err... might have been helpful if I included a link.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc716898.aspx
On Nov 20, 5:30 pm, Steve M <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On this topic, I found this on MSDN today, seems like it might be a
> cleaner solution to the problem, has anyone tried a custom
On this topic, I found this on MSDN today, seems like it might be a
cleaner solution to the problem, has anyone tried a custom message
Encoder?
I found their sample and I'm going to implement it today, I'll let you
know how it goes.
On Nov 20, 7:25 am, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wro
Ah, i found it. You have to set the aspNetCompatibility
Config file:
Service class:
[AspNetCompatibilityRequirements(RequirementsMode =
AspNetCompatibilityRequirementsMode.Required),
System.Runtime.InteropServices.GuidAttribute("09A4A7FA-97AC-4CF8-
B264-305EB987AC5F
Hi,
I am trying to implement a HttpModule but can't get it to work. Can
you please post the code plus config changes?
In the documentation it looks like a HttpModule can not work with WCF.
When you look at http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa702682.aspx
then you will see the folowing senten
Hi,
Could you make the JsonModule and JsonStream objects available? That
would save me a couple of hours making them myself. Your help is realy
appreciated.
Thanks,
Edwin Vermeer
No problem. Probably I should've been a bit more explicit in
reference to the setup.
My WCF service is hosted in IIS 7, and the Stream and Callback classes
I mentioned are in the same solution as the WCF endpoint. Also, you
have to add a line to your web.config file to reference the
IHttpHandle
thanks tenacious for all the help. It sounds like i would just ditch
my IIS hosted WCF service, i was under the impression from this link:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc716898.aspx
that it was some how possible to rig WCF to format the response
natively but the solution it referrers t
Er, "bugger" should've been "buffer". Quite a typo.
On Oct 24, 9:58 am, tenaciousd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> My service setup isn't exactly the same as yours but I think the same
> solution will work for you.
>
> You'll need to add two classes, one that inherits from Stream (we'll
> call is J
My service setup isn't exactly the same as yours but I think the same
solution will work for you.
You'll need to add two classes, one that inherits from Stream (we'll
call is JsonStream) and another that inherits from the IHttpModule
interface (we'll call this JsonModule). The JsonStream class w
Thanks for the info. How exactly are you writing directly to the
response using WCF? My IIS hosted WCF service is basically just
acting like a proxy to a windows hosted WCF service, so they both use
the same contract, but the IIS hosted service is a REST based
service. Is there a way to maintai
If you're going to do cross-domain calls you can't do a POST, only a
GET. I think even if you specify POST as your type jQuery will
convert it to a GET if your datatype is jsonp (check their doc but I'm
pretty sure that's the case).
As for WCF the key is just making sure that you wrap your retur
I am using WCF too, have you done projects that require an $.ajax POST
request to a WCF service cross site? If you have, how did come up
with a server proxy to allow for cross site communication?
On Oct 10, 2:01 pm, tenaciousd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Nevermind. The fundamental issue was th
Nevermind. The fundamental issue was that the json object wrapped in
the callback name does, in fact, need to be written to the Response.
I'm an idiot. Anyway, it's working now. If others hit the same
jquery -> jsonp -> wcf issue let me know.
On Oct 10, 12:07 pm, tenaciousd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
13 matches
Mail list logo