c++wcfinteropiis-6was

BadImageFormatException encountered with WcfSvcHost and IIS WCF host


Creating a WCF Service Library in Visual Studio 2008 on Vista x64 is troublesome when referencing an x86 DLL. A service that calls a 32-bit DLL is required to have a platform target of x86 to run on a 64-bit OS. When you do this, the WcfSvcHost throws a BadImageFormatException when you attempt to debug the service. There is a bug report on MS connect. The workaround I used was to coreflag WcfSvcHost as 32-bit.

Manifest Problem

The main issue I've run in to is this third-party native 32-bit DLL fails to load using certain WCF hosts. I receive the following error when a service operation is invoked that uses the third-party DLL:

System.TypeInitializationException: The type initializer for '' threw an exception.

.ModuleLoadExceptionHandlerException: A nested exception occurred after the primary exception that caused the C++ module to fail to load.

System.BadImageFormatException: The module was expected to contain an assembly manifest. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80131018)

NestedException:

The handle is invalid. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80070006 (E_HANDLE))

This exception is not raised when WcfSvcHost starts, it's raised when the a service operation is invoked that references the 32-bit DLL. What's very interesting, hosting this same service with the same app.config on a console app has no exceptions and works perfectly:

using (ServiceHost host = new ServiceHost (typeof (MsgBrokerService))) {
    host.Open ();
    Console.WriteLine ("running");
    Console.ReadLine ();

This exception occurs right after:

'WcfSvcHost.exe' (Managed): Loaded 'C:\Windows\WinSxS\x86_microsoft.vc80.crt_1fc8b3b9a1e18e3b_8.0.50727.3053_ none_d08d7bba442a9b36\msvcm80.dll'

Again, the console app does not have an exception and loads the same DLL:

'ConsoleApp.vshost.exe' (Managed): Loaded 'C:\Windows\WinSxS\x86_microsoft.vc80.crt_1fc8b3b9a1e18e3b_8.0.50727.3053_ none_d08d7bba442a9b36\msvcm80.dll'

See answer from Microsoft Product Support.

Update #1: Both the console application and the WcfSvcHost.exe host process runs under the same session and logged-in user (me). I've copied WcfSvcHost.exe to the directory of the service, manually launched and experienced the same result. I've also checked the Windows Event Log for additional information and used sxstrace, but nothing was logged.

Running Process Explorer, I've verified the following are the same between the two processes:

Running Process Monitor, and configuring symbols, I see WcfSvcHost looks for the following registry and files, while the console host does not. Process Monitor logs a lot of data and I'm not sure what I'm looking for :(.

HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Fusion\PublisherPolicy\Default\policy.8.0.msvcm80__b03f5f7f11d50a3a C:\Windows\assembly\GAC_32\msvcm80\8.0.50727.3053__b03f5f7f11d50a3a C:\Windows\assembly\GAC_MSIL\msvcm80\8.0.50727.3053__b03f5f7f11d50a3a C:\Windows\assembly\GAC\msvcm80\8.0.50727.3053__b03f5f7f11d50a3a

Update #2: This same exception occurs when the service is hosted in production on IIS 6 / Windows Server 2003.

Update #3: The 3rd-party 32-bit .NET assembly is the StreamBase API:

Update #4: Added manifests without success:

  1. Verified that dotnetapi.dll and pthreads-vc8.dll have RT_MANIFEST. The sbclient.dll .NET assembly did not have a manifest
  2. Removed sbclient.dll from the GAC
  3. Registered sbclient.dll for verification skipping
  4. Added a manifest via mt.exe to both sbclient.dll and monitor.netmodule
  5. Verified manifest was added and that the expected files were loaded during testing (via Visual Studio - debug modules window)
  6. The same BadImageFormatException is thrown under BackgroundWorker.OnDoWork(), and the call stack shows a call to dotnetapi.dll...DefaultDomain.Initalize().

I have verified that msvcm80.dll does not have a manifest, I believe this is the only file loaded that doesn't have a manifest :)

Interesting find

When I load monitor.netmodule in Reflector, it says:

'monitor.netmodule' does not contain an assembly manifest.

Even though it displays an error, Reflector is still able to disassemble the managed code.


Solution

  • Microsoft Product Support has resolved this question: It's by design. The unmanaged code is not loaded in the default AppDomain when using WcfSvcHost or the IIS WCF host.

    A pure image will use a CLR version of the C run-time library. However, the CRT is not verifiable, so you cannot use the CRT when compiling with /clr:safe. For more information, see C Run-Time Libraries.

    http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/k8d11d4s.aspx