Skip to main content

ASP.NET Development Server always needed a restart

Problem

I work in VS 2008, and every time I made a change to my code / html I had to stop the ASP.NET development server – apparently called Cassini.

This was a little irritating as you can imagine, after scouring the internet every time I had a chance for a few months, I was ready to give up, I even posted on a few forums.

Then I found a great site that spoke about nothing to do with the server, and guess what it is working. It has to do with how .net is dealt with on you machine, and it obviously assumes you are not a coder by default.

The Fix

On the MSDN forums I found a reference to the Microsoft knowledge base: KB911272. In summary

Essentially the HKLM\Software\Microsoft\ASP.NET\FCNMode determines how ASP.NET is dealt with as an app on the box.

Initially setting this to "0" fixed the problem, but this caused a UNC share problem, so then I set it to two after finding this great item

hosting-on-a-unc-share-is-not-supported-for-the-windows-xp-platform.aspx

And now I can change my code and run on the fly.

Comments

Jason said…
I'm having this exact same problem with VS2008. I just recently installed VS2010 and continue to have it, unbelievable! I've tried this FCNMode setting at 0 and 2, neither make a difference. This is such an incredibly frustrating problem -- can you think of anything that could help me? I'm running .NET 2.0.50727.4927 and 4.0.30319.1 on Win7 64-bit.

I'm starting to think the 64-bit is the problem, but I can't be the only one in the world with VS2008/2010 on Win7 64bit. Ugh!

Thanks for letting me vent.
Wassa said…
You have to do a reboot between, have had the problem a number of times since this post and it has worked every time. Otherwise the ASP.NET forums have been remarkably helpful for me. Thanks for taking the tim eto comment

Popular posts from this blog

Bitcoin / Cryptocurrency – what is it and how can I benefit

What is it I started investigating Bitcoin when it was worth just over $1000 a bitcoin. I was interested in what it was and how it worked. A lot of people are saying we missed the boat, but I believe that everyone should at least try put a little money in now, or at least use a faucet (see below) to make a little micro-currency. You can read a Wiki article about bitcoin and its history etc. But what you need to know is that it is a currency, that is independent of country. No one really knows who invented the concept of a cryptocurrency since the person who published the paper used a nom de plume. All new cryptocurrencies work more or less the same way as Bitcoin. So as I explain below I interchange these terms. Bitcoin is the original cryptocurrency. How Bitcoin works The currency releases a coin based on a mathematical formula. There will never be more than 21 million bitcoins (other cryptocurrencies do not work like this). Each bitcoin can have divided into one hundred mil...

iTunes song purchased on iPhone not showing in the library, only show purchased

I recently purchase an album on my iPhone, and then when I wanted to mke sure it was in my iTunes library it was not there, but in the Store I found it and it said purchased. If I clieck on Check for Available Downloads, it said nothing. After some search i found this: https://discussions.apple.com/thread/5551143 Which had this fact: " Music can't be redownloaded in all countries, so depending upon where you are you might not be able to redownload music. If music does show as a category, but not that album, then is it hidden :   http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4919 " I then connected my iPhone and saw that to copy a purhcase your computer's iTunes via File > Devices > Transfer Purchases

Access conversion NOTE1: default DateSerial in VBA/Access to SQL

I have started slowly converting my Access database to SQL. The reason is that I would like to take the application online. After trying to use Access's (version 2007) transfer tool, which did not work that well. I found Microsoft's SQL Migration Assistant 2008 for Access, nicknamed SSMA. Which you can download here . When you install there is a niggle about the license, which you need to download into their specified directory and it must be the name they provide. So about the create table. My one table would not convert and I could not see why. After looking at the SQL command I saw the problem was the use of DateSerial. I googled a few sites and could not find an answer The CREATE TABLE line was: [RequireUntilDate] datetime2(0) DEFAULT DateSerial(1980,1,1) NOT NULL, I clicked on the whole command and copied it and then in SQL Server Management Studio, I tried to create the table and found that if I specified the date in US date format it worked: [RequireUnti...