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I have a working WCF Data Service built on a Linq2Sql data provider. Things are looking good so far.

The client app that hits the service accepts a user and password which I authenticate at the server. However, on the server-side the data for each client is stored in a separate client-specific database. So, I need to be able to change the connection string for the data provider after the user has authenticated/identified themselves.

I overrode the data context's CreateDataSource() method (which appears to give me the ability to change the connection string dynamically, which is good). However, during debugging, I see that CreateDataSource() fires before OnRequest()... OnRequest() is where I handle user authentication, so I don't know who they are yet or whether they're authorized at the time that CreateDataSource() fires.

Is there another way to handle the dynamic connection string issue, without having CreateDataSource() called before my request handler? Or, less optimally, is there a way to delay, or trigger the service/data provider to call CreateDataSource() again after authentication, so I can tell who the user is, and construct the proper connection string?

Thanks!

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  • Bonus followup question: is the CreateDataSource() method called every time a request comes in, no matter what? It appears that way from debugging, but I don't have a high-stress multi-user environment to test it with right now...
    – Egahn
    Jun 14, 2011 at 23:07

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Is there a reason why you can do the authentication in CreateDataSource method - First do the authentication, and then accordingly create the datasource with the appropriate connection string.

CreateDataSource method is called everytime to create the new instance of your data source.

Thanks Pratik

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  • Yeah, that's exactly what I ended up doing. Seems to work just fine. Thanks!
    – Egahn
    Jun 16, 2011 at 18:21

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