I referenced(Web Reference) a web service on my PC for my Asp.net project in Visual Studio 2005. The name of my web service is "Condotti". How do I instantiate/consume it? The compiler does not recognize it if I try and do something like this:Condotti = new Condotti(); // Compiler error?
On the client I want to instantiate an instance of an entity (that has a datacontract on the server side), send it to the server, let the server modify it in some way, and send it back. I'm talking about using standard-issue, ordinary WCF objects with DataContract/DataMember attributes.
The only way I could figure out to accomplish the above is to pass the object by reference. Is there another way?
In researching this, I found the links below, one of which says it is not possible to pass by ref (yes I realize we are passing a copy, but it is the result I'm interested in. Perhaps that is what the author is alluding to??).
Sorry for having to ask this but I'm confused (again).
if i have the web application with many pages like add order page, edit order page, and delete order page actually they also interact with the Sql Server 2008 and i also create web service page call Sales_Service.asmx. i know just i need to put something like query into Web Method in Sales_Service.asmx but i have a lot of queries, i don't know which query i should put into it and how the web page call the Sales_Services.asmx
A customer reported that our asmx web service is continually increasing in memory (mem usage as well as private bytes). We are able to reproduce the problem in our lab with Windows 2003 Server SP2 (fully patched) on some of the machines. The customer is using Windows 2008.
We created a Hello World web service targeting the 2.0 framework built under VS2005 SP1 and a test client that continues to call it. The memory increases steadily - approximately 40K per client request. If the test app is paused, the memory remains the same. When it is closed, the memory drops. Explicit calling of GC.Collect does not drop the memory.
We have run the memory profiler on the service and the leak is all native memory. We have uninstalled/re-installed the Framework on one of the machines but no difference. To our knowledge all of the security and IIS settings are not modified. We have compared app pool, default web site and virtual directory properties to machines that have no problem and they are identical.
I have a .net app developed in .net 4.0 version. And I implemented an asmx web service in this. Now I want to call one of the webservice method in another classis ASP application java script function.
Is it possible to run a web service as a particular user/service account in the same way a Windows service can?I have a service account used for connecting to the DB and want to run the webservice under this account as the users using the webservice won't have DB access.The way I see to do it is to include the Impersonate option in the Web.config file, but is there any better way to do this?
How to create an instance of web service without adding web service reference? How to identify the server address/name where the web service is hosted from C# code?
My WCF Client calls my WCF Service which then calls ASMX Web Service. The problem is i have configured my wcf client and wcf service to windows credentials type but when wcf service calls asmx service the user credentials (default windowsidentity) is not passed to asmx service.
In WCF Service i am able to get user identity by using : Thread.CurrentPrincipal.Identity.Name; WCF Service - i have disabled anonymous access and enabled windows authentication. ASMX Web Service - i have disabled anonymous access and enabled windows authentication. WCF Service Config [Code]....
i have created a normal web service and i want to host it outside IIS. one idea i got is to use window service as hosting environment. i have created a web service and hosted it window service and its window service is running now.would anybody please let me know that how can i call web service hosted in window service binded over soap.tcp. here is my sample code.
I am keep getting an error that "Service Error : wbsTest failed" where wbsTest is my webservice.
The error comes up frequently enough for the user - normally reproducible within a minute or so of working with an application.
A bit of background: An user is a remote user accessing application hosted on our servers over https. He is software firewalled and his connection isn't the fastest but it is responsive enough. When errors do not present themselves, page loads are fairly quick.
I am writing a program to measure the latency(response round trip time) for a web service. I need to have this at client side.
My initial plan is to store the time at which request is sent and then calculate the difference in time when we recieve a response from the web service. Is this the correct way to measure latency of web service. This has some overhead because of storing time and all. How can this be done?
Another option is to attach a timestamp with the SOAP request. But the server should return the timestamp. This will not be possible in case of third party web services.
I'm building a web app that assembles output on the fly, and I'm trying to find the right way to instantiate HtmlGenericControl to create a DIV tag. By default, instantiating creates a SPAN tag. Anyone know how to use it so it creates a DIV?
I am inside the codebehind of videolist.aspx and I can not instantiate a copy of the masterpage. Ive noticed that there are no namespaces around the masterpage or the control is this normal? It is a website project. I am used to working on compiled web applications .net 1.1 style.
For the record I was able to 'see' the master page from .aspx pages but not from these controls. I cant getit through intellisense or even if I hard code and compile I get errors.
My skills are failing me, and I know I've seen the code around for this but I can't find it. What's the quickest way to take any arbitrary URL, run it through your asp.net mvc routing system, and come out with a reference to a controller instance on the other end?For example, code execution is inside some arbitrary controller method. I want to do something like this:
... string myURL = "[URL]"; RouteData fakeRouteData = new RouteData(Route???, IRouteHandler???) RequestContext ctxt = new RequestContext(this.ControllerContext.HttpContext, fakeRouteData); ControllerFactory factory = ControllerBuilder.Current.GetControllerFactory(); Controller result = factory.CreateController(ctxt, controllername???)
I'm trying to get an instance of a controller just like the routing system does, regardless of where the code is executing. I'm unclear as to how to fit the pieces together at this point.
Is it possible to instantiate an HtmlHelper object in a controller action in order to call HtmlHelper.EditorFor?
I would like to call HtmlHelper.EditorFor to return some partial html generated by an editor template in response to an ajax call. If I can do so I would not need to create an ascx file that otherwise would do the call to EditorFor.
but when I tried to add the service reference to the silverlight app, the Add Service Reference window would show me that there was a service file, but the node wouldn't expand to show the rest of the files that contain the services and what not. I got this error instead:
"An error occurred during the processing of a configuration file required to service this request. review the specific error details below and modify your configuration file appropriately."
"Parser Error Message:There is no service behavior named 'AdventureWorks_WebServer.Service1Behavior'."
"Metadata contains a reference that cannot be resolved: 'http://localhost:55579/Service1.svc'.
The server did not provide a meaningful reply; this might be caused by a contract mismatch, a premature session shutdown or an internal server error.
If the service is defined in the current solution, try building the solution and adding the service reference again."
I'm just getting started with WCF services and I want to ask you if you could tell me where a WCF service runs.As far as I have researched a WCF service works as a server-side application (under IIS).I believe it works a similar way to a servlet in Tomcat.