I am new to WCF. I have developed a sample WCF service. My service uses the basicHttp
binding.
I host my service in local IIS 7.5 using WAS and it works fine. Now I want to host my service in my website.
I search Google but there most of them are hosted in localhost in IIS. Please tell me how to I do that? It will be better to refer some tutorial or step by step guide.
WCF services can be hosted in any managed application. This is the most flexible option because it requires the least infrastructure to deploy. You embed the code for the service inside the managed application code and then create and open an instance of the ServiceHost to make the service available.
To open WCF Test Client, open Developer Command Prompt for Visual Studio and execute WcfTestClient.exe. Select Add Service from the File menu. Type http://localhost:8080/hello into the address box and click OK. Make sure the service is running or else this step fails.
You have basically two options, I believe:
Option 1 - "bin" deploy (preferred option)
.\bin
folder*.svc
file in that websiteweb.config
in the website folder to define your endpoints and service configuration etc.Your WCF service will now be reachable at the website's base address, plus the name of the *.svc
file, e.g.
http://myserver/someweb/Myservice.svc
Your *.svc
would look something like this:
<%@ ServiceHost Language="C#" Debug="true"
Service="WCF_Simple_Service.HelloIndigoService" %>
The Service=
attributes denotes the class implementing the service - fully qualified with its namespace.
Option 2 - put stuff into App_Code
*.cs
files directly into the .\App_Code
folder*.svc
file in that websiteweb.config
in the website folder to define your endpoints and service configuration etc.Your WCF service will now be reachable at the website's base address, plus the name of the *.svc
file, e.g.
http://myserver/someweb/Myservice.svc
Your *.svc
would look something like this:
<%@ ServiceHost Language="C#" Debug="true"
Service="Service"
CodeBehind="~/App_Code/Service.cs" %>
A simple, sample web.config
might look something like this:
<system.serviceModel>
<behaviors>
<serviceBehaviors>
<behavior name="WithDebug">
<serviceMetadata httpGetEnabled="true" />
<serviceDebug includeExceptionDetailInFaults="true" />
</behavior>
</serviceBehaviors>
</behaviors>
<serviceHostingEnvironment multipleSiteBindingsEnabled="true" />
<services>
<service name="SimpleWCF.HelloIndigoService" behaviorConfiguration="WithDebug">
<endpoint
address=""
binding="basicHttpBinding"
contract="SimpleWCF.IHelloIndigoService" />
<endpoint
address="mex"
binding="mexHttpBinding"
contract="IMetadataExchange" />
</service>
</services>
</system.serviceModel>
You basically define your <service>
tag - and again: the name=
denotes the class implementing the service - fully qualified with its namespace. It must contain at least one endpoint - a "mex" endpoint is optional - but very useful, especially for development and testing. It allows client to "discover" the service and get its service description so it can interface with it.
Once your service is deployed in IIS, you can see it in action using a tool like the WCF Test Client that ships for free with WCF, or SoapUI which is a general-purpose SOAP testing utility (with a free edition for you to use).
old thread, if someone finds it... but instead of your *.svc you can also create in your global.asax:
static Global()
{
RouteTable.Routes.Add(new ServiceRoute("ExternalServices/SOAP/test", new ninjectServiceHostFactory(), typeof(testService)));
}
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