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Docker Desktop extension using Postman's Newman to run collections
Postman Docker extension
This Docker Desktop Extension runs Postman collections using Postman's open-source CLI, Newman image and Danny Dainton's HTMLextra reporter. Run your API tests or execute an API workflow in any server environment. Then review the results of the collection run.
How it works
Install the Docker Desktop Newman extension: https://hub.docker.com/extensions/joycelin79/newman-extension
- Enter a Postman API key to retrieve your Postman data
- Select a collection to run, and optionally select an environment to run with the collection
- Run the collection, review the results of the API calls, and filter by failed tests
Read the blog announcement
Automate API Tests and Debug in Docker With Postman’s Newman Extension
Watch the demo
For local development
Pre-requisites
- Install Docker Desktop 4.10.0 or higher that includes the Docker extensions CLI.
- Make sure that Docker Desktop is running in the background. In Docker Desktop, go to the Settings icon >
Extensions
and checkEnable Docker Extensions
. - Sign up for a free Postman account, and generate an API key. This is used to access your Postman data, like collections and environments.
- Log in to your Postman account, and create a Postman collection to run. If you don’t have a Postman collection yet, you can fork this example collection to your own workspace. Once you do this, the forked collection will appear as your own collection.
This extension is not published yet, so build and deploy it locally from source code.
Clone the project
Run:
git clone https://github.com/loopDelicious/docker-extension.git
Change into the project directory
Run:
cd docker-extension
Build and install the extension
Run:
make && make install
Build the HTML reporter
Change into the HTML reporter directory:
cd htmlreporter-with-template
From inside the subdirectory, build the reporter image:
docker build -t joycelin79/htmlreporter-with-template:latest .
Developing the frontend
In your terminal, run individually one-by-one:
cd ..
cd client
npm install
npm start
This starts a development server that listens on port 3000.
You can now tell Docker Desktop to use this as the frontend source. In another terminal, run:
docker extension dev ui-source joycelin79/newman-extension:latest http://localhost:3000
In order to open the Chrome DevTools for your extension when you click on the extension tab, run:
docker extension dev debug joycelin79/newman-extension:latest
Code of Conduct
Everyone is welcome to contribute to this project. Please follow the Postman Code of Conduct, and don't be a jerk.