Using the WCF web programming model one can specify an operation contract like so:
[OperationContract]
[WebGet(ResponseFormat = WebMessageFormat.Xml, UriTemp
Be aware that in WCF 3.5 you must specify the full qualified assembly name in:
<extensions>
<behaviorExtensions>
<add name="customWebHttp" type="NameSpace.CustomHttpBehaviorExtensionElement, MyAssemblyName, NOT SUFFICIENT HERE" />
</behaviorExtensions>
</extensions>
Just like this: SampleService.CustomBehavior, SampleService, Version=1.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=null
Otherwise you will get exception:
Configuration Error
Description: An error occurred during the processing of a configuration file required to service this request. Please review the specific error details below and modify your configuration file appropriately.
Parser Error Message: Invalid element in configuration. The extension name 'CustomWebHttp' is not registered in the collection at system.serviceModel/extensions/behaviorExtensions.
I've implemented a simple custom QueryStringConverter so that you can make qs1 an string[] then have the query string variable be comma delimited (e.g. http://server/service/SomeRequest?qs1=val1,val2,val3,val4)
[OperationContract]
[WebGet(ResponseFormat = WebMessageFormat.Xml,
UriTemplate = "SomeRequest?qs1={qs1}")]
XElement SomeRequest2(string[] qs1);
First you need a class that inherits from WebHttpBehavior so that we can inject our custom QueryStringConverter:
public class CustomHttpBehavior : System.ServiceModel.Description.WebHttpBehavior
{
protected override System.ServiceModel.Dispatcher.QueryStringConverter GetQueryStringConverter(System.ServiceModel.Description.OperationDescription operationDescription)
{
return new CustomQueryStringConverter();
}
}
Then our CustomQueryStringConverter that handles string[] parameters:
public class CustomQueryStringConverter : System.ServiceModel.Dispatcher.QueryStringConverter
{
public override bool CanConvert(Type type)
{
if (type == typeof(string[]))
{
return true;
}
return base.CanConvert(type);
}
public override object ConvertStringToValue(string parameter, Type parameterType)
{
if (parameterType == typeof(string[]))
{
string[] parms = parameter.Split(',');
return parms;
}
return base.ConvertStringToValue(parameter, parameterType);
}
public override string ConvertValueToString(object parameter, Type parameterType)
{
if (parameterType == typeof(string[]))
{
string valstring = string.Join(",", parameter as string[]);
return valstring;
}
return base.ConvertValueToString(parameter, parameterType);
}
}
The last thing you need to do is create a behavior configuration extension so that the runtime can get an instance of the CustomWebHttpBehavior:
public class CustomHttpBehaviorExtensionElement : System.ServiceModel.Configuration.BehaviorExtensionElement
{
protected override object CreateBehavior()
{
return new CustomHttpBehavior();
}
public override Type BehaviorType
{
get { return typeof(CustomHttpBehavior); }
}
}
Now we add the element to our configuration extensions so that our CustomWebHttpBehavior is used, we use the Name of that extension instead of <webHttp />
in our behavior:
<system.serviceModel>
<services>
<service name="NameSpace.ServiceClass">
<endpoint address="" behaviorConfiguration="MyServiceBehavior"
binding="webHttpBinding" contract="NameSpace.ServiceClass" />
</service>
</services>
<behaviors>
<endpointBehaviors>
<behavior name="MyServiceBehavior">
<customWebHttp/>
</behavior>
</endpointBehaviors>
</behaviors>
<extensions>
<behaviorExtensions>
<add name="customWebHttp" type="NameSpace.CustomHttpBehaviorExtensionElement, MyAssemblyName" />
</behaviorExtensions>
</extensions>
<serviceHostingEnvironment aspNetCompatibilityEnabled="true" />
</system.serviceModel>
You can now also extend your CustomQueryStringConverter to handle other types that the default one doesn't, such as nullable value types.
NOTE: There is a bug logged at microsoft connect that directly relates to this code. The code does not actually work in almost all circumstances where you attempt to Query Convert different types.
http://connect.microsoft.com/VisualStudio/feedback/details/616486/bug-with-getquerystringconverter-not-being-called-by-webservicehost#tabs
Please make sure you read this carefully before wasting hours of your time creating custom REST query string converters that cannot possibly work. (Applies to Framework 4.0 and below).
To respond to your comment on my other answer:
You can do a wildcard parameter at the end of the querystring like
[WebGet(ResponseFormat = WebMessageFormat.Xml,
UriTemplate = "SomeRequest?qs1={*qs1}")]
XElement SomeRequest2(string qs1);
This way the qs1 string parameter will be the whole raw querystring after the qs1=, you could then parse that manually in your code.
The QueryStringConverter relies on the formatting of the querystring so doing something exactly how you want is not possible without possibly rewriting QueryStringConverter instead of the little overrides we did in the other answer.
From MSDN:
Wildcard segments must follow the following rules: