My client/server application is using WCF for communication, which has been great. However one shortcoming of the current architecture is that I must use known type configuration for certain transmitted types. I'm using an in-house Pub/Sub mechanism and this requirement is unavoidable.

The problem is that it's easy to forget to add the known type, and if you do, WCF fails silently with few clues as to what's going wrong.

In my application, I know the set of types that are going to be sent. I would like to perform the configuration programmatically, rather than declaratively through the App.config file which currently contains something like this:

<system.runtime.serialization>
  <dataContractSerializer>
    <declaredTypes>
      <add type="MyProject.MyParent, MyProjectAssembly">
        <knownType type="MyProject.MyChild1, MyProjectAssembly"/>
        <knownType type="MyProject.MyChild2, MyProjectAssembly"/>
        <knownType type="MyProject.MyChild3, MyProjectAssembly"/>
        <knownType type="MyProject.MyChild4, MyProjectAssembly"/>
        <knownType type="MyProject.MyChild5, MyProjectAssembly"/>
      </add>
    </declaredTypes>
  </dataContractSerializer>
</system.runtime.serialization>

Instead, I'd like to do something like this:

foreach (Type type in _transmittedTypes)
{
    // How would I write this method?
    AddKnownType(typeof(MyParent), type);
}

Can someone please explain how I might do this?

EDIT Please understand that I'm trying to set the known types dynamically at run time rather than declaratively in config or using attributes in the source code.

This is basically a question about the WCF API, not a style question.

EDIT 2 This MSDN page page states:

You can also add types to the ReadOnlyCollection, accessed through the KnownTypes property of the DataContractSerializer.

Unfortunately that's all it says and it doesn't make terribly much sense given that KnownTypes is a readonly property, and the property's value is a ReadOnlyCollection.

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On your edit 2: I guess they mean you can pass in extra known types through the DataContractSerializer constructor. That won't help much in your case though, as WCF makes its serializer itself. – Kurt Schelfthout Apr 21 '09 at 15:07
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5 Answers

up vote 31 down vote accepted

Add [ServiceKnownType] to your [ServiceContract] interface:

[ServiceKnownType("GetKnownTypes", typeof(KnownTypesProvider))]

then create a class called KnownTypesProvider:

internal static class KnownTypesProvider
{
    public static IEnumerable<Type> GetKnownTypes(ICustomAttributeProvider provider)
    {
         // collect and pass back the list of known types
    }
}

and then you can pass back whatever types you need.

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Perhaps my question wasn't clear. This is not 'programmatically' -- it's still declaratively. I need the ability to add known types, not get them, at run time. – Drew Noakes Apr 21 '09 at 10:38
3  
@ Drew Noakes - Huh? In the GetKnownTypes method, which is just code, you can return the known types at that point in time. The attribute is just there to tell WCF what method to call to get the known types. This is as programmatically as you can have it in WCF, I think (short of programmatically editing the config file and reloading it). – Kurt Schelfthout Apr 21 '09 at 13:53
Agreed with Miki and Kurt, this is as good as you're going to get in WCF. – unforgiven3 Apr 21 '09 at 13:59
2  
I apologise. This is actually a valid answer, I just misread it as a means of accessing the existing known types. Looking at it again I've no idea what I was thinking. – Drew Noakes Apr 21 '09 at 14:00
1  
What is the purpose of parameter "ICustomAttributeProvider provider"? – Michael Freidgeim Jun 23 '11 at 3:35
show 4 more comments
feedback

There are 2 additional ways to solve your problem:

I. Use KnownTypeAttribute(string):

[DataContract]
[KnownType("GetKnownTypes")]
public abstract class MyParent
{
    static IEnumerable<Type> GetKnownTypes()
    {
        return new Type[] { typeof(MyChild1), typeof(MyChild2), typeof(MyChild3) };
    }
}

