I'm setting up ASP.net MVC 2.0 on an old WebForms site that runs on IIS 7. The old site has a 404 handler set up like:
<httpErrors errorMode="Custom">
<remove statusCode="404" subStatusCode="-1" />
<error statusCode="404" prefixLanguageFilePath="C:\..." path="/error404.aspx" responseMode="ExecuteURL" />
</httpErrors>
This 404 handler is used to simulate URL rewriting, so a URL like "/+yes-&-no" would get routed to it, and Server.Transfer()ed to the correct page. This all works.
When setting up ASP.net MVC 2.0, I add this to the web.config:
<modules runAllManagedModulesForAllRequests="false">
<remove name="UrlRoutingModule" />
<add name="UrlRoutingModule" type="System.Web.Routing.UrlRoutingModule, System.Web.Routing, Version=3.5.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=31BF3856AD364E35" />
</modules>
Once this is added, all URLs containing an ampersand (e.g. "/+yes-&-no") return:
Bad Request
How do I keep the UrlRoutingModule enabled, and still allow URLs with ampersand?
Rejected Solutions:
- I was able to get these registry changes to work, but they have been vetoed out of security concerns.
I was able to use URL Rewriting to change the "&" to "and", but that has SEO implications because that changes the <h1>, etc.
<rule name="RemoveIllegalAmpersands"> <match url="(+.)&(.))" /> <action type="Rewrite" url="{R:1}and{R:2}" /> </rule>
I saw the requestPathInvalidCharacters, web.config element but we can't try it because we're still on .NET 3.5
Are there any other solutions that I've missed?