I've recently installed VS 2003 to work on an existing web project (I already had 2005 and 2008 installed), but I'm getting an annoying problem when I try to run it. I get a browser page with an error message of:
Code:
Required permissions cannot be acquired.It then pinpoints the problem as being in line 198 of my machine.config, which is:
Code:
<add assembly=*/>
I've changed the ASP.Net version to 1.1.4322 in the appropriate places, and other people in the team can run the project happily using an identical machine.config (they used a copy of mine).
I am getting following error on uploading my pages on web server. it working file on my local machineRequired permissions cannot be acquired. Description:An unhandled exception occurred during the execution of the current web request. Please review the stack trace for more information about the error and where it originated in the code.
I found the problem "Required permissions cannot be acquired." when run ASP.NET application on Windows 7.After I search from the web, somebody reccommend me to add following<trust level="Full" / >nto Web.confitack Trace:
A client has sent me their web site and I got it to work on my local machine, but after hosting it on my website under a sub domain I get the following error:Required permissions cannot be acquired.did some searching and tried messing with the trust tag in web.config, but then that told me:This configuration section cannot be used at this path. This happens when the site administrator has locked access to this section using from an inherited configuration file.
ot the following error when click print report button.Application : asp.net 3.5Crystal report : 10.5Host: godadRequired permissions cannot be acquired. Description: An unhandled exception occurred during the execution of the current web request. Please review the stack trace for more information about the error and where it originated in the code.
when i run my application i got this error like...
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.Security.Policy.PolicyException: Required permissions cannot be acquired.
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 am calling example.exe from asp.net web-page. Example.exe contains Process.Kill(), but I am not able to kill that process whenever Ill run example.exe from asp.net web page. I think i need to set some permissions for killing processes. What permissions must a user have to be able to succesffuly execute a rocess.Kill? Note : it is working when I double clicking on (example.exe), means its killing some processes
We have a web application that runs on a WIndows Server 2008 64 bits machine. The app's ApplicationPool is running under the ApplicationPoolIdentity and configured for .net 2 and Classic pipeline mode.
This works fine up to the moment that XmlSerialization requires creation of Serializer assemblies where MEF is being used to create a collection of knowntypes.
To remedy this I was hoping that granting the ApplicationPoolIdentity rights to the ASP.Net Temporary Files directory would be enough, but alas..
What I did was the run the following command from a cmd prompt:
icacls "c:windowsmicrosoft.netframework64v2.0.50727Temporary ASP.NET Files" /grant "IIS AppPoolMyAppPool":(M)
Obviously this did not work, otherwise you would not be reading this :)
Strange thing is that whenever I grant the Users or even more specific, the Authenticated Users Group those permissions, it works. What's weird as well (in my eyes) is that before I started granting access the ApplicationPoolIdentity was already a member of IIS_IUSRS which does have Modify rights for the temporary asp files directory.
And now I'm left wondering why this situation requires Modify rights for the Authenticated Users group. I thought it could be because the apppool account was missing additional rights (googling for this returned some results, so I tried those), but granting the ApplicationPoolIdentity modification rights to the WindowsTemp directory and/or the application directory itself did not fix it.
For now we have a workaround, but I hate that I don't know what is exactly going on here, so I was hoping any of you guys could shed some light on this.
I'm uploading an Excel file and then reading data using oledb connection in asp.net but I'm getting the following error: The Microsoft Jet database engine cannot open the file ''. It is already opened exclusively by another user, or you need permission to view its data.
Dim ocmd As New OleDbCommand("select * from [Sheet1$]", conn) Line 12: conn.Open() Line 13: Dim odr As OleDbDataReader = ocmd.ExecuteReader() conn.open() line is red highlighted for error.
The excel file is uploaded successfully and present in the folder.
Can I use LINQ to SQL and have a user log in, and with that login be restricted to certain parts of the database.. basically having access to information located under their particular customer ID number.... how would I get the 'session' to follow them throughout the website without having to login each time the database is tapped for info...?
I am doing some testing and want to find out best practice for creating a new user to assign to an appPool. I know that the default ASPNET account, on IIS 6.0, is very low permissions. For experienced folks, what are the bare permissions required to grant this new user? Yes, I am aware that various NTFS rights are required for different operations, such as reading outside of the application path, writing to the NTFS share, etc. I am just looking at a base install.
