How to: Host a WCF Service in a Managed Windows Service
This topic outlines the basic steps required to create a Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) service that is hosted by a Windows Service. The scenario is enabled by the managed Windows service hosting option that is a long-running WCF service hosted outside of Internet Information Services (IIS) in a secure environment that is not message activated. The lifetime of the service is controlled instead by the operating system. This hosting option is available in all versions of Windows.
Windows services can be managed with the Microsoft.ManagementConsole.SnapIn in Microsoft Management Console (MMC) and can be configured to start up automatically when the system boots up. This hosting option consists of registering the application domain (AppDomain) that hosts a WCF service as a managed Windows service so that the process lifetime of the service is controlled by the Service Control Manager (SCM) for Windows services.
The service code includes a service implementation of the service contract, a Windows Service class, and an installer class. The service implementation class, CalculatorService, is a WCF service. The CalculatorWindowsService is a Windows service. To qualify as a Windows service, the class inherits from ServiceBase and implements the OnStart and OnStop methods. In OnStart, a ServiceHost is created for the CalculatorService type and opened. In OnStop, the service is stopped and disposed. The host is also responsible for providing a base address to the service host, which has been configured in application settings. The installer class, which inherits from Installer, allows the program to be installed as a Windows service by the Installutil.exe tool.
Construct the service and provide the hosting code
Create a new Visual Studio Console Application project called "Service".
Rename Program.cs to Service.cs.
Change the namespace to Microsoft.ServiceModel.Samples.
Add references to the following assemblies.
System.ServiceModel.dll
System.ServiceProcess.dll
System.Configuration.Install.dll
Add the following using statements to Service.cs.
Imports System.ComponentModel Imports System.ServiceModel Imports System.ServiceProcess Imports System.Configuration Imports System.Configuration.Install
using System.ComponentModel; using System.ServiceModel; using System.ServiceProcess; using System.Configuration; using System.Configuration.Install;
Define the
ICalculator
service contract as shown in the following code.' Define a service contract. <ServiceContract(Namespace:="http://Microsoft.ServiceModel.Samples")> _ Public Interface ICalculator <OperationContract()> _ Function Add(ByVal n1 As Double, ByVal n2 As Double) As Double <OperationContract()> _ Function Subtract(ByVal n1 As Double, ByVal n2 As Double) As Double <OperationContract()> _ Function Multiply(ByVal n1 As Double, ByVal n2 As Double) As Double <OperationContract()> _ Function Divide(ByVal n1 As Double, ByVal n2 As Double) As Double End Interface
// Define a service contract. [ServiceContract(Namespace = "http://Microsoft.ServiceModel.Samples")] public interface ICalculator { [OperationContract] double Add(double n1, double n2); [OperationContract] double Subtract(double n1, double n2); [OperationContract] double Multiply(double n1, double n2); [OperationContract] double Divide(double n1, double n2); }
Implement the service contract in a class called
CalculatorService
as shown in the following code.' Implement the ICalculator service contract in a service class. Public Class CalculatorService Implements ICalculator ' Implement the ICalculator methods. Public Function Add(ByVal n1 As Double, ByVal n2 As Double) As Double Implements ICalculator.Add Return n1 + n2 End Function Public Function Subtract(ByVal n1 As Double, ByVal n2 As Double) As Double Implements ICalculator.Subtract Return n1 - n2 End Function Public Function Multiply(ByVal n1 As Double, ByVal n2 As Double) As Double Implements ICalculator.Multiply Return n1 * n2 End Function Public Function Divide(ByVal n1 As Double, ByVal n2 As Double) As Double Implements ICalculator.Divide Return n1 / n2 End Function End Class
// Implement the ICalculator service contract in a service class. public class CalculatorService : ICalculator { // Implement the ICalculator methods. public double Add(double n1, double n2) { double result = n1 + n2; return result; } public double Subtract(double n1, double n2) { double result = n1 - n2; return result; } public double Multiply(double n1, double n2) { double result = n1 * n2; return result; } public double Divide(double n1, double n2) { double result = n1 / n2; return result; } }
Create a new class called
CalculatorWindowsService
that inherits from the ServiceBase class. Add a local variable calledserviceHost
to reference the ServiceHost instance. Define theMain
method that callsServiceBase.Run(new CalculatorWindowsService)
Public Class CalculatorWindowsService Inherits ServiceBase Public serviceHost As ServiceHost = Nothing Public Sub New() ' Name the Windows Service ServiceName = "WCFWindowsServiceSample" End Sub Public Shared Sub Main() ServiceBase.Run(New CalculatorWindowsService()) End Sub
public class CalculatorWindowsService : ServiceBase { public ServiceHost serviceHost = null; public CalculatorWindowsService() { // Name the Windows Service ServiceName = "WCFWindowsServiceSample"; } public static void Main() { ServiceBase.Run(new CalculatorWindowsService()); }
Override the OnStart method by creating and opening a new ServiceHost instance as shown in the following code.
