In WCF, transaction can be propagated across service boundary. This enables service to participate in a client transaction and it includes multiple services in same transaction, Client itself will act as service or client.
We can specify whether or not client transaction is propagated to service by changing Binding and operational contract configuration
We can specify whether or not client transaction is propagated to service by changing Binding and operational contract configuration
<bindings>
<netTcpBinding>
<binding transactionFlow="true"></binding>
</netTcpBinding>
</bindings>
Even after enabling transaction flow does not mean that the service wants to use the client’s transaction in every operation. We need to specify the “TransactionFlowAttribute” in operational contract to enable transaction flow.
[ServiceContract]
public interface IService
{
[OperationContract]
[TransactionFlow(TransactionFlowOption.Allowed)]
int Add(int a, int b);
[OperationContract]
int Subtract(int a, int b);
}
Note: TransactionFlow can be enabled only at the operation level not at the service level.
TransactionFlowOption | Binding configuration | |
---|---|---|
NotAllowed | transactionFlow="true" or transactionFlow ="false" | Client cannot propagate its transaction to service even client has transaction |
Allowed | transactionFlow="true" | Service will allow to flow client transaction. It is not necessary that service to use client transaction. |
Allowed | transactionFlow="false" | If service disallows at binding level, client also should disable at binding level else error will be occurred. |
Mandatory | transactionFlow="true" | Both Service and client must use transaction aware binding |
Mandatory | transactionFlow="false" | InvalidOperationException will be throw when serice binding disables at binding level. FaultException will be thrown when client disable at its binding level. |
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