Getting Started
In a fullstack or backend repo, run:
npx webhookthing
If your project doesn't have a .thing/hooks
directory, a "download samples" button will be available to download some common defaults
This will create the .thing/hooks
directory and add a set of example webhooks as .json files.
We recommend committing these files to your repo so that they can be shared with your team.
Once you have some json files in the .thing/hooks
directory, you can run them against your local environment by pressing the "play" button
Adding new webhooks
- Open the
.thing/hooks
directory - Make a new
.json
file - Fill the
.json
file with the contents you want to have POSTed when you run the webhook
Your hook should now appear in the UI
Authentication headers
For certain requests, you may want to include a secret in the headers of the request, but you don't want to commit that secret to your repo. For example, you may want to include a secret in the Authorization
header of a request to a third-party API.
In this case you can use the %%ENV_VAR_NAME%%
syntax to include environment variables in your webhook, which will be replaced with the value of the environment variable when the webhook is run.