Going nuts with this issue. I have a solution with 2 projects, one of them is a plain old html with jquery ajax call while the other is a WCF service. The html page will issue a ajax call to the WCF service to get a json string and use it for display purpose.
Now the issue is whenever i run in debug mode, both the html page and the WCF will be started with different port. And this has created a cross-origin issue for me when i perform testing (i.e. getting a 405 Method Not Allowed error with the calling type = OPTIONS in Firefox). I'd triple check the call method on my ajax script and the WCF service is the same (GET).
I'd search google but found that either i have to install a extension or perform some configuration on IIS, which i found cumbersome since what i'm doing is something simple. Following one example, I'd add in the following configuration in my web.config but it didn't work:
<system.serviceModel>
<bindings>
<webHttpBinding>
<binding name="crossDomain" crossDomainScriptAccessEnabled="true" />
</webHttpBinding>
</bindings>
<behaviors>
<endpointBehaviors>
<behavior name="MobileService.webHttpBehavior">
<webHttp />
</behavior>
</endpointBehaviors>
<serviceBehaviors>
<behavior name="MyServiceBehavior">
<serviceMetadata httpGetEnabled="true" />
<serviceDebug includeExceptionDetailInFaults="true"/>
</behavior>
</serviceBehaviors>
</behaviors>
<serviceHostingEnvironment aspNetCompatibilityEnabled="true" multipleSiteBindingsEnabled="true" />
<services>
<service name="MobileService.SimpleMemberInfo" behaviorConfiguration="MyServiceBehavior">
<endpoint address="" binding="webHttpBinding" contract="MobileService.IMemberInfo" bindingConfiguration="crossDomain" behaviorConfiguration="MobileService.webHttpBehavior">
</endpoint>
</service>
</services>
</system.serviceModel>
<system.webServer>
<httpProtocol>
<customHeaders>
<add name="Access-Control-Allow-Origin" value="*" />
<add name="Access-Control-Allow-Methods" value="GET" />
<add name="Access-Control-Allow-Headers" value="Content-Type, Accept" />
</customHeaders>
</httpProtocol>
<modules runAllManagedModulesForAllRequests="true"/>
<directoryBrowse enabled="true"/>
</system.webServer>
Any one has any idea to get rid of this annoying issue?
EDIT: Just to add, I'm running the debug with IIS Express that comes together with the VS Studio 2012
Add in WCF Code and Updated web.config
[ServiceContract]
public interface IMemberInfo
{
[WebInvoke(Method = "GET",
BodyStyle = WebMessageBodyStyle.Wrapped,
ResponseFormat = WebMessageFormat.Json
)]
[OperationContract]
string GetMemberInfoById();
// TODO: Add your service operations here
}
My Script:
$(document).ready(function () {
$.ajax("http://localhost:32972/SimpleMemberInfo.svc/GetMemberInfoById", {
cache: false,
beforeSend: function (xhr) {
$.mobile.showPageLoadingMsg();
},
complete: function () {
$.mobile.hidePageLoadingMsg();
},
contentType: 'application/json',
dataType: 'json',
type: 'GET',
error: function () {
alert('Something awful happened');
},
success: function (data) {
var s = "";
s += "<li>" + data + "</li>";
$("#myList").html(s);
}
});
});
You need to use JSONP for a cross-domain call to get round the browser restrictions, and to update your web.config with crossDomainScriptAccessEnabled
set to true to get round server ones. There's a good example in the answer here: how to avoid cross domain policy in jquery ajax for consuming wcf service?
You may also have a problem with GET requests. Try the fixes outlined here: Making a WCF Web Service work with GET requests
Altogether, you want a web.config that looks something like this:
<bindings>
<webHttpBinding>
<binding name="crossDomain" crossDomainScriptAccessEnabled="true" />
</webHttpBinding>
</bindings>
<behaviors>
<endpointBehavior>
<behavior name="restBehavior">
<webHttp />
</behavior>
</endpointBehavior>
<serviceBehavior>
<behavior name="MyServiceBehavior">
<serviceMetadata httpGetEnabled="true" />
<serviceDebug includeExceptionDetailInFaults="true"/>
</behavior>
</serviceBehavior>
</behaviors>
<services>
<service name="..." behaviorConfiguration="MyServiceBehavior">
<endpoint address="" binding="webHttpBinding" bindingConfiguration="crossDomain"
contract="..." behaviorConfigurations="restBehavior" />
</service>
</services>
(Note that both the service and the endpoint have behaviours attached, allowing webHttp calls and httpGet calls respectively, and that the binding has crossDomain access explicitly enabled).
... a service method decorated like this:
[ServiceContract]
public interface IMyService
{
[WebGet] // Required Attribute to allow GET
[OperationContract]
string MyMethod(string MyParam);
}
... and a client call using JSONP:
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function() {
var url = "...";
$.getJSON(url + "?callback=?", null, function(result) { // Note crucial ?callback=?
// Process result
});
});
</script>