Self hosting RIA Services in WPF executable & Referencing SL RIA Class Library - wpf

I want to use a RIA Services in WPF (Please hear me out before voting to close this :)).
I learned about being able to use RIA Services for other clients. Also looked at the sample progam (the famous HRApp) for consuming DomainServices from WPF using RIA Services Toolkit.
Unfortunately, none of it gave what I needed (explained below).
I was struck by a thought when I was looking through the walkthrough for making the RIA service client context & the domain services into reusable class libraries.
My idea is this:
Have a SL class library maintain a RIA Link to a Domain Service class library. Reference SL Class library (now extended with my own entity extensions) in WPF. Also Reference the DomainService as a class library and then Self-host using this trick inside my WPF app.
Unfortunately, the code is not compiling if I add System.Windows.dll to my WPF project. (Resharper additionaly complains I need to add System.dll too... but that appears at the moment to be a false alarm).
My needs are this:
Self-host a WCF service that allows me to CRUD (without me writing any code).
The WPF exe that self-hosts can accept connections from instances of the same executable running within LAN with just firewall configuration (where needed). In other words, I want the application to work as a server for its own copies running on other machines OR a standalone client
Just by changing a Option inside the program (or app.config) I can connect to a difference instance (for data consolidation and other processing on the server)
My application is very simple (3 tables at the most). Very simple querying needs
Be able to use ADO.Net Entity Model (and Entity)
Allows me to extend my entity classes akin to what RIA offers
Any pointers as to what my options are would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance.

WCF Data Services was (formerly ADO.Net Data Services & Astoria) what I was looking for. It's remarkably similar to RIA Services.
It satisfies 4, 5, & most importantly #6 of my needs. I was able to self host simply by referencing the Service assembly solving #1, #2. I wasn't really looking for answer for #1 - #3 anyway.

Related

WPF and WCF RIA Service+EF or alternatives

Is there any way to get full support for RIA Services+EF for WPF application. I've read previous threads but looks like solution's offered there lacks's essential functionalty like transparent CRUD and Validation API support.
Or is there alternative solutions with other popular communication frameworks/ORM that supports that functionality (to summarize - transparent work with POCO classes in 3-tier enviromnent).
You might want to try looking at WCF Data Services.
Essentially what this does is abstract EntityFramework's DataContext over a WCF service using the OData REST API. Visual Studio generates all of the necessary plumbing for you so that on your client-side you can access your data tier remotely using the same LINQ queries that you would use when accessing the data source directly.

Silverlight / Prism / RIA : How to create the optimal infrastructure?

Since days I am reading and researching and still struggling how to create the perfect infrastructure. Since there are no Prism 4.0 templates as such, I came up with a strategy, but I need to be sure this is the right strategy and I would appreciate an advice from experienced PRISM/RIA developers.
I use PRISM 4.0, RIA Services 1.0 Sp1 Beta, Silverlight 4.0, Entity Framework 4.0
1) Client side
I created first a "Silverlight Business Application", which creates a Web.host and a Silverlight client application with implemented RIA authorization. The initially created Silverlight client application shall be used as the Shell project.
2) Infrastructure project (Common)
This project would contain some common Prism MEF attributes and perhaps the entity models that are auto generated by RIA as well as the Service Interface. The idea is to create a simple Silverlight Class Library, and under Properties of the project, I would select for the dropdown ‘WCF Ria Services Link ’ to point to the host.Web project that contains the Ria Services. Then after the rebuilding, I am able to see the entity models within the Class Library and these could then be shared between the prism modules to feed their ViewModels etc.
3) Service layer
Should I create the EF4 Model on the Web.host project and add the Domain Service in there? Then I would extract an interface from the Domain Service and put the interface into the Infrastructure (Common) project. The Web.Host therefore needs to reference the Infrastructure (common) project to get access to the interface. On the client side the interface may be used by MEF to retrieve or mock the service . However I am concerned about the service referencing a common project that contains also the client-side generated entities.
4) Authorization
Also a bit concerned about the authorization, shall I leave everything on the Shell project? Or do I have to move anything to the Infrastructure (common) project to share it?
Since this is my first time designing with PRISM, I might have misunderstood or forgotten some aspects. Please feel free to improve my suggestions.
Your help is highly appreciated
Kave
After two weeks of intense research, this blog couldn't put it better together:
http://blogs.msdn.com/b/dphill/archive/2009/08/17/prism-and-net-ria-services.aspx
There're nice Quick Start templates for Prism, I found it at blog http://blogs.msdn.com/b/dphill so it looks quite nice, I used it also created RIA Service library so everything now is separated:
1) WEb project
2) Ria Service on web
3) generated RiaService client code as separate and shared assembly and it is used by modules. that's it.

Sorrow with Data Transfer Objects in Silverlight / WCF

I have a Silverlight app hosted in an Azure web role ASP project. The ASP project exposes a WCF service.
I would like to have one set of class definitions for the data types. Someone recommended making a third project (class library) and adding a reference to it from the SL and ASP. I started doing this, but the Silverlight project complained that you can only add references to Silverlight projects.
I then made a Silverlight class library and moved the data classes to it. However, I to add some .dll references, like to the Windows Azure storage client. Then the Silverlight class library tells me I can only add references to Silverlight 4-friendly .dlls, of which Windows Azure isn't one. Fantastic.
Is there something I can do to get around this, or am I stuck with a less elegant, redundant solution?
Multi-targeting is your best bet. There is an article explaining this in Visual Studio from Microsoft at:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff921092(PandP.20).aspx
Basically, you create both your Silverlight and standard .NET class libraries, each with a different name, and then include the same files into each. Usually the files are actually only in one of the class libraries and then soft linked in the second one.
The key is to ensure that the code in your files is compatible with both runtimes. If there needs to be separate implementation for some of your methods depending on the runtime then you need to separate these with pragmas (i.e. #ifdef SILVERLIGHT...).
If you're only doing data structures, however, there should be no issues as long as Silverlight supports the objects you are using.
See if using linked files as per this answer does the trick for you.

