Unable to get auto compliation to work in ASP.NET 5 - compilation

I've downloaded the latest Visual Studio 2015 CTP but am unable to get auto compilation to work. I'm trying this,
Create a web application in visual studio.
Launch it web ctrl+f5
Change some cs file
Hit f5 in the browser
Observe the change
And nothing happens. I still need to go back to VS and build to see any changes.
Anyone knows why and what I'm missing?
I have read a few threads here on StackOverflow and in all of them the problem seems that the debugger is attached. But that's not the case for me, I start the application either by ctrl+f5 or Debug -> Start without debugging.

I was able to figure out why it wasn't working. I was running Windows 10 in a VM (using Parallels on a mac), and the created project was saved in a shared drive with the path something like this,
\psf\Home\Documents\Visual Studio 2015\Projects...
And I guess the file watcher wasn't able to detect file changes and therefore the auto compile wasn't working. I have now created a new project and saved it on c: and the auto compile is working!

Related

Visual Studio 2019 break point is getting hit

I am working on Dotnet Core + Angular application with Visual Studio 2019. After publishing code in release mode and deployed on IIS. When I changed the code to debug and tried to debug something the breakpoints are not getting hit on any controller. Does anybody ever faced this problem, it would be helpful to have any solution on this. Here is my project properties
Visual Studio 2019 break point is getting hit
This is indeed a very strange behavior and I suggest you could try these suggestions to troubleshoot your issue:
Suggestion
1) Right-click on your project-->Properties-->Build-->Advanced-->change Debugging Information to Full.
2) make sure that you use IIS Express with Google Chrome or change to use IE to debug your project
3) Tools --> Options-->Debugging-->Symbols--> select Microsoft Symbol Servers-->Click Load All Symbols
4) close VS Instance, delete .vs hidden folder under solution folder, bin , obj folder and then restart your project to test again.
Update 1
Based on your issue, JS sent request to Core and could not enter the breakpoint, you can try these steps:
1) enable option Javascript Debugging for Asp.Net(Chrome,Edge and IE) under Tools-->Options-->Debugging-->General
2) If you try to debug js on cshtml, you should move these js into a single javascript file and then reference such js file in cshtml. You can refer to this link.
Hope it could help you.

Typescript VS2017 stops at first line, error: Debugger agent is not enabled

When I start a newly created Typescript Project in Visual Studio 2017 theres some strange behaviour going on.
-The debugger breaks on the very first line
-The output shows:
code:-32000
message:Debugger agent is not enabled
-Many scripts in solution explorer (see screenshot)
-Node output:
Debugger listening on wb://127.0.0.1:5858/03dde2a0-7ae8-44fc-8b29-53b99c072de7
For help see https://nodejs.org/en/docs/inspector
Debugger attached.
Screenshot:
Edit: Seems to be a problem with the new node version. If I switch back to 5.4.1.0 (included in VS2017) everything works fine. I read that there has been a change in debugger protocol maybe it has something to do with that... gotta wait for an update.
To show the Console, we can use: Debug -> Windows -> JavaScript Console.
Michael Braude showed two suggestions for the similar issue:
1.Use JavaScript Console of Visual Studio. Frankly, this way is OK for me when I am developing on PC with two displays (I runs emulator on
one screen and debug with Visual Studio on another), but a bit
uncomfortable when I am developing on Notebook with one screen.
2.Run a solution without debugging (CTRL+F5), in this case VS's debugger isn't attached to browser. This looks as simple solution, but
you need to be aware that in this case breakpoints don't stop run-time
and you have to use debugger; keyword.
For detailed information:
Visual Studio Tools for Apache Cordova stops work correct after update
I got it working again by using the included node version of VS2017. There seems to be a problem with the new version <8.
You can choose which version to use by putting the path to the exe folder on top of the list here: Tools > Options > Projects and Solutions > Web Package Management > External Web Tools

