My asp.net web pages are on IIS web server and it communicates with WCF services(sitting on windows 2008 app server) using basic HTTP binding. The performance of my wcf serv
You could also take a look at using a TCP based binding if the WCF service does not need to be exposed outside of the internal network.
See protobuf-net.
protobuf-net is a .NET implementation of this, allowing you to serialize your .NET objects efficiently and easily. It is compatible with most of the .NET family, including .NET 2.0/3.0/3.5, .NET CF 2.0/3.5, Mono 2.x, Silverlight 2, etc.
The short answer is "yes"...
The protocol buffers spec itself doesn't provide an RPC stack, but some have been added outside the spec.
Firstly, protobuf-net has hooks for WCF, allowing you to mark operations on your service contract as ProtoBehavior. This then swaps the regular DataContractSerializer
to use protobuf-net serialization. However, there are some caveats:
[ProtoMember(Order = 1)]
), since it uses these numbers as the field identifiers (protocol buffers uses numeric fields)When used with the basic http transport, this is also compatible with MTOM (if enabled) for maximum througput. Performance of non-trivial messages is largely proportional to their size; you can get an idea of protobuf-net's sizes here.
Alternatively, I'm also working on a bespoke RPC stack. The current build has a working stack over http, but I also plan to enable it on raw TCP/IP when I get chance. I haven't had chance to write it up yet, but I can provide examples on request. Note that to use it most conveniently, you'll want the 3.5 "extensions" dll, too.
Any questions, add a comment or e-mail me (see my profile).