I'm using the new Visual Studio 2013 with IISExpress for the first time (previously used ASP.net Development server on VS2010). I'm running into issues trying to debug my project.
This is what I see in Chrome:
Unable to make a secure connection to the server. This may be a problem with the server, or it may be requiring a client authentication certificate that you don't have.
Error code: ERR_SSL_PROTOCOL_ERROR
I updated my Properies -> web file so that the Project Url uses a https URL now. However, after doing that, I now get a new error when launching:
The connection to localhost was interrupted.
Error code: ERR_CONNECTION_RESET
Thanks
I was getting ERR_CONNECTION_RESET because my Visual Studio 2013/IIS Express configured app port number was NOT in the range :44300-:44398. (I don't recall having to dismiss any warnings to get out of that range.) Changing the port number to something in this range is all I had to do to make it work.
I noticed this after reviewing the netsh http show sslcert > sslcert.txt output and something clicking with stuff I read recently about the port numbers.
Make sure to remove any previous 'localhost' certificates as those could conflict with the one generated by IIS Express. I had this same error (ERR_SSL_PROTOCOL_ERROR), and it took me many hours to finally figure it out after trying out many many "solutions". My mistake was that I had created my own 'localhost' certificate and there were two of them. I had to delete both and have IIS Express recreate it.
Here is how you can check for and remove 'localhost' certificate:
On Start, type → mmc.exe
File → Add/Remove Snap-in...
Select Certificates → Add> → Computer account → Local computer
Check under Certificates > Personal > Certificates
Make sure the localhost certificate that exist has a friendly name "IIS Express Development Certificate". If not, delete it. Or if multiple, delete all.
On Visual Studio, select project and under property tab, enable SSL=true. Save, Build and Run. IIS Express will generate a new 'localhost' certificate.
Note: If it doesn't work, try these: make sure to disable IIS Express on VS project and stopping all running app on it prior to removing 'localhost' certificate. Also, you can go to 'control panel > programs' and Repair IIS Express.
If you're using URLRewrite to force SSL connections in your web.config, it's probably rewriting your localhost address to force https. If debugging with SSL enabled isn't important to you and you're using URLRewrite, consider adding <add input="{HTTP_HOST}" pattern="localhost" negate="true" /> into your web.config file's rewrite section. It will stop the rewrite for any localhost addresses but leave it in place in a production environment.
If you're not using URLRewrite or need to debug using SSL, http://www.hanselman.com/blog/WorkingWithSSLAtDevelopmentTimeIsEasierWithIISExpress.aspx might help. It's for VS2010, but should suffice for VS2013 as well.
I am summarizing the steps that helped me in resolving this issue:
Make sure the SSL port range(used by IIS express) is between
44300-44398
During installation, IIS Express uses Http.sys to reserve ports 44300
through 44399 for SSL use. This enables standard users (without
elevated privileges) of IISExpress to configure and use SSL. For
more details on this refer here
Run the below command as administrator in Command prompt. This will output the SSL Certificate bindings in the computer. From this list, find out the certificate used by IIS express for the corresponding port :
netsh http show sslcert > sslcert.txt
Look for the below items in the sslcert.txt (in my case the IIS
express was running at port 44300)
IP:port : 0.0.0.0:44300
Certificate Hash : eb380ba6bd10fb4f597cXXXXXXXXXX
Application ID : {214124cd-d05b-4309-XXX-XXXXXXX}
Also look in the IIS express management console (RUN (Ctrl+R) -> inetmgr.exe)
and find if the corresponding certificate exists in the Server Certificates
(Click on the ServerRoot -> under section IIS () -> Open the Server
Certificates)
If your localhost by default uses a different certificate other than the one listed in Step 3, continue with the below steps
netsh http delete sslcert ipport=0.0.0.0:44300
netsh http add sslcert ipport=0.0.0.0:44300 certhash=New_Certificate_Hash_without_space appid={214124cd-d05b-4309-XXX-XXXXXXX}
The New_Certificate_Hash will be your default certificate tied-up with your localhost (That we found in step 4) or the one which you want to add as a new certificate.
P.S. Thank you for your answer uosɐſ (which helped me in resolving this issue)
The problem that I was experiencing had to do with me, at some point in time, enabling HSTS for localhost and not realizing that this would break my http://localhost:someport in IIS Express.