"Process with an Id of #### is not running" in Visual Studio

I am trying to run any program on visual studio 2013 update 3 and I get the following alert box:
Process with an Id of #### is not running.
Every time there is different ID number showing.
and in the error windows, I get this error message:
The program '[3148] iisexpress.exe' has exited with code -1073741816 (0xc0000008) 'An invalid handle was specified'.
Sometimes it runs and in the browser I get the following message:
The webpage is not available.
Why is this occurring and how can I resolve it?
The following steps fix the problem for me:
Close Visual Studio
Navigate to the folder where your solution files are stored and delete the hidden .vs folder.
Restart Visual Studio
Hit F5 and IIS Express should load as normal, allowing you to debug.
Note: Based on my experience and others in the comments, this problem seems to be caused by moving a project between workstations, environments, or versions of Visual Studio. There must be some environment specific information contained in the .vs folder.
Open Visual Studio as an administrator
Right-click your project and click on 'Unload Project'
Again, right-click your project and click on 'Edit PROJECT_NAME.csproj'
Find the code below and delete it:
<DevelopmentServerPort>63366</DevelopmentServerPort>
<DevelopmentServerVPath>/</DevelopmentServerVPath>
<IISUrl>http://localhost:63366/</IISUrl>
Save and close the file .csproj
Right-click your project and reload it
First Error
For the first error:
Process with an ID #### is not running.
The following steps worked for me:
Close all instances of Visual Studio.
Rename the IISExpress folder (in my PC is in C:\Users\jmelosegui\Documents).
Add the _CSRUN_DISABLE_WORKAROUNDS Environment System variable with the value of 1.
Start Visual Studio in administrator mode. (In Windows, right click the executable file and select Run as administrator).
Second Error
The second error:
The webpage is not available
What caused this error:
I deleted IIS Express Development Certificate while playing with the SSL.
The following steps worked for me:
Go to Control Panel.
Select Add/Remove Programs.
Locate IIS 8.0 Express.
Right click on it then click Repair.
Your certificate should be back!
With respect to the first error:
Process with an ID #### is not running
This situation will sometimes occur when IIS Express fails to bind to a port. A likely reason for that is that some other process has already bound to that port. Visual Studio will launch the IISExpress.exe process (which will fail to bind to the port and exit again) and then attach to the now-terminated process, resulting in the above error.
To check, note the port number in your project settings (e.g. 12116) and then try:
netstat -ano | find "12116"
If another process has the port open, this will give its PID. You can then choose to kill the offending process or reallocate your own port number.
If you are using a 64-bit machine
Then the problem maybe due to Visual Studio use of 32-bit IIS-Express.
Solution: In Visual Studio, go to Tools menu > Options > Projects and Solutions > Web Projects > Enable the option "Use the 64 bit version of IIS Express" and click ok
I had the same problem. Just restarting Visual Studio worked for me.
My fix was simple, I was missing prerequisites. I needed to install .NET Core SDK
Kilanny's answer is correct. Most machines in 2015 are 64bit, so there's a lot of chances that you just need to enable the 64bit option under the Tools main navigation link menu. No need to configure other files or hard code ports. Besides, port assignment should be dynamic. This fix applies to 2013 With Update 3 and Visual Studio 2015 Community Edition.
Check the images below for a mini tutorial:
(I'm just improving Kilanny's answer)
It looks like there are many solutions that work and some that don't...
My issue kept surfacing after a few test iterations.
Yes restarting the PC and/or VS would resolve the issue...but temporarily.
My solution was to undo a security change I had enabled a couple days
earlier to Controlled folder access under Ransomware protection.
I undid this change by:
(right click Start)
Setting->Update & Security->Windows Security->Virus & threat protection-> Virus & threat protection settings->Manage settings
Under Controlled folder access
Click->Manage Controlled folder access
(this is also the Ransomware protection screen)
Turn Controlled folder access off.
This was 100% the issue for me as I was able to run my test without restarting VS.
Another reason this can happen is for a .NET Core Web app if you upgrade the Microsoft.AspNetCore.Components.* NuGet package to a new version but don't install the new SDK,
In my case it was upgrading Microsoft.AspNetCore.Components.WebAssembly from 6.0.0 to 6.0.1 and didn't install .NET 6.0.1 SDK
go to Properties of the start up project, increment port number of the Project Url is probably the quickest way to get around this problem which I didn't read anyone mentioned yet.
And you don't need to restart VS as it can be a pain sometimes if you needed a few other instances needed to be running.
My solution to this on a new machine and fresh install of VS 2022 was to install the 3.1 framework. So check to make sure whatever framework the project is expecting is installed on your local machine.
I had a similar problem with Chrome. It appears that VS can't attach to the Chrome process for some reason.
Solution:
Close Chrome
With Chrome closed, start the web project and allow VS to open Chrome.
For me, none of the other solutions worked.
The things I tried:
Updating and patching everything associated with Visual Studio
Reinstalling Visual Studio
Reinstalling IIS Express
Several reboots
Adding the _WORKAROUND thing to the PATH
Renaming the IIS folder under documents to regenerate the IIS config
Manually editing the csproj file and removing the whole IIS settings section
Changing the IIS executable usage to 64bit in VS settings
Changing the port of IIS in the projects settings
After checking if the problem was persistent over different projects, it turned out that the problem only occurred in one specific projects. I figured that I had to delete all the user specific files in the solutions folder (such as bin, obj, *.suo, ...)
