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@JakeWharton
Created May 21, 2013 01:14
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A `HttpStack` implementation for Volley that uses OkHttp as its transport.
import com.android.volley.toolbox.HurlStack;
import com.squareup.okhttp.OkHttpClient;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.net.HttpURLConnection;
import java.net.URL;
/**
* An {@link com.android.volley.toolbox.HttpStack HttpStack} implementation which
* uses OkHttp as its transport.
*/
public class OkHttpStack extends HurlStack {
private final OkHttpClient client;
public OkHttpStack() {
this(new OkHttpClient());
}
public OkHttpStack(OkHttpClient client) {
if (client == null) {
throw new NullPointerException("Client must not be null.");
}
this.client = client;
}
@Override protected HttpURLConnection createConnection(URL url) throws IOException {
return client.open(url);
}
}
@JakeWharton
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Author

Use Volley.newRequestQueue(context, new OkHttpStack()) as of http://r.android.com/59170

@shkschneider
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Perfect! Was waiting for something like this since Google I/O 2k13 about Volley.

@tasomaniac
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I am getting "Unknown method 'PATCH'; must be one of [OPTIONS, GET, HEAD, POST, PUT, DELETE, TRACE]" when using Volley with OKHttp. What do I do? I have tried everything.

@tadfisher
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@tasomaniac Update Volley from HEAD; they've since re-added the PATCH request method.

@peter-tackage
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@tasomaniac that ProtocolException is being thrown by base HttpUrlConnection class which doesn't support PATCH in its getRequestMethod() (the list of the supported Methods is in a private array)

You should check out https://github.com/adriancole/retrofit/commit/e704b800878b2e37f5ac98b0139cb4994618ace0 for a reflection based work around and include similar calls in your HurlStack implementation

@laaptu
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laaptu commented May 2, 2014

@JakeWharton: Is it possible to use HTTPS request with OKHttpClient in conjunction with Volley Library.

@zktc5418
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@JakeWharton: Is it possible to use HTTPS request with OKHttpClient in conjunction with Volley Library.
i found the same issue. i could not user Https request with OKHttpClient in conjunction with Volley Library.

@s1rius
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s1rius commented May 27, 2014

@JakeWharton: How to use OkHttp 2.0 with Volley ? The "open" method was dismissed.

@demonzym
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it seems to need com.squareup.okhttp.OkUrlFactory.java, and change the createConnection(URL url) like this:
@OverRide protected HttpURLConnection createConnection(URL url) throws IOException {
return new OkUrlFactory(client).open(url);
}

@JakeWharton @s1rius

maybe differences of new version.

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ghost commented Jun 16, 2014

I made a new class because I want to use cache from okhttp, not volley.
(Volley does not support syncronous request)

And this is for okhttp 2.0

https://gist.github.com/ceram1/8254f7a68d81172c1669

@zapotec83
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How can I use Volley and OkHttp 2.0 to accept my self signed Certificate? I am begggining to use OkHttp 2.0 alone inside an Async Task and no problems, but I don't know how to make it work with Volley....Anybody knows?

@imminent
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imminent commented Jul 7, 2014

With the most recent OkHttp I had to change to:

import com.android.volley.toolbox.HurlStack;
import com.squareup.okhttp.OkHttpClient;
import com.squareup.okhttp.OkUrlFactory;

import java.io.IOException;
import java.net.HttpURLConnection;
import java.net.URL;

/**
 * An {@link com.android.volley.toolbox.HttpStack HttpStack} implementation which
 * uses OkHttp as its transport.
 */
public class OkHttpStack extends HurlStack {
    private final OkUrlFactory mFactory;

    public OkHttpStack() {
        this(new OkHttpClient());
    }

    public OkHttpStack(OkHttpClient client) {
        if (client == null) {
            throw new NullPointerException("Client must not be null.");
        }
        mFactory = new OkUrlFactory(client);
    }

    @Override protected HttpURLConnection createConnection(URL url) throws IOException {
        return mFactory.open(url);
    }
}

Since open was relocated to the OkUrlFactory (which is part of okhttp-urlconnection)

@DeepShah9
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@imminent , it's nice you have implement OkHttp With Volley but i want to know how to use this Custom OkHttpStack class that you have implement ? (i am Newbie)

@quqiufeng
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how can i get the jar file with this file added in?

