62

I am trying to build a small application in C# which should start/stop an IIS Express worker process. For this purpose I want to use the official "IIS Express API" which is documented on MSDN: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/gg418415.aspx

As far as I understand, the API is based (only) on COM interfaces. To use this COM interfaces I've added a reference to the COM library in VS2010 via Add Reference -> COM -> "IIS Installed Versions Manager Interface":

So far so good, but what's next? There is an IIISExprProcessUtility interface available which includes the the two "methods" to start/stop an IIS process. Do I have to write a class which implements this interface?

public class test : IISVersionManagerLibrary.IIISExprProcessUtility
{
    public string ConstructCommandLine(string bstrSite, string bstrApplication, string bstrApplicationPool, string bstrConfigPath)
    {
        throw new NotImplementedException();
    }

    public uint GetRunningProcessForSite(string bstrSite, string bstrApplication, string bstrApplicationPool, string bstrConfigPath)
    {
        throw new NotImplementedException();
    }

    public void StopProcess(uint dwPid)
    {
        throw new NotImplementedException();
    }
} 

As you can see, I'm not a professional developer. Can someone point me in the right direction. Any help is greatly appreciated.

Update 1: According to the suggestions I've tried the following code which unfortunately doesn't work:

alt text Ok, it can be instantiated but I cannot see how to use this object...

alt text

alt text

IISVersionManagerLibrary.IIISExpressProcessUtility test3 = (IISVersionManagerLibrary.IIISExpressProcessUtility) Activator.CreateInstance(Type.GetTypeFromCLSID(new Guid("5A081F08-E4FA-45CC-A8EA-5C8A7B51727C")));

Exception: Retrieving the COM class factory for component with CLSID {5A081F08-E4FA-45CC-A8EA-5C8A7B51727C} failed due to the following error: 80040154 Class not registered (Exception from HRESULT: 0x80040154 (REGDB_E_CLASSNOTREG)).

10 Answers 10

66

I was trying to do similar thing. I concluded that the COM library provided by Microsoft is incomplete. I don't use it because the doc mentioned that "Note: This topic is pre-release documentation and is subject to change in future releases".

So, I decided to take a look at what IISExpressTray.exe is doing. It seems to be doing similar things.

I disassemble the IISExpressTray.dll and found that there is no magic in listing out all the IISexpress processes and stoping the IISexpress process.

It doesn't call that COM library. It doesn't lookup anything from registry.

So, the solution I ended up is very simple. To start an IIS express process, I just use Process.Start() and pass in all the parameters I need.

To stop an IIS express process, I copied the code from IISExpressTray.dll using reflector. I saw it simply sends a WM_QUIT message to the target IISExpress process.

Here is the class I wrote to start and stop an IIS express process. Hope this can help somebody else.

class IISExpress
{
    internal class NativeMethods
    {
        // Methods
        [DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = true)]
        internal static extern IntPtr GetTopWindow(IntPtr hWnd);
        [DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = true)]
        internal static extern IntPtr GetWindow(IntPtr hWnd, uint uCmd);
        [DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = true)]
        internal static extern uint GetWindowThreadProcessId(IntPtr hwnd, out uint lpdwProcessId);
        [DllImport("user32.dll", SetLastError = true)]
        internal static extern bool PostMessage(HandleRef hWnd, uint Msg, IntPtr wParam, IntPtr lParam);
    }

    public static void SendStopMessageToProcess(int PID)
    {
        try
        {
            for (IntPtr ptr = NativeMethods.GetTopWindow(IntPtr.Zero); ptr != IntPtr.Zero; ptr = NativeMethods.GetWindow(ptr, 2))
            {
                uint num;
                NativeMethods.GetWindowThreadProcessId(ptr, out num);
                if (PID == num)
                {
                    HandleRef hWnd = new HandleRef(null, ptr);
                    NativeMethods.PostMessage(hWnd, 0x12, IntPtr.Zero, IntPtr.Zero);
                    return;
                }
            }
        }
        catch (ArgumentException)
        {
        }
    }

    const string IIS_EXPRESS = @"C:\Program Files\IIS Express\iisexpress.exe";
    const string CONFIG = "config";
    const string SITE = "site";
    const string APP_POOL = "apppool";

    Process process;

    IISExpress(string config, string site, string apppool)
    {
        Config = config;
        Site = site;
        AppPool = apppool;

        StringBuilder arguments = new StringBuilder();
        if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(Config))
            arguments.AppendFormat("/{0}:{1} ", CONFIG, Config);

        if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(Site))
            arguments.AppendFormat("/{0}:{1} ", SITE, Site);

        if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(AppPool))
            arguments.AppendFormat("/{0}:{1} ", APP_POOL, AppPool);

        process = Process.Start(new ProcessStartInfo()
        {
            FileName = IIS_EXPRESS,
            Arguments = arguments.ToString(),
            RedirectStandardOutput = true,
            UseShellExecute = false
        });
    }

    public string Config { get; protected set; }
    public string Site { get; protected set; }
    public string AppPool { get; protected set; }

    public static IISExpress Start(string config, string site, string apppool)
    {
        return new IISExpress(config, site, apppool);
    }

    public void Stop()
    {
        SendStopMessageToProcess(process.Id);
        process.Close();
    }
}

I don't need to list all the existing IIS express process. If you need that, from what I saw in the reflector, what IISExpressTray.dll does is to call Process.GetProcessByName("iisexpress", ".")

