Configuration :: How To Set The Proper Permissions For SAPI (text To Speech)
Jul 19, 2010
I have a webapp that turns text to speech and then plays it on a webpage. It's works great when I run it locally but when I upload it to the server I get a security exception.
How can I set the permissions to let me do this? I know very little about permission.
I have developed a web service using c#.net for text to speech using speechlib. It is working locally but not on the host, as I am getting access denied. I have read on other forums that this is because of security permissions on the host server. I am deploying on a site which offers free asp.net hosting. Can someone point me out to a good asp.net web hosting which is not veryy expensive and that supports text to speech without problems?
i have created a website in vs 2008. and i want to deploy that website on other system. i don't want to give all the source(just like .exe file not source).
I'm developing a managed module for IIS7. Assembly with my code is placed in GAC and worked fine within 2.0 pipeline. But with .NET 4.0 pipeline (and Medium Trust Level chosen) there are no permissions to read registry and code is unable to read/write
"C:Program Files<Folder>MyAppConfig.file"
Is there any way to grant my assembly with proper permissions to do this?
I have a web application that uses SAPI to do TTS. I run it on Windows Server 2003 that has MS Sam installed by default.I understand that there are a number of 3rd party companies that sell voices. For a commercial application, which of these companies offer licenses that don't charge a lot of money? Do they have API to easily integrate with a ASP.NET app?I really would like to add more voices to the application.
I am trying to make website in asp.net webforms in which I have to displayed some text. Upon user button click the text is converted to speech and played on the page. I have tried the speech.lib but the sound plays on the server not on the client side. How can this done without using flash silver light. Do I have to use the web methods or web services.
I'm having the classic (dare I say typical?) error on the ASP.NET production server, which tells me that I can't view errors. Below the error displayed below, are things I've already tried. In IIS Manager (6.0), the application is located under one of the web sites in "Web Sites". It is indeed a web application, as opposed to a virtual directory (it has that gear icon). When trying to view the error from the localhost (i.e. the server itself), it doesn't find the application on its path, even though the root web site works just fine from localhost. It is clearly not a firewall issue because first of all, the firewall is turned off, and second because the root web site works fine from localhost. Heck, I even tried connecting through telnet and that worked fine and dandy too, so it is most certainly and very clearly not a firewall issue. Basically, I just need to view the error at all. I won't have to fix this problem if I can just see the error and fix it, because obviously there is something wrong in the code itself... I just don't know what, because IIS/.NET won't tell me.
Runtime Error
Description: An application error occurred on the server. The current custom error settings for this application prevent the details of the application error from being viewed remotely (for security reasons). It could, however, be viewed by browsers running on the local server machine.
Details: To enable the details of this specific error message to be viewable on remote machines, please create a tag within a "web.config" configuration file located in the root directory of the current web application. This tag should then have its "mode" attribute set to "Off".
So what I've already tried is what the error message itself suggests by setting the customErrors thing to "Off". In fact, it always was on "Off" so I didn't have to change anything. I've made sure that the web.config XML is valid. Another common reason for this error is that the .NET run-time is set to version 1.1, not 2.0. I've also made sure that this is correctly configured to 2.0. I'm running it in an independent application pool, meaning that there are no other applications at all, much less 1.1 applications, on the same application pool. I've made sure that EVERYONE can do ANYTHING to the files and directories in the application itself. I understand the security ramifications here, I'm just trying to get it working at all, and then I'll constrain the access rights afterward, one step at a time. But in any case, everyone can read those files.
I am develpoing asp.net web site (3.5) and lately I moved to windows 7. Since then I can't see properly asp.net exceptions and instead of that I'm getting full page with random characters.
I'm trying to send an email. My code is fine, but I'm getting a permissions error:
This is a server I'm administering myself, so I have access to the IIS 7 panel. The trouble is I don't know what to set to get mail working. Anyone got any experience of this?
My permissions error:
Access to the path 'c:7c5658db-d4cd-40cf-a686-6e9630e287f9.eml' is denied.
Description: An unhandled exception occurred during the execution of the current web request. review the stack trace for more information about the error and where it originated in the code.
Exception Details: System.UnauthorizedAccessException: Access to the path 'c:7c5658db-d4cd-40cf-a686-6e9630e287f9.eml' is denied.
ASP.NET is not authorized to access the requested resource. Consider granting access rights to the resource to the ASP.NET request identity. ASP.NET has a base process identity (typically {MACHINE}ASPNET on IIS 5 or Network Service on IIS 6) that is used if the application is not impersonating. If the application is impersonating via <identity impersonate="true"/>, the identity will be the anonymous user (typically IUSR_MACHINENAME) or the authenticated request user.
To grant ASP.NET access to a file, right-click the file in Explorer, choose "Properties" and select the Security tab. Click "Add" to add the appropriate user or group. Highlight the ASP.NET account, and check the boxes for the desired access._______________________________
i am able to deploy the SRS Reports locally without any issue. but the probelm when i try to access in the website its gives the error as "The permissions granted to user 'XXXASPNET' are insufficient for performing this operation. (rsAccessDenied)"So Please any one of you let me know what needs to be done in the configuration setting for the problem to get resolved.
In the edit template of the listview I have a multiline textbox. But when the row is edited and the template switches to the ItemTemplate, the text is not displaying properly in the associated Label control (missing linebreaks).
