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As most of you would know, if I drop a file named app_offline.htm in the root of an asp.net application, it takes the application offline as detailed here.

You would also know, that while this is great, IIS actually returns a 404 code when this is in process and Microsoft is not going to do anything about it as mentioned here.

Now, since Asp.Net in general is so extensible, I am thinking that shouldn't there be a way to over ride this status code to return a 503 instead? The problem is, I don't know where to start looking to make this change.

HELP!

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The handling of app_offline.htm is hardcoded in the ASP.NET pipeline, and can't be modified: see CheckApplicationEnabled() in HttpRuntime.cs, where it throws a very non-configurable 404 error if the application is deemed to be offline.

However, creating your own HTTP module to do something similar is of course trivial -- the OnBeginRequest handler could look as follows in this case (implementation for a HttpHandler shown, but in a HttpModule the idea is exactly the same):

Public Sub ProcessRequest(ByVal ctx As System.Web.HttpContext) Implements IHttpHandler.ProcessRequest
    If IO.File.Exists(ctx.Server.MapPath("/app_unavailable.htm")) Then
        ctx.Response.Status = "503 Unavailable (in Maintenance Mode)"
        ctx.Response.Write(String.Format("<html><h1>{0}</h1></html>", ctx.Response.Status))
        ctx.Response.End()
    End If
End Sub

This is just a starting point, of course: by making the returned HTML a bit friendlier, you can display a nice "we'll be right back" page to your users as well.

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That, I guess, is what I was hoping is not the case. I think I read in a Scott Gu article that there are events exposed by the pipeline for something like this. Now, I wonder if it really is hard coded. – Vaibhav Sep 19 '08 at 10:26
Yeah, it's definitely hardcoded. I've updated my answer to include the function name and source file in the ASP.NET reference source that shows that quite clearly... – mdb Sep 19 '08 at 11:48
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You can try turning it off in the web.config.

<httpRuntime enable = "False"/>
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You could probably do it by writing your own HTTP Handler (a .NET component that implements the System.Web.IHttpHandler interface).

There's a good primer article here: link text

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That won't work, right? Because this technique doesn't even let the App Domain load, so I am thinking that the HTTP Handler will never get called. – Vaibhav Sep 19 '08 at 10:24

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