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How to detect IIS version using C#?

Update: I meant from a winapp (actually the scenario is developing a custom installer that wants to check the version of the installed IIS to call the appropriate api's)

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Server-side or client side (e.g. calling an IIS web from a winforms app) ? I guess you mean server-side. – splattne Jan 15 '09 at 11:58
I meant from a winapp (actually the scenario is developing a custom installer that wants to check the version of the installed IIS to call the appropriate api's) should wrote it in the main question..(sorry).. – Amr Elsehemy Jan 15 '09 at 12:11
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9 Answers

up vote 18 down vote accepted

You can get this information from the SERVER_SOFTWARE variable. It will return the following:

Microsoft-IIS/5.0 (Windows 2000)
Microsoft-IIS/5.1 (Windows XP)
Microsoft-IIS/6.0 (Windows 2003 Server)

etc.

If you're using ASP.NET, you can get this string via

Request.ServerVariables["SERVER_SOFTWARE"];

EDIT: It seems that you will have to query the registry to get this information. Take a look at this page to see how.

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That link exactly what i needed thank u. – Amr Elsehemy Jan 15 '09 at 12:40
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-1 This will only work from a Web Request – balexandre Jan 25 '10 at 19:21
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This is how i do it.

FileVersionInfo verinfo = FileVersionInfo.GetVersionInfo(System.Environment.SystemDirectory + @"\inetsrv\inetinfo.exe");

//Tip... look at verinfo.MajorVersion.
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Fantastic, thxs! – balexandre Jan 25 '10 at 19:22
works for XP, Win7, Win2003, Win2008 ? – Kiquenet Mar 3 '11 at 8:29
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Found the answer here: link text The fileVersion method dosesn't work on Windows 2008, the inetserv exe is somewhere else I guess.

public Version GetIisVersion()
{
using (RegistryKey componentsKey =
Registry.LocalMachine.OpenSubKey(@"Software\Microsoft\InetStp", false))
{
if (componentsKey != null)
{
int majorVersion = (int)componentsKey.GetValue("MajorVersion", -1);
int minorVersion = (int)componentsKey.GetValue("MinorVersion", -1);
if (majorVersion != -1 && minorVersion != -1)
{
return new Version(majorVersion, minorVersion);
}
}
return new Version(0, 0);
}
}

I tested it, it works perfectly on Windows XP, 7 and 2008

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U can find it in the registry.

Up to IIS version 6 you can find it here:

HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\W3SVC\Parameters

Since version 7 here:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\InetStp

MajorVersion MinorVersion

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IIS 7 also has an entry in HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\W3SVC\Parameters, at least on Windows7 32 bit. (Major version 7, minor version 5). But this key appears not to be availalbe on Windows Server 2008 (IIS7) anymore. – Quandary Sep 7 '10 at 7:53
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Use System.Web.HttpRequest.ServerVariables("SERVER_SOFTWARE"). The return value is a string in the format name/version.

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Check the X-Powered-By header: http://www.http-stats.com/X-Powered-By

There you can find the possibly values...

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It is usually presented in http header of response, as i know.

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I would just check the version of the OS: xp has IIS 5.1, Server 2003 has IIS 6 and vista/Server 2008 has IIS 7.

Here's how to check the version of the OS.

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For installer with custom actions: In your custom action view, you can pass data to your customer installer class via the "CustomActionData" attribute in the properties for the custom action as follows: /iisv="[IISVERSION]"

Check:

http://johnbarshinger.wordpress.com/2006/10/27/how-to-modify-the-vs2005-installer-to-set-the-asp-net-version-and-create-application-pools/

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