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I just set up my machine to code Windows Azure apps in Visual Studio 2010. I have a machine at work, which works fine. The machines are both 64-bit Windows 7. I run as administator at work. At home I installed most of the VS and .NET components as normal user, but I'm running everything now as administrator, because I assume there could be some errors correlating to that.

Creating a standard Azure project with one web role gives me this:

"there was an error attaching the debugger to the IIS worker process for URL http://127.0.0.1:5100/ for role instance 'xyz'...".

I searched Google 24 hours and tried most of the solutions, but none worked for me:

http://127.0.0.1:5100/debugattach.aspx 
Status code=403 (Forbidden) Protocol version=1.1 Cached=False
Content-Length=53 Content-Type=text/html; charset=utf-8 
Date=Fri, 19 Aug 2011 20:16:48 GMT Server=Microsoft-IIS/7.5
X-Powered-By=ASP.NET
/debugattach.aspx-application debugging not activated.

When I comment out the Sites-Tag in the ServiceDefinition.csdef I get the following error:

"unrecognized attribute 'targetframework'. note that attribute names are case-sensitive"

Here I also tried most solutions to be found on the internet:

  • setting the right .NET-Framework version in IIS-Manager (all application pools are set to 4.0, when starting the project, the error page shows framework 2.0 though, where can I change it?)
  • installing the newest .NET-Framework, I have 4.0.30319

None of them work.

If you have any advice, I will try it and list my result in this post.

4 Answers 4

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I was getting this due the the properties on the azure project being set up incorrectly.

I had to change the setting from IIS Webserver to IIS Express

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  • But what are the correct properties and settings? That's the million dollar question.
    – Colin Pear
    Jul 3, 2013 at 16:28
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The first question to ask is which version of Windows 7 are you running at home? I'm going to go out on a limb and guess that it's Home Premium and at work you run Professional.

The catch is that with Home Premium (an lesser edtions) you don't have the option to install the necessary components to be able to debug in IIS. To confirm this, on your work computer go to Control Panel -> Programs and Features -> "Turn Windows features on or off" and have a look under the IIS option. You'll see more there than you do at home.

I have not found anywhere in the MS documentation on the differences between various editions of Windows 7 that this is the case. I'd be happy for someone to correct me on this though.

To get around this issue is while running at home to change the project to run with Visual Studio Development Server (right click your project -> Properties -> Web) and make sure that you change it back to using IIS before you check in your code.

Or you can buy an anytime upgrade for windows to Professional.

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  • @knighpfhor You are right, I'm running Win7 Home at home (:>). Checking the IIS options under Windows features shows me less options in the home version under WWW-Services->Security and WWW-Services->Health and Diagnostics. I looked into my Project's Web options, and Server is set to Visual Studio Development Server (I think this is a default and it is also set at my office) - it's not working. Upgrading to Professional would be an option of course, but spending almost 300 Euros for just one feature seems a bit overpriced to me.
    – Torsten
    Aug 22, 2011 at 8:07
  • OK, two things to try. Try running the site under Hosted Web Core rather than IIS. This is a deprecated method of running web roles (simply delete the sites section in the .csdef file) that means it may not try to use IIS. If that doesn't work try debugging just the website project, not the cloud project (this may require some code changes) Aug 22, 2011 at 21:20
  • I tried both already. The first gives me unrecognized attribute 'targetframework'. I can see the current framework is set to 2.0. How do I change the HWC framework? Under the IIS manager the application pools are set to 4.0. The second works.
    – Torsten
    Aug 23, 2011 at 5:37
  • I'm surprised that you get that first error, I don't have anything else to try there. I hate to say it, but if you want to debug your project at home it sounds like you might just have to debug the site and not the cloud project. Aug 23, 2011 at 20:08
  • I accepted your answer, since I reckon the error lies within the Windows versions (Pro/Home).
    – Torsten
    Dec 1, 2011 at 11:23
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Got the same error and fixed it by changing the defaults for the app-pools in IIS.

  • Start iis manager
  • Select application pools
  • On the right side, in the 'Actions' panel click on 'Set application pool defaults'
  • Set .NET framework to 4.0
  • OPTIONAL : Set Enable 32-bit applications to true
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This worked for me:

Go to IIS -> default web site -> bindings

Set the default http port back to 80.

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