Raw HTTP POST with WCF

(From an interesting thread in the MSDN forums…)

WCF does not support raw HTTP requests with the content-type ‘application/x-www-form-urlencoded’ (which is the content-type the browser sends when you hit ‘submit’ in a <form> element) out of the box unless you treat the request body as a Stream.

This makes sense if you consider that the same principle applies when returning data, as you can see here in the Picture Services sample, both the GetDocumentation() and GetPicture() operations return a Stream with data; all you need to do is set the content-type properly and you’re good to go.

I’ve created a little sample that shows how to POST data from a HTML form and parse it in WCF with a little help from the System.Web namespace.

Consider the following service contract:

[ServiceContract]
public interface ISampleService
{
    [OperationContract]
    [WebInvoke(UriTemplate = "invoke")]
    void DoWork(Stream input);
}

Sample HTML form:

ie_form

HTML source:

<form method="post" action="Service.svc/invoke">
    <label for="firstName">First Name</label>: <input type="text" name="firstName" value="" />
    <br /><br />
    <label for="lastName">Last Name</label>: <input type="text" name="lastName" value="" />
    <p><input type="submit" /></p>
</form>

Here’s how you read the input Stream:

public void DoWork(Stream input)
{
    StreamReader sr = new StreamReader(input);
    string s = sr.ReadToEnd();
    sr.Dispose();
    NameValueCollection qs = HttpUtility.ParseQueryString(s);
    string firstName = qs["firstName"];
    string lastName = qs["lastName"];
    // Do work here
}

I’ve attached the full sample.

Hope this helps

Picture Services Sample Released

As Justin announced here, the Picture Services sample was released a few days ago. It’s cool when a project you’re involved in (in my case helping the DPE folks) sees the light. :)

The sample centers around the new WCF 3.5 Syndication API, and shows a variety of cool technologies and scenarios (more info on the Picture Services homepage), here’s a list of my favorite features shown in the sample that will hopefully catch your attention:

  1. How easy is to load and work with any feed on the web (ATOM or RSS) with the new Syndication API
  2. How to extend feeds with custom extensions, the sample shows how to add SLE (Simple List Extensions) to a RSS feed
  3. How to add enclosures
  4. How to return HTML documents with WCF

Click here to download the bits

Other resources:

  1. Browse the source code online
  2. Browse the Picture Services feed here
  3. "A lap around Picture Services", a screencast by Justin Smith