I am trying to find out how to host an ISAPI DLL in Azure. In addition to the DLL, I'll need to deploy supporting files in subdirectories (javascript & css files). And two of these subdirectories can have their contents changed by requests handled by the DLL, so I need to ensure that the account executing the extension has write permission for these.
It would seem that the key to all of this is using a startup task to call appcmd to script all the IIS changes somehow, and I think I need to do the following:-
- Deploy my ISAPI DLL and supporting files with my ASP.NET website
- Create a startup task which will call a batch file utilizing appcmd.exe to do the following:-
- Create a dedicated app pool with its managed pipeline mode set to Classic, and using a known user account
- Create an IIS application pointing to the directory where my ISAPI dll resides
- Ensure the application is configured to allow unknown ISAPI extensions
- Alter the permissions of the required subdirectories so the user account associated with the app pool has write access
I've only just started exploring Azure, so my experience with it is very thin on the ground. Is what I'm hoping to achieve actually achievable? And if so, am I on the right track with regards to the steps required? They mimic what I need to do if I'm setting up this ISAPI DLL in the traditional IIS environment I'm used to dealing with, but please let me know if the rules are different with Azure.