This is a first for me. I have an older Win 2003 R2 server running IIS6. My customer has CFM pages as well as some classic ASP pages. The CFM pages work fine. when I try to browse for the ASP pages (Remember, CLASSIC ASP NOT ASP.NET) I get a page cannot be found. If I change the extension to urlinfo.html, the page comes up with no processing of course.
I have tried the aspnet_iisreg function but the issue still happens.
any ideas on how to fix this? I am stuck.
I did some classic asp with a newer version of IIS, hence it may be not relevant but still I have two ideas for your consideration.
In Windows Features (I'm using Win7), at World Wide Web Services\Application Development Features check whether ASP is enabled. I believe that on Win 2003 these were called the Web Service Extensions area and Active Server Pages.
If (1) did not help, check the Handler Mappings for your page. If the *.asp mapping is missing you should add it. In my case it is added with following options:
Request path: *.asp
Module: IsapiModule
Executable: %windir%\system32\inetsrv\asp.dll
Name: ASP_Classic (you can call it in whatever way you want)
Hope it helps!
Related
I am trying to set up my Windows Server 2012 to run an ASP.NET website. The website can serve html pages and .svc pages, but whenever I visit an .aspx page, it will simply time out.
Error 118 (net::ERR_CONNECTION_TIMED_OUT)
If I would at least get some sort of error description, I could go from there, but I just get a timeout message, as if the server is completely unavailable, so I am stuck with this problem.
It seems the aspx pages are not loaded at all, since I've already tried drastic measures such as putting a "throw Exception" in the first line of Page_Load.
If I create a new site and put just an aspx page in there, it executes fine.
The Event Log is not showing anything in relation to this.
Does anyone have any suggestions?
Creating a new web site in IIS8 and pointing to the same folder made it work. Now the site is working fine and running code as normal.
My guess is, that if I created the website before installing all needed features, they were not part of that site. Now, after installing a new site, it contains all the current features.
It doesn't make TOO much sense, though, as the server had ASP.NET 4.5 from installation (it's Windows Server 2012).
Open up the Web Platform Installer.
Now look for IIS: ASP.NET 4.5 and install that.
I had the same problem as everyone else and nothing worked until I did that.
There is a difference between installing dotNET on your computer/server and dotNET for IIS.
I am having a problem setting up a website under IIS 7. I have created an application and the application pool for the application. Application pool is using .Net Framework 4.0 as my .net app is written in .Net Framework 4.0. Application pool is set to use classic Pipeline Mode. MIME Types have been automatically added to .asp & .aspx.
When I run the website windows explorer is showing me "View Downloads" and trying to download "application name localhost" when it downloads the file I notice that its the html of my default.aspx. I have checked Default Document and it contains Default.aspx.
If I remove .asp & .aspx MIME Types then I get an error: HTTP Error 404.17 - Not Found The requested content appears to be script and will not be served by the static file handler.
I have seen this problem many times. IIS is not serving aspx pages and most likely is not running for the entire server or that site.
For the entire server: Check to see if iis world wide web service is running.
For the site alone: Hit run inside IIS.
You can easily know if IIS is running properly by going to IIS and hit the browse option from inside a web site.
With the data you have put these are the things I would try in order if I were you:
Check in Server Manager/ Features if ASP.NET is installed (ServerManager/Roles/Web Server(IIS) look for ASP.NET
Check IIS Manager if everything is ok by:
Try to browse a test.html file to see if you are able to browse normal
Check Basic settings by clicking Test Settings
Check Handler Mappings to see if aspx is there.
Try to browse a sample test.aspx page with test data.
Check Application pool settings.
Reinstall Framework 4.0
Reboot machine ( a classical)
If you gave us more info and/or the ouput of my proposed tests maybe can help more. Good Luck :)
I had the 404.17 error happening on a server today. As you and cad mentioned, I checked the framework of the Application Pool that my site was using to make sure it was set to ASP.Net 4.0, and it was. What happened in my case is that my site was not using the application pool that I thought it was. My site was nested under another site, meaning my site pointed to a subfolder but another site was pointing to the root folder. Even though I had my site set to use the ASP.Net 4.0 Application Pool, the root site used a different Pool that had ASP.Net turned off, it was set to "No managed code". When I set the framework to 4.0 for the Pool the parent site was using, then my site started working.
In my case the solution was fixing the Handler mappings as explained here: http://forums.iis.net/post/1943489.aspx
IIS Manager->high-light you web site->click Handler Mappings icon on
the home pane->click Revert to Parent...
on the right Actions pane
I have standard ASP.NET 4 application. Inside this application there are also few razor (e.g. test.cshtml) files. ASP.NET application works however if I point browser to /test file (without extension). IIS (static file handler) returns 404.
The same application and even the standalone .cshtml files are working on local machine (with IIS7.5/Win7) and a server with (IIS7.5/Win2008R2), however it does not work the server with IIS7.0/Win2008.
MVC3 is installed on both machines, app pools on both machines are .NET 4.0 integrated.
How the .cshtml handlers works? When the IIS decides to use static file handler and when the .cshtml handler? What else should I check?
