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  1. mockwebserver/README.md

    makes HTTP and HTTPS calls. It lets you specify which responses to return and
    then verify that requests were made as expected.
    
    Because it exercises your full HTTP stack, you can be confident that you're
    testing everything. You can even copy & paste HTTP responses from your real web
    server to create representative test cases. Or test that your code survives in
    awkward-to-reproduce situations like 500 errors or slow-loading responses.
    
    Plain Text
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  2. README.md

    first connect fails. This is necessary for IPv4+IPv6 and services hosted in redundant data
    centers. OkHttp supports modern TLS features (TLS 1.3, ALPN, certificate pinning). It can be
    configured to fall back for broad connectivity.
    
    Using OkHttp is easy. Its request/response API is designed with fluent builders and immutability. It
    supports both synchronous blocking calls and async calls with callbacks.
    
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  3. okhttp-logging-interceptor/README.md

    ```java
    HttpLoggingInterceptor logging = new HttpLoggingInterceptor();
    logging.setLevel(Level.BASIC);
    OkHttpClient client = new OkHttpClient.Builder()
      .addInterceptor(logging)
      .build();
    ```
    
    You can change the log level at any time by calling `setLevel()`.
    
    To log to a custom location, pass a `Logger` instance to the constructor.
    ```java
    HttpLoggingInterceptor logging = new HttpLoggingInterceptor(new Logger() {
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  4. okhttp-tls/README.md

    representative of real-world HTTPS deployment. To get closer to that we can use `HeldCertificate`
    to generate a trusted root certificate, an intermediate certificate, and a server certificate.
    We use `certificateAuthority(int)` to create certificates that can sign other certificates. The
    int specifies how many intermediate certificates are allowed beneath it in the chain.
    
    ```java
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  5. okhttp/src/test/resources/okhttp3/internal/idn/README.md

    ========
    
    In order to implement Nameprep (RFC 3491), OkHttp uses Unicode tables specified in Stringprep
    (RFC 3454). Fragments of this RFC are dumped into the files in this directory and parsed by
    `StringprepTablesReader` into a model that can be used at runtime.
    
    This format is chosen to make it easy to validate that these tables are consistent with the RFC.
    
    ```
    cd okhttp/src/test/resources/okhttp3/internal/idn/
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  6. mockwebserver-junit5/README.md

    }
    ```
    
    Constructor injection is particularly concise in Kotlin:
    
    ```
    class MyTest(
      private val server: MockWebServer
    ) {
      @Test
      fun test() {
        ...
      }
    }
    ```
    
    Multiple instances can be obtained by naming additional ones:
    
    ```
    class MyTest(
      private val server: MockWebServer,
      @MockWebServerInstance("server2") private val server2: MockWebServer,
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