"shutdown Worker Process After Being Idea For" IIS Setting?
Apr 14, 2010
If I set X minutes for the option ""shutdown worker process after being idea for" in IIS, does it recycle the worker process after X minutes being idea ??
If I use In-Proc session state, will it cause my session being lost?
I have a .NET infra code running both within the IIS worker process and within a desktop client app. How can the .NET code determine whether it is running within an IIS worker process?
I know that I could check the name of the process (w3wp.exe, for instance), but I would like a more robust approach. I wish to make a side note. This is not a production need. I need this information to enable certain scenarios useful during the development and testing phase. Specifically to ease the testing of secure vs non secure configurations.
I'm using VS 2010. And in VS 2010 it's even more painful now to attach to the worker process when you want to test your local IIS site via IIS, not the VS built-in web server.It's more painful because now when you select the worker process () via the Debug Menu | Attach to Process | w3wp.exe it brings up an additional prompt asking if you're sure you want to do this.
I have increased the number of worker process of default application pool to 15(IIS->Application Pools->DefaultAppPool->Properties->Performance->webgarden).after increasing the worker process i am facing session timeouts
My application is using a state server session managemnet and a predefined machineKeyCan you please guide me in how to increase the worker process without session loss
In IIS application pool I have set 2 in maximum worker process in process model, will application object, session object and cache object will be shared by the all worker process or will all worker process have different application object, session object and cache object.
I'm in a need to get a list of all the ASP.NET running worker process and its associated application pools and process ID.Is there a way to do this pragmatically (C#) or a powershell script?
My web application is a product which has to deploy to a variety of web servers. Is there a way to determine the account name that the .Net worker process account is using at runtime?
First of all, I'm not a pro on IIS configuration topic.With that being said, I got a website written in VB.NET 3.5 Web Forms. I have a small web service, ASMX, running as a part of this website. One page on the website calls the web service with AJAX (jQuery $.ajax function, post). The server is running Windows 2003 and IIS 6.0. The website and the web service are sharing the same Application Pool.
What is the difference between IIS Worker process, Application pool and application domain? Do we have more than one application domains in one application pool?Does one application domain means one virtual directory? If we have 2 virtual directories pointing to same physical folder. Will they share the same memory or different when there instances are opened in the browser? Will they be in 2 different application domains?
We recently had to enable Memory Recycling on a 2.0 app pool (IIS6). We checked both boxes, leaving in the default values of 500 MB for virtual memory and 192 MB for used memory. Here's where it gets interesting. Every 60 seconds, on the dot, the worker process is forced to recycle.Our tests were spamming the site with concurrent users trying to get the virtual memory up to 500MB, but we never could (as viewed in task manager). However, that didn't matter. We tested it by simply recycling the pool and hitting one page, once, and seeing around 30MB allocated and then just waiting 60 seconds and watching the process die in task manager (and a new one start up).We've increased the value for maximum virtual memory to 768MB and the issue *appears* to have gone away, but just arbitrarily accepting a fix isn't how we like to do things. I haven't found any officially reported bugs, kb articles, or solutions on blogs that point to what is causing this. To me, this means either it's some crazy environmental issue or the answer is really obvious and we just can't see it.
I made a small app to capture frame from video using asp.net, in visual studio, it works fine. however the problem arises when i try to use any other servers, I am currently using iis 7.5, and trying to debug on server, but alas when i reach some region of code the attached w3wp.exe just get detached, the process crashs, no debug available anymore.
Does ASP.NET worker process still return data in chunks of 31KbThis MSDN article written in May 2004 specifies the following.When using the ASP.NET process model,the ASP.NET worker process sendsresponses back to the client, it firstsends them through IIS in 31-kilobyte(KB) chunks. This applies to .NETFramework 1.1, but it could change infuture versions.
In my application i am sending emails of bigger size (> 2.5 Mb). Now till the emails are being sent, the application is in hanged up state (mouse cursor is of busy state).One of my friend suggested to use background worker that "could" display message something like "Please wait...Sending email". I have no idea as to how to use the background worker process. if there is any other quicker/easier alternative,
The architecture of the application is straight forward. There is a web application which maintain account holder data. This data is processed and the status of account holders is updated based on number of business rules. This process is initiated using a button on the page and is a long running process (say 15 mins). A component is developed to do this data processing which internally calls stored procedures. Most of the business rules are kept in stored procedure.
we're hosting a webservice that runs with up to 9 worker processes in it's application pool. There's a memory limit configured for the application pool to keep the system/server performant. Now my concern is that, if the memory limit is reached, a worker process may be recycled although there is an active request handled by this worker process that needs to be responded/finished first. The problem is especially with purchase/order requests, as such requests typically run several minutes and must not be aborted by any worker process recycle process. Is there any configuration setting that allows me app pool recycling by granting that no active process will be abandoned?