EDIT:
Clarification - I am not actually using whole MVC framework, it is just like plain-old .ASPX or PHP file. No controllers, no routes, no 'views'. I am using it for a simple script in addition to old ASP.NET application.
I think it is not a programming issue, since it works on local computer, but rather a configuration issue - the IIS on the Win2008 server might not be configured properly.
EDIT2:
(Machines with IIS7.5 works, only machine with IIS7.0 does not work. But I am not sure whether it is a problem of IIS version.)
EDIT3:
On my local computer where it works, I have not set any routing. TheCodeKing and Keith suggested that I need to have a routing somewhere. Maybe yes, but it is not in my application. It might be set by default somewhere in IIS configuration.
Do you have any hints where this 'implicit' routing could be found?
EDIT4:
Note: On all computers there is HttpForbiddenHandler for *.cshtml, since you cannot download the cshtml file. And there is also the TransferRequestHandler for *.. (Both are enabled.)
EDIT5:
I have found that on the servers, where it is working, I need to have any .cshtml file in the web root. If I remove the .cshtml from the web root and try to invoke any from a subdirectory it will not work.
EDIT6:
I tried that on another two machines: one with IIS 7.5 and another with IIS 7.0. On IIS 7.5 it works (plain install no configuration), but on IIS 7.0 it does not work.
How to make it work on IIS 7.0?
Yay! After several days of struggling I've found it! :))
One way to make it work on IIS 7.0 is to enable runAllManagedModulesForAllRequests:
<modules runAllManagedModulesForAllRequests="true" />
(Although, on IIS 7.5 it works even with the default value runAllManagedModulesForAllRequests="false".)
Don't ask me why:) Maybe someone can explain that.
Not sure if this is your particular problem, but it sounds like ASP.NET Web Pages isn't running (MVC 3 and up depend on Web Pages for Razor and other things). Sometimes things can get installed in orders that mess up some configuration of ASP.NET and IIS, which in turn could make it so Web Pages isn't running and no cshtml file will get executed.
Try running aspnet_regiis /i to clean it all up.
There is an hotfix for IIS7.0 available at: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/980368
I installed it today on windows 2008 SP2 (which requires an OS restart).
The behavior in IIS 7.0 is now similar than IIS 7.5
It fixed the problem on my side / without forcing:
<modules runAllManagedModulesForAllRequests="true" />
This is a better approach than running all modules for any request (even on css/images/...) which would cause unnecessary overload.
Are you sure that IIS has sufficient permissions to access the file under the /test directory?
This could cause some silly issues as I've found.
If this is an asp.net 4.0 web application, you will need to manually set up routes, create the appropriate controller(s), and make sure that your views (.cshtml files) actually exist in the /Views/ControllerName folder.
I would also recommend setting up your project to use IISExpress in your development environment to more closely match your web server. It's a great help when debugging these sort of issues.
As you aren't using MVC, you would need to set up routing, or rewriting using IIS rewrite module to expect /test to resolve to /test.cshtml. You won't get this behaviour without it.
e.g. something like this in your application start.
routes.MapPageRoute(
"extension-less paths",
"{view}",
"~/{view}.cshtml"
);
cshtml can work, if you set a web.conf.
You can think it is a html but with razor syntax.
We configured IIS 5 by mappping * to asp.net handler so that ASP.NET MVC works. After configuring this, directory browsing is not working.
Also uploadify jquery plugin is not working. Showing IO error 2038.
Can someone please suggest us how to enable directory browsig with ASP.NET MVC configurations on IIS 5?
I don't think that you'll be able to get directory browsing to work with ASP.NET MVC in the same application. When you added the wildcard mapping, you told ASP to handle every request. If the request doesn't map to an actual file, it will try to match a route in MVC. If there isn't a matching controller with an index (assuming that's your default) action, then it will fail.
My suggestion is to split your web site into "application" and "content". Set up the application as a separate web site and apply the wildcard mapping there. Leave your content with the original configuration. I don't use IIS5 any more -- with one exception on an old XP development box -- I'm afraid that can't really be of more help.
If I were you, though, I'd upgrade to a more recent OS and web server. Expecting new technology to work on a decade-old platform is very optimistic.
I am using VS 2008 with a very simple UpdatePanel scenario.
But i cannot get UpdatePanel to work and cant seem to find out why
I have in fact reverted to a very simple example to validate it is not my code:
http://ajax.net-tutorials.com/controls/updatepanel-control/
In this example I click on either button and both text links update.
I dont get any errors, the page just behaves like a normal ASPX page.
What things do i need to check. I've been googling this for an hour and not found what I need.
Edit: Works in Visual Studio web server but not in IIS
If it's working locally, but not when deployed to a remote server, that usually indicates that you're using ASP.NET 2.0 and the ASP.NET AJAX extensions aren't installed on the remote server.
If it's a server you have administrative control over, you can download the installer here: http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyID=ca9d90fa-e8c9-42e3-aa19-08e2c027f5d6&displaylang=en
If it's a web host, tell them to get their act together.
Another option would be to check your web.config. You could for example create an new Ajax enabled ASP.NET website from Visual Studio. This will generate a correct web.config. Copy over all non-ajax sections from your existing web.config and you're set. This worked for me.
-Edoode