The OkHttp Profiler plugin can show requests from the OkHttp library directly in the Android Studio tool window. It supports the OkHttp v3 (http://square.github.io/okhttp/) and the Retrofit v2 (https://square.github.io/retrofit/)
You can debug OkHttp request or response headers, inspect the JSON as a tree, as a plain text etc. And you can easily create a Java/Kotlin model from the data. Just click the right mouse button on a root element of the tree (or any other), choose Java or Kotlin, and select a folder for a new file in the project.
For installation, you need to include the library to your app build.gradle file
implementation 'com.itkacher.okhttpprofiler:okhttpprofiler:1.0.4'
and add Interceptor to okHttpClient in code
OkHttpClient.Builder builder = new OkHttpClient.Builder();
if (BuildConfig.DEBUG) {
builder.addInterceptor(new OkHttpProfilerInterceptor());
}
OkHttpClient client = builder.build();
val builder = OkHttpClient.Builder()
if (BuildConfig.DEBUG) {
builder.addInterceptor(OkHttpProfilerInterceptor() )
}
val client = builder.build()
OkHttpClient.Builder builder = new OkHttpClient.Builder();
if (BuildConfig.DEBUG) {
builder.addInterceptor(new OkHttpProfilerInterceptor());
}
OkHttpClient client = builder.build();
Retrofit retrofit = new Retrofit.Builder()
......
.client(client)
.build();
val builder = OkHttpClient.Builder()
if (BuildConfig.DEBUG) {
builder.addInterceptor( OkHttpProfilerInterceptor() )
}
val client = builder.build()
val retrofit = Retrofit.Builder()
......
.client(client)
.build()
Also Proguard will cut it out in the release build.
https://plugins.jetbrains.com/plugin/11249-okhttp-profiler
Have fun!