Introduction
Have you ever needed to change the contract used by WCF service, but were held back by the impact it would have on existing clients? Sure, you could just ask your clients to update their service references and tweak the code which calls your service, but that requires that all your clients (of which there might be many) to do a code release on the same day you release your new server - not ideal.
One way to resolve this would be to leave the existing contract alone, but to create a second modified contract exposed via a new endpoint. That way clients could upgrade to the new contract (and the new endpoint) at their leisure. This will probably create some redundancy in the server-side code, as you'd have very similar code at both endpoints, although you could probably refactor any common code such that it was shared. There's also a risk that this approach would lead to end-point proliferation over time as you make various tweaks to the contract. So, is there an an alternative?
One approach which I used recently, and which is the subject of this post, is to intercept the calls which use the old contract and transform them into a call to the new contract on-the-fly. WCF has an extensibility interface designed just for this purpose - IDispatchMessageInspector. Note that, despite its name, implementing this interface allows us to both inspect and modify inbound and outbound messages.
To demonstrate this approach I'm going to:
- create a WCF Service exposing a particular interface,
- create a client which consumes this service,
- modify the service in a manner which is not backwards compatible,
- show that the client can no longer consume the service,
- implement IDispatchMessageInspector in the service to modify calls on the fly, and
- show that the client can now consume the service again.
Creating the WCF Service
I'm not going to go through this step-by-step. If you're interested in implementing IDispatchMessageInspector to modify WCF messages on the fly, then I'm sure you'll have created a WCF service or two in your time. So I'll just be providing source code listing of the various files:
- IEmployeeService (the service contract)
- EmployeeService (an implementation of that contract)
- Employee (a data contract exposed via the service)
- Server (contains the console application's entry point and service host provider)
IEmployeeService
using System.ServiceModel; namespace WcfService { [ServiceContract] public interface IEmployeeService { [OperationContract] void SaveEmployee(Employee employee); } }
EmployeeService
using System; namespace WcfService { public class EmployeeService : IEmployeeService { public void SaveEmployee(Employee employee) { Console.WriteLine("Saved {0}", employee); } } }
Employee
using System; using System.Runtime.Serialization; namespace WcfService { [DataContract] public class Employee { [DataMember] public string Name { get; set; } [DataMember] public DateTime DateOfBirth { get; set; } [DataMember] public char Gender { get; set; } public override string ToString() { return string.Format("{0} (DOB:{1} Gender:{2})", Name, DateOfBirth.ToShortDateString(), Gender); } } }
Server
using System; using System.ServiceModel; using System.ServiceModel.Description; namespace WcfService { class Server { static void Main() { // create a host and add an end-point to it ServiceHost serviceHost = new ServiceHost(typeof(EmployeeService)); ContractDescription contractDescription = ContractDescription.GetContract(typeof(IEmployeeService), typeof(EmployeeService)); NetTcpBinding netTcpBinding = new NetTcpBinding(); EndpointAddress endpointAddress = new EndpointAddress("net.tcp://localhost:8001/EmployeeService"); ServiceEndpoint serviceEndpoint = new ServiceEndpoint(contractDescription, netTcpBinding, endpointAddress); serviceHost.Description.Endpoints.Add(serviceEndpoint); // add a meta-data end-point ServiceMetadataBehavior serviceMetadataBehavior = new ServiceMetadataBehavior(); serviceMetadataBehavior.HttpGetEnabled = true; serviceMetadataBehavior.HttpGetUrl = new Uri("http://localhost:8002/EmployeeService/mex"); serviceHost.Description.Behaviors.Add(serviceMetadataBehavior); // open the host serviceHost.Open(); Console.WriteLine("Press ENTER to terminate service."); // close the host once the user hits ENTER Console.ReadLine(); serviceHost.Close(); } } }
Okay, so that the server-side code sorted. As you can see it's all fairly basic stuff: the service merely accepts an Employee into the SaveEmployee method of its IEmployeeService and writes details of that Employee to the console.
Creating the WCF Client
The client is just as trivial.