When using Fiddler to monitor HTTP Requests & Responses in Internet Explorer it ignores all traffic directed to http://localhost.
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I think this is only a problem in IE < 9, right?– Josh MouchJul 18, 2014 at 15:22
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Hum... my localhost traffic is not ignored by defaults and i test it with IE 11 too.– m3ndaApr 17, 2015 at 21:35
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I also had to switch from IIS to IIS Express– niicoMar 13, 2017 at 14:49
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Fiddler used to be this great tool, but now it's just a configuration nightmare.– The Muffin ManJan 26, 2018 at 19:42
15 Answers
To get Fiddler to capture traffic when you are debugging on local host, after you hit F5 to begin degugging change the address so that localhost has a "." after it.
For instance, you start debugging and the you have the following URL in the Address bar:
http://localhost:49573/Default.aspx
Change it to:
http://localhost.:49573/Default.aspx
Hit enter and Fidder will start picking up your traffic.
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3
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13that works for cassini.. not iis which you need to use if you are connecting to a site or service on SSL... Jun 8, 2011 at 18:22
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2Didn't work for me using cygwin and curl with the following command: curl -X POST -H "application/json" -d '{"name":{"firstName":"eli", "lastName":"kool"}}' localhost.:61444/Inbound/Catch Jun 10, 2014 at 14:10
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19WebAPI does not work with localhost. it says Bad Request - Invalid Hostname May 27, 2016 at 7:27
Fiddler's website addresses this question directly.
There are several suggested workarounds, but the most straightforward is simply to use the machine name rather than "localhost" or "127.0.0.1":
http://machinename/mytestpage.aspx
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Not sure why Fiddler's website does not suggest the "adding a period after localhost" suggestion, which I think is the best one. This is especially true in some server environments I work in where localhost is the only thing I can use (due to ActiveX controls, permissions, and whatnot). Jul 18, 2014 at 15:21
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3@JoshMouch Because some webservers reject
localhost.
as an invalid hostname. Jan 18, 2017 at 21:49 -
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2As noted, "localhost." doesn't work on many APIs (or 127.0.0.1). I used the "localhost.fiddler" modification which worked perfectly for me.– VmanMay 7, 2019 at 14:12
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MachineName is preferred for my some cases, 127.0.0.1 can be refused by IIS– lyolikaaAug 2 at 11:44
The correct answer is that it's not that Fiddler ignores traffic targeted at Localhost, but rather that most applications are hardcoded to bypass proxies (of which Fiddler is one) for requests targeted to localhost.
Hence, the various workarounds available: http://fiddler2.com/documentation/Configure-Fiddler/Tasks/MonitorLocalTraffic
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1as of April 2013: fiddler2.com/documentation/Configure-Fiddler/Tasks/… p.s. thanks for the awesome tool Eric.– PeteApr 15, 2013 at 16:45
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The adding-a-period-to-the-end-of-localhost is the best trick, and fiddler's site doesn't mention that one. Jul 18, 2014 at 15:23
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Tried the other various solutions on this page: Adding a period, changing the hostname from 'localhost" to my machine name. Neither worked. Replacing "localhost" with "ipv4.fiddler", mentioned in the workarounds document, worked. Mar 13, 2015 at 5:05
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In situations where the address is encoded in the project files that sit in a source code library, distributed to all devs (think Mercurial/Git) in a team, or that all dev's don't actually have fiddler these solutions are unrealistic and cause more problems than they solve. What is needed is a way for fiddler to operate that is outside of a project and therefore have zero impact on taht project or its configuration. Aug 5, 2016 at 12:00
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True in my case. I sent a SOAP HTTP request using SOAP-UI, Fiddler 4 wasn't getting it. Then I sent the same HTTP request using POSTMAN and successfully got it Dec 11, 2020 at 11:05
Fiddler v4.5.1.0 will allow you to go to replace "localhost" with "localhost.fiddler", and present localhost as the host name for the receiving server running on your machine.
