I recently faced a similar problem and i found a not very beautiful, but working solution.
You can use a static variable.
public class SessionData {
private static String sessionId;
public static String getSessionId() {
return sessionId;
}
public static void setSessionId(String sessionId) {
SessionData.sessionId = sessionId;
}
}
Then you can set the IdToken, after you get it from the Google SDK (e.g. after the user logged in).
SessionData.setSessionId(yourCurrentToken);
In the class where you declare the Retrofit.Builder, you should use the following imports (as you said, the okhttp interceptor).
import com.squareup.okhttp.Interceptor;
import com.squareup.okhttp.OkHttpClient;
import com.squareup.okhttp.Request;
import com.squareup.okhttp.Response;
And the content of the class should look like the following.
public class RestClient implements Interceptor {
public RestClient() {
OkHttpClient httpClient = new OkHttpClient();
// add your other interceptors …
// add logging as last interceptor
httpClient.interceptors().add(this); // <-- this adds the header with the sessionId to every request
Retrofit restAdapter = new Retrofit.Builder()
.baseUrl(RestConstants.BASE_URL)
.addCallAdapterFactory(RxJavaCallAdapterFactory.create())
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create())
.client(httpClient)
.build();
}
@Override
public Response intercept(Chain chain) throws IOException {
Request originalRequest = chain.request();
if (SessionData.getSessionId() != null) {
Request newRequest = originalRequest.newBuilder()
.header("sessionId", SessionData.getSessionId())
.build();
return chain.proceed(newRequest);
}
return chain.proceed(originalRequest);
}
}