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Windows Communication Foundation Services and WCF Data Services in Visual Studio

Visual Studio 2008 provides tools for working with Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) and WCF Data Services, Microsoft technologies for creating distributed applications. This topic provides an introduction to services from a Visual Studio perspective.

What Is WCF?

Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) is a unified framework for creating secure, reliable, transacted, and interoperable distributed applications. In earlier versions of Visual Studio, there were several technologies that could be used for communicating between applications.

If you wanted to share information in a way that enabled it to be accessed from any platform, you would use a Web service (also known as an ASMX Web service). If you wanted to just move data between a client and server that was running on the Windows operating system, you would use .NET Remoting. If you wanted transacted communications, you would use Enterprise Services (DCOM), or if you wanted a queued model you would use Message Queuing (also known as MSMQ).

WCF brings together the functionality of all those technologies under a unified programming model. This simplifies the experience of developing distributed applications.

What are WCF Data Services

WCF Data Services are services that interact directly with a database, allowing you to return data using standard HTTP verbs such as GET, POST, PUT or DELETE. In general, WCF Data Services are a good choice for applications that are used to create, update, or delete records in a database. For more information, see ADO.NET Data Services Framework.

WCF Programming Model

The WCF Programming model is based on communication between two entities: a WCF service and a WCF client. The programming model is encapsulated in the System.ServiceModel namespace in the .NET Framework.

WCF Service

A WCF service is based on an interface that defines a contract between the service and the client. It is marked with a ServiceContractAttribute attribute, as shown in the following code:

<ServiceContract()>
Public Interface IService1
[ServiceContract]
public interface IService1
<OperationContract()>
Function GetData(ByVal value As String) As String
[OperationContract]
string GetData(string value);

You define functions or methods that are exposed by a WCF service by marking them with a OperationContractAttribute attribute. In addition, you can expose serialized data by marking a composite type with a DataContractAttribute attribute. This enables data binding in a client.

After an interface and its methods are defined, they are encapsulated in a class that implements the interface. A single WCF service class can implement multiple service contracts.

A WCF service is exposed for consumption through what is known as an endpoint. The endpoint provides the only way to communicate with the service; you cannot access the service through a direct reference as you would with other classes.

An endpoint consists of an address, a binding, and a contract. The address defines where the service is located; this could be a URL, an FTP address, or a network or local path. A binding defines the way that you communicate with the service. WCF bindings provide a versatile model for specifying a protocol such as HTTP or FTP, a security mechanism such as Windows Authentication or user names and passwords, and much more. A contract includes the operations that are exposed by the WCF service class.

Multiple endpoints can be exposed for a single WCF service. This enables different clients to communicate with the same service in different ways. For example, a banking service might provide one endpoint for employees and another for external customers, each using a different address, binding, and/or contract.

WCF Client

A WCF client consists of a proxy that enables an application to communicate with a WCF service, and an endpoint that matches an endpoint defined for the service. The proxy is generated on the client side in the app.config file and includes information about the types and methods that are exposed by the service. For services that expose multiple endpoints, the client can select the one that best fits its needs, for example, to communicate over HTTP and use Windows Authentication.

After a WCF client has been created, you reference the service in your code just as you would any other object. For example, to call the GetData method shown earlier, you would write code that resembles the following:

  Private Sub Button1_Click(ByVal sender As System.Object, _
ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles Button1.Click
      Dim client As New ServiceReference1.Service1Client
      Dim returnString As String

      returnString = client.GetData(TextBox1.Text)
      Label1.Text = returnString
  End Sub
private void button1_Click(System.Object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
    ServiceReference1.Service1Client client = new
        ServiceReference1.Service1Client();
    string returnString;

    returnString = client.GetData(textBox1.Text);
    label1.Text = returnString;
}

WCF Tools in Visual Studio

Visual Studio 2008 provides tools to help you create both WCF services and WCF clients. For a walkthrough that demonstrates the tools, see Walkthrough: Creating and Accessing WCF Services.

Creating and Testing WCF Services

You can use the WCF Visual Studio templates as a foundation to quickly create your own service. You can then use WCF Service Auto Host and WCF Test Client to debug and test the service. These tools together provide a fast and convenient debug and testing cycle, and eliminate the requirement to commit to a hosting model at an early stage.