This avoids "host not recognised" errors when connecting to WCF services with the built in web server that visual studio uses.
i.e. Instead of
http://localhost:51900/service.wcf
you can use http://localhost.fiddler:51900/service.wcf
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2WORKS PERFECTLY!.. Due to my work's network configuration none of the other suggestions worked. This is the only trick that worked for me.– ZorthgoMay 24, 2018 at 14:35
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Internet Explorer has a new feature since IE9 RC: adding <-loopback>
to the proxy bypass list causes WinInet (the network library used by IE) to send requests destined for localhost
and 127.0.0.1
through the defined proxy.
Here's the original announcement by @EricLaw: http://blogs.msdn.com/b/fiddler/archive/2011/02/10/fiddler-is-better-with-internet-explorer-9.aspx
For Fiddler to capture traffic from localhost on local IIS, there are 3 steps (It worked on my computer):
- Click Tools > Fiddler Options. Ensure Allow remote clients to connect is checked. Close Fiddler.
- Create a new DWORD named ReverseProxyForPort inside KEY_CURRENT_USER\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Fiddler2. Set the DWORD to port 80 (choose decimal here). Restart Fiddler.
- Add port 8888 to the addresses defined in your client. For example localhost:8888/MyService/WebAPI/v1/
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Yes, this settings makes the fiddler running as reverse proxy, such that it forwards inbound requests to a different port. In this example it forwards requests made to port 8888 to 80.– ozanmutApr 18, 2015 at 14:24
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The most complex to me was to fully ignore localhost and send all the other traffic to being processed by fiddler. You must bypass localhost, BUT also, exclude it withing your functions. (you can try with hide 304 rule for testing purpose.). So i ended excluding it the following way
if ((m_EnableProxy) && !(oSession.host =="127.0.0.1" || oSession.host =="localhost" || oSession.host =="ipv4.fiddler")) { oSession["X-OverrideGateway"] = "socks=127.0.0.1:8080"; oSession["ui-backcolor"] = "#EFEF9F"; }
. This function should be onBeforeRequest.– m3ndaApr 18, 2015 at 19:11
Using Fiddler v4.6 and the default configuration could not see any traffic from 'localhost'. Tried many suggestions here but nothing worked.
Enabled Help -> Troubleshot and could see many more requests. Sessions were marked in a strike-through font and reason given was 'Hidden due to Status Bar> Process Filter.'
Found this reply from Eric Lawrence to person having same problem http://www.telerik.com/forums/fiddler-not-capturing-ios-traffic-even-though-echo-service-works
basically what to do is: Look at the Status Bar across the bottom of the Fiddler window, the second little "tray" in that bar probably says something like "Web Browsers." Click that and then change to "All Processes."
Don't use localhost in the url!
- http://
localhost:4200/myTestProject
Use like this:
make sure Monitor all connections is ticked. it does not work for me maybe port is diffren i need yo see httprequest to my site from gmail my site is on win xp and iis5(my own machine)
Use your local IP address (not 127.0.0.1) instead would work, such as 192.16.0.88 etc. Go to cmd.exe and type ipconfig and you will see it.
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It doesn't work. It seems you can't connect to your own IP address locally– zeocrashMay 13, 2016 at 15:34
Windows XP:
Be sure to set to click the settings button for each of the items in the "Dial-up and Virtual Private Network settings" listbox in the "Connections" tab of the "Internet Options" control panel applet.
I noticed that Fiddler would stop using the "LAN settings" configuration once I connected to my VPN. Even if the traffic wasn't going through the VPN.
- Type ipconfig at the commmand prompt.
- It will give you your IPv4 Address
- Replace localhost with your IPv4 Address in the Url when hitting the service.
The traffic will show up in Fiddler under your computer's IP address.
Unfortunately none of the suggestions were helpful
Only complete exclusion of localhost
from monitoring with following setting:
Open View Menu
> Preferences
> Connections
> Bypass Fiddler for URLs that start with:
> localhost;127.0.0.1
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Unfortunately that stopped working too. The official guide is useless docs.telerik.com/fiddler-everywhere/knowledge-base/… unless it's for http only. In my case I need to serve over https May 18 at 12:58
Go to Tools, Fiddler Options ..., select the Connections tab, then make sure Monitor all connections is ticked. Like Antony Scott said, but also make sure that the "Web Sessions" pane is set to "Capturing" and [ "Web Browsers" OR "All Processes" ]. Looks like the default is "Non-Browser".