It’s probably caused by a local network connectivity issue (but also a DNS error is possible). Unfortunately HResult is generic, however you can determine the exact issue catching HttpRequestException and then inspecting InnerException: if it’s a WebException then you can check the WebException.Status property, for example WebExceptionStatus.NameResolutionFailure should indicate a DNS resolution problem.
It may happen, there isn’t much you can do.
What I’d suggest to always wrap that (network related) code in a loop with a try/catch block (as also suggested here for other fallible operations). Handle known exceptions, wait a little (say 1000 msec) and try again (for say 3 times). Only if failed all times then you can quit/report an error to your users. Very raw example like this:
private const int NumberOfRetries = 3;
private const int DelayOnRetry = 1000;
public static async Task<HttpResponseMessage> GetFromUrlAsync(string url) {
using (var client = new HttpClient()) {
for (int i=1; i <= NumberOfRetries; ++i) {
try {
return await client.GetAsync(url);
}
catch (Exception e) when (i < NumberOfRetries) {
await Task.Delay(DelayOnRetry);
}
}
}
}