I have the following error after move my website from server to another server
I have already checked iis and make sure the app has an application pool and it points to the correct file path
here is a screenshot of my application pool
I even tried to add virtual directory and add application and still not working
Check siteMapFile attribute of sitemap
The possible reason behind the issue is:
When you create a new web application using visual studio.net, it automatically creates the virtual directory and configures it as an application. However, if you manually create the virtual directory and it is not configured as an application, then you will not be able to browse the application and may get the above error. The debug information you get as mentioned above, is applicable to this scenario. To resolve it, Right Click on the virtual directory - select properties and then click on "Create" next to the "Application" Label and the textbox. It will automatically create the "application" using the virtual directory's name. Now the application can be accessed.
When you have sub-directories in your application, you can have a web.config file for the sub-directory. However, there are certain properties that cannot be set in the web.config of the sub-directory such as authentication, session state (you may see that the error message shows the line number where the authentication or session-state is declared in the web.config of the sub-directory). The reason is, these settings cannot be overridden at the sub-directory level unless the sub-directory is also configured as an application (as mentioned in the above point). Mostly we have the practice of adding web.config in the sub-directory if we want to protect access to the sub-directory files (say, the directory is admin and we wish to protect the admin pages from unauthorized users). But actually, this can be achieved in the web.config at the application's root level itself, by specifying the location path tags and authorization.
in your case the site map section causing the issue. try to remove it from the config file.
You could refer this below link:
Nested ASP.NET 'application' within IIS inheriting parent config values?
Related
I have a website that was building without any issue on multiple servers.
But, when I copy/move it on the same machine from one folder to another folder: I started getting the error
The Virtual Path Maps To Another Application Which Is Not Allowed.
What am I doing wrong?
The source of this problem is that when one copies an ASP.NET Web Site to a new folder -- the properties setting associated with the solution "Virtual Path" is set to the folder name and not the root. The solution is to change the Virtual Path setting from the folder name to "/".
This can be found by right click the project and opening the properties dialog: Solution->Properties->Virtual Path-> Change to "/"
This isn't why your error happened but it may be useful to someone researching the problem who ends up here.
If your web app is running as an application within another IIS site (set via the IIS administration tool) and is attempting to reach resources of the other site by means such as HttpResponse.Redirect, make sure the project isn't set to use a separate IIS in Visual Studio. If it is, it may be firing up inside a different IIS than the rest of the site.
Additional check: Missing global.asax also causes the same error.
If you are creating a new HttpContext and calling any external
service, it also causes the same error.
Key is you should not create new HttpContext, change the existing
context to your needs.
i install visual studio 2010,but i forgot to install iis before it,so now when i want to run asp.net programs,it gives me this error:
virtual directory not being configured as an application in iis,what should i do now?
i see something in another site that said:
Right Click on the virtual directory - select properties and then click on "Create" next to the "Application" Label and the textbox. It will automatically create the "application" using the virtual directory's name. Now the application can be accessed. 2. When you have sub-directories in your application, you can have web.config file for the sub-directory. However, there are certain properties which cannot be set in the web.config of the sub-directory such as authentication, session state (you may see that the error message shows the line number where the authentication or sessionstate is declared in the web.config of the sub-directory). The reason is, these settings cannot be overridden at the sub-directory level unless the sub-directory is also configured as an application (as mentioned in the above point). Mostly we have the practice of adding web.config in the sub-directory if we want to protect access to the sub-directory files (say, the directory is admin and we wish to protect the admin pages from unathorized users).
i do this,but it doesn t work
I am getting this error when I try to run an ASP.NET application without a web.config file.
The requested page cannot be accessed because the related configuration data for the page is invalid
as I read, we can run .NET applications without web config files, but when I tried it is giving me the error. I am using iis 7 on windows 7 machine.
When I create the application virtual directory inside inetpub/wwwroot it works fine. Why doesn't the other directory location?
One reason could be the version of .NET framework (on IIS or application pool level) is different from the application one.
Another reason could be if there are modules used in your web.config which the current configuration of IIS doesn't recognize. E.g. URL rewrite or other optional modules, which you have to explicitly enable before using.
This can be a reason:
If there is no Web.config file in the
UNC directory, IIS 7.0 uses the rules
that are defined for the parent
directory. For the Web content to be
served in this scenario, the
worker-process identity must have
access to the whole content directory.
Otherwise, the Web request is
rejected.
Details here.
You need to set permission for your Website folder or copy them to wwwroot folder.
If you choose to set permission, there are two ways:
Right click on Your Website folder, or
Right click to Your Website in IIS
Then select Edit permission and Add a permission (IUSR - default iis user)
I have uploaded a simple hello world on my IIS server 7 (shared hosting). It doesn't work. Is it necessary to add a web config and what's the minimum in that case ?
Thanks.
Error says:
Server Application Unavailable
The web application you are attempting
to access on this web server is
currently unavailable. Please hit the
"Refresh" button in your web browser
to retry your request.
