20

Hey there I am using Dagger2, Retrofit and OkHttp and I am facing dependency cycle issue.

When providing OkHttp :

@Provides
@ApplicationScope
OkHttpClient provideOkHttpClient(TokenAuthenticator auth,Dispatcher dispatcher){
    return new OkHttpClient.Builder()
            .connectTimeout(Constants.CONNECT_TIMEOUT, TimeUnit.SECONDS)
            .readTimeout(Constants.READ_TIMEOUT,TimeUnit.SECONDS)
            .writeTimeout(Constants.WRITE_TIMEOUT,TimeUnit.SECONDS)
            .authenticator(auth)
            .dispatcher(dispatcher)
            .build();
}

When providing Retrofit :

@Provides
@ApplicationScope
Retrofit provideRetrofit(Resources resources,Gson gson, OkHttpClient okHttpClient){
    return new Retrofit.Builder()
            .baseUrl(resources.getString(R.string.base_api_url))
            .addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create(gson))
            .addCallAdapterFactory(RxJava2CallAdapterFactory.create())
            .client(okHttpClient)
            .build();
}

When providing APIService :

@Provides
@ApplicationScope
APIService provideAPI(Retrofit retrofit) {
    return retrofit.create(APIService.class);
}

My APIService interface :

public interface  APIService {
@FormUrlEncoded
@POST("token")
Observable<Response<UserTokenResponse>> refreshUserToken();

--- other methods like login, register ---

}

My TokenAuthenticator class :

@Inject
public TokenAuthenticator(APIService mApi,@NonNull ImmediateSchedulerProvider mSchedulerProvider) {
    this.mApi= mApi;
    this.mSchedulerProvider=mSchedulerProvider;
    mDisposables=new CompositeDisposable();
}

@Override
public  Request authenticate(Route route, Response response) throws IOException {

    request = null;

    mApi.refreshUserToken(...)
            .subscribeOn(mSchedulerProvider.io())
            .observeOn(mSchedulerProvider.ui())
            .doOnSubscribe(d -> mDisposables.add(d))
            .subscribe(tokenResponse -> {
                if(tokenResponse.isSuccessful()) {
                    saveUserToken(tokenResponse.body());
                    request = response.request().newBuilder()
                            .header("Authorization", getUserAccessToken())
                            .build();
                } else {
                    logoutUser();
                }
            },error -> {

            },() -> {});

    mDisposables.clear();
    stop();
    return request;

}

My logcat :

Error:(55, 16) error: Found a dependency cycle:
com.yasinkacmaz.myapp.service.APIService is injected at com.yasinkacmaz.myapp.darkvane.modules.NetworkModule.provideTokenAuthenticator(…, mApi, …)
com.yasinkacmaz.myapp.service.token.TokenAuthenticator is injected at
com.yasinkacmaz.myapp.darkvane.modules.NetworkModule.provideOkHttpClient(…, tokenAuthenticator, …)
okhttp3.OkHttpClient is injected at
com.yasinkacmaz.myapp.darkvane.modules.NetworkModule.provideRetrofit(…, okHttpClient)
retrofit2.Retrofit is injected at
com.yasinkacmaz.myapp.darkvane.modules.NetworkModule.provideAPI(retrofit)
com.yasinkacmaz.myapp.service.APIService is provided at
com.yasinkacmaz.myapp.darkvane.components.ApplicationComponent.exposeAPI()

So my question: My TokenAuthenticator class is depends on APIService but I need to provide TokenAuthenticator when creating APIService. This causes dependency cycle error. How do I beat this , is there anyone facing this issue ? Thanks in advance.

8
  • because it doesn't make sens ... OkHttpClient with TokenAuthenticator for getting auth token needed by TokenAuthenticator ... it has "circular dependency" even "on paper" ... create another service for getting auth token with another instance of http client without authenticator
    – Selvin
    May 11, 2017 at 12:01
  • TokenAuthenticator is for refreshing user token and I want to use same OkHttp instance for every network call. Because of managing user token. I have dispatcher at that OkHttp instance May 11, 2017 at 12:02
  • 1
    Again, it doesn't make sens ... even if you fix it, it will cause stackoverflow ... you are calling refreshUserToken from authenticate ... but refreshUserToken needs to call authenticate
    – Selvin
    May 11, 2017 at 12:26
  • @Selvin Authenticate works when I got 401 error code and then I refresh my token using refreshUserToken then continue my work. refreshUserToken method do not need to call authenticate May 11, 2017 at 12:35
  • 1
    refreshUserToken is using OkHttpClient which is setup to use TokenAuthenticator which is using refreshUserToken ... how refreshUserToken method do not need to call authenticate can be true?
    – Selvin
    May 11, 2017 at 12:37

4 Answers 4

31

Your problem is:

  1. Your OKHttpClient depends on your Authenticator
  2. Your Authenticator depends on a Retrofit Service
  3. Retrofit depends on an OKHttpClient (as in point 1)

Hence the circular dependency.

