Android Source
String url = "http://www.example.com";
OkHttpClient client = clientBuilder.build();
Request request = new Request.Builder()
.url(url)
.addHeader("Host", "api.example.com")
.addHeader("Referer", "http://www.examplegood.com/")
.build();
Response response = client.newCall(request).execute();
It works well. I tried in iOS using NSURLConnection request.
iOS Source
NSString *url = @"http://www.example.com";
NSMutableURLRequest *request = [[NSMutableURLRequest alloc] init];
[request setValue:@"api.example.com" forHTTPHeaderField:@"Host"];
[request setValue:@"http://www.examplegood.com/" forHTTPHeaderField:@"Referer"];
[request setURL:[NSURL URLWithString:url]];
[request setHTTPMethod: @"GET"];
[NSURLConnection sendAsynchronousRequest:request queue:[NSOperationQueue mainQueue] completionHandler:^(NSURLResponse *response, NSData *data, NSError *error) {
NSMutableData *result = [[NSMutableData alloc] init];
[result appendData:data];
NSString* resultStr = [[NSString alloc] initWithData:result encoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding];
NSLog(@"result:%@",resultStr);
}];
It works bad. There is no response. What is the equivalent of Android OkHttpClient newCall() in iOS?
I solved the problem using NSURLConnection. And get response data by this delegate.
- (void)connection:(NSURLConnection *)connection didReceiveResponse:(NSURLResponse *)response