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I am trying to connect to a WCF service someone set up and i'm having trouble, I have no idea what 808:* means in the "Binding Information" for net.tcp site bindings.

thanks

this is how the bindings are configured in IIS 7 (navigate to IIS, right click on the application hosting the service, click 'edit bindings'). there are two entries:

type: http, port: 8000, ip address: *, binding information: (empty)

type: net.tcp, port: (empty), ip address: (empty), binding information: 808:*

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  • Are you getting some error like this? Can you elaborate? Also include the exact endpoint, you wish to connect to.
    – Kangkan
    Commented May 17, 2010 at 14:26
  • here's an example of someone saying to set net.tcp up this way: expertise4you.blogspot.com/2008_08_01_archive.html
    – ralph
    Commented May 17, 2010 at 14:40
  • I got exactly the same question, thanks for raising this up. Commented Oct 23, 2011 at 14:06

1 Answer 1

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I understand this is an old post but this might help someone that comes back looking for an answer similar to this:

808 is your port number you listen on * is a wild card for host name which means it will handle any requests coming in on port 808 with any host name.

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  • So can I use a concrete IP instead of a host name? Commented Oct 23, 2011 at 14:05
  • 1
    Is the asterisk (*) really a wildcard for the host name? AFAIK TCP/IP network packets do not contain any host name information, but only IP addresses. (This is unlike HTTP requests, which have the host name used in a request URL in the Host: header.) So how would IIS be able to determine the host name used for an incoming TCP request? Commented Jan 14, 2015 at 13:27
  • I assume 808:* is the same as *:808:*. The format is ip address:port:host for http/https protocols. Since net.tcp is listening on port 808 the 808 portion is definitely the port. Commented Apr 10, 2015 at 18:40

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