49

I've been following Miguel Castro's excellent article on WCF here and it's all working nicely, except that I have the following code

public AdminClient()
{
    ChannelFactory<IProductAdmin> factory = new ChannelFactory<IProductAdmin>();
    productAdminChannel = factory.CreateChannel();
}

In my app.config file, I have the following configuration:

<system.serviceModel>
    <client>
        <endpoint address="net.tcp://localhost:8002/ProductBrowser"
                  binding="netTcpBinding"
                  contract="Contracts.IProductAdmin" />
    </client>
</system.serviceModel>

But, when I run the constructor for AdminClient I get an exception saying that the endpoint isn't defined. However, if I change my configuration to give the endpoint a name, and then create the factory as follows, it works.

public AdminClient()
{
    var fac = new ChannelFactory<IProductAdmin>("admin");
    productAdminChannel = fac.CreateChannel();
}

<system.serviceModel>
    <client>
        <endpoint name="admin" 
                  address="net.tcp://localhost:8002/ProductBrowser"
                  binding="netTcpBinding"
                  contract="Contracts.IProductAdmin" />
    </client>
</system.serviceModel>

I'd love an explanation for this. The documentation in MSDN isn't much help...

3
  • 2
    You can do away with your .config file entirely by passing the binding and address to the ChannelFactory. Jan 8, 2009 at 22:39
  • I think the point is to divorce the client from implementation details. Manually doing the work of the configuration system is painful and unnecessary. If the client is to have one endpoint for a particular interface then using an asterisk wildcard will find the first qualifying endpoint, which will satisfy the requirement for most simple client. Feb 12, 2010 at 14:37
  • Hi Sky. Sorry, haven't been paying attention, and this was so long ago for me, I can't remember what I needed it for :) But thanks for your work! Feb 18, 2010 at 6:56

5 Answers 5

63

Use "*" to use the first qualifying endpoint.

public AdminClient()
{
    ChannelFactory<IProductAdmin> factory  
         = new ChannelFactory<IProductAdmin>("*");

    productAdminChannel = factory.CreateChannel();
}

MSDN Example

5
  • 2
    I reviewed .NET source code. If we don't specify name .NET won't even try to apply any configurations. We might specify empty string - then it will apply default configuration.
    – Michael
    Jul 11, 2013 at 16:33
  • 2
    @BenMosher not official documentation, but the next best thing I guess: referencesource.microsoft.com/#System.ServiceModel/System/… Nov 6, 2014 at 9:47
  • WARNING! To complete the answer, the wildcard seems to work if one and only one endpoint has been configure otherwise you get an exception with SFxConfigLoaderMultipleEndpointMatchesWildcard1 message. referencesource.microsoft.com/#System.ServiceModel/System/…
    – LeBaptiste
    Aug 19, 2015 at 10:23
  • Official documentation: WCF Client Configuration A wildcard endpoint configuration name "*" is available and indicates to the ApplyConfiguration method that it should load any endpoint configuration in the file, provided there is precisely one available, and otherwise throws an exception.
    – hectorct
    Oct 13, 2016 at 13:39
  • Does anyone know how to make it to work for .net6 because '*' star was working for me on framework but not on core Nov 30, 2022 at 2:58
3

You need to specify the endpoint name, because you can have many endpoints for the same type of contract. (For instance a service being deployed on one tcp and one http ws endpoint). Microsoft could have of course built something in WCF to check if there is only one client specified for the contract interface, but that wouldn't have been very consistent. (that it would work if there is only one endpoint specified for the contract). When you would add another endpoint for the same contract later, the code would break in that case.

0
2

You can get away without specifying endpoint name on service side. For client side, you need to specify the name, because you may be connecting to multiple services that have the same contract. How would WCF know then which one you want?

2

This has been bugging me for a few days, so I went through the examples shown in the article you linked above. Everything works correctly except for the second client proxy example that you're having a problem with. As you noted and the other answerers creating a proxy in that way requires an endpoint name, coupling it with the client (which is where the endpoint is defined). I'm still not sure why it behaves the way it does, but I found no way to use that example without explicitly coupling the proxy to the endpoint.

On the other hand, the first example showing how to create the proxy requires no explicit coupling of endpoint address or binding:

 using System;
   using System.ServiceModel;

   namespace CoDeMagazine.ServiceArticle
   {
       public class ProductClient 
          : ClientBase<IProductBrowser>, 
            IProductBrowser
       {

           #region IProductBrowser Members

           public ProductData GetProduct(
              Guid productID)
           {
               return Channel.GetProduct(productID);
           }

           public ProductData[] GetAllProducts()
           {
               return Channel.GetAllProducts();
           }

           public ProductData[] FindProducts(
              string productNameWildcard)
           {
               return Channel.FindProducts(
                  productNameWildcard);
           }

           #endregion
       }

   }

That seems to work just fine. So, maybe the second proxy example is just a poor way to do things, or maybe we're missing something obvious...

1
  • not missing anything. miguel's article is out of date. I am sure it ran when he wrote it. Now a asterisk wildcard will match the first qualifying endpoint. I wrote him about it but no reply... Feb 13, 2010 at 20:06
1

If you don't want to specify endpoint Name explicity, you may write:

    public AdminClient()
    {
        ChannelFactory<IProductAdmin> factory =  
           new ChannelFactory<IProductAdmin>(string.Empty);
        productAdminChannel = factory.CreateChannel();
    }

Parameterless constructor unnecessary doesn't work.

0

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