One possible solution here is for your TokenAuthenticator to depend on an APIServiceHolder rather than a APIService. Then your TokenAuthenticator can be provided as a dependency when configuring OKHttpClient regardless of whether the APIService (further down the object graph) has been instantiated or not.

A very simple APIServiceHolder:

public class APIServiceHolder {

    private APIService apiService;

    @Nullable
    APIService apiService() {
        return apiService;
    }

    void setAPIService(APIService apiService) {
        this.apiService = apiService;
    }
}

Then refactor your TokenAuthenticator:

@Inject
public TokenAuthenticator(@NonNull APIServiceHolder apiServiceHolder, @NonNull ImmediateSchedulerProvider schedulerProvider) {
    this.apiServiceHolder = apiServiceHolder;
    this.schedulerProvider = schedulerProvider;
    this.disposables = new CompositeDisposable();
}

@Override
public  Request authenticate(Route route, Response response) throws IOException {

    if (apiServiceHolder.get() == null) {
         //we cannot answer the challenge as no token service is available

         return null //as per contract of Retrofit Authenticator interface for when unable to contest a challenge
    }    

    request = null;            

    TokenResponse tokenResponse = apiServiceHolder.get().blockingGet()

    if (tokenResponse.isSuccessful()) {
        saveUserToken(tokenResponse.body());
        request = response.request().newBuilder()
                     .header("Authorization", getUserAccessToken())
                     .build();
    } else {
       logoutUser();
    }

    return request;
}

Note that the code to retrieve the token should be synchronous. This is part of the contract of Authenticator. The code inside the Authenticator will run off the main thread.

Of course you will need to write the @Provides methods for the same:

@Provides
@ApplicationScope
apiServiceHolder() {
    return new APIServiceHolder();
}

And refactor the provider methods:

@Provides
@ApplicationScope
APIService provideAPI(Retrofit retrofit, APIServiceHolder apiServiceHolder) {
    APIService apiService = retrofit.create(APIService.class);
    apiServiceHolder.setAPIService(apiService);
    return apiService;
}

Note that mutable global state is not usually a good idea. However, if you have your packages organised well you may be able to use access modifiers appropriately to avoid unintended usages of the holder.

21
  • I have two ways. One of them is this and the other one is: Use another instance of OkHttp for TokenAuthenticator and TokenInterceptor classes because of they only trigger when any APIService request call so they are not bound. Also in this way I will seperate token process from my other requests so I can easily maintain. Which one you suggest ? May 12, 2017 at 12:36
  • @Yasin I would personally prefer my solution to having two instances of OkHttpClient. May 12, 2017 at 20:33
  • @Yasin if you look at the docs for Authenticator it seems it is designed to work with a single OkHttpClient. The code in authenticate is executed on the same thread as the original request. May 12, 2017 at 20:38
  • 4
    APIServiceHolder always return null in my case. Jun 21, 2018 at 16:54
  • 1
    Isn't this still a circular dependency? You are hiding the service in a wrapper and kind of applying a lazy initialization but the TokenAuthenticator is still dependant on the service.
    – Tartar
    Feb 6, 2020 at 14:33
10

Using the Lazy interface of Dagger 2 is the solution here. In your TokenAuthenticator replace APIService mApi with Lazy<APIService> mApiLazyWrapper

@Inject
public TokenAuthenticator(Lazy<APIService> mApiLazyWrapper,@NonNull ImmediateSchedulerProvider mSchedulerProvider) {
    this.mApiLazyWrapper= mApiLazyWrapper;
    this.mSchedulerProvider=mSchedulerProvider;
    mDisposables=new CompositeDisposable();
}

And to get the APIService instance from wrapper use mApiLazyWrapper.get()

In case mApiLazyWrapper.get() returns null, return null from the authenticate method of TokenAuthenticator as well.

5
  • 1
    Dear @Tartar this question is from 2017 which is roughly 3 years old. This may work as well but our APIService still holds TokenAuthenticator. The only difference is that we delay injecting it. So IMHO I prefer having a simple client for authentication flow, may be isolated from couple interceptors. Feb 9, 2020 at 20:10
  • 4
    This is the Dagger way of solving the cyclic dependency error so the answer would be useful for those who want to solve the issue in that way instead of having multiple HTTP clients.
    – Tartar
    Feb 9, 2020 at 20:29
  • Yes, this would be a guide for new viewers. Also, @max has an answer about Lazy too. There are several ways to deal with dependency cycle problem, they can choose the appropriate solution for their app Feb 9, 2020 at 20:46
  • 1
    I think this is the best solution now. I don't believe Lazy was around when I wrote the initial answer Jul 24, 2020 at 9:38
  • How to do this with Hilt?
    – Torima
    Jun 3, 2022 at 16:05
1

Big thanks to @Selvin and @David. I have two approach, one of them is David's answer and the other one is :

Creating another OkHttp or Retrofit or another library which will handle our operations inside TokenAuthenticator class.