Here's the script, very basic :)
<%# Page Language="VB" %>
<html>
<head>
<title>ASP.NET Hello World</title>
</head>
<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF">
<p><%= "Hello World!" %></p>
</body>
</html>
A individual, site-specific web.config is not required to be present in order to get a basic "Hello World" site up and running in IIS7, however, it's rather unusual not to have one.
IIS7, unlike previous versions, effectively has the ASP.NET worker process component "built-in". This allows web.config files to specify configuration of not only your ASP.NET site itself, but also how the IIS server hosting your site should be configured (i.e. you can specify (for example) the default document type in an ASP.NET web.config file).
If you don't specify an individual web.config for your ASP.NET site, the IIS7 server will use the "default" web.config, which is usually located in your "windows" folder within the system-wide configuration of the .NET framework itself.
This article:
Working With Configuration Files in IIS 7
from the MSDN library states:
Configuration Files
Configuration exists in a physical
directory in either server-level
configuration files or in Web.config
files. Every configuration file maps
to a specific site, application, or
virtual directory.
Server-level configuration is stored
in the following configuration files:
Machine.config. This file is located in
%windir%\Microsoft.NET\Framework\framework_version\CONFIG.
Root Web.config for the .NET Framework. This file is located in
%windir%\Microsoft.NET\Framework\framework_version\CONFIG.
ApplicationHost.config. This file is located in
%windir%\system32\inetsrv\config.
Site, application, and virtual and
physical directory configuration can
be stored in one of the following
locations:
A server-level configuration file. When configuration for a site,
application, directory, or URL is
stored in a server-level configuration
file, you must use a location tag to
specify the site, application,
directory, or URL to which the
configuration applies.
A parent-level Web.config file. When configuration for an application,
directory, or URL is stored in a
parent-level configuration file, you
must use a location tag to specify the
child at which the configuration
applies.
The Web.config file for the site, the application, or the directory.
When you configure settings for an
application, directory, or URL, the
configuration is stored in the same
directory as the site, application, or
directory. You do not need to use
location tags.
Storing configuration settings in a
parent configuration file is helpful
when:
You want to store configuration settings in a configuration file that
is accessible by only certain users or
groups. For example, the
ApplicationHost.config file is
available only to the Administrator
account and to the members of the
Administrators group on a specific
computer, as well as to domain
administrators when a computer is part
of a domain.
You want to configure a feature at the URL-level (also known as
file-level).
Also, see the following article for further information:
The new Configuration System in IIS 7
EDIT:
Regarding the specific error message that you're getting, I've seen this before on an IIS7 server, and the problem turned out to be the Application Pool that the site was set to use wasn't "running". Going into the IIS7 admin gui and starting the Application Pool cured the problem.
I have also seen this error caused wen the relevant permissions have not been set on the folder containing your website code.
See here, here, and here for further information.
Of course, since you're testing a shared hosting environment, you probably don't have access to the web server itself, and it's difficult to know exactly what you do have access to, administration-wise, through your hosting provider, but they probably have some kind of interface to set permissions on folders/files, so I'd look there first.
Failing that, you may have to include a web.config file in your "test" site as that will allow you to set configurations within IIS7 that you may otherwise have no access to.
Failing that, you may need to speak to your web host's support team.
It should be enough to inherit from machine.config. What's the exception?
I am not sure about the shared Hosting environment. But If you try to create a web application ( try ASP.Net Empty web application template) and just use Response.write("Hello World !") . it will work without any web.config.
I tried my self and it work successfully.
Only problem is that It may ask you if you wanted to debug your application then it requires to add "compilation = true" attribute in web.config.
I am trying to install an app inside of another web app. I have my .aspx pages and some code that I was putting into the main app's app_code folder. I've added my own web.config file for my connection string and such but I think there's a conflict. So my question is a two parter. First, what is the best way to install an app inside of another app, i.e should I use the main apps app_code folder or add my own, and second, would there be a conflict with the two web.config files. I was under the impression that the files pulled from the most specific web.config file. It appears there is a problem with my security and I am unable to access my file. I was attributing this to the two web.config files,
thanks.
If the nested application has had its folder turned into an application (right-click on it in IIS, Properties, and on the "Application" tab, "Create" a new application), you should put the code in the local App_Code folder:
- \RootFolder // Root of website
|- \App_Code // App_Code at root
|- \NewApplication // Seperate application in IIS, has "web in a box" icon in IIS
| |- \App_Code // App_Code of new application
If the nested application isn't a true application (in the IIS sense), then you will need to have the code files in the root App_Code folder.
This also has a bearing on your web.config - if the nested application is a true application, then you'll be able to have a full web.config at the level you want - however if it's not an IIS application, then there are limitations as to what you are able to put in subsequent web.configs - some elements are only allowed in the web.config at the application root, and can't be overridden by other settings.
What's the actual error you are seeing?
Regarding your first question, I would rather have them deployed on different folder. And second, if you have, for instance, a web site inside the default web site, you will have both web.config, but the more specific will override some of the attributes of the web.config from the default web site, but the ones that are not override will be there, (ie, HTTPHandlers, HTTPModules, the site will try to load those, so you will need to add the remove tag inside the HttpModules to remove them).
Hope this clarify your question