Asp.net Display 500 Error
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500 Internal Server Error Iis 8
Community Stack Overflow is a community of 4.7 million programmers, just like you, helping each other. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Detailed iis 500 error log 500 error message, ASP + IIS 7.5 up vote 119 down vote favorite 41 IIS 7.5 , 2008rc2, classic asp, 500 error msg: The page cannot be displayed because an internal server error has occurred. I need to know how to configure
500 Internal Server Error Iis 7
IIS to get a more detailed error. I've tried setting to true all of debugging options in the ASP configuration. But that didn't work. Can anyone help me? asp-classic error-handling iis-7.5 share|improve this question edited May 7 '12 at 14:32 Mr Lister 24.8k85381 asked Apr 14 '10 at 19:49 egidiocs 8453916 I am using different way to log error in text file: stackoverflow.com/questions/20475502/… Main difference -- error informatin will be stored in text file –Zam Oct 5 '15 at 14:14 add a 500.0 - module or isapi error occurred. comment| 9 Answers 9 active oldest votes up vote 157 down vote accepted I have come to the same problem and fixed the same way as Alex K. So if "Send Errors To Browser" is not working set also this: Error Pages -> 500 -> Edit Feature Settings -> "Detailed Errors" Also note that if the content of the error page sent back is quite short and you're using IE, IE will happily ignore the useful content sent back by the server and show you its own generic error page instead. You can turn this off in IE's options, or use a different browser. share|improve this answer edited Jan 21 '14 at 15:03 answered May 4 '10 at 13:43 Vaclav Elias 2,48621122 8 Error Pages -> 500 -> Edit Feature Settings -> "Detailed Error" Thanks!!!!! –Pablo Martinez May 11 '12 at 12:55 6 If it's still not working, disable friendly http error messages –Tim Partridge Feb 22 '13 at 18:53 If "Error Pages" is missing from your panel, ensure the feature is enabled: Turn Windows features on or off => WWW Services, Common HTTP Features, [x] HTTP Errors –fiat Feb 7 '14 at 3:53 @fiat To enable "Error Pages", I had to go: Turn Windows features on or off > Internet Information Services > World Wide Web Services > Common HTTP Features > [✓] HTTP Errors. –Jess Telford Nov 10 '15 at 23:09 Note: "Error Pages" and ".NET Error Pages" are different. You spec
IIS 500 errors leave clues in the log Email ThisBlogThis!Share to TwitterShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest Yesterday I was playing around with thevalidateIntegratedModeConfiguration="true" setting on IIS 7.5. To my surprise I got an empty response back, with no indication of what went wrong. Looking at the response with Fiddler yields: HTTP/1.1 500 Internal Server Error Server: Microsoft-IIS/7.5 X-Powered-By: ASP.NET Date: Mon, 05 Mar 2012 15:59:52 GMT Content-Length: 0 There's not much to work with here! I checked the event log, there was nothing there. So I started looking around for an error log of some sort (I used to play with Apache back in the days) turns out there's no such thing in IIS. Some googling led me to an in-depth article:Troubleshoot IIS7 errors like a pro. I enabled detailed error messages for my website, still no luck. Finally, I figured out that the easiest way to get an indication of what's going on is to check the IIS log. In the default setup, IIS keeps the logs for each website in:C:\inetpub\logs\LogFiles. Here's a log entry from my logfile (shortened for readability): 2012-03-05 15:59:52 ::1 GET /Somesite/ - 443 - ::1 Mozilla/5.0 500 22 50 1 Notice the "500 22" in the log? That's the 500 error, along with its substatus. The substatus is the key here, as you can look that up inMicrosoft's document onThe HTTP status codes in IIS 7.0 and in IIS 7.5. Voila, my error was actually: 500.22 - An ASP.NET httpModules configuration does not apply in Managed Pipeline mode. I can work with that. Of course, you could also enable failed request tracing in IIS if you're a pro, here's a walkthrough by the IIS team:Troubleshooting Failed Requests Using Tracing in IIS 7. I tried it, and it also revealed the substatus of the response. Still, checking the IIS log was a much faster way of getting an indication of what the problem was, and sometimes that's all you need. So check your logs first, then start troubleshooting like a pro! Posted by André N. Klingsheim at Tuesday, March 06, 2012 Labels: ASP.NET, IIS 7.5, Ninja tricks, server 2008 4 comments: Anonymous31 March, 2014 22:55Just wanted to express my thanks for this article. It just saved my bacon! May you receive extra karma today!ReplyDeleteAnonymous24 September, 2014 15:11I'm getting error