An Error Has Occurred Cannot Access Asp Compatibility Mode
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here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Stack Overflow Questions Jobs Documentation Tags Users Badges Ask Question x Dismiss Join the Stack Overflow Community Stack Overflow is a community of 4.7 million programmers, just like you, helping each other. Join them; it only takes a minute: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/910449 Sign up How can I debug a VB6 IIS Application on Windows 7 64-bit up vote 9 down vote favorite 2 I have a need to be able to debug a Visual Basic 6 IIS Application on Windows 7 64-bit. Not just for a single problem but for continuing development. An attempt to debug results in an error "An unspecified error has http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8728958/how-can-i-debug-a-vb6-iis-application-on-windows-7-64-bit occurred" from the WebClass runtime. If I do not debug and simply access the compiled webclass the page loads just fine. Therefore, I don't believe there is anything wrong with the registration / configuration of the application but rather this is somehow related to Windows OS security blocking the VB6 IDE from hooking into IIS and allowing it to debug. Here are all of the things that I have tried: Disabled User Account Control (UAC) and rebooted. Modified DCOM component security for machine debug manager (MDM) and assigned "Everyone" launch and activate permissions. Manually added DCOM entry for "70F214BA-94E2-4bdf-8F30-32CB4A905E4D" which is the VB6 IDE and assigned "Everyone" launch and activate permissions. Disabled Windows Firewall Ran the application (VB6.exe) in compatibility mode of Windows XP SP3 with run as administrator option. Created a new IIS application pool with an identity set to an administrator account. Set the application pipeline mode to classic and enabled 32-bit legacy application support. This exhausted my extensive experience of things to try. If I create a VB6 Windows Application or ActiveX control I can easily launch and debug. I've
Live Demo Pricing Support Blog Documentation Cannot access ASP compatibility mode. boulder_bum 12 years, 4 months ago I have http://arhelp.grapecity.com/groups/topic/cannot-access-asp-compatibility-mode/ an ASP.NET page that uses the ActiveX ActiveReports object. It worked great for a while, but now we're sporadically getting the error: "Cannot access ASP http://www.hanselman.com/blog/BugAndFixASPNETFailsToDetectIE10CausingDoPostBackIsUndefinedJavaScriptErrorOrMaintainFF5ScrollbarPosition.aspx compatibility mode". I looked at the error elsewhere (for an AspCompat problem for a different object), and they said something about getting the error an error only during heavy use times. Are there scalability problems with the ActiveX control? # brandon DD 12 years, 4 months ago How are you using the ActiveX version of ActiveReports on ASP.NET? brandon. -DD # boulder_bum 12 years, 4 months ago Within my page, I have the following: an error has [%@ Page AspCompat="true"… …         Â         … [DISABLEDSCRIPT] Viewing 7 posts - 1 through 7 (of 7 total) You must be logged in to reply to this topic. About GrapeCity ActiveReports ActiveReports is currently developed by Developer Tools Division of GrapeCity, inc., and is one of the world's most popular .NET reporting solutions for Visual Studio developers. ActiveReports was originally introduced in 1999 by Data Dynamics, a company formed to offer data analysis tools to the Visual Studio ecosystem. GrapeCity, which acquired Data Dynamics in 2008, continues to develop ActiveReports to fit ever-changing enterprise reporting needs and has also introduced ActiveReports Server, a browser-based report creation, scheduling, and delivery system. © , inc. All Rights Reserved. All product and company names herein may be trademarks of their respective owners. Company About Us Careers Contact Us Legal Information Privacy Policy Terms of Use
in ASP.NET|ASP.NET Ajax|ASP.NET MVC|Bugs Sponsored By Browser version numbers continue to march on. IE9 is here, IE10 is coming, Firefox 5 and 6 are here with 7 and 8 in the wings, Opera's on 11, and Chrome is on, I dunno, somewhere between 14 and 50. Regardless, we'll all be on version 99 before The Singularity. There is a bug in the browser definition files that shipped with .NET 2.0 and .NET 4, namely that they contain definitions for a certain range of browser versions. But the versions for some browsers (like IE 10) aren't within those ranges any more. Therefore, ASP.NET sees them as unknown browsers and defaults to a down-level definition, which has certain inconveniences, like that it does not support features like JavaScript. If you want to see this for yourself, create a new, blank Web site (e.g. in Visual Studio 2010), add a control that requires JavaScript for postback (good example: