I have created a WCF service using Workflow. It works just fine. I created another Workflow application to consume it. I added the service reference to the application project and rebuilt the project. I added the component from the service to the app, but it's expecting an argument that I never specified.
I've tried rebuilding both the service and the app, generating an entirely new solution and starting from scratch - same problem. I've looked at others' code and they've structured this project the same as mine but this issue does not show up on theirs. Googling this problem seems to bring up not results.
My workflow service is defined as such: https://i.imgur.com/E8mEfs6.png
The parameters of the receive component are: https://i.imgur.com/TaNRw2y.png
But when I add it to my app, the parameters are defined as: https://i.imgur.com/tqgEwNr.png
Which is not what I had defined in my service. I can't even figure out what it wants me to pass in for _GetCityStateFromZip. It says the type is InArgument.
I was expecting it to be expecting the zipcode parameter as I specified in the service. I think I might be adding the service reference incorrectly, but I don't know how. I went to Add Service Reference in Visual Studio, then copy/pasted the path to the .xamlx file of the service on localhost.
Thank you.
I found a solution to this problem here:
https://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/vstudio/en-US/5279fc5f-8a53-43e7-8ef2-3073808dc90f/configuring-workflow-services-how-to-configure-workflow-control-endpoint?forum=wfprerelease
I re-made my service using the steps listed and it works as originally intended.
When adding a reference to a web service, a Reference.vb file gets generated to make all the service's types available to the hosting project.
When I put a breakpoint in that file it never gets hit. How can I solve this?
If you're using VS2013 you can disable Just My Code in the debugging options.
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dn457346(v=vs.110).aspx
That will make VS ignore the DebuggerStepThroughAttribute that Stephan B mentions. If you're using older version of VS you can delete the attribute from the Reference.vb
See System.Diagnostics.DebuggerStepThroughAttribute for why it never gets hit. Right now I don't know how to tell the Debugger to halt anyway, ignoring the Attribute but you should be able to remove the Attribute from Reference.vb and start your Debug session without VS regenerating the file.
You can try the below steps;
Open the web service project and go to web services project's "My Project".
Go to Web tab.
Choose "Don't open a page. Wait for a request from an external application."
Choose "Use Local IIS Web Server"
Change Project URL: "http://localhost/YourWebService" to your service name.
Click on "Create Virtual Directory".
Set the breakpoint at desire location.
Debug Run the web services "F5".
I have 1 c# Console Application project, which has Program.cs (that contains main method), the main method simple calls a web service method and displays the string on the console.
The service reference is added in the project by right clicking it and adding service reference it to it.
when the console application is executed in debug mode from visual studio, it works as expected.
when the console application is executed from a .exe found in /bin/debug, it works as expected.
so far so good.
PROBLEM:
when the project is copied over to the system (you can call it a production environment), where this .exe will actually be executed, it fails at the exact line where i create the service proxy object. the line in Program.cs is:
ProjectName.ServiceReference.ServiceClient service = new ProjectName.ServiceReference.ServiceClient();
I know it fails here, because i have Console.Writeline("some line"); before and after the above line. I can see the Console.Writeline that is before the proxy line, and soon after that it crashes ...
I think this is because the reference paths that are referencing the service, is there any thing i can do to change the paths, or confirm that it is the path issue as suspected ...??
any idea whats going wrong ..???
Check this link: http://blog.davidsandor.com/post/Workaround-The-configuration-for-the-servicee280a6Unrecognized-element-e28098extendedProtectionPolicye28099.aspx
The configuration for the service reference could not be updated due
to the following issue: Unrecognized element
‘extendedProtectionPolicy’. (App.config / Web.config)
There does not seem to be a really clear reason why this is happening
however it seems to be related to Windows 7. I am not sure if the
.NET framework that ships with Win7 has some different setting or
template for the WCF configuration policy files but it seems to be the
culprit. Maybe the machine.config files are different on Win 7 and
the WCF configuration tools use the machine.config as some sort of
policy template.
The fix is annoying (because every time you build your solution on
Windows 7 and then rebuild on Vista you have to redo this).
Remove the line:
<extendedProtectionPolicy policyEnforcement="Never" />
from both your App/Web.config file on the client and on the WCF
server’s Web.config file.
I'm using Visual Studio 2008 and have a WCF client working against a WCF service. They are both located in the same Visual Studio solution. After I've made a change in my WCF contract, I want to update the service reference on the client so that changes made to the contract is also made in the proxy.
My problem is that the proxy code is not re-generated.
When I select to update the service reference, the following happens:
A dialog with the title "Updating service reference 'name-of-reference'" is shown. This dialog has a progress bar.