HSTS tells the browser (Chrome in my case) to ALWAYS request a URL using HTTPS. So therefor even though I hadnt even enabled SSL for my MVC 5 app, the browser would still try to access my site using HTTPS in the URL instead of HTTP.
The fix?
Surf to chrome://net-internals/#hsts
In the delete section, enter "localhost" and delete the record from Chrome.
None of the above options worked for me. I had to do the following:
Uninstalled IIS Express 8.0
Deleted all the configurations in my Documents directory for IIS Express
Reinstalled IIS Express 8.0
Deleted the project on my local machine and downloaded a clean version for TFS
Ran the project - it then ran over SSL and I am able to debug
I got the steps from this thread.
Hope this helps.
The issue that I had was related to #Jason Kleban's answer, but I had one small problem with my settings in the Visual Studio Properties for IIS Express.
Make sure that after you've changed the port to be in the range: 44300 to 44399, the address also starts with HTTPS
In my case, I created a self-signed certificate and had it working, except I was getting an error in the browser because the certificate was untrusted. So, I moved the cert into the Trusted Root Certification Authorities > Certificates folder in the Certificates snapin. It worked, and then I closed Visual Studio for the day.
The following day, I started my project and I received the error mentioned in the original question. The issue is that the certificate you configured IISExpress with must exist in the Personal > Certificates folder or HTTPS will stop working. Once IIS Express successfully starts, you can drag the cert back to the trusted location. It'll continue to work until you restart IIS Express.
Not wanting to fuss with dragging the cert back and forth every time, I just place a copy of the certificate in both places and now everything works fine.
I have a same problem in Visual Studio 2015. Because I use SSL binding in web.config
<rewrite>
<rules>
<rule name="HTTP to HTTPS Redirect" stopProcessing="true">
<match url="(.*)" />
<conditions>
<add input="{HTTPS}" pattern="off" />
</conditions>
<action type="Redirect" url="https://{HTTP_HOST}/{R:1}" redirectType="Found" />
</rule>
</rules>
</rewrite>
And I can fix the problem with the answer of Mr.djroedger. By replacing
<add input="{HTTPS}" pattern="off" />
with
<add input="{HTTP_HOST}" pattern="localhost" negate="true" />
into my web.config, so my code is
<rewrite>
<rules>
<rule name="HTTP to HTTPS Redirect" stopProcessing="true">
<match url="(.*)" />
<conditions>
<add input="{HTTP_HOST}" pattern="localhost" negate="true" />
</conditions>
<action type="Redirect" url="https://{HTTP_HOST}/{R:1}" redirectType="Found" />
</rule>
</rules>
</rewrite>
Removing IISExpress and vs directories and using ssl port range of 44300 to 44399 (inclusive) from this article worked for me
In my case, I was getting this exact error running on port 443, and (for reasons I won't go into here) switching to a different port was not an option. In order to get IIS Express to work on port 443, I had to run this command...
C:\Program Files\IIS Express>IisExpressAdminCmd.exe setupsslUrl -url:https://localhost:443/ -UseSelfSigned
Much thanks to Robert Muehsig for originally posting this solution here.
https://blog.codeinside.eu/2018/10/31/fix-ERR_CONNECTION_RESET-and-ERR_CERT_AUTHORITY_INVALID-with-iisexpress-and-ssl/
I was having this problem, I had configured my site for global require https in FilterConfig.cs.
public static void RegisterGlobalFilters(GlobalFilterCollection filters)
{
filters.Add(new HandleErrorAttribute());
filters.Add(new RequireHttpsAttribute());
}
I had forgotten to change the project url to https: from this tutorial http://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/documentation/articles/web-sites-dotnet-deploy-aspnet-mvc-app-membership-oauth-sql-database/ under ENABLE SSL part 4. This caused the errors you were getting.
Another problem that happened me twice:
In IIS Express's applicationhost.config the order of the bindings does matter. One binding could take precedence over your SSL binding, making it not working.
Example:
<site name="MySite007" id="1">
<application path="/" applicationPool="Clr4IntegratedAppPool">
<virtualDirectory path="/" physicalPath="C:\Users\myuser\projects\mysolutionfolder\MyProject.Service" />
</application>
<bindings>
<binding protocol="http" bindingInformation=":8081:localhost" />
<binding protocol="http" bindingInformation=":8080:" /><!-- evil binding -->
<binding protocol="https" bindingInformation="*:44327:localhost" />
</bindings>
</site>
You may have added a binding similar to the second one to be able to access your WebService from outside localhost. Because this binding listens on any adress, it seems to override the SSL binding although a different port was used.
