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I have an ASP.NET web site that houses some WCF services. I have hooked up to the Application_Error event, so can log any unhandled exceptions.

What I would really like to do is pass the execution back to the method that was called, so I can return something sensible to the client, rather than throwing a FaultException.

I know I can wrap each individual service call in a try/catch block, but that means a load of boilerplate code in every single method. What I would really like to do is have a central catch-all method, like Application_Error, but then allow the individual service call do take back control and return something meaningful to the client.

Is this possible?

P.S. In case anyone thinks I'm doing this the wrong way, the background to this is that I'm implementing Railway Oriented Programming in my C# WCF code. The idea is that if there is an exception, I return an appropriate object that contains the details, along with other useful stuff. This is a much more controlled way of dealing with the situation than having the WCF service throw an exception.

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    This can be done with attributes. See similar question (and accepted answer) here: stackoverflow.com/questions/13655541/…
    – JuanR
    Nov 7, 2016 at 21:20
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    Define a new type like Failable<TResult, ApplicationError> or something and make that the return method of internal function calls?
    – Jeff B
    Nov 7, 2016 at 23:07
  • "so I can return something sensible to the client, rather than throwing a FaultException" - well a FaultException can be as minimal or verbose as you like and is also the recommended fault to return to WCF clients or should I say SOAP clients
    – user585968
    Nov 8, 2016 at 1:43
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    @JeffBridgman That's actually what I want to do, but I'm trying to do it in a way that avoids having to wrap each individual service call in a try/catch block. I'd like to be able to use the global unhandled event handler, but then pass execution back to the service method so it can return a Failable object. Nov 9, 2016 at 18:34
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    @MickyD Trouble with FaultExceptions is that (in my experience) they can be flaky, sometimes containing helpful info sometimes not. Sometimes the client gets them, sometimes the service call fails silently. I was looking at something more robust, such as the Either Monad, which is similar to what Jeff Bridgman suggested. I just want to know how to do this without having to wrap every single service call in its own try/catch block Nov 9, 2016 at 18:36

1 Answer 1

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If you want to do something akin to the ROP-style, then you can do the following (Failable name from Jeff Bridgman's suggestion).

First create abstract base classes as follows...

public abstract class Failable<T> {
}
public abstract class Failable {
}

Next create concrete classes from these to represent success and failure. I've added a generic and non-generic version of each, so you can handle service calls that return a value as well as void ones...

public class Success<T> : Failable<T> {
  public Success(T value) {
    Value = value;
  }

  public T Value { get; set; }
}

public class Success : Failable {
}

public class Failure<T> : Failable<T> {
  public Failure(Exception value) {
    Value = value;
  }

  public Exception Value { get; set; }
}

public class Failure : Failable {
  public Failure(Exception value) {
    Value = value;
  }

  public Exception Value { get; set; }
}

Then a couple of helper methods will give you what you want...

public Failable<T> DoFailableAction<T>(Func<T> f) {
  Failable<T> result;
  try {
    T fResult = f();
    result = new Success<T>(fResult);
  }
  catch (Exception ex) {
    result = new Failure<T>(ex);
    // Do logging, etc here...
  }
  return result;
}

public Failable DoFailableAction(Action f) {
  Failable result;
  try {
    f();
    result = new Success();
  }
  catch (Exception ex) {
    result = new Failure(ex);
    // Do logging, etc here...
  }
  return result;
}

To use these, suppose you have your WCF service. You wrap the service call in the helper method...

Failable<Person> p = failableHelpers.DoFailableAction(() => service.GetPerson(1));

...where failableHelpers is an instance of the class that contains the two helper methods shown above.

Then, you can check if the call succeeded or failed, and act appropriately...

if (p is Success<Person>) {
  Person p = ((Success<Person>)p).Value;
  Debug.WriteLine("Value is Success, and the person is " + p.FirstName + " " + p.Surname);
} else {
  Exception ex = ((Failure<Person>)p).Value;
  Debug.WriteLine("Value is Failure, and the message is " + ex.Message);
}

If your service method is void, you just use the non-generic variation...

Person jim = new Person(1, "Jim", "Spriggs");
Failable saveResult = failableHelpers.DoFailableAction(() => service.Update(jim));

You haven't quite achieved what you wanted, as you still have some boilerplate code in each service method, but it's very little. Not as little as an attribute on the method, but then this approach is much simpler to implement, and works for any kind of level, whether a repository, business logic, WCF service, client, etc. The attibute approach only works for WCF.

The benefit of this approach is that it puts the onus on the consumer of the WCF service (or whatever) to check if the service call was successful, and act appropriately. This is a functional style, and leads to much more robust coding, as you are pretty much forced not to ignore exceptions, unlike non-functional programming, where you would likely just grab the result of the service under the assumption that nothing went wrong. That's fine until something does go wrong!

Hope that helps.

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    Wow, that's amazing. That's exactly what I wanted to do! I guess this means I don't need the unhandled exception event any more? I can add any logging I want to the DoFailableAction() method. Nov 10, 2016 at 23:21
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    Thinking about this some more, it seems that the unhandled exception event would now never get caught, as the DoFailableAction methods would handle them. If so, I would want to put some logging in there, in which case I'd want to inject the logging dependency. This means that the DoFailableAction methods couldn't be static, as the containing class would have a non-static dependency. Any comments? Thanks again. Nov 12, 2016 at 23:04
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    @AvrohomYisroel You're right. I've modified the code to make the methods non-static, and added a comment to show where you'd add logging. Thanks for pointing that out. Nov 13, 2016 at 15:00
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    Thanks, that's great! Nov 13, 2016 at 16:05

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