简体   繁体   中英

Is WebGet functionally equivalent to WebInvoke(Method = “GET”)?

This question already asks what I'm asking, but I want some clarification on the answer.

The answer states that WebGet and WebInvoke are similar, and that the primary difference is the Method parameter.

But if the Method parameter is set to "GET" , is it actually functionally equivalent, or are there other differences?

They are simply marker attributes and end up being 100% functionally equivalent. The only thing that interprets these attributes is the WebHttpBehavior::GetWebMethod method and its functionality is simply:

internal static string GetWebMethod(OperationDescription od)
{
    WebGetAttribute webGetAttribute = od.Behaviors.Find<WebGetAttribute>();
    WebInvokeAttribute webInvokeAttribute = od.Behaviors.Find<WebInvokeAttribute>();
    WebHttpBehavior.EnsureOk(webGetAttribute, webInvokeAttribute, od);
    if (webGetAttribute != null)
    {
        return "GET";
    }
    if (webInvokeAttribute == null)
    {
        return "POST";
    }
    return webInvokeAttribute.Method ?? "POST";
}

It is not.

I just spent few hours trying to replace WCF DataContractJsonSerializer with Newtonsoft JsonSerializer using MessageFormatter based on this and this samples

found out (the hard way) there IS difference in using WebGet and WebInvoke(Method="GET") .

With WebInvoke the request goes through different pipeline in WCF stack, trying to deserialize the expected message (method IDispatchMessageFormatter.DeserializeRequest() gets invoked) which is not the case with WebGet .

The lesson learned: use WebGet for GET operation

The technical post webpages of this site follow the CC BY-SA 4.0 protocol. If you need to reprint, please indicate the site URL or the original address.Any question please contact:yoyou2525@163.com.

 
粤ICP备18138465号  © 2020-2024 STACKOOM.COM