添加链接
link之家
链接快照平台
  • 输入网页链接,自动生成快照
  • 标签化管理网页链接
Collectives™ on Stack Overflow

Find centralized, trusted content and collaborate around the technologies you use most.

Learn more about Collectives

Teams

Q&A for work

Connect and share knowledge within a single location that is structured and easy to search.

Learn more about Teams

In the Chrome browser - Chrome developer tools - Network - I can show only POST requests by putting "method:POST" in the Filter search box. What filter should I use in order to see both PATCH and POST requests?

The filter option is quite powerful, but it's limited to only using AND (conjunction). So simple workaround would be to use negatives... For instance, in your case you could create a filter like this:

-method:GET -method:OPTIONS -method:PUT

This should filter out most of the requests. If you have other offending HTTP verbs you can easily add them.

this is great, and I'd add a reference here, because there's a bunch of other helpful options. Another hint is: type just - in the filter field - and you'll see all the options (remove - afterwards though, if you're looking for a "positive" filtering) YakovL Jun 21, 2019 at 14:48

Like me, I'm guessing many people came to this thread and don't necessarily need to filter to both POST and PATCH. That said, you can just use the filter like this to filter to POST requests:

On the Network Tab, in the filter box, type in:

method:POST

Unfortunately, you can't filter on multiple HTTP methods, or multiple pre-defined filters in general, such as using both method and domain.

You also can't mix a pre-defined filter and a normal text based one, as I discovered when answering How to filter by both text and property in Chrome DevTool's network panel?

You will have to filter one at a time, or alternatively if there's a lot of requests, you could export the HAR and filter based on the JSON output. I gave an example of parsing the JSON here if that helps.

Thanks for contributing an answer to Stack Overflow!

  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid

  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.