Running ASP.net application on IIS - timeout error - asp.net

I was running my asp.net application on localhost in the internal IIS for Visual Studio and for Testing purposes I was trying to host my website on my LAN at home. I obviously had to switch to use the custom IIS web server. I followed all the steps to do this i.e. I turned on IIS from the windows features in control panel and added my web application to IIS and configured VS settings to use that server and gave it a start URL.
However when I run my project I am getting an error message:
Unable to start debugging on the web server. The web server did not
respond in a timely manner. This may be because another debugger is
already attached to the web server.
What is the cause of this error and how can I solve it?
Thanks

One workaround is to make an empty page and you call the debugger from it as
System.Diagnostics.Debugger.Launch();
To solve it and make possible to start the debugger from the VS you must configure the start up page to see the local IIS on the properties of your project. Also I have notice that if you do not have default browser the IE it may also fail. So for me, to move on, call the debugger from the page.

I have the same problem and I solved it by reseting iis from cmd => "iisreset"

Related

Can't debug on Visual Studio 2017 with local IIS - Unknown Error 0x80004005

I'm working on a ASP.NET MVC project which was developed under IIS express and haven't had any problems with it ever since. However, when I try to run the debugger with local IIS, debugger doesn't attach and throws an error pop up stating - "Unable to start debugging on the web server. Operation is not supported. Unknown Error 0x80004005".
Actual error popup
Web settings in VS project
Event log doesn't show anything regarding this error, as well as Visual studio in log mode. If I create a new project on VS 2017 and try debugging it on local IIS - it works without a problem.
I'm using standard IIS site, in which:
Application pool uses administrator account
Port: 44311
IIS express SSL certificate
Already tried:
Making sure that IIS settings are correct.
Deleting VS cache, repairing VS, pulling clean source code from repository.
I was struggling with this error whole day, so any related information will be very appreciated.
In your project settings, open the "Web" tab and make sure you are debugging the app using the HTTPS address.
Project -> Properties -> Web -> Project Url
I am using HTTPS and a redirect and got exactly this error. Although there are other causes, I'm guessing it is the HTTPS one that is affecting you.

"The resource cannot be found" when opening a page in IIS hosted asp.net web application

I'm hosting a web application (.Net 4.5) to a remote server using IIS 8.5. The application runs well locally and on the remote IIS, however there is a single page "/Reports/ReportsMain.aspx" that causes the error "The resource cannot be found." I made sure that the page exists.
I also made sure that the .Net version for the application pool is set to 4.0.However I noticed the following:
1- When I accessed this page remotely for the first time I got a browser "Login" popping up, although there should be no authentication here at all
2- The error page shows at the bottom "Version Information: Microsoft .NET Framework Version: 2.0, ASP.NET Version: 2.0 " although I've set the application pool to 4.0
What could be the problem ?
A couple things to try
Make sure there is not a duplicate site in IIS that is capturing the request
Restarting IIS is never a bad option
Make the web.config itself is set to target framework 4.0 and not 2.0
Usually when this happens where it works fine locally but not when deployed it always turns out to be the third item, a web.config configuration mis-match. Hope this helps!
I had this problem.
another solution can be changing the Application Pool settings:
go to the application pool related to your application. Click advanced settings. Change the "Enable 32-Bit Application"
I just ran into this response, and turns out it was caused by a StackOverflowException inside the action that supposedly could not be found. I was able to see this by attaching to IIS using the visual studio debugger. Go figure. I was doing a POST though.
As Seany84 explained in their comment above, if you have migrated from to 2.0 to 4.0, most probably your webconfig contains some tags that are incompatible with new version. In my case there was an 'applicationSettings' section that caused the problem. After removing this tag from webconfig my webservis started to run properly.
When you get
The resource cannot be found.
error on the server but it works fine locally - it could be caused by your server running out of disk space. Navigate to the server and check directory structure to see if the file exists. Also check your log messages for more details.
Folder Permissions on wwwroot.
Add IUSR with (Read & execute , Read)
Add (machine name)\ IIS_IUSRS (Read & execute , Read)
If IIS doesn't have permissions to access the file, you will be blocked
I had this problem and i fix it following way,
Make sure you don't have any errors in web config,
For finding error goto
IIS > your application >Manage Application > browse
A page will open in internet explorer,
You will find error here, fix it and restart application it will work
I was able to resolve my issue by leaving the IIS Site Bindings 'Host Name' blank.
I have tried all the answers all of them are useful. But in my case after changing these settings Restarting my machine (not just the IIS). worked for me

Unable to start debugging on the web server.

Ok so I've set up IIS on my laptop, I then went to visual studio and created a new test project called IISTest, right clicked the solution > properties > Web > and choose > Local IIS and created the virtual directory, message popped up saying directory was created successfully, I then open IIS to make sure its there and below is what I see - seems normal:
I then run the project and got the follow message:
Unable to start debugging on the web server. Unable to connect to the web server. Verify that the web server is running and that incoming HTTP requests are not blocked by a firewall.
I off to google I went, found this which explains the problem I'm experiencing http://saiabhilash.blogspot.com.au/2012/03/unable-to-start-debugging-on-web-server.html
When I open IIS and try to see if its running on the right hand side this is what I see, I don't get the option to select start/stop or reset:
Would anyone be able to suggest what's wrong please.
You start or stop/recycle the application pool. On the left pane, Application Pools are above the Websites, the options will now appear on the right pane.
You can also run Appcmd.exe, for Application Pool operations
or
Run iisreset from the command-line, for IIS Server Wide operations

HTTP Error 503, the service is unavailable

I'm really new to setting up web servers in general. I've got IIS 8 on Windows 8, and I'm trying to set up a little site locally, while doing some development. In IIS I choose Add Site, give a name, points to a location where I have a index.html file (I've tried different locations, latest in a c:\inetpub\wwwroot\test -folder) and otherwise use all default settings. However, when I try to browse to localhost I get
HTTP Error 503. The service is unavailable.
I've verified the pool is started, and I've given IIS_IUSRS Full Control on the target folder
I've search around but not found anything that solved my issue, and there's nothing helpfull in the EventLog or in the C:\Windows\System32\LogFiles\HTTPERR folder
Could anyone tell me what's wrong?
It could be that the user identity is outdated, especially if you've tried starting a stopped app pool and the next request again fails.
In IIS, go to the Application Pools under the Server, then find the correct Application Pool for your web site, and click on it. On the Advanced Settings menu to the right, select Identity and change it and enter new user and password. Click on your Application Pool again, and select Recycle to restart it.
You can also try looking at the error message in Event Viewer, under Windows Logs, Application, Details tab.
Other answers are fine. But in my case, I was working on a Windows box that already was running some old IIS, IISExpress or any other web site. What happened is urls ACLs where reserved somehow in the system. So, you might want to check this.
Here is the console command to dump all URL acls:
netsh http show urlacl
Check what's returned here, and if anything matches the url you are testing, here is the command to delete one URL acl (for example):
netsh http delete urlacl url=http://localhost:2018/
(beware to carefully note what you do here in case it was not related to the original problem)
In my case the problem was the DefaultAppPool. I changed the "Load User Profile" to false and now it works. However, I don't know if there are side effects to this.
Further reading on setting the Load User Profile option: What exactly happens when I set LoadUserProfile of IIS pool?
Check your application's respective Application Framework Pool - it could be stopped. If it is, start it and check again.
If you're still experiencing issues you can also check out Event Viewer to find the cause of that error in order to troubleshoot more.
If the app pool is running under some specific user identity, then go to the advanced settings and update the username and password again to ensure they are correct.
If the app pool immediately stops after you start it and your event log shows:
The worker process for application pool 'APP_POOL_NAME' encountered an
error 'Cannot read configuration file ' trying to read configuration
data from file '\?\', line number '0'. The data field contains
the error code.
... you may experiencing a bug that was apparently introduced in the Windows 10 Fall Creators Update and/or .Net Framework v4.7.1. It can be resolved via the following workaround steps, which are from this answer to the related question Cannot read configuration file ' trying to read configuration data from file '\\?\<EMPTY>', line number '0'.
Go to the drive your IIS is installed on, eg. C:\inetpub\temp\appPools\
Delete the directory (or virtual directory) with the same name as your app pool.
Recycle/Start your app pool again.
I have reported this bug to Microsoft by creating the following issue on the dotnet GitHub repo: After installing 4.7.1, IIS AppPool stops with "Cannot read configuration file".
EDIT
Microsoft responded that this is a known issue with the Windows setup process for the Fall Creators Update and was documented in KB 4050891, Web applications return HTTP Error 503 and WAS event 5189 on Windows 10 Version 1709 (Fall Creators Update). That article provides the following workaround procedure, which is similar to the one above. However, note that it will recycle all app pools regardless of whether they are affected by the issue.
Open a Windows PowerShell window by using the Run as administrator
option.
Run the following commands:
Stop-Service -Force WAS
Remove-Item -Recurse -Force C:\inetpub\temp\appPools\*
Start-Service W3SVC
