How to prevent an Azure website from going to sleep?
I deployed an ASP.NET 5, MVC 6 web application to Azure. It seems that if I don’t hit the site for 10-15 minutes, it goes to sleep and it takes a good 10-15 seconds for it to wake up.
I deployed an ASP.NET 5, MVC 6 web application to Azure. It seems that if I don’t hit the site for 10-15 minutes, it goes to sleep and it takes a good 10-15 seconds for it to wake up.
I’ve searched and searched on Google, and I can’t find anything that even seems applicable to my situation, let alone solves the problem. It doesn’t matter which address in my website I try to navigate to (even addresses that don’t exist give this error instead of a 404), I get the exact same message (the path is always ‘/’). Any ideas?
The user does something on the ASP.Net page that causes my server-side code to need to connect to another system and carry out lengthy operations, so I want to return control to the user quickly by firing that action to another thread. The user can keep watching progress through AJAX or simply move away – the web is stateless after all 🙂
I have following class that returns number of current Request per Second of IIS. I call RefreshCounters every minute in order to keep Requests per Second value refreshed (because it is average and if I keep it too long old value will influence result too much)… and when I need to display current RequestsPerSecond I call that property.
As you can see this is a question from a non web developer. I would like to have an ASPX page which, under certain circumstances, can generate a 401 error from code. Ideally it would show the IIS standard page.
I have an ASP.NET project which uses IIS. IIS site is configured to use custom binding host name. Project file contains following settings:
Well – exactly as the question subject states – any ideas on how you might do this?
I am reading a report from a “web application security” company, whom have been scanning a few websites of the company I am working for. It appears from the report – which seems written without any human involvement – that several attempts where made to break our sites using requests like this:
Just looking for the relevant documentation. An example is not necessary, but would be appreciated.
The problem I’m running into the typical virtual-directory dilemma in that you have some paths on your ASP.Net application and you deploy the app in a IIS virtual directory. Then all paths relatives to the “web root” (f.i., “/images”) doesn’t work because the app is in a virtual directory path. The solutions A. Make the … Read more