TL;DR: How can I stream large files with a known size using WCF, and still show progress (Content-Length
) to the final user (a web browser)?
I have a WCF REST service which downloads and then serves very large files (1-20Gb) to a web browser. To simplify, think of my service as a proxy. This obliges me to set TransferMode = Streamed
or TransferMode = StreamedResponse
on the Binding, or the end client will have to wait for the source files to be downloaded to the webserver before the actual download begins. Also, buffered transfer mode kills the server for large files (RAM usage). Intermediate disk storage is not an option. From TransferMode man page:
(...) Buffered transfers hold the entire message in a memory buffer until the transfer is complete.
But when setting TransferMode
to Streamed
or StreamedResponse
, WCF no longer returns the header Content-length
to the client, and a new header Transfer-Encoding: chunked
is added. This is consistent with wikipedias article on chunked transfer:
(...) uses the Transfer-Encoding HTTP header in place of the Content-Length header (...)
But I always know the size of the data to be transferred beforehand, and for the end user, it's very frustrating not to know the size of the download. So:
(How) can I configure the WCF binding to use a "streaming" Transfer mode (more specifically, not buffering the entire message before sending) and still use the Content-Length
header?
Some leads:
This q/a states that the http standard disallows both
Transfer-Encoding
andContent-length: 123456
in the same message, so I guess that's not an option?I have tried modifying the headers using an inspector in IDispatchMessage.BeforeSendReply but at this point the
Content-Length
header has not yet been removed, andTransfer-Encoding
has not yet been set, so it's "too early". I have later read that chunked transfer encoding is on TCP level, so changing the header at this point probably wont work even if I could.I have tried setting aspNetCompatibilityEnabled
="true"
, setting wcf transfer mode to buffered output (default) and then setSystem.Web.HttpContext.Current.Response.BufferOutput = false;
. This is ignored by wcf though, the message is clearly buffered.It seems to be a missing feature, according to this link. But there may still be a quirky workaround somewhere..