Typically, you would serialize state (entities), not the WSDL service wrapper. Most code-gen since 2.0 will write files as partial classes, which means you can add a second code file to add things like attributes:
namespace MyNamespace
{
[Serializable] partial class Customer {}
[Serializable] partial class Order {}
[Serializable] partial class Address {}
}
This is combined with the other half in the wsdl-generated types, and should make it usable from BinaryFormatter - however, personally I suspect that is a bad way to do it. Since you are using wsdl.exe, your types are already serializable via XmlSerializer. Instead of serializing them with BinaryFormatter (which is what will be used by default, and which is very brittle), consider serializing them via XmlSerializer to a string or a byte[], and add that to session-state. This will work without extra code changes, and is a lot more robust as it avoids the multiple brittle points of BinaryFormatter.
For example:
static string SerializeXml<T>(T obj) where T : class
{
if (obj == null) return null;
StringWriter sw = new StringWriter();
using (XmlWriter xw = XmlWriter.Create(sw))
{
new XmlSerializer(typeof(T))
.Serialize(xw, obj);
}
return sw.ToString();
}
static T DeserializeXml<T>(string xml) where T : class
{
if (xml == null) return null;
using (XmlReader xr = XmlReader.Create(new StringReader(xml)))
{
return (T)new XmlSerializer(typeof(T))
.Deserialize(xr);
}
}