I am trying to achieve the following:
- Have one 'full' set of services for consumption by internal apps
- Expose a subset of these methods to 3rd parties
The way I have tried to go about this is to create one service that implements two interfaces
For example:
Public Service Interface
[ServiceContract(Namespace = "http://www.myurl.com/public/2011/10")]
public partial interface IPublicService
{
[OperationContract]
ResponseObjOne OperationAvailableToEveryone(RequestObjOne request);
}
Private Service Interface
[ServiceContract(Namespace = "http://www.myurl.com/private/2011/10")]
public partial interface IPrivateService
{
[OperationContract]
ResponseObjOne OperationAvailableToEveryone(RequestObjOne request);
[OperationContract]
ResponseObjTwo OperationAvailableInternally(RequestObjTwo request);
}
Service class to implement both interfaces
public class Service : IPrivateService, IPublicService
{
ResponseObjOne OperationAvailableToEveryone(RequestObjOne request)
{ }
ResponseObjTwo OperationAvailableInternally(RequestObjTwo request)
{ }
}
I would now like to be able to configure this to run as two separate endpoints in IIS. So I have an .svc file with the following:
<%@ ServiceHost Language="C#" Debug="true" Service="Adactus.Pulse.SOAServices.Service, Adactus.Pulse.SOAServices" %>
And added the following in the web.config:
<service name="Service">
<endpoint address="/public" binding="basicHttpBinding" contract="IPublicService" />
<endpoint address="/private" binding="basicHttpBinding" contract="IPrivateService" />
</service>
But if I browse to the .svc file I now see all operations in the WSDL and if I add /public to the URL I see a 404. So how can I achieve this?
Ideally I would like to add another .svc endpoint and be able to specify the interface as well as the service implementation class in these svc files. Then I can lock down access to the svc in IIS to secure the internal service.
the key is that some of the operations are exposed in both contracts and I don't want to duplicate their implementation.
Any ideas? Am I going about this in the wrong way?
Cheers, Rob