' Start the Windows service. Protected Overrides Sub OnStart(ByVal args() As String) If serviceHost IsNot Nothing Then serviceHost.Close() End If ' Create a ServiceHost for the CalculatorService type and ' provide the base address. serviceHost = New ServiceHost(GetType(CalculatorService)) ' Open the ServiceHostBase to create listeners and start ' listening for messages. serviceHost.Open() End Sub
// Start the Windows service. protected override void OnStart(string[] args) { if (serviceHost != null) { serviceHost.Close(); } // Create a ServiceHost for the CalculatorService type and // provide the base address. serviceHost = new ServiceHost(typeof(CalculatorService)); // Open the ServiceHostBase to create listeners and start // listening for messages. serviceHost.Open(); }
Override the OnStop method closing the ServiceHost as shown in the following code.
Protected Overrides Sub OnStop() If serviceHost IsNot Nothing Then serviceHost.Close() serviceHost = Nothing End If End Sub
protected override void OnStop() { if (serviceHost != null) { serviceHost.Close(); serviceHost = null; } }
Create a new class called
ProjectInstaller
that inherits from Installer and that is marked with the RunInstallerAttribute set to true. This allows the Windows service to be installed by the Installutil.exe tool.' Provide the ProjectInstaller class which allows ' the service to be installed by the Installutil.exe tool <RunInstaller(True)> _ Public Class ProjectInstaller Inherits Installer Private process As ServiceProcessInstaller Private service As ServiceInstaller Public Sub New() process = New ServiceProcessInstaller() process.Account = ServiceAccount.LocalSystem service = New ServiceInstaller() service.ServiceName = "WCFWindowsServiceSample" Installers.Add(process) Installers.Add(service) End Sub End Class
// Provide the ProjectInstaller class which allows // the service to be installed by the Installutil.exe tool [RunInstaller(true)] public class ProjectInstaller : Installer { private ServiceProcessInstaller process; private ServiceInstaller service; public ProjectInstaller() { process = new ServiceProcessInstaller(); process.Account = ServiceAccount.LocalSystem; service = new ServiceInstaller(); service.ServiceName = "WCFWindowsServiceSample"; Installers.Add(process); Installers.Add(service); } }
Remove the
Service
class that was generated when you created the project.Add an application configuration file to the project. Replace the contents of the file with the following configuration XML.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?> <configuration> <system.serviceModel> <services> <!-- This section is optional with the new configuration model introduced in .NET Framework 4. --> <service name="Microsoft.ServiceModel.Samples.CalculatorService" behaviorConfiguration="CalculatorServiceBehavior"> <host> <baseAddresses> <add baseAddress="https://localhost:8000/ServiceModelSamples/service"/> </baseAddresses> </host> <!-- this endpoint is exposed at the base address provided by host: https://localhost:8000/ServiceModelSamples/service --> <endpoint address="" binding="wsHttpBinding" contract="Microsoft.ServiceModel.Samples.ICalculator" /> <!-- the mex endpoint is exposed at https://localhost:8000/ServiceModelSamples/service/mex --> <endpoint address="mex" binding="mexHttpBinding" contract="IMetadataExchange" /> </service> </services> <behaviors> <serviceBehaviors> <behavior name="CalculatorServiceBehavior"> <serviceMetadata httpGetEnabled="true"/> <serviceDebug includeExceptionDetailInFaults="False"/> </behavior> </serviceBehaviors> </behaviors> </system.serviceModel> </configuration>
Right click the App.config file in the Solution Explorer and select Properties. Under Copy to Output Directory select Copy if Newer.
