My ASP.Net web service cannot run because the application pool is unable to start due to the identity crisis it's experiencing.

The user I'm using in the app pool is a domain user, it's a local admin, it's in IIS_WPG, I've given it "act as part of the OS permissions" - nothing. Nada. Fails to start the application pool each time.

Adding the user to IIS_WPG is usually what's missing, but I guess there's something else.

Things I've tried:

  • Adding user to IIS_WPG
  • Adding user to local admin group and adding the "Act as part of the os" right.
  • aspnet_regiis -ga
  • rebooting...
  • Checked password
  • Recreated the app pool and assigning only my application to it

p.s. If I use the Network Service user it all works - it's just my "custom" user that's failing. Logging in (interactively) with this user works.

Edit:

The solution is as described in the accepted answer (adding the "Log on as Service" right to the application pool's identity user).

I'll just add, for future reference, for those encountering the following message when trying to add the "Log on as a service" right to a domain user:

"This setting is not compatible with computers running Windows 2000 Service Pack 1 or earlier...."

Know that this has nothing to do with Windows 2000 and it's just the domain's group policy that's preventing you from assigning this right to the user.

link|improve this question
what exactly does the event log report? – AviD May 14 '09 at 15:00
1  
Assaf - if you're creating custom accounts to be used as application pool identities you do need to use the aspnet_regiis -ga <username>. – Kev May 15 '09 at 13:24
Kev - I tried and it didn't help – gigantt.com May 17 '09 at 8:23
I'm here because we rebooted the server today, and this started happening out of the blue. I suspect that there was a domain policy change, since the last reboot. Just sitting out there, waiting for us to reboot... WHAM! The info here looks very useful, hopefully it'll get us going again. – Chris Thornton Sep 27 '11 at 18:15
feedback

10 Answers

up vote 12 down vote accepted
+150

Have you enabled "Log on as a service" for the account?

Start -> Control Panel -> Administrative Tools -> Local Security Policy -> Local Policies -> User Rights Assignment -> Log on as a service

(make sure your account is in this list directly or indirectly; it has also been suggested that you should set: Access this computer from the network; Deny logon locally; Log on as a batch job)

Also - ensure that the account has "Read & Execute", "List Folder Contents" and "Read" access to the file system that underpins the web site/application.

link|improve this answer
I tried setting Log On as Service, but I'm unable to. The MMC snapin says: "this setting is not compatible with computers runnign Windows 2000 Service Pack 1 or earlier...." Of course, I'm running XP64 with SP3. This is very suspicious. Could it be a wrong error message that's actually due to group policy preventing me from changing this right? – gigantt.com Jun 7 '09 at 8:06
I haven't seen that message; I honestly don't know. – Marc Gravell Jun 7 '09 at 8:33
Bingo. Group policy prevented the assignment of this right to my user. The result was the above weird message which is totally unintuitive. – gigantt.com Jun 7 '09 at 10:54
show 1 more comment
feedback

Try running the following command in the C:\WINDOWS\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v2.0.50727 folder:

aspnet_regiis -ga <your_app_pool_user>

For more info on configuring a user account to use as an application pool identity see the following article:

How To: Create a Service Account for an ASP.NET 2.0 Application (MSDN)

link|improve this answer
the command line did not help. – gigantt.com May 14 '09 at 14:36
If you're creating custom accounts for use as app pool identities you should always run that command anyway. It sets up all the correct user rights assignments, registry permissions, NTFS perms etc. – Kev May 14 '09 at 16:30
This worked for me. Probably should note to run that out of the appropriate framework version folder though... – Telos Apr 22 at 0:36
feedback

Make sure there's a folder called c:\inetpub\temp\apppools. If not, create it.

link|improve this answer
Had no such folder. Created one. Still doesn't work (invalid identity). Is there an extra step? – gigantt.com Jun 7 '09 at 8:03
feedback

What's happening is you are likely running your application inside a pool that is running applications using a different version of the .NET framework. Make sure that all your applications inside that pool are running the same version. If those apps must run under a different version than this one, create a new pool and add your app to it.

link|improve this answer
good idea. I'll check... – gigantt.com May 14 '09 at 14:19
Nope, not it. And it actually unlikely to be the cause because the warning in the Event Log about the identity problem occurs way before I even try to view the web page (thereby loading the DLL..) – gigantt.com May 14 '09 at 14:33
feedback

I know this is simple, but have you checked the password is correct?

link|improve this answer
yes, and I've reset it and retried. even tried running calc with runas with it.. (which works) – gigantt.com May 14 '09 at 14:18
feedback

Having had this issue before and not being able to track the reason I sympathise! Some pointers that might help:

  • Check the password is correct (sorry has to be said)
  • Use a new app pool in which no other website is running
  • Ensure that you have run aspnet_regiis -ga to set up the required permissions

If all else fails: - Stop the app and delete the app pool - Delete the user - Re-create the user - Run aspnet_regiis -ga - Set up a new app pool running under this user - Run the site under this pool That along with copying and pasting the complex password I was using worked for me!

link|improve this answer
I've done all this except delete the user (which is a domain user, and working fine on many other machines, so I'm not about to delete it). – gigantt.com Jun 7 '09 at 8:07
feedback

Do you have a group policy somewehere that is pulling the account out of the iis_wpg group? We have this (or a similar) problem frequently when, for whatever reason, a worker process or a service needs to run under a custom account.

link|improve this answer
No, the account is in WPG. – gigantt.com Jun 6 '09 at 5:56
feedback

I still getting issue.. i created and added window user in to Log on as a service. Also set read and execute permission on directory. Set this user to identity of appPool. But no luck... Can any one have ne solution?

link|improve this answer
feedback

Make sure the user account trying to access the app pool is a member of the IIS_USRS group in AD.

link|improve this answer
feedback

The app pool user account might be locked out.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.