Reputation: 12887
Unfortunately, there's a multitude of cookie managers for Android. The cookies for HttpURLConnection
are maintained by java.net.CookieManager
and the cookies for WebView
are maintained by android.webkit.CookieManager
. These cookie repositories are separate and require manual synchronization.
My app uses both HttpURLConnections
and shows WebViews
(it's a native-HTML hybrid). Naturally, I want both to share all cookies - so I will have a transparent session all across.
More Specifically:
Simply put - I'm looking for a two-way sync. Or even better, to have them both use the same cookie repository. You can assume both are active in the same time (like on different tabs).
Questions:
Is there a way to make both use the same cookie repository?
If not, what is the recommended practice to do the manual sync? When exactly should I sync and how?
Related Question: This question tackles a similar issue, but only implements one-way sync (HttpURLConnection -> WebView).
My Best Idea So Far: I really want to avoid a manual sync, so I tried to think how to make both use the same repository. Maybe I can create my own core handler which extends java.net.CookieManager
. I will set it as the core cookie handler using java.net.CookieHandler.setDefault()
. Its implementation will be a proxy to the android.webkit.CookieManager
handler instance (for every function I'll simply access the webkit manager).
Upvotes: 36
Views: 15012
Reputation: 12887
I've implemented my own idea. It's actually pretty cool. I've created my own implementation of java.net.CookieManager
which forwards all requests to the WebViews' webkit android.webkit.CookieManager
. This means no sync is required and HttpURLConnection uses the same cookie storage as the WebViews.
Class WebkitCookieManagerProxy:
import java.io.IOException;
import java.net.CookieManager;
import java.net.CookiePolicy;
import java.net.CookieStore;
import java.net.URI;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Map;
public class WebkitCookieManagerProxy extends CookieManager
{
private android.webkit.CookieManager webkitCookieManager;
public WebkitCookieManagerProxy()
{
this(null, null);
}
public WebkitCookieManagerProxy(CookieStore store, CookiePolicy cookiePolicy)
{
super(null, cookiePolicy);
this.webkitCookieManager = android.webkit.CookieManager.getInstance();
}
@Override
public void put(URI uri, Map<String, List<String>> responseHeaders) throws IOException
{
// make sure our args are valid
if ((uri == null) || (responseHeaders == null)) return;
// save our url once
String url = uri.toString();
// go over the headers
for (String headerKey : responseHeaders.keySet())
{
// ignore headers which aren't cookie related
if ((headerKey == null) || !(headerKey.equalsIgnoreCase("Set-Cookie2") || headerKey.equalsIgnoreCase("Set-Cookie"))) continue;
// process each of the headers
for (String headerValue : responseHeaders.get(headerKey))
{
this.webkitCookieManager.setCookie(url, headerValue);
}
}
}
@Override
public Map<String, List<String>> get(URI uri, Map<String, List<String>> requestHeaders) throws IOException
{
// make sure our args are valid
if ((uri == null) || (requestHeaders == null)) throw new IllegalArgumentException("Argument is null");
// save our url once
String url = uri.toString();
// prepare our response
Map<String, List<String>> res = new java.util.HashMap<String, List<String>>();
// get the cookie
String cookie = this.webkitCookieManager.getCookie(url);
// return it
if (cookie != null) res.put("Cookie", Arrays.asList(cookie));
return res;
}
@Override
public CookieStore getCookieStore()
{
// we don't want anyone to work with this cookie store directly
throw new UnsupportedOperationException();
}
}
And use it by doing this on your application initialization:
android.webkit.CookieSyncManager.createInstance(appContext);
// unrelated, just make sure cookies are generally allowed
android.webkit.CookieManager.getInstance().setAcceptCookie(true);
// magic starts here
WebkitCookieManagerProxy coreCookieManager = new WebkitCookieManagerProxy(null, java.net.CookiePolicy.ACCEPT_ALL);
java.net.CookieHandler.setDefault(coreCookieManager);
Testing
My initial testing show this is working well. I see cookies shared between the WebViews and HttpURLConnection. I hope I'll not run into any issues. If you try this out and discover any problem, please comment.
Upvotes: 66