@nachtien
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To get @imminent's code to work, you need to add

compile 'com.squareup.okhttp:okhttp-urlconnection:1.6.+'

to your build.gradle

@hpadrao
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hpadrao commented Nov 27, 2014

Does it make sense? (In order to avoid "OkHttp changes the global SSL context, breaks other HTTP clients" square/okhttp#184 )

/**
 * An {@link com.android.volley.toolbox.HttpStack HttpStack} implementation which
 * uses OkHttp as its transport.
 */
public class OkHttpStack extends HurlStack {
    private final OkUrlFactory mFactory;

    public OkHttpStack() {
        this(new OkHttpClient());
    }

    public OkHttpStack(OkHttpClient client) {
        if (client == null) {
            throw new NullPointerException("Client must not be null.");
        }

        try {
            SSLContext sslContext = SSLContext.getInstance("TLS");
            sslContext.init(null, null, null);
            client.setSslSocketFactory(sslContext.getSocketFactory());
        } catch (Exception e) {
            throw new AssertionError(); // The system has no TLS. Just give up.
        }

        mFactory = new OkUrlFactory(client);
    }

    @Override
    protected HttpURLConnection createConnection(URL url) throws IOException {
        return mFactory.open(url);
    }
}

@mehmet6parmak
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Neither OkHttpClient nor OkUrlFactory has a method named open now. None of the above implementations work with the latest versions of OkHttpClient.

@toanpv
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toanpv commented Jan 5, 2015

@pdichone
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I am sorry guys, but how do I add the url connection you mentioned? I am using the latest Android Studio IDE.

I guess I should explain what I am trying to do:

  • All I am trying to do is to be able to us PATCH to send data over to a server. I haven't been able to do that with Volley for the past 2 days... and I am pretty much hitting my head into the wall right now :(

I followed previous comments on how to use OkHttpStack implementation. I did all that but I am getting this error when I run my app in the emulator:

java.net.ProtocolException: Unknown method 'PATCH'; must be one of [OPTIONS, GET, HEAD, POST, PUT, DELETE, TRACE] which is something that one other person got too. However, I don't understand how to solve this problem.

Can you please help?

Thanks

@JeffMcKnight
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This implementation of OkHttpStack works with OkHttpClient v2.3.0 (doesn't use open(url) method):
https://gist.github.com/bryanstern/4e8f1cb5a8e14c202750

@vfede
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vfede commented Jul 2, 2015

@imminent version still works with these dependencies in gradle:

compile 'com.squareup.okhttp:okhttp:2.4.0'
compile 'com.squareup.okhttp:okhttp-urlconnection:2.4.0'

then you just have to init your RequestQueue with:

myRequestQueue = Volley.newRequestQueue(context, new OkHttpStack())

@GleidsonFerSanP
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@JakeWharton i' m your fan!!

@uniruddh
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uniruddh commented Sep 9, 2016

Any update on how we can use Volley with okhttp3 ?

@Anawaz
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Anawaz commented Sep 10, 2016

Any update on how we can use Volley with okhttp3 ?

@SylvainHocq
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@sushant4anshu
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client.open(url);

open method is not working,
Is there any working alternative for this?.

@TamirSagiGimso
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TamirSagiGimso commented Mar 13, 2018

@sushant4anshu, yes,
That one works for me

add these libraries to gradle file
compile 'com.squareup.okhttp3:okhttp:3.9.0'
compile 'com.squareup.okhttp:okhttp-urlconnection:1.6.+'

then :

/**
* An {@link com.android.volley.toolbox.HttpStack HttpStack} implementation which
* uses OkHttp as its transport.
*/

  private class OkHttpStack extends HurlStack {
        private final OkUrlFactory mFactory;

        public OkHttpStack() {
            this(new OkHttpClient());
        }

        public OkHttpStack(OkHttpClient client) {
            if (client == null) {
                throw new NullPointerException("Client must not be null.");
            }
            mFactory = new OkUrlFactory(client);
        }

        @Override protected HttpURLConnection createConnection(URL url) throws IOException {
            return mFactory.open(url);
        }
    }

while creating Volley Queue:
mRequestQueue = Volley.newRequestQueue(mCtx.getApplicationContext(), new OkHttpStack());

@khat33b
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khat33b commented May 24, 2018

What is the advantage of using OkHttp as transport for Volley?

@swankjesse
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swankjesse commented Mar 2, 2019

OkUrlFactory is gone

It was deprecated in December 2015 and deleted in March 2019. You should use this instead:
https://gist.github.com/bryanstern/4e8f1cb5a8e14c202750

@4sskick
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4sskick commented May 21, 2024

thank you guys for the insight, here the updated version using volley 1.2.1 (latest) https://gist.github.com/4sskick/d1318379500747564d8f1c8d6af1f796 in case still you guys still has old project which need to maintain but don't want to refactor to OkHttp or another request library

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