Scripting
How to use the Scripting tool to modify the Request/Response by Javascript Code.
Proxyman offers a scripting feature that the developer could write the JS code to manipulate the Request/Response in a flexible way.
Implement Map Local / Map Remote / Breakpoint by JS Code. 100x Faster
Change the Request Content, including Domain, Host, Scheme, Port, Path, HTTP Method, HTTP Headers, Query, Body (Encoded-Form, JSON, plain-text)
Change the Response Content, including HTTP Status Code, HTTP Headers, and Body (JSON, Encoded-Form, plain-text, binary...)
Provide plenty of built-in addons and libraries for common tasks, such as Hashing, Encode/Decode, JSON-Text transformer, Beautify,...
Able to write your own JS Addons or Libraries
Designed to replace Rewrite GUI Tool from Charles Proxy
You can access the Scripting Tool by:
Script Menu -> Script List (⌥⌘I)
Open Menu Context from Right Click on the Flow -> Tools -> Scripting
Please check out the Snippet Code to see a collection of snippet JS codes for the Scripting Tool.
4. Scripting with GraphQL Requests
From Proxyman 2.27.0+, the Scripting Tool can work with a GraphQL Request by a specific QueryName. Please check out the following GraphQL Document.
GraphQL4.1 Scripting with Websocket
From Proxyman v6.2.0 or later, it's possible to use the Script to
Modify the Websocket Request URL & Header
Modify the Websocket Response Headers
❌ Can not modify the websocket message. Only URL and Headers are supported.
Refer to this snippet code.
The following guide will show you how to write JS code to change the Request domain from Production to Localhost and change the Response Body
Make sure you enable SSL for this domain before creating the script.
Open the Scripting Tool and create a new Script Entry (⌘N). You can right-click on the Request -> Tools -> Scripting => Proxyman will create a Script too
Give the name and define a Matching Rule.
Ex: Name=Test on Localhost endpoint, URL=https://proxyman.io
Enable Run Script on Request and Response checkbox
Start writing JS code for
onRequestfunction
onRequest(context, url, request) {}
onRequest() Object Format
context, url and request Objects are defined by:
You can change any value of the request obj except rawBody
If the body variable is invalid format due to incorrect Content-Type in the Header. Please consider using the rawBody and manually parse the string.
The type of request.body replies on the Content-Type Header.
application/json or JSON families
application/x-www-form-urlencoded
plain-text or text-based Content-Type, Ex: application/js, text/css, text/html, ...
The rest: Binary Data (application/zip, application/octet-stream)
Check out common JS code from Snipped Code Page
Snippet Code7. Start writing code on onResponse function
onResponse() Objects Format
context, url, request, and response objects are defined by:
You can change statusCode, headers and body from the response Obj
If the body variable is invalid format due to incorrect Content-Type in the Header. Please consider using rawBody and manually parse the string.
The type of response.body replies on the Content-Type Header
application/json or JSON families
application/x-www-form-urlencoded
plain-text or text-based Content-Type, Ex: application/js, text/css, text/html, ...
The rest (application/zip, application/octet-stream)
You must return request and response object in onRequest and onResponse function
6. Built-in Addons and Libraries
Proxyman provides plenty of addons and libraries that help you achieve common tasks: Hashing, Encode/Decode, ...
AddonsBuilt-in JS LibrariesSnippet CodeOn certain occasions, you might encounter Javascript errors due to syntax errors, invalid code, ... You can debug by looking at error messages on the console or using console.log().
8. Use Scripting as a Mock API
From Proxyman 2.32.0, we can use the Scripting Tool as a Mock API. It means your request would never hit the server, and you have to define a Response Body. This behavior is the same with Map Local.
This feature is useful when the actual Restful API is not available yet. You can define and test it locally.
To enable the Mock API:
Open the Scripting Tool -> Select the Script
Enable Run as Mock API checkbox.
Then you can define a Response as usual:
You must return
requestandresponseObject inonRequestandonResponsefunction.Proxyman 4.16.0 or later: Proxyman now converts the Binary Data to Uint8Array
Proxyman 4.15.0 or earlier: Since Javascript doesn't have the Data object type, the Data Body will convert to Base64 Encoded String in Javascript. To pass Uint8Array, blob, or ArrayBuffer to the body, make sure you convert to Base64 Encoded String.