I just deleted the whole solution folder and reverted the files in git.
TLDR:
Try deleting user specific files/folders like bin, obj, *.suo, ...
Reboot your computer before trying any of these!
Some of these may be helpful. Doing the netstat trick
netstat -ano | find
helped me as another application was using my port, but didn't completely solve my problem. IIS Express still kept crashing. It wasn't until I rebooted my win 10 PC (first time in over a week), that my problem completely cleared up.
Head to the following directory
%userprofile%\documents\IISExpress\Config directory
Delete all files within that folder. Restart visual studio and works like a charm.
I had the same problem, and what needed to be done was setup IIS Express properly.
I right clicked on my project Properties => Web (tab) and on Servers:
Project URL was already pre-populated and I clicked the button "Create Virtual Directory".
I had just reinstalled (refreshed) windows and the IIS was not setup b/c it was new.
I came across the same problem and found that somehow the file 'applicationhost.config' (in ..\Documents\IISExpress\config) had a different localhost port number (in the 'sites' section) to the one specified in project\properties\web. Changed them to the same number and the problem went away
Close VS.
Navigate to the folder of the solution and delete the hidden .vs folder.
Restart VS.
Hit F5 and IIS Express should load as normal, allowing you to debug.
If this not working, then:
right click your solution and go to properties
Click left menu Web tag
Click checkbox "Override application root Url"
and run again your project.
For me this was the solution,
Close all running Visual studio instances
Open the solution folder and remove the .vs folder (hidden folder)
Open Run Command
Type iisreset and press Ok, and you may see a command prompt and
wait for it to complete and it will close automatically
Now Open visual studio and run your project, it should run.
So, nothing worked for me and this happened to happen to me when I got a new machine. Apparently it didn't have the older versions of .Net on it. Went into VS Installer and checked the box for .Net 5 Runtime (VS 2022). Working fine now on all .Net 5 Projects.
TL;DR: if you do have the right .NET Core (or .NET I guess) runtime installed, install any patch updates or reinstall the latest version if there aren't any.
Detail:
Similar to a couple of other answers where they just didn't have the right .NET core installed. I was trying to run a .NET Core 3.1 web app which had worked fine previously for months, and this suddenly started happening.
I did have 3.1 (runtimes 3.1.21 and 3.1.22) installed. However a new one (3.1.23) had been released 12 days earlier, and installing that fixed the problem.
I have no idea if this was because it's aware that there's a new patch and I didn't have it so it wouldn't run, or if there was just something wrong with my 3.1.22 installation. Worth trying installing latest patch, or reinstalling existing installations.
I encountered this while trying to run a project I'd run many times on a machine I'd used for the project many times. Cleaning up my IIS Express directory and my .vs directory didn't work, nor did setting environment variables. I even tried re-cloning my repository to a different folder, but no success.
By trying to run via command line, I found a more useful message:
dotnet run --project [startup project path]
I saw that the project was trying to run using .NET 6.0.5, but I only had .NET 6.0.4 installed. Installing the latest .NET 6.0.5 from the Microsoft website worked.
I also had the same problem, doing the above didn't work for me. What my error turned out to be was twofold.
I had Opera as my default browser and it couldn't attach to that.
I had multiple startup projects so it wouldn't let me switch to IE until I change the default startup project back to just the MVC shell.
I set that project specifically as the startup, then I switched it back to launching IE and it started debugging again.
What I did to make this go away:
Open C:\Users\gr_mext1\Documents\IISExpress\config\applicationhost.config and remove all <site> entries in <sites> do not remove <siteDefaults>!
In your project, go to Properties, Web and click "Create Virtual Directory".
Close and re-open visual studio, load your project and run
Fixed!
None of the listed solutions worked for me. Problem was some sort of conflicting state in local applicationhost.config file. Fix is easy, just delete one in your solution. For VS2015 it should be located in <path_to_your_solution>\Solution\.vs\config\. When you launch Debug, VS will recreate that file based on settings in your project file.
Deleting the hidden .vs folder didn't work for me since the port specified in my app was being used by another app. Doing the following worked for me:
Went to properties and then click the web tab.
Changed the port number in the Start Url and the Project URL.
Clicked Create Virtual Directory.
Save and Press F5.
cmd - regedit-HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE-SYSTEM-CurrentControlSet-Services-HTTP-START=3
Computer restarted.
worked for me!
Tried most of the things here to no avail, but finally found a fix for my machine, so thought I'd share it:
Following previous advice in another question, I had used netsh to add :: to iplisten. It turns out undoing that was my solution, by simply replacing add in their advice:
netsh http delete iplisten ipaddress=::
You can also do this manually by deleting HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\HTTP\Parameters\ListenOnlyList from the registry and restarting the service/your PC.
I update my Visual Studio to 2019 version and has this problem, I tried all solution from this question but it doesn't help to start my ASP.NET MVC 5 project with IIS Express. After I remove IIS Express (using Control Panel), download last version from www.microsoft.com and install it. After this everything works fine.
After some weeks i got update for Visual Studio and I got this problem again. I remove IIS Express and reinstall and it works fine now.
p.s. repair didn't help me, only uninstall and install.

