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I understand that you are able to open port 80 on an Azure worker role and run a WCF service publicly. I am, however, having trouble coming up with a scenario where it makes more sense to do it this way as opposed to running in a web role. Any ideas?

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A WCF service hosted in a worker role will essentially be self-hosted: From your OnStart(), you'd create a new ServiceHost() and go from there.

A WCF service hosted in a web role would be taking advantage of IIS to host the service, as an svc, taking advantage of IIS performance counters, caching, automatic activation, process recycling, etc.

Even more interesting: In a web role where you host your website, you could still run a self-hosted WCF service the same way as in a worker role. You'll just need to create another input endpoint on some other port (or an internal endpoint, usable by only your Windows Azure web/worker role instances in your deployment).

And yet another scenario: By running a self-hosted service, you're not limited to .net - fire up any executable that knows how to listen to a port. This opens up opportunities to host a Java service host, python, etc.

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  • can you share some tutorial links on this.
    – Andrew
    Jul 4, 2013 at 7:57

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