Remove the evil binding or move it down.
For me it worked using the solution provided in the blog here.
C:\Program Files (x86)\IIS Express\IisExpressAdminCmd.exe setupsslUrl -url:https://localhost:44387/ -UseSelfSigned
use the port that your project uses for https.
This is anecdotal as overheard from a co-worker, but allegedly this is an issue with chrome forcing https. I usually launch in firefox so i hadn't seen this problem before. Using firefox or ie worked for my co-worker.
If you need to use a port outside of the 44300-44399 range, here's a workaround:
Create a new site in IIS (not Express)
Bind HTTPS to the port you need
For SSL Certificate, choose IIS Express Development Certificate
Once the site is created, stop it, since it doesn't actually need to be running
This registers the IIS Express Development certificate with that port and is the easiest way I've found to get around the 44300-44399 range requirement.
My problem was caused by Fiddler. When Fiddler crashes it occasionally messes with your proxy settings. Simply launching Fiddler seemed to fix everything (perhaps it repairs itself somehow).
To follow on to other answers about setting the SSL port between 44300 and 44399, I was unable to change the SSL Enabled property in Visual Studio, nor set a specific SSL URL. Other answers, like repairing IIS Express did not help. The solution was to go into the .vs folder parallel to the sln file, open the config subfolder, and then edit the applicationhost.config file. Then, I added the https line manually and restarted VS.
<binding protocol="http" bindingInformation="*:24941:localhost" />
<binding protocol="https" bindingInformation="*:44301:localhost" />
The 'Digicert certificate installation checker' is often helpful in situations like this.
I was able to verify the SSL cert being attempted was the one I was expecting by comparing the serial number.
For me #Jason Kleban answer was the actual problem, but this can be a very useful utility to check your basic assertions about what certificate is being loaded.
In my case after trying everything for three days, solved by just starting Visual Studio by "Run as Administrator."
KASPERSKY ISSUE!! I'd tried everything, localhost with SSL worked if I ran VS2019 as Administrator, but the connection was lost after a while of debugging, and I had to re-run the app. The only worked for me was uninstall Kaspersky, unbelievable, days ago I'd tried to pause Kaspersky protection and it didn't solve the problem, so I had discarded antivirus issues, after days of trying solutions, I resumed antivirus matter, uninstalled Kaspersky V 21.1 ..., tried and worked, installed V 21.2 ... and it works fine also without running VS as Administrator
I had the same issue running Rider/VS, both were using IIS Express to run it. I was having the issue with Postman, Chrome, Firefox and front end application calling it.
Turns out that because my laptop was appropriated for me when i started working for this company the previous developer had clicked No when asked if he wanted to use the Developer Cert the first time he ran IIS Express.
This was fixed on Windows 10 by going to Add Remove Programs (from the new UI there is a link on the right to launch the classic application for Adding and Removing Programs) then Repair IIS 10.0 or 8 or whatever version you are running.
Then try running the application again (I did this in VS but assume that Rider would do the same) and when asked whether you would like to use the Developer Certificate you click YES.
Hours wasted on this, but all sorted after that!
I'd just rebuilt my computer. This thread gave me the clues, where I realized in the project settings>Web, the project was configured to use HTTP and the HTTP port. By updating it to HTTPS and the correct HTTPS port, everything started to work again.
In my case I'd simply forgotten I had a binding set up for (in my case) https://localhost:44300 in full IIS. You can't have both!
In my case, the localhost url was redirected to https://localhost when I was debugging. This happened from one moment to other, without changing anything. I solved this by making a hard reload to the browser. Here the link
I had similar issue where my application's swagger(running on SSL port 44319) stopped working suddenly and I got ERR_CONNECTION_RESET error.
After doing a little research, I found that port 44319 was removed from the list of allow ports for SSL connection - found using this command netsh http show sslcert > sslcert.txt.
I then had to add back port 44319 to SSL allowed ports using netsh http add sslcert ipport=0.0.0.0:44319 certhash=YOUR_CERT_HASH appid={YOUR_APP_ID}.
To find the certhash and appid, you can use output of first command. This worked for me!
