I´m porting a .net 4.6.2 code to a .net Core project, that calls a SOAP service. In the new code I´m using C# (because of some config reasons I just can´t remember why right now).
But I´m getting the following exception.
An error occurred while receiving the HTTP response to https://someurl.com/ws/Thing.pub.ws:Something. This could be due to the service endpoint binding not using the HTTP protocol. This could also be due to an HTTP request context being aborted by the server (possibly due to the service shutting down). See server logs for more details.
The code that is throwing it is
try
{
var binding = new BasicHttpsBinding(BasicHttpsSecurityMode.Transport);
binding.Security.Transport.ClientCredentialType = HttpClientCredentialType.Basic;
var endpoint = new EndpointAddress(new Uri("https://someurl.com/ws/TheEndpoint.pub.ws:AService"));
var thing= new TheEndpoint.AService_PortTypeClient(binding, endpoint);
thing.ClientCredentials.UserName.UserName = "usrn";
thing.ClientCredentials.UserName.Password = "passw";
var response = await thing.getSomethingAsync("id").ConfigureAwait(false);
}
finally
{
await thing.CloseAsync().ConfigureAwait(false);
}
Based on the old config where it works calling the service is like this, what am I missing?
<bindings>
<basicHttpsBinding>
<binding name="TheEndpoint_pub_ws_AService_Binder" closeTimeout="00:02:00"
openTimeout="00:02:00" receiveTimeout="00:03:00" sendTimeout="00:03:00">
<security mode="Transport">
<transport clientCredentialType="Basic" />
<message clientCredentialType="UserName" algorithmSuite="Default" />
</security>
</binding>
</basicHttpsBinding>
</bindings>
<client>
<endpoint address="https://someurl.com/ws/Thing.pub.ws:AService"
binding="basicHttpsBinding" bindingConfiguration="TheEndpoint_pub_ws_AService_Binder"
contract="TheEndpoint.AService_PortType" name="TheEndpoint_pub_ws_AService_Port" />
</client>
I´m just unable to find lot of information on this online. Hope you can help me.
UPDATE Per Sixto Saez suggestion I got the endpoint to reveal its error and it is
The HTTP request is unauthorized with client authentication scheme 'Basic'. The authentication header received from the server was 'Basic realm="Integration Server", encoding="UTF-8"'.
I´ll try to find out what to do and post the result here if successful.
UPDATE 2
Ok now I tried to move to the new syntax with this code here
ChannelFactory<IAService> factory = null;
IAService serviceProxy = null;
Binding binding = null;
try
{
binding = new BasicHttpsBinding(BasicHttpsSecurityMode.Transport);
factory = new ChannelFactory<IAService>(binding, new EndpointAddress(new Uri("https://someurl.com/ws/TheEndpoint.pub.ws:AService")));
factory.Credentials.UserName.UserName = "usrn";
factory.Credentials.UserName.Password = "passw";
serviceProxy = factory.CreateChannel();
var result = await serviceProxy.getSomethingAsync("id").ConfigureAwait(false);
factory.Close();
((ICommunicationObject)serviceProxy).Close();
}
catch (MessageSecurityException ex)
{
//error caught here
throw;
}
but I still get the same (slightly different) error. It now has 'Anonymous' instead of 'Basic' and is now missing ", encoding="UTF-8" at the end.
The HTTP request is unauthorized with client authentication scheme 'Anonymous'. The authentication header received from the server was 'Basic realm="Integration Server"'.
Is the problem at my side or the servers?
Obviously my SOAP "skills" are greatly lacking now days, but I have just about tried every config combo I can think of with this new approach without luck. Hope somebody can point me in the right direction.
Ok this answer is for those who are trying to connect to a WCF service from a .net Core project.
Here is the solution to my problem, using the new .net Core WCF syntax/library.
UPDATE
I got the following exception using the code above
Which seems to be something that is broken (or needs addressing) by the WCF team.
So I had to do the following to make it work (based on this GitHub issue)
But your requirements will probably be different. So here are the resources you might need to help you connecting to your WCF service are here:
The tests helped me a lot but they where somewhat hard to find (I had help, thank you Zhenlan for answering my wcf github issue)
So I had to do this and used the WCF Web Service Reference Provider Tool.
The apparent need, according to responses like those here, for all the roundabout business with Bindings and Factories and Proxies seemed strange, considering that this all appeared to be part of the imported class.
Not being able to find a straightforward official "HowTo", I will post my findings as to the simplest setup I was able to cobble together to fit my requirements with Digest authentication:
Now, if you don't need to do any authentication simply doing:
Should be sufficient.
The
ServiceName_PortClient
class was generated as such by the import tool, whereServiceName
was the name of the service I was importing.Of course it seems to be more in the spirit of the imported code to place the configuration in a partial
ServiceName_PortClient
class along the lines of:To consume a SOAP service from .NET core, adding connected service from the project UI does not work.
Option 1: Use dotnet-svcutil CLI. Prerequisite: VS 2017, Version 15.5 or above
Go to app.csproj file and add below references:
Rebuild solution.
Option 2 In case you need to refer more than one SOAP sevice,
You can use the
ChannelFactory
class even in puredotnet core
. It is fairly simple.You can find a working GitHub example here.
Don't forget to change between
BasicHttpBinding
andBasicHttpsBinding
depending on whether you are usingHTTP
orHTTPS
in theURL
.For those who are trying to do the same with NTLM and .Net Core and wondering what some of the variables are defined as, I clarified the code to look like:
IAService_PortType
is the service reference you created if you followed the guide on https://joshuachini.com/2017/07/13/calling-a-soap-service-from-asp-net-core-or-net-core/