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okhttp-tls/src/test/java/okhttp3/tls/internal/der/DerTest.kt
// Type1 ::= VisibleString // Type2 ::= [APPLICATION 3] IMPLICIT Type1 // Type3 ::= [2] Type2 // Type4 ::= [APPLICATION 7] IMPLICIT Type3 val buffer = Buffer() val derWriter = DerWriter(buffer) derWriter.write("test", tagClass = DerHeader.TAG_CLASS_APPLICATION, tag = 7L) { derWriter.write("test", tagClass = DerHeader.TAG_CLASS_APPLICATION, tag = 3L) {
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samples/tlssurvey/build.gradle.kts
plugins { kotlin("jvm") application id("com.google.devtools.ksp").version("1.9.23-1.0.20") } application { mainClass.set("okhttp3.survey.RunSurveyKt") } dependencies { implementation(projects.okhttp) implementation(projects.okhttpCoroutines) implementation(libs.conscrypt.openjdk) implementation("com.squareup.retrofit2:retrofit:2.11.0") implementation("com.squareup.retrofit2:converter-moshi:2.11.0")
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mockwebserver/README.md
### Example Use MockWebServer the same way that you use mocking frameworks like [Mockito](https://github.com/mockito/mockito): 1. Script the mocks. 2. Run application code. 3. Verify that the expected requests were made. Here's a complete example: ```java public void test() throws Exception { // Create a MockWebServer. These are lean enough that you can create a new
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android-test-app/src/main/AndroidManifest.xml
<manifest xmlns:android="http://schemas.android.com/apk/res/android" xmlns:tools="http://schemas.android.com/tools" package="okhttp.android.testapp"> <uses-permission android:name="android.permission.INTERNET" /> <application android:allowBackup="true" android:label="@string/app_name" android:supportsRtl="true" android:name=".TestApplication" > <activity android:name=".MainActivity"
XML - Registered: Fri Apr 26 11:42:10 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Sat Dec 23 14:46:51 GMT 2023 - 683 bytes - Viewed (0) -
okhttp/src/main/kotlin/okhttp3/Interceptor.kt
* indicating that the call was canceled. The interceptor's exception is delivered to the current * thread's [uncaught exception handler][Thread.UncaughtExceptionHandler]. By default this * crashes the application on Android and prints a stacktrace on the JVM. (Crash reporting * libraries may customize this behavior.) * * A good way to signal a failure is with a synthetic HTTP response: * * ```kotlin
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samples/slack/src/main/java/okhttp3/slack/SlackApi.java
import okhttp3.WebSocketListener; import okio.ByteString; /** * API access to the <a href="https://api.slack.com/apps">Slack API</a> as an application. One * instance of this class may operate without a user, or on behalf of many users. Use the Slack API * dashboard to create a client ID and secret for this application. * * <p>You must configure your Slack API OAuth and Permissions page with a localhost URL like {@code
Java - Registered: Fri Apr 26 11:42:10 GMT 2024 - Last Modified: Fri Jul 06 19:30:55 GMT 2018 - 4.4K bytes - Viewed (1) -
okhttp/src/main/kotlin/okhttp3/internal/connection/RealCall.kt
import okhttp3.internal.platform.Platform import okhttp3.internal.threadName import okio.AsyncTimeout import okio.Timeout /** * Bridge between OkHttp's application and network layers. This class exposes high-level application * layer primitives: connections, requests, responses, and streams. * * This class supports [asynchronous canceling][cancel]. This is intended to have the smallest
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docs/features/events.md
Events ====== Events allow you to capture metrics on your application’s HTTP calls. Use events to monitor: * The size and frequency of the HTTP calls your application makes. If you’re making too many calls, or your calls are too large, you should know about it! * The performance of these calls on the underlying network. If the network’s performance isn’t sufficient, you need to either improve the network or use less of it. ### EventListener
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okhttp/src/main/kotlin/okhttp3/Callback.kt
* body on another thread. * * Note that transport-layer success (receiving a HTTP response code, headers and body) does not * necessarily indicate application-layer success: `response` may still indicate an unhappy HTTP * response code like 404 or 500. */ @Throws(IOException::class) fun onResponse( call: Call, response: Response, )
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okhttp/src/main/kotlin/okhttp3/Authenticator.kt
* * The route is best effort, it currently may not always be provided even when logically * available. It may also not be provided when an authenticator is re-used manually in an * application interceptor, such as when implementing client-specific retries. */ @Throws(IOException::class) fun authenticate( route: Route?, response: Response, ): Request? companion object {
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