i have a wcf service, i want to host it for about 5 clients, the problem is, that these clients will be exposed different methods, so basically IService would differ for all .... so i was hopping instead of creating a seperate service and hosting sepertely for each client on IIS, i could use different endpoint for each client .. but this endpoint thing is not working
you shouldn't ask questions twice, as you might have already noticed :) SO users are a bit ... err... 'special' about it
well. As I told you: From my understanding of WCF, endpoints are not meant for this and you will need to implement another WCF service (interface) for each client connecting
or you could search for another approach. Maybe just tell us what you are trying to achieve
they are of same industry .... but depending on their contract with us, they will be provided with set of methods they can use to query our databases ....
and there will be more clients coming in it could go up to 20-25
now instead of having 5 WCF projects, and then hoting each of them seperately on IIS
i dont want to get into roles at this stage, because there will be roles within clinets as well, so users belonging to group A of a client will have some differnt features than group B
@yas4891 If every user is doing more or less the same kinds of things with the DB, but their tariff determines what they're allowed to do, then yep, it sounds like authentication + authorisation to me, not separate contract interfaces
the underlying databases are different for each client ... i was hoping if i can create a Service.svc.cs, which implements IClientA, IClientB ... the then depending the request came from which endpoint the Service.svc.cs connects to that db and gets its request ...
@user402186 are the database schemas pretty much the same? and are the operations in IClientA, IClientB, etc. all the same? If A is on a lower tariff than B, can they do a subset of the things that B can do, or something completely different?
If the functionality of lower tariffs is a subset of higher ones, and everyone uses the same (or mostly similar) DB schemas (but different DBs), then you should use only one interface. Your authentication system determines who you're talking to, then you can use that to decide which DB to use and what they're allowed to do to it.
some clients have completely different tariff that dosent have any thing to do with other tariffs
i can do one interface
but then one question remains
the users depending on what role he belongs to, will be allowed to access certain methods ... but i can not restrict from users about what are the total avaliable exposed methods .... can i? .... if all users see all methods signatures .... is that ok form the design and industry practice point of view?
@user402186 You can, but you don't do it by giving each user a separate endpoint. You have to set your service up to authenticate users (e.g. using username and password), then based on the users who log in, you can allow or deny access to methods
that can be done .... but is that a good approach ... i mean users seeing the names (signatures) of methods even if they are not allowed to use them .....
depends on your situation I suppose. in general that should be fine. you'd go to a lot of effort to hide them for not much benefit, when the important bit is preventing people from calling them unless they're authorised to
my boss wont be very comfortable with that .... coz these "clients" are also competitors, and the name of methods may disclose what type of task that method does, and that task can point out who could be the client using that method ... u c what i mean .....
yeah well.... I once read something quite inspiring: "Don't try to obfuscate your code too hard. It can be cracked anyway. Try to build better software than your competition"
hehehe ..... i love that approach that you guys are suggesting .... (and in the end i may use it also), am just trying to know if there is any way i can do my work according to good practice, an
@user402186 that may be pretty messy, but how about using very general method signatures (instead of using different contracts per client) and specifying the behaviour with a bunch of Enums / strings / whatever
If you are really willing to 'obfuscate' this
this might be easier to implement (but pretty ugly)
in that case, I would make the signatures less specific: rather than have e.g. void CompanyXPerformTransactionY(double amount), have void PerformTransaction(TransactionDescription td)
and have your parameters be more complex but hide the specifics
ok, before this gets really confused, let's agree on some terminology :) user = 1 person, who works for one of your clients client = 1 company for whom you're providing the service role = a set of allowed operations on a database
one way would be: you have a bunch of logins. One login is basically one username/password combination. Every login is associated with a client (so it goes to the right DB) and one or more roles (which determine what the login can do with the DB)
say you have methods X, Y and Z. user1, user2 and user3 are all associated with clientA (not necessarily a role) but you could have roles per method. so user1 and user3 have role "Can Run Y"
then even within the Y method, you could have fine-grained roles. user1 might have the role "Don't log my actions in the audit trail", while user3 doesn't
if role is "can run y" and NOT the "clientA" the the grouping of the users are based on theie assesibility, and not the client, so i can not get all users of clientA, but i can get all users that can run y
that dosent sound like users under clinet umberella
Unless I'm missing something, you shouldn't need roles within roles. The login tells you which database to use, the login's roles tell you what you're allowed to do it, or which methods you're allowed to call, etc.
@user402186 in what sense? I understand user1, user2 and user3 to be under the umbrella of client A because they all have a row in the authentication DB linking them to client A's database
@yas4891 should be exactly the same way, just remember the [DataContract]s
@user402186 so the process is: user1 calls method X, X gets ASP.NET authentication result and sees "user1" is the IPrincipal. Runs a query: select clientId from clientUsers where userid = 'user1'. Follows up with: select databaseName from clients where clientId = <user's client id>
@shambulator rite .... i'll give it a thought over night .... i think that can be done ..... let me think about it ...... or if i get some other thing in my mind .....
Das Element "http://tempuri.org/:aUpdatedObject" enthält Daten eines Typs, der dem Namen "http://schemas.datacontract.org/2004/07/ServerApp:TransmissionClass" zugeordnet ist. Dem Deserialisierungsprogramm ist kein Typ bekannt, der diesem Namen zugeordnet ist.
@yas4891 off the top of my head though, there's a type in your class hierarchy which either a) doesn't have a [DataContract], or b) is a subclass of a DataContract type, which means you need to use KnownTypeAttribute to let the deserialiser know to expect it
:D there's that great minds routine again. it needs to go on any base types which might actually be derived types at runtime
I've managed to get WCF callback (over NamedPipes) working with strings, but I sadly can't get it to work with custom classes.
Here's the service declaration + implementation:
http://pastebin.com/Zayi2kjT
here is my data contract:
http://pastebin.com/wFCxrRcJ
here is what I'm doing on the cli...
i remember back when i worked at aplace that did heavy WCF stuff we had a ping service that just whacked the service every 5 minutes to never let it sleep
i believe that could potentially be avoided nowadays using IIS 7.5 and setting the app pool that hosts the WCF service to be set to AlwaysRunning
the other major performance things i remember were making sure all the ngen stuff happened
i think thats a nonissue now that VS is smart enough to do all of that for release publishes
I am working in WPF in .Net 4.0. I have some huge images from camera 1392x1040 pixels. Every frame comes as System.Drawing.Bitmap and will be converted into a BitmapImage by using
Public Function BitmapToWpfBitmapSource(ByVal bmSrc As System.Drawing.Bitmap) As BitmapSource
If...