Custom 404 Error Pages Asp.net
Websites Community Support ASP.NET Community Standup ForumsHelp Web Forms:Guidance Videos Samples Forum Books Open Source Older Versions - Getting Started Getting StartedGetting Started with ASP.NET 4.5 Web Forms and Visual Studio 20131. Getting Started with Web Forms and Visual Studio2. Create the Project3. Create the Data Access Layer4. UI and Navigation5. Display Data Items and Details6. Shopping Cart7. Checkout and Payment with PayPal8. Membership and Administration9. URL Routing10. ASP.NET Error HandlingIntroduction to ASP.NET Web FormsCreating a Basic Web Forms Page in Visual Studio 2013Creating ASP.NET Web Projects in Visual Studio 2013Code Editing ASP.NET Web Forms in Visual Studio 2013ASP.NET Scaffolding in Visual Studio 2013ASP.NET Web Forms (dotnetConf 2014)Using Page Inspector for Visual Studio 2012 in ASP.NET Web FormsVisual Studio 2012 Hands On LabsWhat's New in ASP.NET and Web Development in Visual Studio 2012What's New in Web Forms in ASP.NET 4.5Using Page Inspector in Visual Studio 2012Monitoring and TelemetryRoutingASP.NET 4 - RoutingASP.NET 4 - Defining RoutesASP.NET 4 - Constructing URLs from RoutesASP.NET 4 - Accessing URL Parameters in a PageJavaScript and Client FrameworksASP.NET 4 - Microsoft Ajax OverviewASP.NET AJAX Control Toolkit (maintained by DevExpress)Working with Data Getting Started with ASP.NET 4.5 Web FormsModel Binding and Web Forms in Visual Studio 20131. Retrieving and Displaying Data2. Updating, Deleting, and Creating Data3. Sorting, Paging, and Filtering Data4. Integrating JQuery UI Datepicker5. Using Query String Values to Filter Data6. Adding Business Logic LayerASP.NET 4 Web Forms - Validating User Input in a PageASP.NET 4 Web Forms - State ManagementASP.NET Data Access - Recommended ResourcesServer Data ControlsASP.NET 4 Data-Bound ControlsASP.NET 4 Data Source Controls OverviewASP.NET 4.5 Chart ControlRecomme
resources Windows Server 2012 resources Programs MSDN subscriptions Overview Benefits Administrators Students Microsoft Imagine Microsoft Student Partners ISV Startups TechRewards Events Community Magazine Forums Blogs Channel 9 Documentation APIs and reference Dev centers Retired content Samples We’re sorry. The content you requested has been removed. You’ll be auto redirected in 1 second. MSDN Library MSDN Library MSDN Library MSDN Library Design Tools Development Tools and Languages Mobile and Embedded Development .NET Development Office development Online Services Open Specifications patterns & practices Servers and Enterprise Development Speech Technologies Web Development Windows Desktop App Development https://www.asp.net/hosting/tutorials/displaying-a-custom-error-page-cs TOC Collapse the table of content Expand the table of content This documentation is archived and is not being maintained. This documentation is archived and is not being maintained. Complete Example for Error Handlers Other Versions Visual Studio 2010 .NET Framework 4 Visual Studio 2008 This code example includes elements for both page-level and application-level exception handling. Code Example Files The example https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb397417.aspx consists of the following files: Web.config Global.asax Default.aspx ExceptionUtility (to be put in the App_Code folder) GenericErrorPage.aspx HttpErrorPage.aspx Http404ErrorPage.aspx DefaultRedirectErrorPage.aspx Web.config The following example shows the Web.config file. The customErrors section specifies how to handle errors that occur with file types that are mapped to ASP.NET, such as .aspx, .asmx, and .ashx files. (In IIS 6.0 and in IIS 7.0 in classic mode, static content files such as .html and .jpg files are not mapped to ASP.NET.) The settings in the example customErrors section cause any unhandled HTTP 404 (file not found) errors to be directed to the Http404ErrorPage.aspx file. These HTTP 404 errors would occur if a request were made for an .aspx file, .asmx file, and so on and if the requested file did not exist. All other unhandled errors in ASP.NET files are directed to the DefaultRedirectErrorPage.aspx file. If static content files are not handled by ASP.NET, a request for a nonexistent .html or .jpg file does not cause a redirect to the Http404ErrorPage.aspx file. If you want ASP.NET to handle requests for all file types, you can configure IIS to ma
