See Request.setRetryPolicy()
and the constructor for DefaultRetryPolicy
, e.g.
JsonObjectRequest myRequest = new JsonObjectRequest(Method.GET,
url, null,
new Response.Listener<JSONObject>() {
@Override
public void onResponse(JSONObject response) {
Log.d(TAG, response.toString());
}
}, new Response.ErrorListener() {
@Override
public void onErrorResponse(VolleyError error) {
Log.d(TAG, "Error: " + error.getMessage());
}
});
myRequest.setRetryPolicy(new DefaultRetryPolicy(
MY_SOCKET_TIMEOUT_MS,
DefaultRetryPolicy.DEFAULT_MAX_RETRIES,
DefaultRetryPolicy.DEFAULT_BACKOFF_MULT));
To handle Android Volley Timeout you need to use RetryPolicy
RetryPolicy
is an interface where you need to implement your logic of how you want to retry a particular request when a timeout happens.
It deals with these three parameters
For ex. If RetryPolicy is created with these values
Timeout - 3000 ms, Num of Retry Attempts - 2, Back Off Multiplier - 2.0
Retry Attempt 1:
Retry Attempt 2:
So at the end of Retry Attempt 2 if still Socket Timeout happens Volley would throw a TimeoutError
in your UI Error response handler.
//Set a retry policy in case of SocketTimeout & ConnectionTimeout Exceptions.
//Volley does retry for you if you have specified the policy.
jsonObjRequest.setRetryPolicy(new DefaultRetryPolicy(5000,
DefaultRetryPolicy.DEFAULT_MAX_RETRIES,
DefaultRetryPolicy.DEFAULT_BACKOFF_MULT));
Just to contribute with my approach. As already answered, RetryPolicy
is the way to go. But if you need a policy different the than default for all your requests, you can set it in a base Request class, so you don't need to set the policy for all the instances of your requests.
Something like this:
public class BaseRequest<T> extends Request<T> {
public BaseRequest(int method, String url, Response.ErrorListener listener) {
super(method, url, listener);
setRetryPolicy(getMyOwnDefaultRetryPolicy());
}
}
In my case I have a GsonRequest which extends from this BaseRequest, so I don't run the risk of forgetting to set the policy for an specific request and you can still override it if some specific request requires to.
/**
* @param request
* @param <T>
*/
public <T> void addToRequestQueue(Request<T> request) {
request.setRetryPolicy(new DefaultRetryPolicy(
MY_SOCKET_TIMEOUT_MS,
DefaultRetryPolicy.DEFAULT_MAX_RETRIES,
DefaultRetryPolicy.DEFAULT_BACKOFF_MULT));
getRequestQueue().add(request);
}
req.setRetryPolicy(new DefaultRetryPolicy(
MY_SOCKET_TIMEOUT_MS,
DefaultRetryPolicy.DEFAULT_MAX_RETRIES,
DefaultRetryPolicy.DEFAULT_BACKOFF_MULT));
You can set MY_SOCKET_TIMEOUT_MS
as 100. Whatever you want to set this to is in milliseconds. DEFAULT_MAX_RETRIES
can be 0 default is 1.
int MY_SOCKET_TIMEOUT_MS=500;
stringRequest.setRetryPolicy(new DefaultRetryPolicy(
MY_SOCKET_TIMEOUT_MS,
DefaultRetryPolicy.DEFAULT_MAX_RETRIES,
DefaultRetryPolicy.DEFAULT_BACKOFF_MULT));
Another way of doing it is in custom JsonObjectRequest by:
@Override
public RetryPolicy getRetryPolicy() {
// here you can write a custom retry policy and return it
return super.getRetryPolicy();
}
Source: Android Volley Example
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