I have wcf library with service contracts and implementations.
[ServiceContract]
public interface IServiceProtoType
{
[OperationContract]
Response GetMessage(Request request);
[OperationContract]
String SayHello();
}
[DataContract]
public class Request
{
private string name;
[DataMember]
public string Name
{
get { return name; }
set { name = value; }
}
}
[DataContract]
public class Response
{
private string message;
[DataMember]
public string Message
{
get { return message; }
set { message = value; }
}
}
public class MyDemoService : IServiceProtoType
{
public Response GetMessage(Request request)
{
var response = new Response();
if (null == request)
{
response.Message = "Error!";
}
else
{
response.Message = "Hello, " + request.Name;
}
return response;
}
public string SayHello()
{
return "Hello, World!";
}
}
I have windows service project that references this library, where MyService is just an empty shell that inherits ServiceBase. This service is installed and running under local system.
static void Main()
{
ServiceBase.Run(CreateContainer().Resolve());
}
private static IWindsorContainer CreateContainer()
{
IWindsorContainer container = new WindsorContainer();
container.Install(FromAssembly.This());
return container;
}
public class ServiceInstaller : IWindsorInstaller
{
#region IWindsorInstaller Members
public void Install(IWindsorContainer container, Castle.MicroKernel.SubSystems.Configuration.IConfigurationStore store)
{
string myDir;
if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(AppDomain.CurrentDomain.RelativeSearchPath))
{
myDir = AppDomain.CurrentDomain.BaseDirectory;
}
else
{
myDir = AppDomain.CurrentDomain.RelativeSearchPath;
}
var wcfLibPath = Path.Combine(myDir , "WcfDemo.dll");
string baseUrl = "http://localhost:8731/DemoService/{0}";
AssemblyName myAssembly = AssemblyName.GetAssemblyName(wcfLibPath);
container
.Register(
AllTypes
.FromAssemblyNamed(myAssembly.Name)
.InSameNamespaceAs<WcfDemo.MyDemoService>()
.WithServiceDefaultInterfaces()
.Configure(c =>
c.Named(c.Implementation.Name)
.AsWcfService(
new DefaultServiceModel()
.AddEndpoints(WcfEndpoint
.BoundTo(new WSHttpBinding())
.At(string.Format(baseUrl,
c.Implementation.Name)
)))), Component.For<ServiceBase>().ImplementedBy<MyService>());
}
#endregion
}
In Client Console app I have the following code and I am getting the following error:
{“Sequence contains no elements”}
static void Main(string[] args)
{
IWindsorContainer container = new WindsorContainer();
string baseUrl = "http://localhost:8731/DemoService/{0}";
container.AddFacility<WcfFacility>(f => f.CloseTimeout = TimeSpan.Zero);
container
.Register(
Types
.FromAssemblyContaining<IServiceProtoType>()
.InSameNamespaceAs<IServiceProtoType>()
.Configure(
c => c.Named(c.Implementation.Name)
.AsWcfClient(new DefaultClientModel
{
Endpoint = WcfEndpoint
.BoundTo(new WSHttpBinding())
.At(string.Format(baseUrl,
c.Name.Substring(1)))
})));
var service1 = container.Resolve<IServiceProtoType>();
Console.WriteLine(service1.SayHello());
Console.ReadLine();
}
I have an idea what this may be but you can stop reading this now (and I apologize for wasting your time in advance) if the answer to the following is no:
Is one (or more) of
Request,Response, orMyDemoServicein the same namespace asIServiceProtoType?I suspect that Windsor is getting confused about those, since you are doing…
… and then configuring everything which that returns as a WCF client proxy. This means that it will be trying to create proxies for things that should not be and hence a
Sequence Contains no Elementsexception (not the most useful message IMHO but crushing on).The simple fix would be just to put your
IServiceProtoTypeinto its own namespace (I often have a namespace likeXXXX.Servicesfor my service contracts).If that is not acceptable to you then you need to work out another way to identify just the service contracts – take a look at the
Ifmethod for example or just a good ol’Component.Forperhaps.