Could not create Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Diagnostics.DiagnosticMonitorTraceListener - azure-storage

While using Windows Azure Table Storage in WCFService WebRole, tried to create CloudStorageAccount by the following way:
storageAccount =
CloudStorageAccount.Parse(Microsoft.WindowsAzure.CloudConfigurationManager.GetSetting("[Setting name]"))
Get exception:
ConfigurationErrorsException "Could not create Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Diagnostics.DiagnosticMonitorTraceListener, Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Diagnostics, Version=1.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=31bf3856ad364e35."
MSDN help says that 1) Visual Studio must be run as an administrator. 2) A role must be running under full trust (change the .NET trust level option to Full Trust).
All Done, but I still have the same exception.

One thing that can cause this error is running the web role itself, instead of running the containing cloud project. If this is the issue, you could fix it by ensuring that the cloud project is set as the startup project for debugging, and not the web role.
It's possible, and sometimes useful, to run the ASP.NET project that defines the web role on its own. This can be a lot quicker than running things in the Azure Compute Emulator. It may also enable you to develop your project without having to run VS elevated. Also, I've found that the emulator tends to cause Visual Studio to report an invalid memory access error from time to time, at which point you need to restart VS. Running the web role directly avoids all these problems.
However, there are some things that can prevent this from working, and the exception you describe is a symptom of one of these problems. If your web role's Web.config includes configuration for Azure's DiagnosticMonitorTraceListener (and Visual Studio adds that by default when you create a web role) then the first thing that tries to generate trace output will crash with the error you describe if you run outside the emulator. And as it happens, retrieving a setting from the CloudConfigurationManager appears to do this.
This isn't peculiar to the CloudConfigurationManager by the way. All it's doing is producing some trace output. VS configures web roles to send all trace output to the Azure diagnostic listener, and because that listener can only run in either the compute emulator or an actual Azure instance, the first thing that tries to produce trace output will crash. CloudConfigurationManager is a common candidate because it happens to produce trace output, and it typically gets used early on when a role starts up. But in principle, anything that produces trace output could hit this exception.
A simple way to avoid this is to remove the relevant section from the configuration file. When you create a new web role, Visual Studio adds a <system.diagnostics> section that configures the default trace output to go to the Azure diagnostic listener. You could just comment that out. That will enable you to debug the web role directly in Visual Studio without using the compute emulator (assuming you aren't doing anything else that depends on being in a role environment).
Of course, the problem with that is that you'll no longer get any diagnostic traces when running in Azure. One way to solve that is to move the relevant configuration to the Web.config.Release file (adding the necessary xdt: attributes).
This change will also stop the Azure diagnostic trace listener from running when you use the local compute emulator. (That's less of a problem, because the trace messages will still appear in the debugger. It just means you won't get persistent copies of the traces copied to table storage like you would when running for real.) The obvious way to fix this would seem to be to make a similar modification to Web.config.Debug (or to run the release build in the emulator), but there's a snag: apparently cloud projects do not apply configuration file transforms when packaging for the emulator by default. Fortunately, you can fix this: http://blog.hill-it.be/2011/03/07/no-web-config-transformation-in-local-azure/ shows how to enable transforms for local debugging in the compute emulator. (Transforms are never applied when debugging an ASP.NET project directly from within VS, by the way.)

I've found that this error is caused by the wrong version in your web.config
Ie., you may not have
Version=1.0.0.0
Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Diagnostics is up to version 1.8.0.0 as of now
Try updating to the current version

Remove the lines in Web.config < add type="Microsoft.WindowsAzure.Diagnostics.DiagnosticMonitorTraceListener

Related

Want to deploy WCF web service on Azure platform

I want to deploy my WCF web Service on Azure plateform.
I have created a Storage account for my website, and also created a cloud Service and uploaded my package file and config file to the staging site.
But while uploading, The message displays
'Your staging deployment is starting. Hang on, the page will refresh once the deployment begins.'
I am waiting sice 2-3 hours and not getting the desired output.
Am I doing correctly? Or is there anything that I forgot?
Please Help...!
Most likely there is a problem in your code or the packaging that is causing the role to continuously restart. This is a fairly common problem, but there are a lot of possible causes (missing an assembly reference, an uncaught exception, the Run() method is exiting, a Startup Task is failing, or many other things). You need to gather more information to know exactly what the problem is and how to fix it.
There are many threads here on SO about this topic. There's also a Microsoft post discussing how to diagnose this type of issue. Those are good places to start.

