You can't. Once a channel is faulted, it's faulted for good. You must create a new channel. WCF channels are stateful (in a manner of speaking), so a faulted channel means the state may be corrupted.
What you can do is put the logic you're using into a utility method:
public static class Service<T> where T : class, ICommunicationObject, new()
{
public static void AutoRepair(ref T co)
{
AutoRepair(ref co, () => new T());
}
public static void AutoRepair(ref T co, Func<T> createMethod)
{
if ((co != null) && (co.State == CommunicationState.Faulted))
{
co.Abort();
co = null;
}
if (co == null)
{
co = createMethod();
}
}
}
Then you can invoke your service with the following:
Service<SampleServiceClient>.AutoRepair(ref service,
() => new SampleServiceClient(someParameter));
service.SomeMethod();
Or if you want to use the default parameterless constructor, just:
Service<SampleServiceClient>.AutoRepair(ref service);
service.SomeMethod();
Since it also handles the case where the service is null
, you don't need to initialize the service before calling it.
Pretty much the best I can offer. Maybe somebody else has a better way.
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