I've written a MessageSizeInspector
class to inspect the size of the messages the service receives from the client. Here is what it looks like:
//the actual implementation logs more!
//but in this question, my only concerns is request.ToString()
public sealed class MessageSizeInspector :
BehaviorExtensionElement, //to enable it to be used in config
IDispatchMessageInspector, //service-side inspector
IEndpointBehavior //so we can apply it on endpoint
{
if (request != null )
{
Logger.Verbose("Message = {0}\n", request.ToString()));
}
//more
}
And it logs message of this format:
<s:Envelope xmlns:s="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/">
<s:Header>
<To s:mustUnderstand="1" xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/ws/2005/05/addressing/none">http://localhost:8961/EngineService</To>
<Action s:mustUnderstand="1" xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/ws/2005/05/addressing/none">http://tempuri.org/IEngineService/GetMousePatternID</Action>
</s:Header>
<s:Body>
<GetMousePatternID xmlns="http://tempuri.org/">
<args>
<accelerator xmlns="http://schemas.datacontract.org/2004/07/Runaware.Insight.EngineService" />
<accessKey xmlns="http://schemas.datacontract.org/2004/07/Runaware.Insight.EngineService" />
<controlId xmlns="http://schemas.datacontract.org/2004/07/Runaware.Insight.EngineService">66222</controlId>
<!--- deleted the rest to avoid verbosity -->
</args>
</GetMousePatternID>
</s:Body>
</s:Envelope>
As you can see the actual message is tiny, but the XML elements and namespaces make it too huge. Namespaces, in particular, are too big in comparison to the actual message.
My question is : how can we reduce the size of the soap messages? As the xmlns
are same for all elements, the WCF could optimize this but it doesn't. Can we make it use shorter namespace of our choice? There are few elements such as accelerator
and accessKey
which do not even have any value (as you can see by scrolling right), but they're still there! Can we make WCF to omit them and assume their values null
(or default value) on the service side?
In short, anything we can do to save bandwidth?
I'm assuming that the above message is what comes the client, exactly in the same format, with same XML elements and namespaces.
The server is written in C# and WCF, and the client is written in C++ using Windows Web Services API. The service and client both written by me. So I've full control over them. If required, I may change it to save bandwidth!
WebAPI
instead as this sends much less data.