Azure Web Role 500 Internal Server Error
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Asp.net Web Api 500 Internal Server Error
a minute: Sign up How to debug Azure 500 internal server error [closed] up vote 15 down vote favorite 2 My newly deployed site is getting a 500 internal server error. I'm trying to deploy Umbraco to Azure. I've turned off custom errors but that doesn't help. Is there anyway to see the error that Azure is throwing? SOLVED I was 500 internal server error web service call able to edit my configuration and setup RDP into my web role. Once on the box I couldn't go to it via IP because I'm using the umbraco accelerator. There was a binding in IIS to go to 0.mydomain.com. If I used that I could see the page from the server and the error came up. asp.net azure umbraco share|improve this question edited Jun 14 '11 at 3:11 asked Jun 12 '11 at 20:29 Nate 92942048 closed as off topic by Will May 23 '13 at 19:27 Questions on Stack Overflow are expected to relate to programming within the scope defined by the community. Consider editing the question or leaving comments for improvement if you believe the question can be reworded to fit within the scope. Read more about reopening questions here.If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question. 1 Is there some sort of Development mode or Debug mode? Usually servers suppress errors when they are in a live or production mode, which prevents possible attackers from exploiting malfunc
the cloud integration team Troubleshooting Scenario 5 – Internal Server Error 500 in WebRole ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ Kevin Williamson [MSFT]September 19, 20134 0 0 0 This post will describe how to troubleshoot an Internal azure website 500 internal server error Server Error 500 in an Azure webrole. This is a continuation of the troubleshooting
Azure Http 500 Error
series. Symptom You have deployed your WebRole, which works perfectly fine on your development machine, to Windows Azure and it shows
Azure Http Server Errors
as Ready in the portal, but when you browse to the site you get: 500 - Internal server error. There is a problem with the resource you are looking for, and it cannot be http://stackoverflow.com/questions/6324463/how-to-debug-azure-500-internal-server-error displayed. Troubleshooting If the role itself is showing Ready in the portal, but there are functional issues with your hosted service (ie. this 500 Internal Server Error) then the first and easiest step is to RDP to the Azure VM and attempt to browse to the site using the DIP. The DIP is the VM's internal IP address (a 10.xxx or 100.xxx address) which you can get https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/kwill/2013/09/19/troubleshooting-scenario-5-internal-server-error-500-in-webrole/ from ipconfig or IIS Manager. This will give you the more detailed error information that you would expect to get when browsing a website from the server where IIS is running. Typically the error and root cause of the issue will be immediately apparent. The easiest way to browse the website on the local DIP is to open IIS Manager, expand Sites and click on the website. On the right-hand side you will see ‘Browse Website’. Alternatively you can use ipconfig to get the local IP address and then open Internet Explorer and browse to that address, but if your site is not on the standard port 80 you will also have to find the port number. You can get the port number from IIS Manager, the management portal, or your .csdef file, but in general it is just easier to browse directly using IIS Manager. Browsing to the local DIP in IE will result in more detailed error information: In this case we can see the following problem: Error Code 0x80070032 Config Error The configuration section ‘system.web.webPages.razor' cannot be read because it is missing a section declaration Solution This particular problem can be resolved by adding the razor sectionGroup settin
23, 20112 0 0 0 Update November 2012 – See my new blog entry Debugging Azure HTTP 500 Errors. This blog no longer applies to https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/rickandy/2011/11/23/debugging-http-500-internal-server-error-with-windows-azure-sdk/ Azure. I was working on a lab using the Windows Azure SDK https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/documentation/articles/web-sites-dotnet-troubleshoot-visual-studio/ when I got 500 server error Not a descriptive error message. The Windows Azure Tools for Microsoft Visual Studio (WATVS) creates a new application pool and web site on the fly when you run your Web application locally. The Azure tools do this to mimic how Azure runs applications in server error the cloud. The default setting on IIS for detailed errors is to only display for local addresses. (See http://learn.iis.net/page.aspx/267/how-to-use-http-detailed-errors-in-iis/ ). To get a robust error message you need to use a local address. You can get a local address by changing the site binding with IIS Manager. Select the web site in the connections pane, right click and select Edit Bindings.
500 internal server In the Edit Site Bindings dialog, select the binding (the line in blue highlighting below), then select Edit. Change the IP address from All Unassigned to *. OK, then Close. In IIS Manager, in the Actions pane, select Browse *.8x(http) . Now when you run the Azure application, you’re rewarded with rich error information. In my case, the root Web.config of the application had a duplicate section in the the configSections element. The configSections is used for registering all IIS and Windows Activation System (WAS) sections. HTTP Error 500.19 - Internal Server Error The requested page cannot be accessed because the related configuration data for the page is invalid. Config Error : There is a duplicate ‘system.web.extensions/scripting/scriptResourceHandler' section defined I commented out the duplicate line and the application worked. Alternate approach – Editing ApplicationHost.config I was doing lots of labs, and each Azure application creates a dedicated web site and application pool (as mentioned previously, to more closely mimic Azure cloud deployment.) As you can see from the Sites pane in IIS manager, I have several Azure applications, and I would have to changeAzure Learn the basics about Microsoft's cloud platform Cloud you can trust Learn about security, privacy, transparency, and disaster recovery Compliance and certifications Learn about independently verified compliance certifications Case studies People are doing amazing things with Azure, hear their stories Azure vs. AWS Which public cloud is right for you? Azure for your business applications Learn about the benefits of running your business apps on Microsoft’s cloud platform Webinars Watch live online presentations about the latest features Get started Learn how to get started quickly with Azure Sign up for free and get $200 to spend on all Azure services Learn more Solutions Products Compute Compute Virtual Machines Provision Windows and Linux virtual machines in minutes Virtual Machine Scale Sets Create highly available, auto scalable Linux or Windows virtual machines Azure Container Service Use Docker based tools to deploy and manage containers Functions Process events with serverless code Batch Run large-scale parallel and batch compute jobs Service Fabric Build and operate always-on, scalable, distributed applications Cloud Services Create highly available, infinitely scalable cloud applications and APIs Get credits that enable: 4 Windows or Linux Virtual Machines 24 x 7 for a month And much more... Learn more Networking Networking Virtual Network Provision private networks, optionally connect to on-premises datacenters Load Balancer Deliver high availability and network performance to your applications Application Gateway Layer 7 Load Balancer with built-in HTTP load balancing and delivery control VPN Gateway Establish secure, cross-premises connectivity Azure DNS Host your DNS domain in Azure CDN Deliver content to end-users through a robust network of global data centers Traffic Manager Route incoming traffic for high performance and availability ExpressRoute Dedicated private network fiber connections to Azure Connect Virtual Machines with Virtual Network for free. Learn more Storage Storage Azure Storage Durable, highly available, and massively scalable cloud storage Blob REST-based object storage for unstructured data Table NoSQL key-value store using semi-structured datasets Queue Effectively scale apps according to traffic File File shares that use the standard SMB 3.0 protocol Premium Low latency and high throughput storage Data Lake Store Hyperscale repository for big data analytics workloads StorSimple Hybrid cloud storage for enterprises, reduces costs and improves