To use the class I provided, here is a sample program I used to test it.

class Program
{

    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        Console.Out.WriteLine("Launching IIS Express...");
        IISExpress iis1 = IISExpress.Start(
            @"C:\Users\Administrator\Documents\IISExpress\config\applicationhost.config",
            @"WebSite1(1)",
            @"Clr4IntegratedAppPool");

        IISExpress iis2 = IISExpress.Start(
            @"C:\Users\Administrator\Documents\IISExpress\config\applicationhost2.config",
            @"WebSite1(1)",
            @"Clr4IntegratedAppPool");

        Console.Out.WriteLine("Press ENTER to kill");
        Console.In.ReadLine();

        iis1.Stop();
        iis2.Stop();
    }
}

This may not be an answer to your question but I think people interesting in your question may find my work useful. Feel free to improve the codes. There are some places that you might want to enhance.

  1. Instead of hardcoding the iisexpress.exe location, you can fix my code to read from the registry.
  2. I didn't include all the arguments supported by iisexpress.exe
  3. I didn't do error handling. So, if the IISExpress process failed to start for some reasons (e.g. port is in used), I don't know. I think the easiest way to fix it is to monitor the StandardError stream and throw exception if I get anything from StandardError stream
4
  • 2
    Wow! Thank you very much for this detailed answer! I think as long as there is no complete/correct COM documentation on MSDN, this seems to be the perfect solution. I'll try it as soon as I'm back on the PC.
    – Mike
    Jan 24, 2011 at 4:15
  • Excellent, the stop message worked like a charm. I'm running IIS Express from command line but this was the missing piece. Thanks!
    – jpierson
    Mar 18, 2012 at 17:44
  • 1
    Brilliant! I added CreateNoWindow = true, in Process.Start and use this during SetUp/TearDown of my fixtures. Thank you very much! Feb 6, 2017 at 15:49
  • Thanks. I wrote a similar code and was using process.Kill() for ISS Express but it was not working for some reason (anyone has any idea why BTW?) and using the stop message works. May 12, 2020 at 12:35
15

Although, it's too late, I'll provide an answer to this question.

IISVersionManagerLibrary.IISVersionManager mgr = new IISVersionManagerLibrary.IISVersionManagerClass();
IISVersionManagerLibrary.IIISVersion ver = mgr.GetVersionObject("7.5", IISVersionManagerLibrary.IIS_PRODUCT_TYPE.IIS_PRODUCT_EXPRESS);

object obj1 = ver.GetPropertyValue("expressProcessHelper");

IISVersionManagerLibrary.IIISExpressProcessUtility util = obj1 as IISVersionManagerLibrary.IIISExpressProcessUtility;

That's it. Then you can call StopProcess method on util object.

However, you have to get notice from Microsoft.

" Version Manager API (IIS Express) ; http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/gg418429(v=VS.90).aspx

Note: The IIS Version Manager API supports the IIS Express infrastructure and is not intended to be used directly from your code. "

5
  • Thank you (+1). Compiler complained and told me to modify first row: IISVersionManagerLibrary.IISVersionManager mgr = new IISVersionManagerLibrary.IISVersionManager();
    – ilmatte
    May 24, 2013 at 23:00
  • 2
    Thanks! This code runs fine for me, but I guess I'm a little lost at what to do next. How can I figure out what port it's running on? How can I use this to launch a site I'm developing? Dec 10, 2015 at 17:28
  • Alas this does not work with the latest (4.5+) of .NET.... error CS0656: Missing compiler required member 'Microsoft.CSharp.RuntimeBinder.Binder.Convert' Jan 21, 2016 at 15:57
  • 1
    @DavidV.Corbin Your problem has nothing to do with this answer. Go and find your answer. There must be. (FYI, I compiled it in 4.6.1 of .NET successfully) Jan 22, 2016 at 10:23
  • 2
    It's never too late! Apr 23, 2017 at 14:13
7

This implementation works for starting/stopping IIS Express programmatically, can be used from tests.

public class IisExpress : IDisposable
{
    private Boolean _isDisposed;

    private Process _process;

    public void Dispose()
    {
        Dispose(true);
    }

    public void Start(String directoryPath, Int32 port)
    {
        var iisExpressPath = DetermineIisExpressPath();
        var arguments = String.Format(
            CultureInfo.InvariantCulture, "/path:\"{0}\" /port:{1}", directoryPath, port);

        var info = new ProcessStartInfo(iisExpressPath)
                                    {
                                        WindowStyle = ProcessWindowStyle.Normal,
                                        ErrorDialog = true,
                                        LoadUserProfile = true,
                                        CreateNoWindow = false,
                                        UseShellExecute = false,
                                        Arguments = arguments
                                    };

        var startThread = new Thread(() => StartIisExpress(info))
                                 {
                                     IsBackground = true
                                 };

        startThread.Start();
    }

    protected virtual void Dispose(Boolean disposing)
    {
        if (_isDisposed)
        {
            return;
        }

        if (disposing)
        {
            if (_process.HasExited == false)
            {
                _process.Kill();
            }