Related
I enabled SSL in Visual Studio 2015 in order to implement Facebook and Google login locally.
I changed the project URL in the Web tab of the project's properties to https://localhost:44300/ and decorated the controller with the RequireHttps attribute - ref #msdn.
Everything worked fine locally.
I reverted settings to HTTP to test something else and that caused me a problem when I tried to get back to HTTPS.
I found this SO question and tried almost every suggested solution.
Error detail:
Failed to register URL "url" for site "site" application "path".
Error description: Access is denied. (0x80070005).
I had to issue this command in DOS to solve the problem in VS 2015:
netsh http add urlacl url=http://{ip_addr}:{port}/ user=everyone
Strangely this was only needed when I moved the project to a different PC. On the original PC I didn't need it.
Turned out this very answer on the same question thread by Cayne led me to the solution.
The port change didn't work because applicationhost.config file, located in .vs folder specific for VS2015, kept bindings combo of old port for Http and Https as a default setting. No matter how many times did I change port to something else while trying with Http (only got clogged with mass of new web site bindings in the config file) as soon as I wanted to switch back to SSL it ended up with the first bindings combo. The port it complained about that can't be registered any more.
Once I deleted that first bindings combo everything was fine.
I hope this will help someone in the future.
Go to C:\Users{username}\Documents\IISExpress\config and open the applicationhost.config file.
Search for the <sites> tag in the document. You will see some lines similar to the following.
<site name="WebSite1" id="1" serverAutoStart="true">
<application path="/">
<virtualDirectory path="/" physicalPath="%IIS_SITES_HOME%\WebSite1" />
</application>
<bindings>
<binding protocol="http" bindingInformation="*:8080:localhost" />
</bindings>
</site>
Replace the line <binding protocol="http" bindingInformation="*:8080:localhost" /> as follows.
<binding protocol="http" bindingInformation="*:{required_port_number}:*" />
I think you can even remove the * marks in bindingInformation.
Then restart IIS Server (remove all IIS server related operations using Task Manager and go to C:\Program Files\IIS Express folder and run iisexpress.exe: you might need to Run as Administrator).
A console will open and if all went well, following lines will be displayed.
Successfully registered URL "http://*:{required_port_number}/" for site "Website1" application "/"
...
Also check in browser whether the required URL works now.
Here's a very useful resource...
We are developing an ASP.NET 5 project and one of the requirements is that user authentication is done through client certificates via browser, but I can't make this work.
Using web.config and IIS the certificate is requested properly with this configuration:
<system.webServer>
<security>
<access sslFlags="Ssl, SslNegotiateCert" />
<authentication>
<iisClientCertificateMappingAuthentication enabled="true" />
</authentication>
</security>
</system.webServer>
But the client certificate does not arrive to the web application, as I understand it should be in context.Connection.ClientCertificate property, where context is the current HttpContext.
I suspect that httpPlatformHandler that tunnels IIS to Kestrel is ignoring https and this may be implemented in the future.
I have made some tests with an OWIN site (not DNX) and a custom AuthenticationHandler that gets the X509 client certificate and works properly under IIS.
It looks like there has been some work done on this and a pull request and merge was done implementing this. So... hopefully we'll see it in a updated release of Kestrel.
See here: https://github.com/aspnet/KestrelHttpServer/pull/385
As I can read in the Change to IIS hosting model announcement:
The HttpPlatformHandler currently does not forward client certs (this will be a future enhancement)
So, it seems that is not possible right now and httpPlaformHandler must be fixed.
I have a WCF REST service which debugs and works perfectly when using IISExpress and this url:
http://localhost:<portnumber>
However, for various reasons, I need it to also work with IIS Express and THIS url:
http://<ip address>:<portnumber>
When I tried originally, I got HTTP error 400: Bad request. Then I used google and ended up here: Connecting to Visual Studio debugging IIS Express server over the lan
That thread asked the EXACT same question, and the answer got me part of the way there. Following all the most excellent advice in that thread, I did the following:
Edit the IISExpress Host.config:
1: Open the %USERPROFILE%\My Documents\IISExpress\config\applicationhost.config file.