II. Use constructor DataContractSerializer

[AttributeUsage(AttributeTargets.Method | AttributeTargets.Class | 
                AttributeTargets.Interface)]
public class MyHierarchyKnownTypeAttribute : Attribute, IOperationBehavior, IServiceBehavior, IContractBehavior
{
    void IOperationBehavior.AddBindingParameters(
            OperationDescription description, 
            BindingParameterCollection parameters)
    {}

    void IOperationBehavior.ApplyClientBehavior(
            OperationDescription description, 
            System.ServiceModel.Dispatcher.ClientOperation proxy)
    {
        ReplaceDataContractSerializerOperationBehavior(description);
    }
    void IOperationBehavior.ApplyDispatchBehavior(
            OperationDescription description, 
            System.ServiceModel.Dispatcher.DispatchOperation dispatch)
    {
        ReplaceDataContractSerializerOperationBehavior(description);
    }
    void IOperationBehavior.Validate(OperationDescription description)
    {}


    void IServiceBehavior.AddBindingParameters(
          ServiceDescription serviceDescription,
          ServiceHostBase serviceHostBase,
          System.Collections.ObjectModel.Collection<ServiceEndpoint> endpoints,
          BindingParameterCollection bindingParameters)
    {
        ReplaceDataContractSerializerOperationBehavior(serviceDescription);
    }

    void IServiceBehavior.ApplyDispatchBehavior(
            ServiceDescription serviceDescription, 
            ServiceHostBase serviceHostBase)
    {
        ReplaceDataContractSerializerOperationBehavior(serviceDescription);
    }

    void IServiceBehavior.Validate(ServiceDescription serviceDescription,
            ServiceHostBase serviceHostBase)
    {}

    void IContractBehavior.AddBindingParameters(
            ContractDescription contractDescription,
            ServiceEndpoint endpoint, 
            BindingParameterCollection bindingParameters)
    {}

    void IContractBehavior.ApplyClientBehavior(
            ContractDescription contractDescription,
            ServiceEndpoint endpoint, ClientRuntime clientRuntime)
    {
        ReplaceDataContractSerializerOperationBehavior(contractDescription);
    }

    void IContractBehavior.ApplyDispatchBehavior(
            ContractDescription contractDescription,
            ServiceEndpoint endpoint, DispatchRuntime dispatchRuntime)
    {
        ReplaceDataContractSerializerOperationBehavior(contractDescription);
    }

    void IContractBehavior.Validate(ContractDescription contractDescription,
            ServiceEndpoint endpoint)
    {}


    private static void ReplaceDataContractSerializerOperationBehavior(
            ServiceDescription description)
    {
        foreach (var endpoint in description.Endpoints)
        {
            ReplaceDataContractSerializerOperationBehavior(endpoint);
        }
    }

    private static void ReplaceDataContractSerializerOperationBehavior(
            ContractDescription description)
    {
        foreach (var operation in description.Operations)
        {
            ReplaceDataContractSerializerOperationBehavior(operation);
        }
    }

    private static void ReplaceDataContractSerializerOperationBehavior(
            ServiceEndpoint endpoint)
    {
        // ignore mexигнорируем mex-интерфейс
        if (endpoint.Contract.ContractType == typeof(IMetadataExchange))
        {
            return;
        }
        ReplaceDataContractSerializerOperationBehavior(endpoint.Contract);
    }

    private static void ReplaceDataContractSerializerOperationBehavior(
            OperationDescription description)
    {
        var behavior = 
         description.Behaviors.Find<DataContractSerializerOperationBehavior>();
        if (behavior != null)
        {
            description.Behaviors.Remove(behavior);
            description.Behaviors.Add(
                new ShapeDataContractSerializerOperationBehavior(description));
        }

    }

    public class ShapeDataContractSerializerOperationBehavior 
            : DataContractSerializerOperationBehavior
    {
        public ShapeDataContractSerializerOperationBehavior(
                OperationDescription description)
            : base(description) { }

        public override XmlObjectSerializer CreateSerializer(Type type, 
                string name, string ns, IList<Type> knownTypes)
        {
            var shapeKnownTypes = 
                new List<Type> { typeof(Circle), typeof(Square) };
            return new DataContractSerializer(type, name, ns, shapeKnownTypes);
        }

        public override XmlObjectSerializer CreateSerializer(Type type, 
                XmlDictionaryString name, XmlDictionaryString ns, 
                IList<Type> knownTypes)
        {
            //All magic here!
            var knownTypes = 
                new List<Type> { typeof(MyChild1), typeof(MyChild2), typeof(MyChild3) };
            return new DataContractSerializer(type, name, ns, knownTypes);
        }
    }
}


[ServiceContract()]
[MyHierarchyKnownTypeAttribute]
public interface IService {...}

NOTE: You must use this attribute on both sides: client side and service side!

