You'll get nowhere in 2.6. I couldn't get anything to work in 2.10 (including the latest, which included "additional WCF" per Miguel.)
System.ServiceModel.Activation isn't there so you're pretty much screwed -- not that you'd be able to infer that from those increasingly useless "what interfaces are supported" pages. Likewise the MoMA tool is totally useless now. It has two modes: the first one crashes, the second one displays false positives. I paid $99 for the fancy version. Which was just enough to tick me off when it didn't work, yet not enough for me to feel like I deserved any sort of support or engineering attention. Mono's 3.0 release needs to be everything that's promised -- and faster, too -- or they might as well just shelve this whole concept. The cost premium for managed Windows servers at cloud vendors is 40-70%. But Mono runs my app 2x slower. So the tradeoff becomes the cost of dealing with the endless idiotic Windows server maintenance issues versus the cost of dealing with the endless idiotic Mono compatibility issues. I can throw money at the problem and easily solve the first case. The second case leaves me prisoner to awkward help pages, broken tools, vague roadmaps, and snarky Novell developers chasing things that worked great on Windows five years ago. -- View this message in context: http://mono.1490590.n4.nabble.com/how-to-deploy-WCF-in-Mono-tp3339828p3341685.html Sent from the Mono - General mailing list archive at Nabble.com. _______________________________________________ Mono-list maillist - [email protected] http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/mono-list
