I've got a Windows Service that makes use of a plugin system. I'm using the following code in the plugin base class to provide a separate configuration per DLL (so it'll read from plugin.dll.config
):
string dllPath = Assembly.GetCallingAssembly().Location;
return ConfigurationManager.OpenExeConfiguration(dllPath);
These plugins need to make calls to WCF services, so the problem I'm running into is that new ChannelFactory<>("endPointName")
only looks in the hosted application's App.config for the endpoint configuration.
Is there a way to simply tell the ChannelFactory to look in another configuration file or somehow inject my Configuration
object?
The only way I can think of to approach this is to manually create an EndPoint and Binding object from values read in from plugin.dll.config
and pass them to one of the ChannelFactory<>
overloads. This really seems like recreating the wheel though, and it could get really messy with an endPoint that makes heavy use of behavior and binding configurations. Perhaps there's a way to create EndPoint and Binding objects easily by passing it a configuration section?
There are 2 options.
Option 1. Working with channels.
If you are working with channels directly, .NET 4.0 and .NET 4.5 has the ConfigurationChannelFactory. The example on MSDN looks like this:
ExeConfigurationFileMap fileMap = new ExeConfigurationFileMap();
fileMap.ExeConfigFilename = "Test.config";
Configuration newConfiguration = ConfigurationManager.OpenMappedExeConfiguration(
fileMap,
ConfigurationUserLevel.None);
ConfigurationChannelFactory<ICalculatorChannel> factory1 =
new ConfigurationChannelFactory<ICalculatorChannel>(
"endpoint1",
newConfiguration,
new EndpointAddress("http://localhost:8000/servicemodelsamples/service"));
ICalculatorChannel client1 = factory1.CreateChannel();
As pointed out by Langdon, you can use the endpoint address from the configuration file by simply passing in null, like this:
var factory1 = new ConfigurationChannelFactory<ICalculatorChannel>(
"endpoint1",
newConfiguration,
null);
ICalculatorChannel client1 = factory1.CreateChannel();
This is discussed in the MSDN documentation.
Option 2. Working with proxies.
If you're working with code-generated proxies, you can read the config file and load a ServiceModelSectionGroup. There is a bit more work involved than simply using the ConfigurationChannelFactory
but at least you can continue using the generated proxy (that under the hood uses a ChannelFactory
and manages the IChannelFactory
for you.
Pablo Cibraro shows a nice example of this here: Getting WCF Bindings and Behaviors from any config source
Use a separate AppDomain for each plugin. When you create the AppDomain you can specify a new configuration file.
See http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.appdomainsetup.configurationfile.aspx
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