2: Changed all 17 of these lines:
<binding protocol="http" bindingInformation="*:8080:localhost" />
To look like this instead:
<binding protocol="http" bindingInformation="*:8080:*" />
(the port number varied on all 17 lines)
Visual Studio:
Closed, re-opened but ran as admin
Windows Firewall:
Added the port in question to allow incoming connections
CMD:
netsh http add urlacl url=http://*:XXXXX/ user=Everyone
Ran that command, where XXXXX is the port number.
Now, when I start debug and go to this URL:
http://<ip address>:<portnumber>
Instead of "HTTP error 400: Bad request", I now get "HTTP Error 503. The service is unavailable."
This is progress, as the browser is now at least hitting IISExpress, right? But I'm not sure at this point how to get past this 503 error. I've been searching google for that error for a while, but nothing is specific to what I'm trying to do.
Any ideas?
Figured it out. Instead of this:
<binding protocol="http" bindingInformation="*:8080:*" />
change it to this:
<binding protocol="http" bindingInformation="*:8080:" />
We are trying to install NServiceBus 4.2.0.0 with RavenDB via the following command:-
nserviceBus.host.exe -install serviceName="xxxx.Server" -displayname="xxxx.Server" -username="domainName\serviceAccountName" -password="serviceAccountPassword"
NServiceBus seems to install however the RavenDB install fails - note we are trying to install under a port other than 8080 - as a result we have placed the line:-
<add name="NServiceBus/Persistence" connectionString="Url = http://localhost:9090" />
...in our config
The error message we receive is:-
[1] WARN NServiceBus.ConfigureRavenPersistence [(null)] <(null)> - Raven could not be contacted. We tried to access Raven using the following url: http://localhost:9090.
If I leave at the default port (8080), everything installs correctly, however I need to change the port because 8080 is already in use
Does anyone have any ideas ?
RavenDB installation is separate from NServiceBus host installation.
To install RavenDB either follow the instructions on RavenDB website or you can install Raven server by using the NServiceBus Powershell cmdlets, see http://docs.particular.net/nservicebus/managing-nservicebus-using-powershell for instructions on how to load the cmdlets.
If you choose to use the cmdlets, you need to execute Install-NServiceBusRavenDB -Port 9090
If you just want to change the RavenDB port, you can do the following:
Note: The paths defined here are from the NServiceBus 4.3.2 installer with default paths
To download the installer, you can visit here: https://github.com/Particular/NServiceBus/releases/download/4.3.2/Particular.NServiceBus-4.3.2.exe
Launch the services management window (i.e. Run services.msc)
Stop service RavenDB
Navigate to the following path: "C:\Program Files\NServiceBus.Persistence.v4"
Edit the Raven.Server.exe.config: <add key="Raven/Port" value="<your port here>" />
Save the config
Start the service
Hit localhost on your new port
You should now be able to hit the RavenDB web on the new port!
Maybe try to change local.config in RavenDB folder.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<LocalConfig Port="9090" />
then restart raven
To change the port of RavenDb,
IIS
Change the port in IIS :)
here's where mine is set (under bindings)
Development Console
Find the config file of the ravenDb exe or dll (depends if you're running it as an IIS website, windows server or just the console window).
<Root RavenDb folder>\Server\RavenDb.server.exe.config
Set the port, manually in the file. Change the following ...
<add key="Raven/Port" value="*"/>
to
<add key="Raven/Port" value="6969"/>
or whatever port you need/require.
Windows Service
No idea! i've never used it.
Good luck!
I have a MVC page which consumes a WebService over SSL. The certificate is installed and when the application is running its able to detect the certificate.
The problem is this codes works perfectly fine in my local machine while i try to call the MVC page hosted.
But when MVC page hosted in server is called it throws an error:
There was no endpoint listening at https:// that could accept the message. This is often caused by an incorrect address or SOAP action.
I found out the issue was indeed with the App Pool identity. When I changed it to run with my credentials it solved the problem. But i cannot do this in production environment.
I need to make it work with Identity : Network Service in IIS App pool.
I have tried giving permission to certificate using winhttpcertcfg for network service and that also didn't help.
Not sure what is missing.
Thanks in Advance.
adding this solved my problem:
<system.net> <defaultProxy useDefaultCredentials="true" enabled="true"> <proxy usesystemdefault="True" proxyaddress="myproxyserver:port"; bypassonlocal="False"/> </defaultProxy> <settings> <servicePointManager expect100Continue="false" /> <ipv6 enabled="true"/> </settings> </system.net>