You could implement partial classes that allow you to separate your content in individual cs files while maintaing a single interface and endpoint. This isn't the most ideal way, because at the end of the day it is still a single class made up of partial classes, but at least it looks like it in your file structure, thus giving some separation rather than a massive class file.
Example Structure:
IMyService.cs
[ServiceContract]
public interface IMyService
{
[OperationContract]
string GenericMethod()
[OperationContract]
string GetUsers(int companyId)
[OperationContract]
string GetMessages(int userId)
}
MyService.cs
//Put any attributes for your service in this class file
[AspNetCompatibilityRequirements(RequirementsMode = AspNetCompatibilityRequirementsMode.Allowed)]
public partial class MyService : IMyService
{
public string GenericMethod()
{
return "";
}
}
UserService.cs
public partial class MyService
{
public string GetUsers(int companyId)
{
return "";
}
}
MessagingService.cs
public partial class MyService
{
public string GetMessages(int userId)
{
return "";
}
}