Silverlight and n-Tier Development - -How is it done?

I've asked several questions on Silverlight the last day or two (I have no experience with it), and I've had some high-level questions answered. I have another high-level question. How is N-Tier development done with Silverlight? What I am considering is a browser based UI and then a c# back-end containing all the business logic and database code. How would a Silverlight client application communicate with such a back-end sitting on another server? Would it be done via Web service calls, WCF or something else? What is standard practice?
Thanks!
For the projects I've worked on. Typical practice is Silverlight providing a client and then communicating back to the back-end via WCF services.
The business logic is then spread/duplicated across the client and the backend.
You'll want to be looking at the WCF RIA Services for this. In combination with Entity Framework this will approach the sort of thing you need.
The Entity Framework creates model that you can extend and include some business logic.
The Domain Services then allow you to expose access to the model and any other range of operations you need via WCF.
The tooling that RIA Services adds to the Visual Studio will dynamically create in the Silverlight application the client side of this Domain service. There is even a provision for you create C# source that is shared by both by both Silverlight and the server code.
If its Silverlight 3 RIA is a better choice to work with. AnthonyWJones has pointed it right, There is a provision to have a shared Source between Client and Server usually Entities code should be shared in both Client and Server to get full advantage of RIA validation and other stuff.

RIA Services versus WCF Services

I'm rewriting an LOB application whose architecture is like this:
Silverlight && Windows Mobile -> WCF
-> Entity Framework -> Database.
The mobile app was supposed to be able to do certain things as the silverlight app. What benefits would I get from using RIA Services here? Whats the advantage and disadvantage of RIA Services over WCF?
.NET RIA Services was created for Silverlight that runs in the browser. Silverlight is running a special version of the the .NET framework and in an N-tier application Silverlight is unable to share assemblies with the server side. By employing some clever code generation .NET RIA Services makes this gap almost invisible to the developer. Classes similar to the domain classes are code generated on the client side, and ways to move objects back and forth between client and server are also made available.
You will probably be able to call into a .NET RIA Service from Windows Mobile, but I don't think it will particular easy and currently you may in fact have to reverse engineer what's sent on the wire (JSON is used). WCF on the other has a much more broad scope, but doesn't support Silverlight development in the same way that .NET RIA Services does.
If you are writing a Silverlight only N-tier application .NET RIA Services are very powerful. If however Silverlight is only one of several clients WCF is probably a better choice.
Please note the .NET RIA Services hasn't been released yet, but a preview is available for download.
WCF RIA Services introduces several solutions for challenges you run into when using WCF from Silverlight. For instance, asynchronous loading of queries using the EntityQuery<T> is much easier than the Begin..End solution offered by WCF. Also, RIA provides integrated change tracking from your client that allow to submit or reject multiple changes as one change set. RIA will bundle all these changes into one request, but from your Domain Service it behaves as it were individual calls. As a long time WCF developer I can tell you that that is a breeze.
Ria services are created just to be used with Silverlight. They are substantially a standard "package" ready to be used by Silverlight. The advantage is that you have a lot of services without need to write code i.e.:
Support for data annotations
Support for membership provider and login
Support for transferring to silverlight server side generated exceptions. There is a difficulty in silverlight that make difficultthe normal error transfer of exception through FaultContract. The point is that the browser is not able to handle all error codes. Ria services solve this with a trick
All things done by Ria can be done with WCF and with other available software and in particular with Wcf data services. For instance for data annotations I found this library that do a better job than Ria services, support for membership just require activating the already existing membership endpoint of a WCF service, and finally the exception problem is easily resolved by writing a WCF behaviour. Code is available here:http://www.silverlightshow.net/Storage/10Tips.zip
The point is that with Ria Service you have all this in a mouse click!. On the other side Ria Services are really difficult to customize...so if you don't like the standard solution they offer you simply can't use them
RIA Services is built on top of WCF. With the PDC release, this will be much more evident. RIA Services simplifies the client-side programming model so that it matches very closely with your server-side DomainService and entities.
Regardless to the answer:
RIA Services is built on top of WCF.
With the PDC release, this will be
much more evident. RIA Services
simplifies the client-side programming
model so that it matches very closely
with your server-side DomainService
and entities.
For me (and I guess that for the topic author) it is not clear what RIA services provide also besides access to the DomainService (which is same thing provided by WCF)?
Thanks.
Until there is a formal release of WCF RIA Services, I don't think there is a definitive answer to this question. As of the current Beta (for VS 2008, SL 3), RIA Services does not hide the asynchronous nature of service calls; you still need to provide a callback method. Also, RIA Services does not currently support user-defined classes (or collections of user-defined classes) as either parameters or return values on RIA service calls. I'm also running into trouble providing non-editable entity classes through RIA Services. (The error says the entity collection isn't editable. Yeah, that is actually what I want....)
At this point, I need to fall back and take another look at making plain old WCF work. That's not so simple, given the size of the application we're developing, but it seems to be the workable solution until MS fixes some of the current problems with RIA Services.
.NET RIA Services had been named as WCF RIA Services in PDC which was held in November 2009. Since it is built on top of WCF, hence the name WCF RIA Services.
You'll need to use WCF RIA Services for building N tier application involving database(or any information that needs to be carried along the tiers).

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