NikolaiDante
NikolaiDante

Reputation: 18639

Silverlight Async Timeout Error

Calling through to my Silverlight Enabled WCF-Service in my silverlight application, occasionally users get timeouts. Whats the easiest way to boost the time allowed by the service client for a response?

The exact exception thrown is: System.TimeoutException: [HttpRequestTimedOutWithoutDetail]

Thanks

Upvotes: 13

Views: 15279

Answers (5)

ashish jaiman
ashish jaiman

Reputation: 389

Rather than changing the timeout, I think you should implement a timer-based callback to the server from the Silverlight application so that the session doesn't expire. This would eliminate the overhead of longer timeouts for all of your application.

Upvotes: 0

Matthew Hall
Matthew Hall

Reputation: 11

I fixed this by enabling compatibility mode in IE

Upvotes: 1

Rick Arthur
Rick Arthur

Reputation: 2430

The accepted answer here did not work for me. Instead I had to cast the base channel into an IContextChannel, and set the OperationTimeout on that.

To do that, I had to create a new file with a partial class, that matched the name of the ServiceReference. In my case the I had a PrintReportsService. Code is below.

using System;
using System.Net;
using System.Windows;
using System.Windows.Controls;
using System.Windows.Documents;
using System.Windows.Ink;
using System.Windows.Input;
using System.Windows.Media;
using System.Windows.Media.Animation;
using System.Windows.Shapes;

namespace RecipeManager.PrintReportsService 
{
    public partial class PrintReportsClient : System.ServiceModel.ClientBase<RecipeManager.PrintReportsService.PrintReports>, RecipeManager.PrintReportsService.PrintReports 
    {
        public void SetOperationTimeout(TimeSpan timeout)
        {
            ((System.ServiceModel.IContextChannel)base.Channel).OperationTimeout = timeout;
        }


    }
}

Then when I create the client, I do the following:

        PrintReportsService.PrintReportsClient client = new RecipeManager.PrintReportsService.PrintReportsClient();
        client.SetOperationTimeout(new TimeSpan(0, 4, 0));

That did it for me! More info is available here, but the code snippet in this post doesn't compile.

Upvotes: 4

Shawn Wildermuth
Shawn Wildermuth

Reputation: 7458

This can be set, but there is an upper limit that is defined by the underlying HTTP library (I think its five minutes). Note that using a higher value will fall back to what the upper limit is. Also, be aware that you may need to configure the timeout on the server as well.

Upvotes: 1

NikolaiDante
NikolaiDante

Reputation: 18639

This can be set in the node of the ServiceReference.ClientConfig file in the silverlight app.

Upvotes: 12

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