Hi Dieter, Did you mean use the fully qualified name of the proxy host (i.e. the PC that Fiddler is running on)? When I try this, I get an HTTP connection error:
Error: HTTP transport error: java.net.ConnectException: Connection refused: connect I can seem to monitor the traffic using Wireshark OK. Fiddler would have been nicer to use I think ...:-( Thanks, Tim On Mon, Sep 23, 2013 at 12:05 PM, Guendisch, Dieter < [email protected]> wrote: > Hi Tim, > > I noticed something similar some months ago. If I remember correctly, the > JVM was to "clever" to avoid proxies for request going to localhost and > 127.0.0.1. > I think I overcome this by pointing my client to the full-qualified > computer name as the CMIS server instead of using localhost or 127.0.0.1. > > Regards, > Dieter > > On 20.09.13 17:55, "Tim Webster" <[email protected]> wrote: > > >Hi, > > > >I would like to be able use something like Fiddler with my Apache > >Chemistry > >client. > > > >My chemistry client is embedded in a server application running in a Jetty > >server. I would like to see the request/response trace while using the > >Web > >Services binding between the chemistry client and the CMIS repository > >(which is on a different box). > > > >My setup is a client/server spring application with both the client and > >server running on my development box. The server part of the app is what > >contains the Chemistry client libraries, and is deployed on Jetty. > > > >The CMIS repository is on a different machine, accessible over the > >network. > > Pretty standard stuff. > > > >I tried adding this to the Jetty JVM startup: > > > >-Dhttp.proxyHost=localhost -Dhttp.proxyPort=8888 > > > >and tried invoking the server with Fiddler running, but nothing gets > >captured when calls are made to the CMIS repository. I know Fiddler is > >working because I can see it capturing my browser traffic. I also tried > >with IP address and 127.0.0.1 instead of localhost and nothing helped. > > > >Am I going about this right way? I have the CMIS and Apache Chemistry in > >Action book, but it just mentions how to do this with the CMIS workbench > >(which works). > > > >Thanks, > > > >Tim > > -- Check out my wine blog: http://timswineblog.blogspot.com/