This example explicitly specifies endpoints in the configuration file. If you do not add any endpoints to the service, the runtime adds default endpoints for you. In this example, because the service has a ServiceMetadataBehavior set to true, your service also has publishing metadata enabled. For more information aboutdefault endpoints, bindings, and behaviors, see Simplified Configuration and Simplified Configuration for WCF Services.
Install and run the service
Build the solution to create the
Service.exe
executable.Open the Visual Studio 2010 command prompt and navigate to the project directory. Type
installutil bin\service.exe
at the command prompt to install the Windows service.Note
If you do not use the Visual Studio 2010 command prompt, make sure that the
%WinDir%\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v4.0.<current version>
directory is in the system path.Type
services.msc
at the command prompt to access the Service Control Manager (SCM). The Windows service should appear in Services as "WCFWindowsServiceSample". The WCF service can only respond to clients if the Windows service is running. To start the service, right-click it in the SCM and select "Start", or type net start WCFWindowsServiceSample at the command prompt.If you make changes to the service, you must first stop it and uninstall it. To stop the service, right-click the service in the SCM and select "Stop", or type net stop WCFWindowsServiceSample at the command prompt. Note that if you stop the Windows service and then run a client, an EndpointNotFoundException exception occurs when a client attempts to access the service. To uninstall the Windows service type installutil /u bin\service.exe at the command prompt.
Example
The following is a complete listing of the code used by this topic.
Imports System
Imports System.Collections.Generic
Imports System.Linq
Imports System.Text
Imports System.ComponentModel
Imports System.ServiceModel
Imports System.ServiceProcess
Imports System.Configuration
Imports System.Configuration.Install
Namespace Microsoft.ServiceModel.Samples
' Define a service contract.
<ServiceContract(Namespace:="http://Microsoft.ServiceModel.Samples")> _
Public Interface ICalculator
<OperationContract()> _
Function Add(ByVal n1 As Double, ByVal n2 As Double) As Double
<OperationContract()> _
Function Subtract(ByVal n1 As Double, ByVal n2 As Double) As Double
<OperationContract()> _
Function Multiply(ByVal n1 As Double, ByVal n2 As Double) As Double
<OperationContract()> _
Function Divide(ByVal n1 As Double, ByVal n2 As Double) As Double
End Interface
' Implement the ICalculator service contract in a service class.
Public Class CalculatorService
Implements ICalculator
' Implement the ICalculator methods.
Public Function Add(ByVal n1 As Double, ByVal n2 As Double) As Double Implements ICalculator.Add
Return n1 + n2
End Function
Public Function Subtract(ByVal n1 As Double, ByVal n2 As Double) As Double Implements ICalculator.Subtract
Return n1 - n2
End Function
Public Function Multiply(ByVal n1 As Double, ByVal n2 As Double) As Double Implements ICalculator.Multiply
Return n1 * n2
End Function
Public Function Divide(ByVal n1 As Double, ByVal n2 As Double) As Double Implements ICalculator.Divide
Return n1 / n2
End Function
End Class
Public Class CalculatorWindowsService
Inherits ServiceBase
Public serviceHost As ServiceHost = Nothing
Public Sub New()
' Name the Windows Service
ServiceName = "WCFWindowsServiceSample"
End Sub
Public Shared Sub Main()
ServiceBase.Run(New CalculatorWindowsService())
End Sub
' Start the Windows service.
