Problem:
The problem is caused by the fact that IIS supports specifying multiple IIS bindings per site (which results in multiple base addresses per scheme, in our case HTTP), but a WCF service hosted under a site allows binding to only one base address per scheme.
Multiple addresses example (in our case two):
Solution:
Create a custom service factory to intercept and remove the additional unwanted base addresses that IIS was providing.
- Add the custom service factory to your Custom.svc file
<%@ServiceHost language=c# Debug="true"
Service="MySolution.Services.CustomService, $SharePoint.Project.AssemblyFullName$"
Factory="MySolution.Core.CustomHostFactory", $SharePoint.Project.AssemblyFullName$ %>
* Don’t forget to add the assembly full name: $SharePoint.Project.AssemblyFullName$ or you’ll get “The CLR Type ‘typeName’ could not be loaded during
service compilation” error.
- Create a custom factory by inheriting from ServiceHostFactory and overriding the CreateServiceHost method.
By using the current request host name you can check which base address to use, and if no host name found, use the first one.
public class CustomServiceHostFactory : ServiceHostFactory
{
protected override ServiceHost CreateServiceHost(Type serviceType, Uri[] baseAddresses)
{
string hostName = HttpContext.Current.Request.Url.Host;
foreach (Uri uri in baseAddresses)
{
if (uri.Host == hostName)
return new ServiceHost(serviceType, uri);
}
return new ServiceHost(serviceType, baseAddresses[0]);
}
}
public class CustomHost : ServiceHost
{
public CustomHost(Type serviceType, params Uri[] baseAddresses)
: base(serviceType, baseAddresses)
{ }
protected override void ApplyConfiguration()
{
base.ApplyConfiguration();
}
}
}
Hope you’ll find this post helpful.