engine optimization. SEM/ PPCMaximize ROI on advertising spend through pay-per-click management. ContentEnrich your site with SEO content that helps visitors and feeds search engines. Social MediaTarget communities & build brand with current http://www.bruceclay.com/blog/microsoft-iis-custom-404-error-page-configuration/ and future customers via social media. DesignImprove a site's relationship with search engines and users through Web design. Analytics & CROMake the most of traffic with analytics tracking and conversion optimization. Digital Marketing https://dusted.codes/demystifying-aspnet-mvc-5-error-pages-and-error-logging » Bruce Clay, Inc. Blog » Configuring a Custom 404 Error Page in Microsoft IIS Server « How to Improve... | Blog home | Your Pass to #SMX... » May 4, 2015 custom 404 How to Configure a Custom 404 Error Page in Microsoft IIS Server Posted by Melanie Saxe on 05/04/2015 @ 8:57 am | Comments Off on How to Configure a Custom 404 Error Page in Microsoft IIS Server Tweet The 404 error page is a generic, browser-issued web page that tells a visitor when a page they are looking for can’t be found. A custom 404 error custom 404 error page, on the other hand, is a specially-designed page that delivers the same message but in a more helpful, user-friendly way that honors the brand. It can tell the visitor what’s going on and what to do next. It can even be crafted to save a sale. This post walks through the steps of setting up a custom error 404 page if you’re a small business administering your own IIS server either directly or through a hosting provider. How to Identify Your Web Server Photo by Marc Dubois (CC by ND-2.0) There are several popular (and many more besides) software programs used to store and host web pages, called servers. If you’re not sure which server you use, contact your web host and they’ll tell you. If they say it’s Apache — and it very well might be since it’s the most widely used server on the web — leave this post and read How to Configure a Custom 404 Error Page — Apache Server Edition. Not using Apache? There’s a high chance you’re using the second most popular web server in the industry, Microsoft IIS. You can also tell if you’re using Microsoft IIS server
it as part of our official documentation for implementing custom error pages, we've decided to sponsor it. Visit elmah.io - Error Management for .NET web applications using ELMAH, powerful search, integrations with Slack and HipChat, Visual Studio integration, API and much more. Custom error pages and global error logging are two elementary and yet very confusing topics in ASP.NET MVC 5. There are numerous ways of implementing error pages in ASP.NET MVC 5 and when you search for advice you will find a dozen different StackOverflow threads, each suggesting a different implementation. Overview What is the goal? Typically good error handling consists of: Human friendly error pages Custom error page per error code (e.g.: 404, 403, 500, etc.) Preserving the HTTP error code in the response to avoid search engine indexing Global error logging for unhandled exceptions Error pages and logging in ASP.NET MVC 5 There are many ways of implementing error handling in ASP.NET MVC 5. Usually you will find solutions which involve at least one or a combination of these methods: HandleErrorAttribute Controller.OnException Method Application_Error event customErrors element in web.config httpErrors element in web.config Custom HttpModule All these methods have a historical reason and a justifyable use case. There is no golden solution which works for every application. It is good to know the differences in order to better understand which one is applied best. Before going through each method in more detail I would like to explain some basic fundamentals which will hopefully help in understanding the topic a lot easier. ASP.NET MVC Fundamentals The MVC framework is only a HttpHandler plugged into the ASP.NET pipeline. The easiest way to illustrate this is by opening the Global.asax.cs: public class MvcApplication : Sys