Or if none of the current solutions work, look in your website's directory for a file called app_offline.htm. That basically tells IIS that your site is unavailable and to show this page instead.
To fix it, either delete it or rename it to app_offline.htm.bak.
In my case, I added it while showing a colleague how to use that to prevent traffic to the site temporarily and then forgot that I did that on my box. Sigh.
Start by looking in Event Viewer, either under the System or the Application log.
In my case the problem was that no worker process could be started for the App Pool because its configuration file couldn't be read - I had included an extra '.' at the end of its name.
I resolved this issue by removing a URL reservation that matched my app directory in IIS. I had a similar (definitely not the same) issue as outlined in this article:
A Not So Common Root Cause for 503 Service Unavailable
It is possible that your domain requires the account used for running the AppPool to have batch logon rights. In which case you will see this same error message. The way you can tell if that is the case, is by looking at the System events in the Event Viewer. There should be an event saying that the account being used with the App Pool has either 'the wrong password or does not have batch logon rights'.
This is why developers quite often use IIS Express on their development machine, since it by passes the batch logon rights issue.
I ran into the same issue, but it was an issue with the actual site settings in IIS.
Select Advanced Settings... for your site/application and then look at the Enabled Protocols value. For whatever reson the value was blank for my site and caused the following error:
HTTP Error 503. The service is unavailable.
The fix was to add in http and select OK. The site was then functional again.
For my case, My Default Application Pool was offline.
To troubleshoot the problem, I checked the IIS logs located in C:\Windows\System32\LogFile\HTTPERR. Scroll down to the most recent error logs, this will show you problems with IIS if any.
My Error was "503 1 AppOffline DefaultPool"
Solution
Open IIS Manager
Click on Application Pools, this lists all application pool to your right.
Check if the application pools hosting your api or site has a stop sign on it. If so, right click the application pool and click start.
Try again to access your service from the client
Check Event Viewer - Windows - Application. If there is a red Error line made from IIS-W3SVC-WP and the message is like The Module DLL C:\Windows\system32\inetsrv\rewrite.dll failed to load. The data is the error. then you are missing some Windows Setup features.
In Windows Server 2012 go to Server Manager, Add Roles and Features, Web Server (IIS) and add the matching feature. Usually, most of the Application Development section is installed. Here is a complete list of IIS features and their associated DLL to help in diagnosis.
After going through a few iterations of that I ended on the error message above regarding "rewrite.dll". This led to a direct download and install of Microsoft URL Rewrite tool. Finally all websites came to life.
Our server ran out of disk space on Sunday afternoon which led to an application suddenly failing and returning HTTP error 502. The logs were empty so it had to be something that was occurring before IIS even did anything.
A swift look at the event viewer(WIN+R > eventvwr) exposed the issue.
It's a good idea to filter out the output of the System and Application windows to WAS since it can get pretty verbose in there.
The application depended on another one which was disabled. Therefore keep in mind an application can go down indirectly if one of it's dependent processes has gone down. We simply re-enabled the .NET application pool and our other application started running normally again.
If you have IIS URL Rewriting installed it could be to do with that. I suffered issues after a Windows 10 Update.
This StackOverflow post helped me.
Go to Windows Control Panel > Programs and Features > IIS URL Rewrite Module 2 > Repair.
i see this error after install url rewrite module i try to install previous version of it from:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=7435
it fixed my error
In my case, the problem was that another application was using the port that I had bound to my web site.
I found it by running the following command from a command line, which lists all of the listening ports and the executable involved:
netstat -b
If you have McAfee HIPS and if you see the following error in event viewer application log:
The Module DLL C:\Windows\System32\inetsrv\HipIISEngineStub.dll failed to load.
The data is the error.
Then this workaround on McAfee.com resolved the issue in my case.
Quote from the page:
Click Start, Run, type explorer and click OK.
Navigate to: %windir%\system32\inetsrv\config
Open the file applicationHost.config as Administrator for editing in Notepad.
Edit the <globalModules> section and remove the following line:
<add name="MfeEngine" image="%windir%\System32\inetsrv\HipIISEngineStub.dll" />
Edit the <modules> section and remove the following line:
<add name="MfeEngine" />
After you have finished editing the applicationHost.config file, save the file, then restart the IIS server using iisreset or by restarting the system.
Actually, in my case https://localhost was working, but http://localhost gave a HTTP 503 Internal server error. Changing the Binding of Default Web Site in IIS to use the hostname localhost instead of a blank host name.
tname for http binding
