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I get error message "Unable to start debugging on the web server" in Visual Studio 2010. I clicked the Help button and followed the related suggestions without success.

This happens with a newly created local ASP.Net project when modified to use IIS instead of Cassini (which works for debugging). It prompts to set debug="true" in the web.config and then immediately pops up the error. Nothing shows up in the Event Viewer.

I am able to attach to w3wp to debug. It works but is not as convenient as F5.

I also have a similar problem with VS2008 on the same PC. Debugging used to work for both.

I have re-registered Framework 4 (aspnet_regiis -i). I ran the VS2010 repair (this is the RTM version). I am running on a Windows Server 2008 R2 x64 box.

I do have Resharper V5 installed.

There must be some configuration setting or registry value that survives the repair causing the problem.

I'd appreciate any ideas.

Thanks, Gary Davis (garyd@webguild.com)

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Are HTTP Keep Alives enabled in IIS? That has caused this for me before. – JasonS May 21 '10 at 21:46
Yes, they are enabled. I am still having this problem. It happens in both VS2010 and VS2008. – GarDavis May 25 '10 at 19:11
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I'm stuck here too. The only difference is no ReSharper (yet) and no Win 2008 (I'm on Win 7). Have you found a solution? – DMCS Aug 3 '10 at 18:54
I gave a working answer, just scroll down to read it. Who is going to accept my answer? – Jeroen Aug 6 '10 at 21:25
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11 Answers

Disable the loopback check

(original microsoft page here)

To set the DisableLoopbackCheck registry key, follow these steps:

Click Start, click Run, type regedit, and then click OK.

In Registry Editor, locate and then click the following registry key: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Lsa

Right-click Lsa, point to New, and then click DWORD Value.

Type DisableLoopbackCheck, and then press ENTER.

Right-click DisableLoopbackCheck, and then click Modify.

In the Value data box, type 1, and then click OK.

Quit Registry Editor, and then restart your computer.

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Jeroen - this worked! Thanks! Being lazy, I did not reboot. I tried to debug the existing VS2010 web app and still got the error. I shut down VS2010 and then killed the msvsmon.exe process; reopened VS2010 with the project and this time was able to debug. – GarDavis Aug 6 '10 at 13:21
You're welcome. dont forget to accept the answer (and upvote) – Jeroen Aug 6 '10 at 13:39
Turns out it is still failing after working a bit so I am still looking for a solution. Now, killing msvsmon and restarting VS2010 did not help. – GarDavis Aug 11 '10 at 16:50
This did not solve my problem. – SnowJim Jun 27 '11 at 14:17
Wait. "Killing msvsmon"? Are you debugging remotely? – Dan Esparza Dec 14 '11 at 22:15
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These steps my differ depending on your version of Windows. I am using 7 with iis 7.

Open IIS Manager, click on Application Pools and find the 2 ASP.NET v4.0 pools (One is called "ASP.NET v4.0" the other "ASP.NET v4.0 Classic". Chances are that first one is stopped. Do not start it yet, we need to investigate a bit more.

For the "ASP.NET v4.0" pool, check the name in the Identity Field. Is it ApplicationPoolIdentity? Remember the name.

Open Computer Management (right click on My Computer and select Manage). Expand Event Viewer, then Windows Logs. Click on Application and wait for the data to load. There should be an error with a source of User Profile Service with a message that starts with "Windows cannot log you on because your profile cannot be loaded. Check that you are connected to the network, and that your network is functioning correctly."

If you do find that, then you have the same problem as I did.

The Solution: Go back to IIS Manager and right click on "ASP.NET v4.0" and select Advanced Settings. Under Process Model, the first field is Identity. Change this from ApplicationPoolIdentity to NetworkService. Click OK.

Now start the pool if it did not restart automalically. Go back to your application and press F5 (start debug) and your application should work.

Please note that I have not figured out why this works, and this may be a security risk, but at least you will be able to do some work while you think about this.

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Thanks, this is not my solution - all my pools are "started" – GarDavis May 2 '11 at 13:21
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I had the same problem. How did I fixed it.

Go to IIS (in my case IIS 7 / Windows 7). Select your web site from the list, click on .NET Compilation in ASP.NET section. Select Open Feature. Check if your Debug is set to True. In my case it was False. Once I changed it to True - I have my debug back :)

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I had the same issue on Win7 and VS2010 (without ReSharper) and found that Skype listened on port 80. IIS listens to port 80 by default. This can occur when you set VS to debug an existing web application running in IIS instead of the built in ASP.NET debug web server.

