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WCF 4.0 Multi-tier Services Development with LINQ to Entities

You're reading from   WCF 4.0 Multi-tier Services Development with LINQ to Entities Build SOA applications on the Microsoft platform with this hands-on guide updated for VS2010

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2010
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849681148
Length 348 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Mike Liu Mike Liu
Author Profile Icon Mike Liu
Mike Liu
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

WCF 4.0 Multi-tier Services Development with LINQ to Entities
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface
1. Introducing Web Services and Windows Communication Foundation FREE CHAPTER 2. Implementing a Basic HelloWorld WCF Service 3. Hosting and Debugging the HelloWorld WCF Service 4. Implementing a WCF Service in the Real World 5. Adding Database Support and Exception Handling to the RealNorthwind WCF Service 6. LINQ—Language Integrated Query 7. LINQ to Entities: Basic Concepts and Features 8. LINQ to Entities: Advanced Concepts and Features 9. Applying LINQ to Entities to a WCF Service 10. Distributed Transaction Support of WCF Index

Adding error handling to the service


In the previous sections, when we were trying to retrieve a product but the product ID passed in was not a valid one, we just threw an exception. Exceptions are technology-specific and therefore are not suitable for crossing the service boundary of SOA-compliant services. All exceptions generate a fault on the communication channel, resulting in unhappy proxies, as a recover and retry is not possible. Thus, for WCF services, we should not throw normal exceptions.

What we need are SOAP faults that meet industry standards for seamless interoperability.

In the service interface layer operations that may throw FaultExceptions must be decorated with one or more FaultContract attributes, defining the exact FaultException.

On the other hand, the service consumer should catch specific FaultExceptions to be in a position to handle the specified exceptions.

Adding a fault contract

We will now change the exception in the GetProduct operation to a FaultContract.

Before...

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