Dino Esposito wrote in Chapter 15 of Programming Microsoft ASP.NET 2.0 - Core Reference that the following directories would need the respective permissions:
.NET framework root - read/list Temporary ASP.NET folders - full GAC - read Windows System32 - access/read App root - access/read Web site root - scanWhat else would I need to set up beyond this base configuration as far as rights are concerned? If anyone does this regularly, do you have a script to do this automatically?
I've got a routine that tries to import files from an import directory, spitting them out to an Error directory if the import fails. The Error directory is shared and users have access permissions to delete files in there, so they can try to fix the problems and then move the files off to the import directory again. I use File.Move to move the files to the Error directory and this is working fine, apart from the permissions - it seems to revert to a default set of permissions, rather than the directory's one, and so the users can't remove the files - how can I reset the permissions on the file to those of their containing directory? I've tried poking around with SetAccessControl and SetAccessRuleProtection but I don't seem to be having any luck?
I have an ASP.NET 4 site that uses the new SQL CE 4 CTP. The site works fine locally (IIS 7.5 on Win7) and fine in Server 2003/IIS 6. It fails when deploying to IIS 7 on Server 2008. The error I get is:
Access is denied. (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80070005 (E_ACCESSDENIED))
The interesting thing is if I switch the app pool user from its default user to LocalSystem, everything works great. So clearly there is a permissions problem somewhere.
Long story short, does anyone know what special permissions need to be set when deploying a SQL CE 4 database? (BTW, we have already set r/w access on the db itself and on c:windows emp)
I am having trouble running a commercial ASP.NET application on a client machine. On most client machines this runs as intended, but for one machine I am getting a security exception as follows: Server Error in '/ElasSelfService' Application. Required permissions cannot be acquired. Description: An unhandled exception occurred during the execution of the current web request. Please review the stack trace for more information about the error and where it originated in the code.
Exception Details: System.Security.Policy.PolicyException: Required permissions cannot be acquired. Source Error: An unhandled exception was generated during the execution of the current web request. Information regarding the origin and location of the exception can be identified using the exception stack trace below. Stack Trace:
The website has a separate application pool defined for it running under the Network Service account. I have checked the settings for the virtual directory for the application but nothing seems wrong. I have tried defining the trust level in web.config to full trust but this does not fix the issue. I have looked into defining the trust level for the application through the machine.config file but I am unsure of how to proceed with this.
We have a small XBAP file upload app that we are having trouble deploying. We were getting security errors when we were pushing this application that we don't get when running in our development environments on our machines. We gave the XBAP app full permissions and still got errors. Then we created a personal certificate and were able to get this to work. But that means we have to load a client side certificate for each and every machine that wants to run this which is ridiculous.
We use a build tool, TeamCity to do our builds. I have a directory locally with javascript files that works fine, but when its built and pushed to our test server and I try to get to any files in the directory I get: 401 - Unauthorized: Access is denied due to invalid credentials.
I've changed permissions several time on the server (2008/IIS 7) and still the problem persists. I have other directories that have javascripts and when I put the path into the browser for them I get the source.
I have a site on domain1. I need to open a ModalDialog with a Page on domain2. My Domain2 is protected not to allow anonymous access so i get a login window like:
My problem is, for this one functionality, i want users to be able to see that ASPX, through the ModalDialog, without authenticating.
I tried using the ftp way:(URL) and i get a javascript error.
My site is hosted in IIS6, Windows Server 2003 and i have full access to the server.
I have my SqlServer 2005 database at a web host. I recently figured out how to set permissions for the stored procedures (see this link if you face the same problem:
[URL]
Now I wonder: What permissions should I give the website's visitors?
In a stored procedure's Properties window, I have three availabale users, the db owner (the db name), "guest" and "public". My bet is on public.
As far as permission types go, I hev the following available:
Alter, Control, Execute, Take Ownership, and View Definition. My guess is that the one of interest is Execute, correct?
In other words, should I set all stored procedures to Execute for public (not that I seem to have the permission to do that myself - I get an error message when I try to alter them)? If so, could I ask the web host to set them globally for me? Or should I only set stored procedure using UPDATE/INSERT/DELETE to Execute?
I am trying to load some dll's into a MEF DirectoryCatalog within an ASP.NET MVC application:
var catalog = new DirectoryCatalog(HttpRuntime.BinDirectory, "Toptable.Mobile.*.dll");
When I run the app through the Cassini web server (i.e. F5) everything runs fine however when hosted in IIS(7) I get the following exception:
[code]....
The .NET trust levels for the application are set to "Full" both for the site and globally and I have set the trust level in web.config (system.web/trust) to Full.
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?