IIS Aborting Requests












3















For some users of an application, IIS is aborting the request to the server, including me. I type in the URL, and it just stops, doesn't even process. FireBug reports the request was aborted. But I see successful logins to the application by other users. Any tips for debugging these types of issues? It seems very odd.



Thanks.










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  • Yes, you need to debug IIS logs.. Look at the timestamp when you try and go there.. and it should log why its aborted, failed the connection. Most likely a certificate problem.. is your date/time set correctly on your machine?

    – ppumkin
    Jan 23 '12 at 15:27













  • Date/time - yes, that's fine. I'll look into the certificate, but oddly enough, no errors in the log...

    – Brian Mains
    Jan 23 '12 at 17:24











  • Use Fiddler, inspect the request and response packets.. see what is happening.. timing out? or an actual error.. If there is no error log maybe there are just too many request per second?

    – ppumkin
    Jan 23 '12 at 17:25
















3















For some users of an application, IIS is aborting the request to the server, including me. I type in the URL, and it just stops, doesn't even process. FireBug reports the request was aborted. But I see successful logins to the application by other users. Any tips for debugging these types of issues? It seems very odd.



Thanks.










share|improve this question

























  • Yes, you need to debug IIS logs.. Look at the timestamp when you try and go there.. and it should log why its aborted, failed the connection. Most likely a certificate problem.. is your date/time set correctly on your machine?

    – ppumkin
    Jan 23 '12 at 15:27













  • Date/time - yes, that's fine. I'll look into the certificate, but oddly enough, no errors in the log...

    – Brian Mains
    Jan 23 '12 at 17:24











  • Use Fiddler, inspect the request and response packets.. see what is happening.. timing out? or an actual error.. If there is no error log maybe there are just too many request per second?

    – ppumkin
    Jan 23 '12 at 17:25














3












3








3








For some users of an application, IIS is aborting the request to the server, including me. I type in the URL, and it just stops, doesn't even process. FireBug reports the request was aborted. But I see successful logins to the application by other users. Any tips for debugging these types of issues? It seems very odd.



Thanks.










share|improve this question
















For some users of an application, IIS is aborting the request to the server, including me. I type in the URL, and it just stops, doesn't even process. FireBug reports the request was aborted. But I see successful logins to the application by other users. Any tips for debugging these types of issues? It seems very odd.



Thanks.







iis iis-7.5






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share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 31 '14 at 14:05









Der Hochstapler

68k50230286




68k50230286










asked Jan 23 '12 at 15:00









Brian MainsBrian Mains

1141415




1141415













  • Yes, you need to debug IIS logs.. Look at the timestamp when you try and go there.. and it should log why its aborted, failed the connection. Most likely a certificate problem.. is your date/time set correctly on your machine?

    – ppumkin
    Jan 23 '12 at 15:27













  • Date/time - yes, that's fine. I'll look into the certificate, but oddly enough, no errors in the log...

    – Brian Mains
    Jan 23 '12 at 17:24











  • Use Fiddler, inspect the request and response packets.. see what is happening.. timing out? or an actual error.. If there is no error log maybe there are just too many request per second?

    – ppumkin
    Jan 23 '12 at 17:25



















  • Yes, you need to debug IIS logs.. Look at the timestamp when you try and go there.. and it should log why its aborted, failed the connection. Most likely a certificate problem.. is your date/time set correctly on your machine?

    – ppumkin
    Jan 23 '12 at 15:27













  • Date/time - yes, that's fine. I'll look into the certificate, but oddly enough, no errors in the log...

    – Brian Mains
    Jan 23 '12 at 17:24











  • Use Fiddler, inspect the request and response packets.. see what is happening.. timing out? or an actual error.. If there is no error log maybe there are just too many request per second?

    – ppumkin
    Jan 23 '12 at 17:25

















Yes, you need to debug IIS logs.. Look at the timestamp when you try and go there.. and it should log why its aborted, failed the connection. Most likely a certificate problem.. is your date/time set correctly on your machine?

– ppumkin
Jan 23 '12 at 15:27







Yes, you need to debug IIS logs.. Look at the timestamp when you try and go there.. and it should log why its aborted, failed the connection. Most likely a certificate problem.. is your date/time set correctly on your machine?

– ppumkin
Jan 23 '12 at 15:27















Date/time - yes, that's fine. I'll look into the certificate, but oddly enough, no errors in the log...

– Brian Mains
Jan 23 '12 at 17:24





Date/time - yes, that's fine. I'll look into the certificate, but oddly enough, no errors in the log...

– Brian Mains
Jan 23 '12 at 17:24













Use Fiddler, inspect the request and response packets.. see what is happening.. timing out? or an actual error.. If there is no error log maybe there are just too many request per second?

– ppumkin
Jan 23 '12 at 17:25





Use Fiddler, inspect the request and response packets.. see what is happening.. timing out? or an actual error.. If there is no error log maybe there are just too many request per second?

– ppumkin
Jan 23 '12 at 17:25










1 Answer
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Check if you have any "URL Rewrite" rules that can filter your request.



Also check if you have "IP Address and domain restrictions" configured. In IIS manager: click your website, "IP Address and domain restrictions", check any rules there. Also check the "Dynamic restriction settings". This module is an anti-DDoS thing, that can block you as a false-positive.



Repeat both steps at parent level (in IIS manager).






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    Check if you have any "URL Rewrite" rules that can filter your request.



    Also check if you have "IP Address and domain restrictions" configured. In IIS manager: click your website, "IP Address and domain restrictions", check any rules there. Also check the "Dynamic restriction settings". This module is an anti-DDoS thing, that can block you as a false-positive.



    Repeat both steps at parent level (in IIS manager).






    share|improve this answer




























      0














      Check if you have any "URL Rewrite" rules that can filter your request.



      Also check if you have "IP Address and domain restrictions" configured. In IIS manager: click your website, "IP Address and domain restrictions", check any rules there. Also check the "Dynamic restriction settings". This module is an anti-DDoS thing, that can block you as a false-positive.



      Repeat both steps at parent level (in IIS manager).






      share|improve this answer


























        0












        0








        0







        Check if you have any "URL Rewrite" rules that can filter your request.



        Also check if you have "IP Address and domain restrictions" configured. In IIS manager: click your website, "IP Address and domain restrictions", check any rules there. Also check the "Dynamic restriction settings". This module is an anti-DDoS thing, that can block you as a false-positive.



        Repeat both steps at parent level (in IIS manager).






        share|improve this answer













        Check if you have any "URL Rewrite" rules that can filter your request.



        Also check if you have "IP Address and domain restrictions" configured. In IIS manager: click your website, "IP Address and domain restrictions", check any rules there. Also check the "Dynamic restriction settings". This module is an anti-DDoS thing, that can block you as a false-positive.



        Repeat both steps at parent level (in IIS manager).







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 25 '14 at 18:42









        jitbitjitbit

        2701211




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