Deploy sync error: maximum number of sync passes '5' has been exceeded

When running a web deploy to a specific IIS site I get the following error:
Error: The synchronization is being stopped because the maximum number of sync passes '5' has been exceeded even though all the changes could not be applied. This could occur if there are external changes being made to the destination.
At C:\Code\.....\deploy.ps1:185 char:10
+ & <<<< ($appDeployCmd) $type /M:$url /U:$user /P:$pass /A:Basic -allowUntrusted -useCheckSum
+ CategoryInfo : NotSpecified: (Error: The sync...he destination.:String) [], RemoteException
+ FullyQualifiedErrorId : NativeCommandError
Web Deploy is working fine on this environment against other IIS sites and file syncs are also working. I have previously been able to use web deploy to deploy this specific site without issue. All of the sudden out of nowhere, this issue started happening and I can no longer deploy this site.
I'm doing a basic site deploy with a package built from msbuild. I don't think the specifics are that important because as I said this was all working before and currently works against other sites on the same server farm without issues.
The error message says:
"This could occur if there are external changes being made to the destination."
but I'm not sure how to track this down or if it is even the issue to begin with. I've made sure all explorer windows are closed in all remote sessions. I've tried restarting the site and the app pool. The only thing I have not tried is rebooting the server which is not possible at moment.
Any ideas what might be cause this web deploy to fail?
I had the same error and the problem was my dropbox.
I was working directly in my dropbox folder, and when you publish, it causes dropbox to syncronize at the same time, which caused the error.
Disabling dropbox sync while working solved the problem.
I recon the problem also could happen with onedrive, google drive and so on.
We had this problem when converting from a previously adhoc deploy of a service to MSDeploy, and found that if there were files that were either
marked as read-only via the DOS/Windows read-only file attribute.
inaccessible due to ACLs
then we would get the "maximum number of sync passes" error on deploying.
Once we fixed the attributes/ACLs, we were able to sync.
Quick and easy way to resolve this issue is to delete the files in the destination and re-run the web deploy.
The issue seems to revolve around the ACL step of the web deploy, which attempts to change the permissions of your websites files as a safety measure intended to ensure they are not changed during a deployment.
By default Web Deploy sets the ACL of the sites anonymous user to read only while also overwriting Control Panel access to your website.
Source
You can turn of ACL in future to avoid this if you wish, but it's not really worth it. This will also speed up web deploys - but that is a separate issue.
Not really an answer, but one workaround you can try if you are using the Web Deploy dirPath, filePath, or contentPath providers is the ignoreErrors provider setting. If you know that you are consistently hitting a certain error number, you can specify that that error be ignored when it's hit. See the dirPath provider article for full details (and caveats).
In my case I couldn't fix it but realised the deployment worked regardless.
If you are reading this I wouldn't suggest to just assume it worked, and if it did that it deployed fully, but consider that it may be a false alarm!

WCF Services not working from Silverlight Application after Deploying

Okay I have seen some very similar questions here but none seem to be answered to my liking. I have created a Silverlight application that calls a couple of services to populate various comboboxes from the database. I got this working without too much trouble on my local machine.
So now I want to deploy it to our webserver. It was relatively straight forward to get ISS7 to load the Silverlight application. However, none of my services seem to be working properly, in that the comboboxes are empty. In IE I get the following error:
Message: Unhandled Error in Silverlight Application An exception occurred during the operation, making the result invalid. Check InnerException for exception details. at System.ComponentModel.AsyncCompletedEventArgs.RaiseExceptionIfNecessary()
at MyTestPage.ViewModel.MyService.GetInfoCompletedEventArgs.get_Result()
at MyTestPage.ViewModel.MainPageViewModel.b__2(Object s, GetInfoCompletedEventArgs ea)
at MyTestPage.ViewModel.MyService.MyServiceClient.OnGetInfoCompleted(Object state)
Line: 1
Char: 1
Code: 0
URI: http://www.mywebsite.com/MyTestPage.aspx
My problem is that this error only occurs when deploying on the webserver and I have no clue how to debug this problem. The error says to check the InnerException but I haven't found an answer yet (after hours of searching) that tells me how I should do this.
I have tried browsing to the services and I am able to do so using the domain name i.e. http://test.myserver.com/Services/MyService.svc. However when logged onto the server and using http://localhost:3456/Services/MyService.svc - which is the path in the ServicesReferences.ClientConfig file - It cannot be found.
Some answers here seem to suggest using a clientaccesspolicy.xml file but I don't understand why this should be necessary if the services are hosted on the same server as the application - they aren't required when debugging on my local machine. Despite my reservations I have tried adding a clientaccesspolicy.xml file to the root of the application but this still doesn't make any difference.
So I have a couple of questions:
1) How do I get access to the InnerException when I am running the application on the webserver? Is there a specific log file I can view or turn on?
2) If, for some reason, I am trying to access the service in a cross domain fashion (even though they are located on the same server) how do I configure the application so that this isn't required?
UPDATE:
Ok, I was able to get the tracing to work. I can now see the trace details on the page when it loads but it doesn't really tell me anything useful. I have also added the option to write the details to the disk. Initially this file wasn't being written and I couldn't understand why. Then I noticed that refreshing my silverlight application was not triggering a write to the log. It was only when I manually browsed to the services that the log file was updated. This seems to indicate to me that my silverlight application is not hitting the services at all (for some reason). I tried cutting out the View Model object and hitting the service directly from the xaml code behind file but this didn't make any difference either.
At this point after spending more than two days trying to figure this out, I am thinking about starting again from scratch.
For my mind it shouldn't be this difficult to deploy something that works on a development machine to a webserver.
I pretty much gave up on my initial approach. I had another go following along from this video http://www.silverlight.net/learn/videos/all/net-ria-services-intro/. It uses Domain services instead of the WCF Services and it was actually fairly straight forward to get it going on the webserver. The example is two years old now so maybe there are better ways to do this now (I am open to suggestions) but at least it worked within an hour of trying it (compared to 2.5 days and getting nowhere).

