Transmitting Network Data Using Volley

Dependencies and prerequisites

  • Android 1.6 (API Level 4) or higher

Video

Volley: Easy, Fast Networking for Android

Volley is an HTTP library that makes networking for Android apps easier and most importantly, faster. Volley is available through the open AOSP repository.

Volley offers the following benefits:

  • Automatic scheduling of network requests.
  • Multiple concurrent network connections.
  • Transparent disk and memory response caching with standard HTTP cache coherence.
  • Support for request prioritization.
  • Cancellation request API. You can cancel a single request, or you can set blocks or scopes of requests to cancel.
  • Ease of customization, for example, for retry and backoff.
  • Strong ordering that makes it easy to correctly populate your UI with data fetched asynchronously from the network.
  • Debugging and tracing tools.

Volley excels at RPC-type operations used to populate a UI, such as fetching a page of search results as structured data. It integrates easily with any protocol and comes out of the box with support for raw strings, images, and JSON. By providing built-in support for the features you need, Volley frees you from writing boilerplate code and allows you to concentrate on the logic that is specific to your app.

Volley is not suitable for large download or streaming operations, since Volley holds all responses in memory during parsing. For large download operations, consider using an alternative like DownloadManager.

The core Volley library is developed in the open AOSP repository at frameworks/volley and contains the main request dispatch pipeline as well as a set of commonly applicable utilities, available in the Volley "toolbox." The easiest way to add Volley to your project is to clone the Volley repository and set it as a library project:

  1. Git clone the repository by typing the following at the command line:
    git clone https://android.googlesource.com/platform/frameworks/volley
    
  2. Import the downloaded source into your app project as an Android library project (as described in Managing Projects from Eclipse with ADT, if you're using Eclipse) or make a .jar file.

Lessons

Sending a Simple Request
Learn how to send a simple request using the default behaviors of Volley, and how to cancel a request.
Setting Up a RequestQueue
Learn how to set up a RequestQueue, and how to implement a singleton pattern to create a RequestQueue that lasts the lifetime of your app.
Making a Standard Request
Learn how to send a request using one of Volley's out-of-the-box request types (raw strings, images, and JSON).
Implementing a Custom Request
Learn how to implement a custom request.