“Could not get any response” response when using postman with subdomain

安稳与你 提交于 2019-11-27 03:22:11

First Go to Settings in Postman:

1) Off the SSL certificate verification in General Tab:

2) Off the Global Proxy Configuration and Use System Proxy in Proxy Tab

I had the same issue. It was caused by a newline at the end of the "Authorization" header's value, which I had set manually by copy-pasting the bearer token (which accidentally contained the newline at its end)

Hi This issue is resolved for me.

setting ->general -> Requesttimeout in ms = 0

If all above methods doesn't work check your environment variables, And make sure that the following environments are not set. If those are set and not needed by any other application remove them.

HTTP_PROXY
HTTPS_PROXY

Reference link

For me it was the http://localhost instead of https://localhost.

When getting the following error,

you need to do the following.

Step 1: In Postman, click the wrench icon, go to settings, then go to the Proxy tab.

Step 2: Create a custom Proxy. This article explains how to create a custom proxy. After you create the custom Proxy, make sure you turn the Proxy toggle button to off. I put 61095 in for the proxy server and it worked for me.

Step 3 :

Success

If you get a "Could not get any response" message from Postman native apps while sending your request, open Postman Console (View > Show Postman Console), resend the request and check for any error logs in the console.

Thanks to numaanashraf

For me, it was that route that I was calling in my node server wasn't returning anything. Adding

    return res.status(200).json({
        message: 'success!',
        response: 'success!'
    });//

to the route I was calling resolved the issue.

You mentioned you are using a CER certificate.

According to the Postman page on certificates.

Choose your client certificate file in the CRT file field. Currently, we only support the CRT format. Support for other formats (like PFX) will come soon.

The name of the extension CER, CRT doesn't make the certificate that type of certificate but, these are the excepted extensions names.

CER is an X.509 certificate in binary form, DER encoded.

CRT is a binary X.509 certificate, encapsulated in text (base-64) encoding.

You can use OpenSSL to change a CER file into a CRT file. I have not had good luck with it but it looks like this.

openssl x509 -inform PEM -in certificate.cer -out certificate.crt

or

openssl x509 -inform DER -in certificate.cer -out certificate.crt

For me what worked was to add 127.0.0.1 subdomain.localhost to my host file. On OSX that was /etc/hosts. Not sure why that was necessary as I could reach the subdomain from chrome.

None of these solutions works for me. Postman is not sending any request to the server because postman is not finding the host. So, if you modify your /etc/hosts to 127.0.0.1 localhost 127.0.0.1 subdomain.localhost

It works for me.

For me the issue was that the Content-Length was too big. I placed the content of the body in NotePad++ and counted the characters and put that figure in PostMan and then it worked.

I know it does not directly answer why the op's sub-domain was not working but it might help out someone.

  1. In postman go to setting --> proxy
  2. And off Global Proxy Configuration

After all the above methods like turning OFF SSL certificate verification, turning ON only Use System Proxy and removing HTTP_PROXY and HTTPS_PROXY system environment variables, it worked.

Note: Had to restart the Postman app, since the environment variables were changed.

Unchecking proxy and SSL Certificate Verification didn't work for me.

Unsetting PROXY environment variables did the trick.

export http_proxy=
export ftp_proxy=
export https_proxy=

Change to the directory where Postman is installed and then:

./Postman

Postman for Linux Version 6.7.1 - Ubuntu 18.04 - linux 4.15.0-43-generic / x64

I had the same problem and by chance I replaced http://localhost with http://127.0.0.1 and everything worked.

My etc/hosts had the proper entries for localhost and https://localhost requests always worked as expected.

I have no clue why changing localhost for http with 127.0.0.1 solved the issue.

I came up with this solution

  1. In postman go to setting --> proxy
  2. And off Global Proxy Configuration
  3. on the Use System Proxy

  4. And go to windows host configure file 'C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts'

  5. Open that file in administrator mode
  6. And add the sub domain to hosts file

In my case it was invisible spaces that postman didn't recognize, the above string of text renders as without spaces in postman. I disabled SSL certificate Validation and System Proxy even tried on postman chrome extension(which is about to be deprecated), but when I downloaded and tried Insomnia and it gave those red dots in the place where those spaces were, must have gotten there during copy/paste

In my case, MVC wasn't able to serialize the results (I accidentally used a model instead of DTO). I debugged down to passing a simple string, which worked. Once I fixed the serialization it all came up.

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