I solved the issue by unchecking "Use ports 80 and 443 as alternatives for incoming connections." in Skype under Tools -> Options -> Connection, followed by a restart of Skype.

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On the workstation with the problem, I do not have Skype installed. though this Skype port issue has affected other unrelated issues on other PCs that did have Skype. Thanks for your comment. – GarDavis Aug 2 '11 at 12:59
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up vote 1 down vote accepted

I got a new PC with Windows 7. I installed VS2010 and my developement environment and hoped my F5 debug problem would be gone but it still failed to start the debugger. This was a good clue since it ruled out the install of software.

I finally traced it down to my HOSTS file. I had an entry for some of my local websites which I can access like "http://testsite.lcl" but the IP I had assigned was my machine's IP instead of using 127.0.0.1 so it looked like a remote server to VS2010. Changing back to 127.0.0.1 resolved the issue.

Thanks for everyone's help on this.

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You can firstly deploy your web application/site with your iis, then open your visual studio 2010. Then click "File"->open->website->Local IIS Site, then select your website/application. Then you will find that the debug may works. This method works for my case.

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I don't have a definite answer though these articles may have some helpful info:

Using Windbg to start with w3wp.exe This mentions windbg/cdb debuggers specifically, but this advice should work with Visual Studio talking to cdb (which is attached to w3wp).

Remote debugging with Visual Studio The reason I mention remote debugging at all is that I had to use that a few times in the past to get Visual Studio to attach to w3wp.exe. W3wp.exe runs in a different session, so you can't directly attach a debugger to that.

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You have not mentioned what operating system you are using. But this might not be related to operating system. I am taking a guess here. If you are running on Windows 7, try running visual studio under Administrator previlages.

You can also try adding your user ID to the VS debugger users group. You can access user groups by reight clicking on computer name or my computer and selecting Manage. Under that you can find Users & Groups.

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I am using Windows Server 2008 R2. I tried running VS2010 as admin and that did not help. I looked at the groups on my system and there is no group called VS debugger or anything similar. I am a member of the Administrators group. Thanks. – GarDavis Aug 5 '10 at 13:06
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In IIS in the Directory Security TAB, if using SSL check "Ignore client certificate" if you are running it in your local PC.

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The error happens for WinForms apps, not just ASP.Net. So there is no tie-in to IIS. – GarDavis Aug 25 '10 at 19:09
If I put a Thread.Sleep(100000) in the start code and set it running, then attempt to attach the debugger to the process, the error that displays is "Unable to attach to the process". – GarDavis Aug 25 '10 at 19:13
Well, I created a new console app from scratch and the debugger worked. I copied in the source code from the failing project and it also worked. I compared the csproj files and saw the one that worked used Client Framework 4 instead of Framework 4 but switching that did not get it to work. Another difference was the working project used X86 instead of Any CPU. My system is 64-bit. Switching this setting did get the console app to debug! Well, now I will have to check ASP.Net and see if that is the solution also. Not sure what the real solution is, however since Any CPU should debug. – GarDavis Aug 28 '10 at 16:28
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I was getting this after a new install of Windows 7 that did not include IIS by default. After installing IIS, the default app pool was created to run under .NET 2.0. Though I was able to set the default App Pool to .net 4 from .net 2, I still got this error. I had to reinstall .net 4 in IIS to get it to work properly. That is, run C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET{FrameworkFolder}\v{FrameworkNumber}\aspnet_regiis -i

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Your solution file in visual studio is broken. It's a known issue when converting from a file-system website to an IIS website, and it has been carried over from 2008 to 2010. Not sure of the location for the bug report on ms's kb site, though.

Remove the website from the solution file (right click the project name, click "remove"). Then right click the solution name, click "add existing web site". When the dialog to add a web site comes up, choose "from IIS" in the left-hand pane. Navigate to your application in IIS, select "use secure sockets layer" if necessary, and click "finish" (or whatever that button is labeled).

this will permanently fix the issue.

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This is not my solution. Even winforms apps and console apps refuse to debug with the same error; not just asp.net sites. At least with asp.net, I have the workaround to attach to w3wp. Note that this is not consistent - infrequently the F5 will start up the debugger but usually, I just get the error Unable to Start Debugging.... For the Console App, the error is a bit different: "Error while trying to run project: Unable to start debugging". – GarDavis Aug 16 '10 at 20:54
This did not help me. – SnowJim Jun 27 '11 at 13:58
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