WCF Templates

WCF Visual Studio templates provide a basic class structure for service development. Several WCF templates are available in the Add New Project dialog box. These include WCF Service Library projects, WCF Service Web Sites, and WCF Service Item templates.

When you select a template, files are added for a service contract, a service implementation, and a service configuration. All necessary attributes are already added, creating a simple "Hello World" type of service, and you did not have to write any code. You will, of course, want to add code to provide functions and methods for your real world service, but the templates provide the basic foundation.

To learn more about WCF templates, see WCF Visual Studio Templates.

WCF Service Host

When you start the Visual Studio debugger (by pressing F5) for a WCF service project, the WCF Service Host tool is automatically started to host the service locally. WCF Service Host enumerates the services in a WCF service project, loads the project’s configuration, and instantiates a host for each service that it finds.

By using WCF Service Host, you can test a WCF service without writing extra code or committing to a specific host during development.

To learn more about WCF Service Host, see WCF Service Host (WcfSvcHost.exe).

WCF Test Client

The WCF Test Client tool enables you to input test parameters, submit that input to a WCF service, and view the response that the service sends back. It provides a convenient service testing experience when you combine it with WCF Service Host.

When you press F5 to debug a WCF service project, WCF Test Client opens and displays a list of service endpoints that are defined in the configuration file. You can test the parameters and start the service, and repeat this process to continuously test and validate your service.

To learn more about WCF Test Client, see WCF Test Client (WcfTestClient.exe).

Accessing WCF Services in Visual Studio

Visual Studio 2008 simplifies the task of creating WCF clients, automatically generating a proxy and an endpoint for services that you add by using the Add Service Reference dialog box. All necessary configuration information is added to the app.config file. Most of the time, all that you have to do is instantiate the service in order to use it.

The Add Service Reference dialog box enables you to enter the address for a service or to search for a service that is defined in your solution. The dialog box returns a list of services and the operations provided by those services. It also enables you to define the namespace by which you will reference the services in code.

The Configure Service References dialog box enables you to customize the configuration for a service. You can change the address for a service, specify access level, asynchronous behavior, and message contract types, and configure type reuse.

Title

Description

Walkthrough: Creating and Accessing WCF Services

Provides a step-by-step demonstration of creating and using WCF services in Visual Studio.

Walkthrough: Creating and Accessing a WCF Data Service in Visual Studio

Provides a step-by-step demonstration of how to create and use WCF Data Services in Visual Studio.

Using the WCF Development Tools

Discusses how to create and test WCF services in Visual Studio.

How to: Add, Update, or Remove a Service Reference

Describes how to add, update, or remove WCF services from a project.

How to: Add, Update, or Remove a WCF Data Service Reference

Discusses how to reference and use WCF Data Services in Visual Studio.

How to: Add a Reference to a Web Service

Describes how to add a reference to an XML (ASMX) Web service to a project.

How to: Select a Service Endpoint

Describes how to select an endpoint for a WCF service that exposes multiple endpoints.

How to: Call a Service Method Asynchronously

Describes how to call a WCF service asynchronously.

How to: Bind Data Returned by a Service

Describes how to enable data binding to a WCF service.

How to: Configure a Service to Reuse Existing Types

Describes how to enable or disable type sharing for a WCF service.

Troubleshooting Service References

Presents some common errors that can occur with service references and how to prevent them.

Debugging WCF Services

Describes common debugging problems and techniques you might encounter when debugging WCF services.

Windows Communication Foundation Authentication Service Overview

Describes how to use WCF to provide a role service for a Web site.

Messaging in the .NET Compact Framework

Describes support for the WCF messaging layer in the .NET Compact Framework.

Walkthrough: Creating an N-Tier Data Application

Provides step-by-step instructions for creating a typed dataset and separating the TableAdapter and dataset code into multiple projects.

Add Service Reference Dialog Box

Describes the user interface elements of the Add Service Reference dialog box.

Configure Service Reference Dialog Box

Describes the user interface elements of the Configure Service Reference dialog box.

Reference

System.ServiceModel

System.Data.Services