Redigera

Dela via


IPolicyImportExtension.ImportPolicy Method

Definition

Defines a method that can import custom policy assertions and add implementing binding elements.

public:
 void ImportPolicy(System::ServiceModel::Description::MetadataImporter ^ importer, System::ServiceModel::Description::PolicyConversionContext ^ context);
public void ImportPolicy (System.ServiceModel.Description.MetadataImporter importer, System.ServiceModel.Description.PolicyConversionContext context);
abstract member ImportPolicy : System.ServiceModel.Description.MetadataImporter * System.ServiceModel.Description.PolicyConversionContext -> unit
Public Sub ImportPolicy (importer As MetadataImporter, context As PolicyConversionContext)

Parameters

importer
MetadataImporter

The MetadataImporter object in use.

context
PolicyConversionContext

The PolicyConversionContext that contains both the policy assertions that can be imported and the collections of binding elements to which implementing binding elements can be added.

Examples

The following code example shows the use of the PolicyAssertionCollection.Remove method to locate, return, and remove the assertion in one step.

  #region IPolicyImporter Members
  public const string name1 = "acme";
  public const string ns1 = "http://Microsoft/WCF/Documentation/CustomPolicyAssertions";

  /*
   * Importing policy assertions usually means modifying the bindingelement stack in some way
   * to support the policy assertion. The procedure is:
   * 1. Find the custom assertion to import.
   * 2. Insert a supporting custom bindingelement or modify the current binding element collection
   *     to support the assertion.
   * 3. Remove the assertion from the collection. Once the ImportPolicy method has returned,
   *     any remaining assertions for the binding cause the binding to fail import and not be
   *     constructed.
   */
  public void ImportPolicy(MetadataImporter importer, PolicyConversionContext context)
  {
    Console.WriteLine("The custom policy importer has been called.");
    // Locate the custom assertion and remove it.
    XmlElement customAssertion = context.GetBindingAssertions().Remove(name1, ns1);
    if (customAssertion != null)
    {
      Console.WriteLine(
        "Removed our custom assertion from the imported "
        + "assertions collection and inserting our custom binding element."
      );
      // Here we would add the binding modification that implemented the policy.
      // This sample does not do this.
      Console.ForegroundColor = ConsoleColor.Red;
      Console.WriteLine(customAssertion.NamespaceURI + " : " + customAssertion.Name);
      Console.WriteLine(customAssertion.OuterXml);
      Console.ForegroundColor = ConsoleColor.Gray;
    }
 }
#endregion
    #Region "IPolicyImporter Members"
    Public Const name1 As String = "acme"
    Public Const ns1 As String = "http://Microsoft/WCF/Documentation/CustomPolicyAssertions"

'    
'     * Importing policy assertions usually means modifying the bindingelement stack in some way
'     * to support the policy assertion. The procedure is:
'     * 1. Find the custom assertion to import.
'     * 2. Insert a supporting custom bindingelement or modify the current binding element collection
'     *     to support the assertion.
'     * 3. Remove the assertion from the collection. Once the ImportPolicy method has returned, 
'     *     any remaining assertions for the binding cause the binding to fail import and not be 
'     *     constructed.
'     
    Public Sub ImportPolicy(ByVal importer As MetadataImporter, ByVal context As PolicyConversionContext) Implements IPolicyImportExtension.ImportPolicy
      Console.WriteLine("The custom policy importer has been called.")
      ' Locate the custom assertion and remove it.
      Dim customAssertion As XmlElement = context.GetBindingAssertions().Remove(name1, ns1)
      If customAssertion IsNot Nothing Then
        Console.WriteLine("Removed our custom assertion from the imported " & "assertions collection and inserting our custom binding element.")
        ' Here we would add the binding modification that implemented the policy.
        ' This sample does not do this.
        Console.ForegroundColor = ConsoleColor.Red
        Console.WriteLine(customAssertion.NamespaceURI & " : " & customAssertion.Name)
        Console.WriteLine(customAssertion.OuterXml)
        Console.ForegroundColor = ConsoleColor.Gray
      End If
    End Sub
  #End Region

The following code example shows the client application configuration file to load the custom policy importer when the System.ServiceModel.Description.MetadataResolver is invoked.

<client>
    <endpoint 
      address="http://localhost:8080/StatefulService" 
      binding="wsHttpBinding"
      bindingConfiguration="CustomBinding_IStatefulService" 
      contract="IStatefulService"
      name="CustomBinding_IStatefulService" />
  <metadata>
    <policyImporters>
      <extension type="Microsoft.WCF.Documentation.CustomPolicyImporter, PolicyExtensions"/>
    </policyImporters>
  </metadata>
</client>

The following code example shows the use of the MetadataResolver to download and resolve metadata into description objects.

// Download all metadata.
ServiceEndpointCollection endpoints
  = MetadataResolver.Resolve(
    typeof(IStatefulService),
    new EndpointAddress("http://localhost:8080/StatefulService/mex")
  );
' Download all metadata. 
Dim endpoints As ServiceEndpointCollection = MetadataResolver.Resolve(GetType(IStatefulService), New EndpointAddress("http://localhost:8080/StatefulService/mex"))

Remarks

Implement the ImportPolicy method to obtain policy assertions and perform some modification of the imported contract or binding to support the assertion. Typically, a policy importer responds to finding a custom policy assertion by configuring or inserting a binding element into the binding being imported.

Windows Communication Foundation (WCF) passes two objects to the ImportPolicy method, a MetadataImporter and a PolicyConversionContext. Typically the PolicyConversionContext object already contains the policy assertions for each binding scope.

An IPolicyImportExtension implementation performs the following steps:

  1. Locates the custom policy assertion for which it is responsible by calling either the GetBindingAssertions, GetMessageBindingAssertions, or GetOperationBindingAssertions methods, depending upon the scope.

  2. Removes the policy assertion from the assertion collection. The PolicyAssertionCollection.Remove method locates, returns, and removes the assertion in one step.

  3. Modifies the binding stack or the contract by either adding a required custom BindingElement to the BindingElements property or by modifying the PolicyConversionContext.Contract property.

Step 2 is important. After all policy importers have been called, WCF checks for the existence of any policy assertions that remain. If one exists, WCF assumes that the policy import was unsuccessful and does not import the associated binding.

Applies to