I know that the Label control doesn't understand the enter key code, and I need to do a replace on the string. What I have right now is :
I am running a web-site with simple .aspx files on a standalone workgroup Windows Server 2008 called 'Max'.I had assumed that the .aspx files were accessed by the 'Network Service' account.The application pool for the website is running with 'Network Service' as the process account.I was puzzled, since 'Network Service' had no permission on these files. So I added event level auditing to the files, and I was suprised to learn that the .aspx files were being accessed by an account called Max$ (ie the computer account).this correct ?Why is the Network Service account not being used ??
I have a previously working ASPX website which also supports AJAX. However, we just upgraded our SQL Server to a new version and now this website is no longer working. I believe the problem is that now we need to again restore original SQL accounts and settings prior to this upgrade. This website also uses AJAX. Which accounts need to be created to fix this problem? When I navigate to this URL, I get the message below:
There seems to be an issue with the "Trust" level when executing within a "Cloud" environment. In order for the following app to work it needs a trust level of at least "Medium." This web app is developed using VB.NET 3.5, and Visual Studio 2008. The app works perfectly on my local sever but when deployed/published to the "Cloud" it returns the error: System.Security.Permissions.SecurityPermission, mscorlib, Version=2.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089' failed. I have added all 4 required values, ConsumerKey, ConsumerSecret, OAuthToken, and OAuthTokenSecret to the web.config file in the "appSettings" section of the "configuration"
[Code]....
If found that by going to [URL] and signing into the account that is using the application, then go to the "Settings" page, go to the bottom of the page and click on the "API" menu option. Once the API page appears you will clik on the button "2", Register An App. On the right side on the new page, you will see a button "View Your Applications." If you have previously registered your app, click this button, If not fill out the appliction for a new app. Now at the View your Applications page, select the app you want to get the authorization keys for where is says "Edit Details". Now click on the button to the right that says, "Application Detail." Here you will find your Consumer Key and your Consumer Secret Key. On the right side of this page you will see the menu option "My Access Token", click it and you will find your oauth_token and your oauth_token_secret keys! Not that you have all the keys, put them in the "appSettings" section of the web.config file. Add "Dim twConn As New TwitterVB2.TwitterAPI" at the top of the page.
I then created a subroutine where I pass in the Tweet:
[Code]....
This code works great in an enviornment that allows at least a "Medium" trust level. However it appears that many of the "new" hosting envrionments such as "Cloud Hosting" and others do not allow this trust level automatically!However if the trust level is less than "Medium" on your host you will likely receive the error message: "Twitter Returned: Request for the permission of type 'System.Security.Permissions.SecurityPermission, mscorlib, Version=2.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089' failed." If anyone has found a fix for this "Trust Level"
I'm trying to use the System.Speech.Recognition namespace for recognizing speech in a web service. Actually, the WS calls a dll that uses this namespace.The problem is that...I can't. First, I had a Access denied error. After changing the Identity of my application pool to LocalSystem (security break, I know), that disappeared. But a timeout appeared. I receive no error, but no response either.
I did some tests, and, the same code (very simple) that I use for recognizing the text in a WAV returns the answer in around 2 seconds, when integrated in a desktop application, but hangs and does nothing in a web application. I'm not supposed to use System.Speech.Recognition in a web application? Am I supposed to use something else?
Most often I use it when I am accessing a property of a composite control that depends on a child control.But I have also added it to OnInit of a control so I could make sure a hidden field was added correctly. Just a minute ago I called it in RenderControl because I was having an issue rendering a calendar extender and it fixed it. I am starting to get a little confused on when I need to and when I don't need to call EnsureChildControls and when I should call it.
Is it possible to use a small .NET page to set folder permissions on some folders on the server where it resides? What is the code or objects that can be used for this? I am on Windows Server 2003.
Basically I want to hit the page with a GET or POST and have it run and check and/or update the permissions on a folder.
I have a simple test page using a couple asp features that I want to incorporate in a future site. It runs fine in Visual Web Developer.I deploy the site on a device running Windows CE with a web server. When I go look at Default.aspx I just read the file as text. Do I need to install something else on the device to get the web page to work?
I'm fairly new to dependency injection but it seems like a proper DI implementation will be fairly complex.
For example, DI requires a centralized class that manages the configuration and resolves the dependencies at runtime.
DI is also based on the concept of using interfaces. For example, a SpecialLogger should use an ILogger interface.
The centralized DI manager class will need to register types - for example, associate ILogger to SpecialLogger.
SpecialLogger will also need to implement the ILogger interface so SpecialLogger can be used through the DI ILogger interface.
Therefore, it seems like a sln using DI will need multiple projects to support DI. Here is an example for logging:
* MyCompany.MyDivision.Framework.DI.Management - this would have the DI manager where dependency types are registered and resolved at runtime * MyCompany.MyDivision.Framework.Logging - this would have the implementation of a logging class. The main logging class would need to implement ILogger. * MyCompany.MyDivision.Framework.DI.Interfaces - this would have the ILogger interface.
Interfaces would need to be stored in a separate class library from the DI manager because both the DI manager and SpecialLogger use the ILogger interface. Since the DI manager associates SpecialLogger to ILogger a circular reference would be encountered without a separate class library to store the ILogger interface.