Forum Discussion
SmartBear_Suppo
15 years agoSmartBear Alumni (Retired)
Hello,
There is a dump file property which captures the raw response data, but not the request. I think the easiest way of capturing both the request and the response is by writing a groovy script to do so. Add a Script TestStep after the Request with the following script:
This will save each request and response to a separate file.
Alternatively, if all you want to do is output them to the log, you can use:
In either case, replace HTTP Test Request with the name of your TestStep.
Regards,
Dain
eviware.com
There is a dump file property which captures the raw response data, but not the request. I think the easiest way of capturing both the request and the response is by writing a groovy script to do so. Add a Script TestStep after the Request with the following script:
def timestamp = System.currentTimeMillis()
def directory = "c:\\dump"
def requestFile = new File(directory, "request_${timestamp}.txt")
requestFile.append( context.expand('${HTTP Test Request#Request}') )
def responseFile = new File(directory, "response_${timestamp}.txt")
responseFile.append( context.expand('${HTTP Test Request#Response}') )
This will save each request and response to a separate file.
Alternatively, if all you want to do is output them to the log, you can use:
log.info context.expand('${HTTP Test Request#Request}')
log.info context.expand('${HTTP Test Request#Response}')
In either case, replace HTTP Test Request with the name of your TestStep.
Regards,
Dain
eviware.com
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