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  • Creating Sessions over HTTP

    I've got a sessionful contract that I want to use with HTTP. How do I get the HTTP transport to produce a sessionful channel shape? The basic design principle of channels is that they produce whatever channel shape is their natural message exchange pattern. For HTTP, the natural message exchange pattern is request-reply. This means that if you want any other channel shape, then you need to apply a layered channel that changes the message exchange pattern. That is the approach regardless of whether you want to change the channel shape to one-way, duplex, or a sessionful channel. There are no built-in HTTP specific additions to create sessionful channels. We have a sample channel that demonstrates creating a session based on HTTP cookies . There are several general-purpose protocol channels that provide sessions, such as security and reliable messaging. However, this entire line of conversation tends to indicate a fundamental flaw in thinking. A session has the semantic meaning of correlating messages together according to some principle of relationship. Sessionful services use the relationship to treat the session of messages as a connected unit. The meaning of that session ought to be a more significant factor than whether some contract has been previously declared to know about sessions. If you are scrounging around to come up with any possible session to get a service working, then something is probably wrong. Next time: XML Support Read More...
  • Faking Channel Security

    I occasionally see people asking how they can fake the security capabilities of a binding. These questions often start off with "I'm getting an error message that a message's required protection level is not being met". Now, I'm not precisely sure why you'd want to fake the security capabilities in this case. After all, the application developer is in charge of both specifying the protection requirements of the messages and choosing what channels to use. If they're getting this error message, then it more than likely means that this helpful check has detected a problem somewhere in their design. There are a few rare reasons why you'd want to fake this, but they mainly involve transmitting over specially secured networks. However, it turns out that faking security capabilities is exactly the same as legitimately specifying the capabilities of a custom channel so I might as well explain that! Security capabilities are found by querying the channel stack with GetProperty for an instance of ISecurityCapabilities. This call should be supported on the binding element of channels that implement message or transport security. Transport channels should respond with something, even if it is to say that they don't support any kind of security. Everyone else can just delegate the call to their inner channel (which is typically what you do by default for any type you don't know about). public interface ISecurityCapabilities { ProtectionLevel SupportedRequestProtectionLevel { get; } ProtectionLevel SupportedResponseProtectionLevel { get; } bool SupportsClientAuthentication { get; } bool SupportsClientWindowsIdentity { get; } bool SupportsServerAuthentication { get; } } The fields here should be self-explanatory, you either support a particular feature or you don't, but let's look at examples from some of the existing channels. HTTP doesn't support any protection on requests and responses, neither encryption nor signing. HTTP supports client authentication when in any security mode but Anonymous. It only supports server authentication when using Negotiate security. Windows identities are supported whenever client authentication is. On the other hand, HTTPS provides both encryption and signing for both requests and responses. HTTPS always does server authentication. It supports client authentication and Windows identities whenever HTTP would plus whenever client certificates are turned on. You can quickly get a sense of the differences between HTTP and HTTPS by looking at Read More...

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