I was amazed not find a decent explanation anywhere regarding this. I hope someone can assist me.
I am at a new office coming from a ASP.NET 1.1 shop to a 2.0 VS2005 one. They have a large scale complicated classic ASP 3.0 site that I am going to re-write in small modules as a hybrid for a bit.
There is a server 2003 running IIS6 (running ASP.NET 2.0) with two directories running two sites. One Staging/Development and one the intranet production site. I can not seem to be able to run a simple index.aspx when a new site is mapped to the network drive. Via either the VS2005 localhost or via the network URL. When I develop on my local machine it runs fine of course and if I publish to that directory it fails as well.
How can I set up a running 2.0 site without front page extensions on a mapped drive to run on that webserver? This office only has two developers and it has been made known to me that there will be no version control. Just a dev directory that will be accessed and worked on.
<== Some people say they are afraid of heights. With me its table widths. ==>
I am at a new office coming from a ASP.NET 1.1 shop to a 2.0 VS2005 one. They have a large scale complicated classic ASP 3.0 site that I am going to re-write in small modules as a hybrid for a bit.
There is a server 2003 running IIS6 (running ASP.NET 2.0) with two directories running two sites. One Staging/Development and one the intranet production site. I can not seem to be able to run a simple index.aspx when a new site is mapped to the network drive. Via either the VS2005 localhost or via the network URL. When I develop on my local machine it runs fine of course and if I publish to that directory it fails as well.
How can I set up a running 2.0 site without front page extensions on a mapped drive to run on that webserver? This office only has two developers and it has been made known to me that there will be no version control. Just a dev directory that will be accessed and worked on.
<== Some people say they are afraid of heights. With me its table widths. ==>