This could also happen if any recent installs or updates happened with .NET framework and/or ASP.NET. If you are unsure of what happened recently and if all your apps use ASP.NET version 4, you can try reset them by running the following commands in command prompt in administrator mode.
cd C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework64\v4.0.30319
aspnet_regiis -i
This makes sure to install or reinstall ASP.NET 4 and updates existing applications to use ASP.NET 4 version of the app pool. It updates both IIS Classic and Integrated mode handlers and script mappings in the IIS metabase. It also recreates ASP.NET v4.0 and ASP.NET v4.0 Classic app pools, and sets .NET framework 4 to DefaultAppPool and Classic .NET app pools.
I changed the port from 80 to 8080, that's why this error occur. I write localhost/ in search bar then this error occur. My problem is resolved by writing localhost:8080/ in the search then local host open.
This happened to me on a server on our intranet. After browsing through blog posts and Windows logs, it turned out that a few days before Christmas 2015 (related to a Windows Update?) my web site application pool wanted to create a config file in folder c:\inetpub\temp\appPools, but access to this folder was restricted. This caused the application pool to be disabled.
After adding Full control to Everyone on this temp folder, I restarted the Windows Process Activation Service and everything went online again.
If I'd been a little more elegant, it would probably had been enough to grant the AppPool user full control to the folder, but I never seem to remember how the app pool name and app pool user relates to eachother...
Same thing with IIS Express 10.0 after upgrading Windows 7 to Windows 10.
Solution: go to IIS and enable all disabled websites and reinstall ASP.NET Core.
Also check the address bar and make sure the page is in the right location.
This error can be returned instead of the 404 (Page not found). In my case, it was a bad link on the page that didn't have a subfolder included.
I was having this problem when cleaning up my IIS on dev machine, and I had somehow created a virtual folder for a subfolder of my actual development web that I couldn't clear and was creating conflicts.
To clear it I had to use
C:\Windows\System32\inetsrv\appcmd.exe list vdir
and then individually remove the problem virtual directories using
C:\Windows\System32\inetsrv\appcmd.exe delete app /app.name:"Default Web Site"/{name of virtual directory}
For me the solution is to change Enable 32-bit Applications to False
None of the answers worked for me. So I'd like to share what I found after hours of research..
Keep seeing this message from event logs: The Module DLL C:\Windows\system32\RpcProxy\RpcProxy.dll failed to load. The data is the error. Turns out that dll is 64bit and cannot be loaded into 32bit process.
You can also try the following.
Right-click on the site and 'Basic Settings...'
Click on 'Connect As...'
Click on Specific User and give the new credentials.
Now it should work.
In my case, I had to change my userPass of network because company policies. So, you need to edit your AppPool:
click on Application Pools. Select your pool, 'advanced Settings...' go to 'Process Model' click on 'Identity' and Click on Specific User and give the new credentials.
This might be because of number of connections to the database. I had such a situation and so, wrote a de-constructor and killed db open connection and it resolved.
I had the same problem and found it was caused by permission problems creating the user profile in C:\Users. I gave ApplicationPoolIdentity full permissions to the C:\Users folder, started the site and everything worked, the profile must have been created properly, and my site worked as it should. I then removed access to C:\Users from ApplicationPoolIdentity.
Site wont start on local using ApplicationPoolIdentity, only when using NetworkService: "HTTP Error 503. The service is unavailable."

An unexpected DCOM error occurred while trying to automatically attach to the remote web server

I've two web sites running on my IIS 7.5. Both on port 80. Since they are both on the same port, I have to stop one to start the other. I am not using the inbuilt cassini server. Debugging works fine when using cassini.
The problem I am facing is that when I try to debug my mvc application (which was created under the second website) I get the error:
Unable to start debugging on the web server. An unexpected DCOM error
occurred while trying to automatically attach to the remote web
server. Try manually attaching to the remote web server using the
'Attach To Process' dialog.
The web application has windows authentication enabled. Any ideas?
Additional details : I'm able to do a "attach to process" and debug it. But cannot debug using F5
Although I was trying to remotely debug a simple *.exe application running on a different machine but I was getting very similar error mentioned by the OP.
Unable to attach to the process. A DCOM error occurred trying to
contact the remote computer. Access is denied.
It may be possible to avoid this error by changing your settings to
debug only native code or only managed code.
I followed this Microsoft documentation and following below step helped resolve my error:
Turn off Native Compatibility Mode and Managed Compatibility Mode.
You can follow below screen shot to achieve the same:
I didn't require to reboot the machine. You can also try that way and if it doesn't work then go ahead the reboot the machine.
Set the Connect as property of the website to Application user.

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