If you want to use another OkHttp or Retrofit instance you must use Qualifier annotation.

For example :

@Qualifier
public @interface ApiClient {}


@Qualifier
public @interface RefreshTokenClient {}

then provide :

@Provides
@ApplicationScope
@ApiClient
OkHttpClient provideOkHttpClientForApi(TokenAuthenticator tokenAuthenticator, TokenInterceptor tokenInterceptor, Dispatcher dispatcher){
    return new OkHttpClient.Builder()
            .connectTimeout(Constants.CONNECT_TIMEOUT, TimeUnit.SECONDS)
            .readTimeout(Constants.READ_TIMEOUT,TimeUnit.SECONDS)
            .writeTimeout(Constants.WRITE_TIMEOUT,TimeUnit.SECONDS)
            .authenticator(tokenAuthenticator)
            .addInterceptor(tokenInterceptor)
            .dispatcher(dispatcher)
            .build();
}

@Provides
@ApplicationScope
@RefreshTokenClient
OkHttpClient provideOkHttpClientForRefreshToken(Dispatcher dispatcher){
    return new OkHttpClient.Builder()
            .connectTimeout(Constants.CONNECT_TIMEOUT, TimeUnit.SECONDS)
            .readTimeout(Constants.READ_TIMEOUT,TimeUnit.SECONDS)
            .writeTimeout(Constants.WRITE_TIMEOUT,TimeUnit.SECONDS)
            .dispatcher(dispatcher)
            .build();
}

@Provides
@ApplicationScope
@ApiClient
Retrofit provideRetrofitForApi(Resources resources, Gson gson,@ApiClient OkHttpClient okHttpClient){
    return new Retrofit.Builder()
            .baseUrl(resources.getString(R.string.base_api_url))
            .addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create(gson))
            .addCallAdapterFactory(RxJava2CallAdapterFactory.create())
            .client(okHttpClient)
            .build();
}

@Provides
@ApplicationScope
@RefreshTokenClient
Retrofit provideRetrofitForRefreshToken(Resources resources, Gson gson,@RefreshTokenClient OkHttpClient okHttpClient){
    return new Retrofit.Builder()
            .baseUrl(resources.getString(R.string.base_api_url))
            .addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create(gson))
            .addCallAdapterFactory(RxJava2CallAdapterFactory.create())
            .client(okHttpClient)
            .build();
}

Then we can provide our seperated interfaces :

@Provides
@ApplicationScope
public APIService provideApi(@ApiClient Retrofit retrofit) {
    return retrofit.create(APIService.class);
}

@Provides
@ApplicationScope
public RefreshTokenApi provideRefreshApi(@RefreshTokenClient Retrofit retrofit) {
    return retrofit.create(RefreshTokenApi.class);
}

When providing our TokenAuthenticator :

@Provides
@ApplicationScope
TokenAuthenticator provideTokenAuthenticator(RefreshTokenApi mApi){
    return new TokenAuthenticator(mApi);
}

Advantages : You have two seperated api interfaces which means you can maintain them independently. Also you can use plain OkHttp or HttpUrlConnection or another library.

Disadvantages : You will have two different OkHttp and Retrofit instance.

P.S : Make sure you make syncronous calls inside Authenticator class.

11
  • I am beginner for dagger 2, when I used your approach I start getting error in my previous apiService ApiService cannot be provided without an @Provides-annotated method. What I am missing? Jan 23, 2019 at 12:33
  • Dear @BajrangHudda I cannot help you if you don't show your code. I mean your components, modules. Also if you are beginner with dagger I highly recommend you to read Dagger samples and try to understand what dependency injection is. Jan 23, 2019 at 12:51
  • I used David's answer, is there anything drawback? Jan 25, 2019 at 5:33
  • 1
    @BajrangHudda I saw no drawback on David's answer; but you know in software sometimes there is multiple solutions available for you. And I personally do not like nullable things inside dependency injection modules. Also this question is old tho and I am using Kotlin and Dagger right now. Dagger has been updated a lot and let me look at this question and see if any other workaround. Jan 25, 2019 at 7:26
  • 1
    @BajrangHudda also there is Lazy at Dagger too. Did not used it but you can take a look at it. Jan 25, 2019 at 7:37
0

You can inject the service dependency into your authenticator via the Lazy type. This way you will avoid the cyclic dependency on instantiation.

Check this link on how Lazy works.

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