Use HTTP 2 with HttpClient in .Net

You want to use the http/2 protocol but you did not set the protocol property. Please do so. Did you check if it is possible on the operating system you use? .NET Core does not support this for Mac OS yet for example. Also make sure you setup the needed properties as described here using the options variable when calling ConfigureKestrel. Logically, you can also try this alternative way to set the http version.

By doing a curl call, you can check if your http/2 call is possible in your situation.

In addition, there are issues with the original HttpClient in .NET Core (which you use). Please use the HttpClientFactory.


Update - .NET Core 3.0

.NET Core 3.0 now supports HTTP/2. The following code will print 2.0 :

var client = new HttpClient();

var req = new HttpRequestMessage(HttpMethod.Get, "https://http2.akamai.com/demo"){
             Version = new Version(2, 0) 
             };

var x = await client.SendAsync(req);
var version = x.Version;

Console.WriteLine(version);

Original Answer

You can't use HTTP/2 with HttpClient in .NET Core 2.1 or 2.2, even if you explicitly set the version in the request. You'll have to explicitly configure .NET Core to use the old HttpClientHandler instance that came with .NET Core 2.0, either by setting an App Context switch with :

AppContext.SetSwitch("System.Net.Http.UseSocketsHttpHandler", false);

Or by setting the DOTNET_SYSTEM_NET_HTTP_USESOCKETSHTTPHANDLER environment variable to 0 or false.

The discussion in this Github issue shows that HTTP/2 support is planned for .NET Core 3.0. The 3.0 Preview 1 released at Microsoft Connect 2018 doesn't support HTTP/2 yet.

The HttpClientHandler used up to .NET Core 2.0 supported HTTP/2. The following code will return 2.0 in a project that targets Core 2.0 :

var client = new HttpClient();

var req = new HttpRequestMessage(HttpMethod.Get, "https://http2.akamai.com/demo")
{
    Version = new Version(2, 0)
};

var x = await client.SendAsync(req);
var version = x.Version;

Console.WriteLine(version);

Just make sure you thoroughly clean your project if you change the target runtime - delete bin, obj and all target files, or you may end up running with the wrong runtime as I did.

In 2.1 a new, far faster SocketsHttpClientHandler was added as a default. The new handler doesn't support HTTP/2 yet. The same code will return 1.1 as the protocol version.

If the app context switch is set before creating the HttpClient though, HTTP/2 is used. This code will return 2.0. Interestingly, there's no need to specify the HTTP version. When HTTP/2 is available, the actual protocol version is negotiated. Both the Akamai URL and https://www.google.com will use HTTP/2 even though the version wasn't specified:

AppContext.SetSwitch("System.Net.Http.UseSocketsHttpHandler", false);
var client = new HttpClient();

var req = new HttpRequestMessage(HttpMethod.Get, "https://http2.akamai.com/demo");
var x = await client.SendAsync(req);

var version = x.Version;

The switch and environment variable are explained in the official announcement for .NET Core 2.1 SDK Preview 2:

Sockets Performance and SocketsHttpHandler

We made major improvements to sockets in .NET Core 2.1. Sockets are the basis of both outgoing and incoming networking communication. The higher-level networking APIs in .NET Core 2.1, including HttpClient and Kestrel, are now based on .NET sockets. In earlier versions, these higher-level APIs were based on native networking implementations.

...

You can use one of the following mechanisms to configure a process to use the older HttpClientHandler:

From code, use the AppContext class:

AppContext.SetSwitch("System.Net.Http.UseSocketsHttpHandler", false);

The AppContext switch can also be set by config file.

The same can be achieved via the environment variable DOTNET_SYSTEM_NET_HTTP_USESOCKETSHTTPHANDLER. To opt out, set the value to either false or 0.


The current suggested pattern is to register HttpClient dependencies in the ConfigureServices method: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/aspnet/core/fundamentals/http-requests.

Here is an example of registering a default HttpClient using a typed client and configuring it to use HTTP/2:

public void ConfigureServices(IServiceCollection services)
{
...
    services.AddHttpClient<ExampleService>()
        .ConfigureHttpClient((client) =>
        {
            client.DefaultRequestVersion = new Version(2, 0);
        });
...
}