The progressbar moves and the status text in the dialog is changed to "Updating configuration"
The progressbar moves a bit more, and the status text is chnaged to "Configuration update complete"
The dialog doesn't show the text "Generating \something\" (can't remember the exact wording) which I would expedct.
If I delete the service reference and add it again, the proxy is properly generated. I add the service using the exact same settings as before, so I don't think it's a issue I can solve by changing the service reference configuration on the client.
One thing I suspect may be the problem is that I've renamed the default wsHttpBindings in app.config. I've also renamed the default endpoints. The reason behind this is that I need more than one endpoint and having one named 'some-default-name' and one with my own name is just confusing.
The problem with deleting the service and adding it again is that Visual Studio adds a new binding in app.config (among other things) which should not be there.
Anyone seen this problem before? Anyone knows of a solution to it?
When we have had this problem it has usually been one of these errors:
The size of the contract has increased, and is now so large that the WCF configuration does not allow it to be transferred.
A new class has been added to a WCF Interface and that class is not marked as serializable.
There is a compile error that stops the code from building and it therefore uses the old dll
I've run into this problem with the following conditions:
Our workstations are connected to an Active Directory domain (nearly everything uses Windows Authentication)
The service reference I'm trying to update is hosted on localhost, and is running under IIS Express (so the Application Pool user is running as the developer's personal domain user account)
Another developer has added or updated the reference to the project more recently than me.
The only way I have figured out how to workaround this issue is to edit the configuration.svcinfo file for that service reference (you will need to show all files for the project to see it in visual studio), locate the following section:
userPrincipalName value="user#domain.com"
and change the user to my own domain user. After saving the file, I have no trouble updating the reference until another developer updates the service reference (likely using the same workaround). Unfortunately, I haven't been able to figure out a permanent solution to this issue.
My error was that I forgot to add the OperationContract attribute.
In my case the problem was that the previous developer had added the service reference using his machine name rather than localhost. So when I told Visual Studio to update, it connected to his machine, which did not have the changes. I modified the service reference files and replaced his machine name with localhost and it was able to update the reference.
I had this problem too. Deleted the service reference and recreated it again.
My problem was that I had two methods with the same name. Everything builded fine, but I couldn't update service reference. When I tried to start just the WCF service, the error pops up.
Two easy steps to solve that:
Run Service, then stop it.
Update service reference.
Highlight the service as the active project, F5 to run it in VisualStudio, it will start up in the service test app. Stop debugging. Then try to update your service reference - worked for me.
I know this solution is a bit late, but after trying the posted solutions with no success, this worked:
When you create a WebService, it generates a .dll file that you reference as your service reference. This .dll is (as most know) not recreated everytime you make changes to the .SVC file. You can see this if you go and view the date modified property of the web service .dll file, in my case it was three hours old!
My solution was to make appropriate changes to the service contact, save it, and re-build the project which will cause it to recreate all the .dll's reflecting the changes you made to the service contact file (.svc).
After this, update the service reference on the client app, and the changes are evident.
Spades
I had the same problem. Modified some of the data contracts. Tried to "Update Service Reference" and did not see the change. Dropped and re-added the service. Still didn't see the change when writing code in the client. Opened my client with Reflector and saw the service types had the change! So why was intellisense still showing old properties? Restarted Visual Studio and the modifications finally showed in intellisense.
I had the same problem, this by me it was caused by GIT Merge Conflict, i was missing the following code from my csproj file
<ItemGroup>
<None Include="Service References\<SERVICE NAME>\Reference.svcmap">
<Generator>WCF Proxy Generator</Generator>
<LastGenOutput>Reference.cs</LastGenOutput>
</None>
</ItemGroup>
I have added this onder the line of Reference.svcmap
Another solution to these kinds of problems is if your namespaces get jumbled in referenced projects that both consume the service. So:
ProjectA - Consumes ServiceA
ProjectB - Consumes ServiceA, Has Reference to ProjectA
If you change ServiceA and update ProjectB, sometimes the namespaces can can change to look at ProjectA's version of the service.
I get this error when I attempt to run the wcftestclient application: "The client was unable to retrieve service metadata..."
What is odd that this happens when I load the program; before the UI to choose which service to connect to is loaded. I presume it's "helpfully" remembering the last service to which I connected, unfortunately this is no longer running and I have no idea what it could be (since the wcftestclient exits when this error pops up).
Does any one know where it may be storing this information and how I would go about deleting it?
If you launch the application from the command line, passing in the URI of the service you want to test it works fine.
Check this folder on your machine:
C:\Documents and Settings*User*\Local Settings\Application Data\Temp\Test Client Projects
All your clients are saved there.