local development (where cf is installed on your laptop or
desktop) then that's where your proxy/sniffer needs to live. CFHTTP is
technically not a browser request - just a straight HTTP request using
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: CFHTTP Raw Request
you will need a sniffer on the server to see any HTTP request from CF. If
you are doing local development (where cf is installed on your laptop or
desktop) then that's where your proxy/sniffer needs to live. CFHTTP is
technically not a browser
, October 14, 2014 12:53 PM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: CFHTTP Raw Request
I think I may be confused. I need to see the raw headers that CFHTTP is
creating. I installed Fiddler on the development and ran it. When I call the
CF page that includes the CFHTTP, I am not seeing any new requests
If you are doing this on a developer machine, install fiddler. Then you can
watch everything the request and response and look at the raw outputs. It has
saved me multiple times from pulling my hair out.
Steve
-Original Message-
From: Donnie Carvajal
Try the getpagecontext or getmetadata functions.
On Wed, Oct 8, 2014 at 17:17 PM, Donnie Carvajal
donnie.carva...@transformyx.com wrote:
I have a process that is sending xml via cfhttp and I am not getting the
anticipated response from the web service. I would like to see the actual
headers
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