Does anybody know how I can trigger the ASPNET_Worker process on Windows 2000 and 2003 servers? Apparently, every time we reboot our servers on Saturday nights our monitoring software generates alerts for the ASPNET_Worker process and they don't go away until during the morning hours. This leaves me to believe that this process doesn't automatically run after a reboot and only starts to kick in when clients access our websites during the day. I'd like to be able to trigger the process after a server reboot so our monitoring software doesn't identify it as down.I was reading this post on http://weblogs.asp.net/jgalloway/archive/2006/06/01/Avoid-IISRESET-in-ASP.NET-applications-_2800_added-bonus_3A00_-ASPRESET_2900_.aspx and I believe the code on that article is what I need. However, I am only a SysAdmin and have very little knowledge about programming. The writer mentioned compiling the code using SnippetCompiler but after downloading the software I can't seem to figure out how to turn the code into an .exe.
I've run into a particularly nasty bug where an ASP.NET website attempts to make a call to a WCF service method that sends IIS into a death spiral...that ultimately brings down the associated app pool. It never gets to our log4net code that outputs unhandled exceptions.I was watching w3wp.exe processes spin up and die, so I figured I'd take a dump file on termination using ProcDump from SysInternals using the following command
We're experiencing a nasty issue in Oracle 11g Release 2 where the w3wp process takes over and entire processor core, and debugging shows that the Oracle data provider is throwing ThreadAbortExceptions infinitely. A developer found this issue by doing the following:
1) Browse a web site that uses Oracle data connections locally (http://localhost/OracleWebSite - we use IIS, not the ASP.NET dev server, for all of our sites). This ensures that the w3wp process is running and that an active Oracle pool of connections exists in the app pool.2) Stop the web site (or perform a Rebuild All operation in Visual Studio on the web site in question).Our Oracle connection handling in the affected applications (all Oracle web apps) is well-established and robust. This issue does not occur if we disable connection pooling. This issue does not occur in Oracle 11g Release 1.
Unable to start debugging on the web server. The IIS worker process for the launched URL is not currently running.I'm running Windows 7 64 bit, VS 2008 sp1.When I first try to debug I get the error msg above. I wait a few minutes (presumably some service is starting) and debugging will start but no breakpoints are recognized.Some of the things I've tried:Changing the binding of my site from a static IP to "*".
Enabled windows authentication.made sure localhost = 127.0.0.1 in the hosts file.The website was built under windows xp and whatever version of IIS ships with xp. My web config has no errors that I know of but might be missing something required for iis 7 (??)
This is a really odd situation, so hopefully I can explain it well enough.
I am deploying an ASP.NET 4 webforms application to a Windows Server 2003 SP2 server running IIS6.
Here's the problem -- when the application pool recycles its worker process (w3wp.exe), about 80% of the time, I will get an ReflectionTypeLoadException error trying to access any page in the app that contains an EntityDataSoure every time I try to view it.
However (this is the interesting part) -- the other 20%, it works just fine. I've actually resorted to turning off recycling the worker process entirely for this application pool and just add/remove whitespace from web.config forcing the site to recompile until I get a "good" w3wp.exe.
If this isn't clear, what I'm saying is: the actual worker process doesn't work at all for pages containing an EntityDataSource for about 4/5 times it starts, but still manages to serve all other pages just fine. Once you get a worker process that manages to serve a page with an EntityDataSource, it works every time until that process gets recycled.
My question is, how can I debug this? It works fine on my dev machine, it works fine on the server as long as you get a good process running, but iisreset or a server restart or anything that kills the worker process is almost guaranteed to cause the site to not come back up and throw this ReflectionTypeLoadException.
I have seen this for a long time, and finally decided to put the question up here. I have some applications that I need to maintain that were written in Delphi 2007 for .NET (ASP.NET 2.0). Normally, the first time I run the application (using IIS) I get the classic "Unable to start debugging on the web server. Unable to attach to ASP.NET worker process" message. I simply press F9 (run) again, and it runs. Sometimes I have to try running several times before it will actually run. I am running Windows 7 64-bit (and have seen the same effect on Vista 64-bit). I do have IIS configured for ASP.NET, and I do have the following code in my Web.config file.
The point is that I eventually can run the application in the debugger, sometimes even on the first try. Many times when I get the failure it happens about 15 seconds or so after I press Run, sometimes even after I've hit a page or two (or three) of the Web app. And, yes, when Delphi gets into this mode, I can simply run without debugging, and all is fine (unless I really want to debug). And, I can just keep on trying to run in the debugger and eventually it will just work.
It appears that Delphi's .NET debugger is somehow getting the idea that the application cannot run, and then gives up and stops the process (which as I've mentioned is sometimes clearly running). I know of other developers who have also seen this behavior. My question is, does anyone know how to stop this annoying behavior?
My DataGrid contain totally 32 columns.I need to display my first 4 column as default column.For the remaining Column i need to view using scroll bar.(not Page scroll need scroll bar inside my grid view)
When you do introduce intellisense and colorization to the razor editor, what about allowing the developer to choose the schema that it verifies against? If it could by default use a flavour of HTML, but optionally allow the dev to reference an arbitary XSD file (as supportted by the XML text editor). It could result in a very flexible experience that supports using ASP.Net MVC as a web service returning XML.