Visual Studio 2013 launches the wrong MVC Application

This seems like a typical Microsoft bug. I have a project that when I click launch despite the fact that it's set as the default project is launches a skeleton MVC app as opposed to the MVC app that I'm currently working on.
To fix the problem I have to close down Visual Studio completely and relaunch my solution. I press f5 or just run the app and it works.
What I find interesting is this mysterious skeleton app which seems to be ASP.NET temporary files is the same port as my project. This happens multiple times a day while developing this particular app on the particular port. Does anybody know why Visual Studio 2013 is doing this?
Okay so this is a Microsoft bug. It turns out the project I'm working on does have identical names to another project that I was working on except in a different codeline. Visual Studio gets all confused and launches the old app in cache instead of the app I'm working on. The only way to fix this it appears it to manually change the port number for IIS Express.
For more information check this out.
https://connect.microsoft.com/VisualStudio/feedback/details/786645/vs-launches-the-wrong-mvc-website-when-two-identically-named-solutions-are-open-at-the-same-time

Visual Studio 2010 hangs on attach to process / debugging

Whenever I try to debug a Visual Studio 2010 web project, VS hangs, and ultimately crashes. This happens if I try to start the project using F5, or through Attach to Process, before the process list even appears.
Hitting F5 in, for example, a Windows Form project works fine, but attach to process fails here too.
Any ideas on what can be causing this? Obviously attaching to the devenv.exe process won't work as I can't get the Attach to Process dialog to appear...
Oh, running W7 (x64), VS2010 SP1 (had same problems without SP1)
In Solution Explorer there is a Show All Files icon (highlighted in the photo below):
Make sure it's turned off,
When It's turned on, Visual Studio tries to index all the files in the solution and if you have a giant Solution it could take forever!
I hope this has helped someone :)
Have you recently installed Mono and/or Mono Tools for VS2010?
I found that to be the problem it my case. Not sure why, but it somehow got in the way.
Matthew
In my case hangs when executable type was not correctly set, ex. Managed v4.0 and trying to attach to Native.

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