// Import UUID addons
const { uuidv4 } = require("@addons/UUID.js");
function onRequest(context, url, request) {
// print log
console.log(request);
// Change Production domain -> Localhost
request.method = "GET";
request.scheme = "http";
request.host = "localhost";
request.port = 8000;
// Add new header
request.headers["X-New-Header"] = "Hello From Scripting feature";
request.headers["UUID"] = uuidv4(); // generate random UUIDv4
delete request.headers["Key-Need-Delete"];
// Update or Add a new Query
request.queries["name"] = "Proxyman";
// Update Body
var body = request.body;
body["name"] = "Proxyman";
request.body = body;
// Or Map the body with a local file (Proxyman 2.25.0+)
// request.bodyFilePath = "~/Desktop/mockdata.json";
// Done
return request;
}// context (readonly)
{
"scriptName": "<String> Your Script Name",
"matchingRule": "<String> Your Matching Rule",
"matchingMethod": "<String> Method",
"isEnableOnRequest": "Bool",
"isEnableOnResponse": "Bool",
"filePath": "<String> Script path",
"flow": { // Availble from 2.16.0+
"serverPort": "443",
"serverIpAddress": "104.18.230.83",
"clientIpAddress": "192.168.0.102",
"remoteDeviceName": "iPhone XR",
"remoteDeviceIP": "192.168.0.102",
"id": "51",
"clientPath": null,
"clientPort": "51494",
"clientName": null,
"mapRemoteOriginalURL": "<String> Original URL before Map Remote modification (nullable)"
},
}
// url (readonly)
url: String // => Present the full URL
// request
{
"method": "<String> HTTP Method. Accept string method. Ex: GET, POST, ...",
"scheme": "<String> Accept http or https",
"host": "<String> Host of the request. Ex: api.proxyman.io, localhost, ...",
"path": "<String>: Path of the URL. Ex: /v1/data",
"port": "<Int> Accept int port number. Ex: 443, 8080, ..",
"queries": "<[String: Any]> A JS Object (Dictionary) contains key values of the query",
"headers": "<[String: Any]> A JS Object (Dictionary) contains key values of the header",
"body": "Depend on the Content-Type header. It might be a dictionary for JSON and form, Plain Text or Uint8Array",
"bodyFilePath": "<String><Optional> Set a body with a local file. See example in Snippet Code Page"
"rawBody": "<Readonly>: A raw body String or Uint8Array",
"preserveHostHeader": "<Bool> Preserve the Host",
"isURLEncoding": "<Bool> Determine if Proxyman will perform URLEncoding when constructing the final URL. Default is True"
}
function onResponse(context, url, request, response) {
console.log(response);
// Update or Add a new header
response.headers["Content-Type"] = "application/json";
// Update status Code
response.statusCode = 500;
// Update Body
var body = response.body;
body["new-key"] = "Proxyman";
response.body = body;
// Or Map the body with a local file (Proxyman 2.25.0+)
// response.bodyFilePath = "~/Desktop/mockdata.json";
// Done
return response;
}// context (readonly): Same with onRequest
// url (readonly): Same with onRequest
// request (readonly): Same with onRequest
// response
{
"statusCode": "<Int> Status Code. Ex: 200, 400, 404,...",
"httpVersion": "<String><Readonly> The HTTP Version",
"statusPhrase": "<String><Readonly> HTTP Status Phrase. Ex Not Found, OK, ...",
"headers": "<[String: Any]> A JS Object (Dictionary) contains key values of the header",
"body": "Depend on the Content-Type header. It might be a dictionary for JSON and form, PlainText or Uint8Array",
"rawBody": "<Readonly>: A raw body String or Uint8Array",
"bodyFilePath": "<String><Optional> Set a body with a local file. See example in Snippet Code Page"
}function onResponse(context, url, request, response) {
// Init new body
var body = {};
body["new-key"] = "Proxyman";
response.body = body;
// Or map from a file
// response.bodyFilePath = "~/Desktop/myfile.json"
// Done
return response;
}