I followed these links:

  1. Catching "Maximum request length exceeded" and
  2. ASP.NET - how to show a error page when uploading big file (Maximum request length exceeded)?

to display error page to handle uploading files exceeding the maxRequestLength in web.config

But my problem is, it is not redirected to the error page (the message says that the webpage cannot be displayed ). I do not know what I'm missing.

Here's my Code @ Global.asax:

void Application_Error(object sender, EventArgs e) 
{       
    if (IsMaxRequestLengthExceeded(Server.GetLastError()))
    {
        this.Server.ClearError();
        this.Server.Transfer("~/Error.html");
    }
}

private bool IsMaxRequestLengthExceeded(Exception ex)
{
    Exception main;
    HttpUnhandledException unhandledEx = (HttpUnhandledException)ex;

    if (unhandledEx != null && unhandledEx.ErrorCode == -2147467259)
    {
        main = unhandledEx.InnerException;
    }
    else
    {
        main = unhandledEx;
    }

    HttpException httpException = (HttpException)main;
    if (httpException != null && httpException.ErrorCode == -2147467259)
    {
        if (httpException.StackTrace.Contains("GetEntireRawContent"))
        {
            return true;
        }
    }

    return false;
}

And @ web.config:

<httpRuntime executionTimeout="1200" />
<customErrors defaultRedirect="Error.html" mode="On">
</customErrors>

It found out that when maxRequestLength was not initialized, it is set by default to 4MB. (I didn't set it because it is not important to me.)

Hope you could help me with this. Thanks

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Shouldn't "Error.html" in web.config be same as in Global.asax "~/Error.html" ? – Răzvan Panda Jul 21 '11 at 9:12
Hi, using Error.html causes error, i need the ~ character to specify the root path of the virtual directory. – KaeL Jul 21 '11 at 9:18
Shouldn't it be "~/Error.html" in both places then (web.config also)? – Răzvan Panda Jul 21 '11 at 9:23
I think not, my web.config is working as expected with defaultRedirect="Error.html" :( – KaeL Jul 21 '11 at 9:26
My guess is that "Error.html" is not pointing to the error page and that is why it can't be displayed. Try using "~/Error.html" in web.config also. Check this: ASP.NET paths – Răzvan Panda Jul 21 '11 at 9:51
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1 Answer

up vote 0 down vote accepted

I was able to find another way to solve maxRequestLength error. I found it in this link:

The solution was posted as comment by Rakesh Kumar Roy (Post Details: Friday, February 13, 2009 1:43 PM). This might be helpful for other programmers out there. :D

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