New Web Services features in Silverlight 4 Beta
Cross-posted from the Silverlight Web Services Team Blog.
This morning at PDC ’09 ScottGu just announced the availability of Silverlight 4 Beta. Later on today I am going on to present the latest improvements around networking and web services and I’ll link to the full talk as soon as it is available online. In this post I’ll provide a quick summary of today’s announcements, with more detail to follow.
On the high level, we are announcing an exciting alignment between the different web services stacks in Silverlight. ADO.NET Data Services and .NET RIA Services are being rebranded as WCF Data Services and WCF RIA Services to reflect the fact that both technologies are being built out as programming models on top of WCF. In a way, this is not really major news; to you as a developer, pretty much everything stays the same, and you can continue using your favorite technology, whether it is straight WCF, or WCF RIA Services or WCF Data Services.
RIA Services and Data Services give you productive patterns for specific kinds of services and applications, hiding away some of the complexity of using WCF directly. The power of WCF is still there for you under the covers, if you need to modify some setting to your liking.
Specifically within the core WCF model, Silverlight 4 Beta has support for a brand new binding: NetTcp. This binding lets Silverlight talk to WCF services using a high-performance TCP pipe, using a duplex message pattern. In Silverlight, the binding is built on top of the sockets support that’s already there since Silverlight 2, so we inherit the security requirements of the Silverlight sockets API. More specifically, the service needs to be hosted in a given port range (4502 – 4534) and needs to expose a policy responder on port 943. One more thing to be aware of is that the security support and the streamed programming model for NetTcp available in WCF on the desktop framework are not available in Silverlight 4 Beta.
We’ll have a lot more content for you coming up soon, including the code from my talk today. If you want to get your hands dirty right away, go get the Silverlight 4 Beta, and then try the steps this how-to in our MSDN documentation, which has already been updated and show usage for NetTcp.
More information:
Thanks, and looking forward to your feedback!
Yavor Georgiev
Program Manager, Silverlight