Protected Overrides Sub OnStart(ByVal args() As String)
If serviceHost IsNot Nothing Then
serviceHost.Close()
End If
' Create a ServiceHost for the CalculatorService type and
' provide the base address.
serviceHost = New ServiceHost(GetType(CalculatorService))
' Open the ServiceHostBase to create listeners and start
' listening for messages.
serviceHost.Open()
End Sub
Protected Overrides Sub OnStop()
If serviceHost IsNot Nothing Then
serviceHost.Close()
serviceHost = Nothing
End If
End Sub
End Class
' Provide the ProjectInstaller class which allows
' the service to be installed by the Installutil.exe tool
<RunInstaller(True)> _
Public Class ProjectInstaller
Inherits Installer
Private process As ServiceProcessInstaller
Private service As ServiceInstaller
Public Sub New()
process = New ServiceProcessInstaller()
process.Account = ServiceAccount.LocalSystem
service = New ServiceInstaller()
service.ServiceName = "WCFWindowsServiceSample"
Installers.Add(process)
Installers.Add(service)
End Sub
End Class
End Namespace
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.ComponentModel;
using System.ServiceModel;
using System.ServiceProcess;
using System.Configuration;
using System.Configuration.Install;
namespace Microsoft.ServiceModel.Samples
{
// Define a service contract.
[ServiceContract(Namespace = "http://Microsoft.ServiceModel.Samples")]
public interface ICalculator
{
[OperationContract]
double Add(double n1, double n2);
[OperationContract]
double Subtract(double n1, double n2);
[OperationContract]
double Multiply(double n1, double n2);
[OperationContract]
double Divide(double n1, double n2);
}
// Implement the ICalculator service contract in a service class.
public class CalculatorService : ICalculator
{
// Implement the ICalculator methods.
public double Add(double n1, double n2)
{
double result = n1 + n2;
return result;
}
public double Subtract(double n1, double n2)
{
double result = n1 - n2;
return result;
}
public double Multiply(double n1, double n2)
{
double result = n1 * n2;
return result;
}
public double Divide(double n1, double n2)
{
double result = n1 / n2;
return result;
}
}
public class CalculatorWindowsService : ServiceBase
{
public ServiceHost serviceHost = null;
public CalculatorWindowsService()
{
// Name the Windows Service
ServiceName = "WCFWindowsServiceSample";
}
public static void Main()
{
ServiceBase.Run(new CalculatorWindowsService());
}
// Start the Windows service.
protected override void OnStart(string[] args)
{
if (serviceHost != null)
{
serviceHost.Close();
}
// Create a ServiceHost for the CalculatorService type and
// provide the base address.
serviceHost = new ServiceHost(typeof(CalculatorService));
// Open the ServiceHostBase to create listeners and start
// listening for messages.
serviceHost.Open();
}
protected override void OnStop()
{
if (serviceHost != null)
{
serviceHost.Close();
serviceHost = null;
}
}
}
// Provide the ProjectInstaller class which allows
// the service to be installed by the Installutil.exe tool
[RunInstaller(true)]
public class ProjectInstaller : Installer
{
private ServiceProcessInstaller process;
private ServiceInstaller service;
public ProjectInstaller()
{
process = new ServiceProcessInstaller();
process.Account = ServiceAccount.LocalSystem;
service = new ServiceInstaller();
service.ServiceName = "WCFWindowsServiceSample";
Installers.Add(process);
Installers.Add(service);
}
}
}
Like the "Self-Hosting" option, the Windows service hosting environment requires that some hosting code be written as part of the application. The service is implemented as a console application and contains its own hosting code. In other hosting environments, such as Windows Process Activation Service (WAS) hosting in Internet Information Services (IIS), it is not necessary for developers to write hosting code.
See Also
Concepts
Simplified Configuration
Hosting in a Managed Application
Hosting Services