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+1 for the complete code sample! – Samuel Jack Oct 22 '10 at 11:17
feedback

Web .Config

<applicationSettings>
<HostProcess.Properties.Settings>
<setting name="KnowTypes" serializeAs="Xml">
<value>
 <ArrayOfString xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
   <string>a.AOrder,a</string>
   <string>b.BOrder,b</string>
   <string>c.COrder,c</string>
 </ArrayOfString>
</value>
</setting>
</HostProcess.Properties.Settings>

static class Helper
{
    public static IEnumerable<Type> GetKnownTypes(ICustomAttributeProvider provider)
    {
        System.Collections.Generic.List<System.Type> knownTypes =
        new System.Collections.Generic.List<System.Type>();
        // Add any types to include here.
        Properties.Settings.Default.KnowTypes.Cast<string>().ToList().ForEach(type =>
            {
                knownTypes.Add(Type.GetType(type));
            });

        return knownTypes;
    }
}


[ServiceContract]
[ServiceKnownType("GetKnownTypes", typeof(Helper))]
public interface IOrderProcessor
{
    [OperationContract]
    string ProcessOrder(Order order);
}

The Order is the abstract base class


[DataContract]
public abstract class Order
{
    public Order()
    {
        OrderDate = DateTime.Now;
    }
    [DataMember]
    public string OrderID { get; set; }
    [DataMember]
    public DateTime OrderDate { get; set; }
    [DataMember]
    public string FirstName { get; set; }
    [DataMember]
    public string LastName { get; set; }
}
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What is the purpose of parameter "ICustomAttributeProvider provider"? Is it required? – Michael Freidgeim Jun 23 '11 at 3:36
feedback

I needed to do this to allow inheritance to work properly. I didn't want to have to maintain the list of derived types.

 [KnownType("GetKnownTypes")]
 public abstract class BaseOperationResponse
 {

 public static Type[] GetKnownTypes()
    {
        Type thisType = System.Reflection.MethodBase.GetCurrentMethod().DeclaringType;
        return thisType.Assembly.GetTypes().ToList<Type>().Where(t => t.IsSubclassOf(thisType)).ToArray();
    }

I know the first line of the function is overkill but it just means I can paste it into any base class without modification.

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Nice, thanks. But I think that ToList<Type>() is wortless. Why are you using it? – Karel Kral Jan 4 at 15:01
Good point! I should tidy that up :) – Paul McNamara Apr 20 at 9:20
feedback

I don't. Plymorphism is an OO term, not SOA term, so I don't use it, and make my contracts explicit wherever possible. Take a look at this answer as well: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/416457/wcf-contract-returning-interface-could-cause-serialization-issue/421657#421657

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Take a look at Exchange Web Service : msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb204119.aspx, it uses polymorphism heavily. This is not a simple web service to use but it is very powerfull and coarse grained. – Nicolas Dorier Apr 21 '09 at 9:11
I too prefer to make things explicit wherever possible. Whilst I appreciate that this might not be the best way of doing things, I made it clear that this is an in-house Pub/Sub mechanism that sends 'object' via WCF. I want to make using this system simpler as the Pub/Sub mechanism knows the types in question and could configure the underlying transport (WCF) accordingly. Why do you think I'm using SOA? – Drew Noakes Apr 21 '09 at 10:42
Schema supports the "base" attribute for complex type extensions, giving you polymorphism-like properties of schema. Insomuch as schema supports it, it's compatible with the technologies that typically make up a SOA. w3.org/2001/XMLSchema Of course the word "polymorphism" doesn't apply much to SOA because polymorphism in this case refers more to implementation of a SOA, rather than SOA itself. SOA and polymorphism don't have much to do with each other. – Anderson Imes Apr 22 '09 at 0:23
Right. I'm not saying you CAN'T do it. I'm saying you SHOUDN'T do it, it's like putting circles into square holes. You can do it, but it feels wrong... – Krzysztof Koźmic Apr 22 '09 at 8:02
I have a situation where I've included class A in the same assembly as my contract. I've used DataMember to explicity identify the state of A that I'm interested in. I then have class B which subclasses A. There's nothing in B I care about from the service's standpoint, it will treat instances of B just like As. However, I have B in a different assembly and I don't want the service to depend on that assembly. Sadly, I see no way to achieve this with WCF. If my contract expects an A, why do I have to tell it about Bs? Bs should be As. – JohnOpincar May 4 '09 at 22:41
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