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I've just installed IE8 (final) and restarted. I can no longer debug Web Application Projects using Visual Studio 2005 on Windows Server 2003 Enterprise R2. I get the message "Internet Explorer cannot display the webpage" and then WebDev.WebServer.exe quits with no visible error message and nothing in the Event Viewer.

Does anyone have any ideas?

Things that haven't helped:

  • Adding localhost to trusted sites
  • Changing the port to 8080 or 80
  • Checking my hosts file (it's just got 127.0.0.1 localhost in it)

Things that have helped a bit:

  • Running (not debugging) with CTRL-F5, which works fine (unless you need to debug)
  • Changing the default Visual Studio browser to Firefox, which allows me to debug

My hosts file contains:

# Copyright (c) 1993-1999 Microsoft Corp.
#
# This is a sample HOSTS file used by Microsoft TCP/IP for Windows.
#
# This file contains the mappings of IP addresses to host names. Each
# entry should be kept on an individual line. The IP address should
# be placed in the first column followed by the corresponding host name.
# The IP address and the host name should be separated by at least one
# space.
#
# Additionally, comments (such as these) may be inserted on individual
# lines or following the machine name denoted by a '#' symbol.
#
# For example:
#
#      102.54.94.97     rhino.acme.com          # source server
#       38.25.63.10     x.acme.com              # x client host

127.0.0.1       localhost
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Thanks, I didn't realize it was IE8 that was causing the issue. I recently upgraded to Windows 7 when everything stopped working, so I thought it was related to that. – RexM Oct 15 at 15:14

10 Answers

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A colleague of mine was having similar issues and found this:

IE 8 has a feature called Loosely-Coupled Internet Explorer (LCIE) which results in IE running across multiple processes.

http://www.microsoft.com/windows/internet-explorer/beta/readiness/developers-existing.aspx#lcie

Older versions of the Visual Studio Debugger get confused by this and cannot figure out how to attach to the correct process. You can work around this by disabling the process growth feature of LCIE. Here's how:

  1. Open RegEdit
  2. Browse to HKEY_LOCALMACHINE -> SOFTWARE -> Microsoft -> Internet Explorer -> Main
  3. Add a dword under this key called TabProcGrowth
  4. Set TabProcGrowth to 0

Since you are running on Windows Server 2003, this is all you should need to do. If you run into the same problem on Vista or newer, you will also need to turn off protected mode.

Credit: Brad Sullivan, Program Manager, Visual Studio Debugger, MSFT

Source: http://social.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/vsdebug/thread/e2c795cd-b7a0-4fad-b7c9-b1ca40d7302e

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2  
Just a little addition for everyones information: Visual Studio 2008 Debugger can handle this feature. – Oliver Hanappi Jul 7 at 10:41
That's good to know, thanks. – tjrobinson Jul 8 at 9:47
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I recently had a similar issue after installing an update to Windows Vista. Basically the update changed the hosts file, which caused the same issue you describe.

Apparently, the entry in the hosts file needs to be prefixed by three colons, ie.:

:::1 localhost

For some reason the update to Vista changed this to two colons. I'm not sure if you have the same problem, but it sounds like it's worth checking out.

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Thanks, this seems to work. In my case there was no entry like that in the hosts file (see original post where I've shown my old hosts file) so I tried adding it and now everything works fine. – tjrobinson Mar 20 at 9:04
2  
:::1 is IPv6's version of 127.0.0.1 – ilitirit Mar 20 at 9:04
Unfortunately this fix has just stopped working, I'll have to un-accept the answer for now to see if anyone else has other ideas. – tjrobinson Mar 20 at 9:49
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I have the same problem when one IE8 window is already running when i trying to start the debugging (F5 from VS 2005). It works fine if no IE is running.

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I think you've found the cause! I usually have Outlook Web Access open in another IE window - I've reproduced the problem by trying it both with and without another IE instance running. Very annoying :/ – tjrobinson Mar 20 at 17:58
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This is what resolved my problem on Windows XP Pro SP3/IE8. Go to Control Panel/Internet Options/Connections/LAN settings, uncheck 'Automatically detect settings', then OK/OK

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VS help here.

ie8 Visual Studio http://qdeo.com/mm3

http://qdeo.com/mm4

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If you run into this with IE8 and Visual Studio 2008, modify your hosts file and point the localhost to 127.0.0.1:

::1 localhost

127.0.0.1 localhost

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The registry entry solution worked for me

running WinXP SP3, VS 2005

Initially debugging would work if I clicked the menu item: Debug -> Start Debugging. Wouldn't work if I pressed F5 or clicked the 'play' button, but the constant issue I found was, that if I tried to debug more than one app, IE8 would crash and give an error :

"AppName: iexplore.exe AppVer: 8.0.6001.18702 ModName: urlmon.dll ModVer: 8.0.6001.18702 Offset: 000050d7"

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Thank you! tjrobinson fix worked for me :) WinXP IE8 , VS2005. Been looking for this for days, thanks very much.

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This should really be a comment not an answer – tjrobinson Jul 17 at 7:59
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Some people report that debugging works fine when there is not an instance of IE8 already running. If that does not work for you, check your running processes with ProcExplorer, you may be surprised to find that when you stop debugging by hitting the Stop button in VS2005, it no longer shuts down the browser cleanly, which can result in many running (but invisible) instances of Internet Explorer.

/me doesn't think Microsoft ate enough dogfood on this one...

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Thank!. My problem was solved after adding new DWARD "TabProcGrowth" (0) in registry under HKEY_LOCALMACHINE -> SOFTWARE -> Microsoft -> Internet Explorer -> Main

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