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All of the sudden I'm getting the following error on my local web server (Win7 64bit, IIS 7.5). I've uninstalled & reinstalled IIS locally and it didn't fix it. IIS is set to start up automatically and I can see that the service has been successfully started. Upon a fresh reboot if I go into IIS and click on start website I get the following error:
"The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80070020"
If I try to start debugging on my local website project I get the following error:
"Unable to start debugging on the web server. The underlying connection was closed. The connection was closed unexpectedly."
Any ideas on what I can try? I've been doing research on the issue and Microsoft suggest making sure no other service is listening on the same ports. I've verified that this isn't the issue.
Hi.
We had a website deployed on IIS server remotely say www.liveserver.com.
We recently decided to make a copy of the website internal to the organisation so we brought a server and copied all the code from live server and configured it and say it is http//archives-testserver.com
Everything seems to work fine but while navigating and clicking on certain module links within http//archives-testserver.com......the domain name is getting rewritten to www.liveserver.com and user is made to navigate on the live site. I wonder where this configuration is with in IIS...
I looked under properties under website identification and everything is referring it as http://arhives-testserver.com. also thr is a file called securityRedirect.inc and ifor handling errors and all the references have been changed and couldn't find anything in web.config.
I would really appreciate if anyone can guide in right direction, where else to look for probable reference to live site?
Hi
I need to know if a web application deployed in a 64-bit server runs as a WOW64 process or a 64-bit process if the web application's pages are compiled as PE 32/x86 ?
I mean I have read a lot about normal console applications or executables with PE 32/x86 run as WOW64 on 64-bit servers. But what about web applications( all i can compile is the pages which are dlls)? The only process I can think of is w3wp.exe for web apps. Please explain. I am confused.
Thanks in advance
Vineeth
Hi All,
i have a program in vb.net..i use the webrequest to post the data to another page (http://localpost/posReceived.aspx), and use the webResponse to get the back the response from the remote page.
When i run this program, it returned error "The remote server returned an error: (403) Forbidden.". I have no idea on this. Coz my aspx page and posReceived.aspx are placed in the same server and same directory. I supposed it should be worked without any security concerns.
Can anyone help me to solve it. Thanks a lot!
I have the following code:
Protected Sub btnAdmin_Click(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Server.Transfer("~/Admin/Default.aspx") End Sub
that runs when a user clicks the admin button
It works fine in firefox, but in IE it doesn't work.
The values in one of the fields in my GridView's table are just either a zero or a one or a null. Well, "zero," "one," and "" are not very appropriate values to display to the end user. Is there a way I could change these to "True"/"False"/"NA" or "Yes"/"No"/"NA"?
This should not be to hard but my head is not going for it today
I have a gridview that changes the sales reps name every 3 rows.
The data is group in 3 rows for each rep. estimates, job & invoices each have their own row
I want to change the backgroup for each rep.
I am using C# and I would guess it would be in the code behind file
I got this far but can not remember a way to check the next row to make sure
it is the same of changed from the previous row
protected void gvSaleReport_RowDataBound(object sender, GridViewRowEventArgs e) { if (e.Row.RowType == DataControlRowType.DataRow) { string prevRep; prevRep = e.Row.Cells[0].Text; if (prevRep == e.Row.Cells[0].Text) e.Row.BackColor = System.Drawing.Color.Blue; else e.Row.BackColor = System.Drawing.Color.White; } }
Thanks