WCF service deployed to Azure

I have create a WCF Service Web Role project.I can consume the service locally. But I am having issues trying to deploy the service on the azure cloud. After starting the webrole it justs kepps going in a loop where it init then stops. I have not made any changes to the default WebRoleclass that was added automatically. Can anybody point me to some samples or examples of WCF being deployed to azure
The behaviour you're seeing occurs when the instance errors in the OnStart or Run. The usual diagnostics error trapping hasn't had a chance to start yet so this is a difficult problem to debug. You might try adding error trapping inside this functions that writes the error details out to either a blob or a queue so that you can see what is actually happening.
Having said that, with code that works in the dev fabric, but continues to cycle when deployed to live, the first thing to check is that all of the references have the appropriate "Copy Local" property set. Anything that is part of the framework or Microsoft.WindowsAzure.ServiceRuntime will need to have Copy Local to false, everything else should be set to true (third party assemblies an the like). If this is a web role and you're using MVC, you'll need to check that System.Web.Mvc has Copy Local set to true as well as this is not included as part of the standard framework deployed in Azure.
Have you looked at the Known Issues information on the WCF Azure code page? There's a patch that's needed, as well as a tweak to the service behavior. Hopefully this will help you.
I just found out the root of the problem. It was caused by one of my projects having the target platform set to x86. Seems like it does not support x86 build assemblies which can be a problem

FluentNHibernate blows up in Windows Service but not website

I've got a class library doing all my NHibernate stuff. It also handles all the mapping using Fluent NHibernate - no mapping files to deploy.
This class library is consumed by a number of apps, including a Windows Service running on my computer. Although it works fine in all my web apps, the Windows Service gets this when it tries to use NHibernate:
An invalid or incomplete configuration was used while creating a SessionFactory. Check PotentialReasons collection, and InnerException for more detail.
at FluentNHibernate.Cfg.FluentConfiguration.BuildSessionFactory()
at Kctc.NHibernate.KctcSessionFactory.get_SessionFactory() in C:\Kctc\Trunk\Kctc.NHibernate\KctcSessionFactory.cs:line 28
...more stack trace...
I have checked for an InnerException and there doesn't appear to be one. I have no idea what the PotentialReasons collection is, and Google doesn't seem to be forthcoming either.
This is my dev machine, so when I'm working on my web apps they run locally (i.e. using the web server in Visual Studio). The fact that the Windows Service and my dev web apps are running on this same machine suggest it's not to do with trust settings or what have you.
Can anyone suggest what I should try? This is one of those ones where I'm so stumped I can't even think of how to get more information about the problem.
Just a wild guess. NHibernate picks up the hibernate.cfg.xml file from the execution directory. Did you configure the execution directory of the service that it can find this file?
I've found out what the problem is. The Service did not deploy with the required NHibernate.ByteCode.LinFu.dll.
I appear to have an ongoing problem with the Visual Studio compiler not always copying indirect dependencies (i.e. dlls required by class libraries required by the app) into the output folder during the build. I should have thought of this sooner really.
Thanks for racking your brains on my behalf guys.
I bet the name of the connection string is missing from the app.config. For me that message is almost exclusively a missing connection string.
Are you targeting the same database or could it be some sort of schema mismatch between databases?
Could it be authentication issues on the service like you use windows authentication where it can't be used (or the sql authentication that doesn't work)?
It's hard to tell when there is no code, just an exception!
EDIT Are you ever using HttpContext, HostingEnvironment or anything else specific to "web"?