If WCF Service side and Client side config is different?!
from stackoverflow
最近配置wcf服务,一直有个疑问,一直我们配置wcf服务端跟client端总是一致的,但是如果我们配置的不一样呢?在stackoverflow找到以下答案。其实这个没有说一定那边起作用,比如client的sendtimeout对应的是service端的receivetimeout,而且在client端有些配置是没有用的。这个还得细细琢磨。我擦。。。
In order to address your request in your last comment to my previous answer, I tried to come up with my approach to how I would create (and modify) server- and client-side config's for any given service. This is based on both theory I read (books, blogs), things I've learned in Juval Lowy's WCF Master Class
, and quite a bit of practical experience with several large service implementation projects - this isn't available in one single place, on the web or in a book.... so here it goes:
I would start basically from scratch. Think about your service first:
- what address does your service live at?
- what binding(s) do you want to support?
Simplest scenario: single service, single endpoint, basicHttpBinding, all defaults
Service config:
<system.serviceModel>
<services>
<service name="YourNamespace.YourServiceClass">
<endpoint name="Default"
address="http://YourServer/SomeVirtualDirectory/YourService.svc"
binding="basicHttpBinding"
contract="YourNamespace.IYourServiceContract" />
</service>
</services>
</system.serviceModel>
Corresponding client config:
<system.serviceModel>
<client name="Default">
<endpoint name="Default"
address="http://YourServer/SomeVirtualDirectory/YourService.svc"
binding="basicHttpBinding"
contract="YourClientProxyNamespace.IYourServiceContract" />
</client>
</system.serviceModel>
Then only ever change something if you really must! And most of all: NEVER EVER let Visual Studio (Add Service Reference) or svcutil.exe
screw up your config! Protect it like the apple of your eye!
Then: if e.g. your data transfer takes more time than the default timeout of 1 minute allows, change that one single setting on both the service side and the client side. Do this by defining a custom binding configuration and referencing that from your endpoints - but change only that - not more!Leave everything else as is, with default values. Don't ever change anything unless you absolutely must (and know what you're doing, and why you're doing it).
Mind you: the sendTimeout
on the client (time allowed until the whole message has been sent) will correspond to the receiveTimeout
on the server - the time allowed for the whole message to come in (see this excellent blog post and this MSDN forum thread for more information)
Service config:
<system.serviceModel>
<bindings>
<basicHttpBinding>
<binding name="ExtendedTimeout"
receiveTimeout="00:05:00" />
</basicHttpBinding>
</bindings>
<services>
<service name="YourNamespace.YourServiceClass">
<endpoint name="Default"
address="http://YourServer/SomeVirtualDirectory/YourService.svc"
binding="basicHttpBinding"
bindingConfiguration="ExtendedTimeout"
contract="YourNamespace.IYourServiceContract" />
</service>
</services>
</system.serviceModel>
Corresponding client config:
<system.serviceModel>
<bindings>
<basicHttpBinding>
<binding name="ExtendedTimeout"
sendTimeout="00:05:00" />
</basicHttpBinding>
</bindings>
<client name="Default">
<endpoint name="Default"
address="http://YourServer/SomeVirtualDirectory/YourService.svc"
binding="basicHttpBinding"
bindingConfiguration="ExtendedTimeout"
contract="YourClientProxyNamespace.IYourServiceContract" />
</client>
</system.serviceModel>
As you need other changes, like multiple endpoints on the service side, or local settings like bypassProxyOnLocal
- adapt your config, do it carefully, step by step, manually, and consider your config an extremely essential part of your whole service - take care of it, put it in version control etc.
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作者:Agile.Zhou(kklldog)
出处:http://www.cnblogs.com/kklldog/
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