WSHttpBindingElement.AllowCookies Property
Definition
Important
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Gets or sets a value that indicates whether the WCF client will automatically store and resend any cookies sent by a single web service.
public:
property bool AllowCookies { bool get(); void set(bool value); };
[System.Configuration.ConfigurationProperty("allowCookies", DefaultValue=false)]
public bool AllowCookies { get; set; }
[<System.Configuration.ConfigurationProperty("allowCookies", DefaultValue=false)>]
member this.AllowCookies : bool with get, set
Public Property AllowCookies As Boolean
Property Value
true
if automatic cookies processing is required; otherwise, false
.
- Attributes
Remarks
Setting AllowCookies to true
is useful when a client is interacting with one web service that uses cookies. If you are accessing multiple services with the same cookie, set AllowCookies to false
and you will have to manually add the cookie header to each outgoing message. The following code shows how to do this:
MyWebServiceClient client = new MyWebServiceClient();
using (new OperationContextScope(client.InnerChannel))
{
client.DoSomething();
// Extract the cookie embedded in the received web service response
// and stores it locally
HttpResponseMessageProperty response = (HttpResponseMessageProperty)
OperationContext.Current.IncomingMessageProperties[
HttpResponseMessageProperty.Name];
sharedCookie = response.Headers["Set-Cookie"];
}
MyOtherWebServiceClient otherClient = new MyOtherWebServiceClient();
using (new OperationContextScope(otherClient.InnerChannel))
{
// Embeds the extracted cookie in the next web service request
// Note that we manually have to create the request object since
// since it doesn't exist yet at this stage
HttpRequestMessageProperty request = new HttpRequestMessageProperty();
request.Headers["Cookie"] = sharedCookie;
OperationContext.Current.OutgoingMessageProperties[
HttpRequestMessageProperty.Name] = request;
otherClient.DoSomethingElse();
}
Applies to
.NET