            _process.Dispose();
        }

        _isDisposed = true;
    }

    private static String DetermineIisExpressPath()
    {
        String iisExpressPath;

        iisExpressPath = Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.Is64BitOperatingSystem 
            ? Environment.SpecialFolder.ProgramFilesX86
            : Environment.SpecialFolder.ProgramFiles);

        iisExpressPath = Path.Combine(iisExpressPath, @"IIS Express\iisexpress.exe");

        return iisExpressPath;
    }

    private void StartIisExpress(ProcessStartInfo info)
    {
        try
        {
            _process = Process.Start(info);

            _process.WaitForExit();
        }
        catch (Exception)
        {
            Dispose();
        }
    }
}
2
  • 4
    This is great! I found a little more complete implementation of this here.
    – orad
    Jun 16, 2016 at 21:51
  • 1
    Environment.Is64BitOperatingSystem is the wrong choice here. It really depends on the bitness of the binaries the site is built for.
    – jpmc26
    Nov 8, 2017 at 21:38
3

I feel you are doing it in a hard way. Take a hint from this question Automatically stop/restart ASP.NET Development Server on Build and see if you can adopt the same process.

Answering your question, I think pinvoke.net might help you. They have lot of examples as well which can help you build your solution.

1
  • Pradeep, thanks for your answer. The solution from the first link doesn't work for me because they kill the process with proc.Kill(); pinvoke.net is very interesting, thanks for the tip. Unfortunately I've found no information about how to use the IIS Express COM API
    – Mike
    Jan 23, 2011 at 21:15
3

Harvey Kwok had provided a good hint, since I want to tear up and tear down the service when running integration test cases. But Harvey codes is too long with PInvoke and messaging.

Here's an alternative.

    public class IisExpressAgent
{
    public void Start(string arguments)
    {
        ProcessStartInfo info= new ProcessStartInfo(@"C:\Program Files (x86)\IIS Express\iisexpress.exe", arguments)
        {
          // WindowStyle= ProcessWindowStyle.Minimized,
        };

        process = Process.Start(info);
    }

    Process  process;

    public void Stop()
    {
        process.Kill();
    }
}

And in my integration test suit with MS Test, I have

       [ClassInitialize()]
    public static void MyClassInitialize(TestContext testContext)
    {
        iis = new IisExpressAgent();
        iis.Start("/site:\"WcfService1\" /apppool:\"Clr4IntegratedAppPool\"");
    }

    static IisExpressAgent iis;

    //Use ClassCleanup to run code after all tests in a class have run
    [ClassCleanup()]
    public static void MyClassCleanup()
    {
        iis.Stop();
    }
1
  • You may find the usual IDisposable pattern is not used here. However, the process resource is actually released in the ClassCleanup/teardown method, and the test suit process is short live.
    – ZZZ
    Jul 14, 2014 at 0:25
3

Here is my solution too. It runs IIS Express with hidden windows. Manager class controls several IIS Express instances.

class IISExpress
{               
    private const string IIS_EXPRESS = @"C:\Program Files\IIS Express\iisexpress.exe";        

    private Process process;

    IISExpress(Dictionary<string, string> args)
    {
        this.Arguments = new ReadOnlyDictionary<string, string>(args);

        string argumentsInString = args.Keys
            .Where(key => !string.IsNullOrEmpty(key))
            .Select(key => $"/{key}:{args[key]}")
            .Aggregate((agregate, element) => $"{agregate} {element}");

        this.process = Process.Start(new ProcessStartInfo()
        {
            FileName = IIS_EXPRESS,
            Arguments = argumentsInString,
            WindowStyle = ProcessWindowStyle.Hidden                
        });
    }

    public IReadOnlyDictionary<string, string> Arguments { get; protected set; }        

    public static IISExpress Start(Dictionary<string, string> args)
    {
        return new IISExpress(args);
    }

    public void Stop()
    {
        try
        {
            this.process.Kill();
            this.process.WaitForExit();
        }
        finally
        {
            this.process.Close();
        }            
    }        
}

I need several instances. Designed manager class to control them.

static class IISExpressManager
{
    /// <summary>
    /// All started IIS Express hosts
    /// </summary>
    private static List<IISExpress> hosts = new List<IISExpress>();

    /// <summary>
    /// Start IIS Express hosts according to the config file
    /// </summary>
    public static void StartIfEnabled()
    {
        string enableIISExpress = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["EnableIISExpress"]; // bool value from config file
        string pathToConfigFile = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["IISExpressConfigFile"]; // path string to iis configuration file
        string quotedPathToConfigFile = '"' + pathToConfigFile + '"';

        if (bool.TryParse(enableIISExpress, out bool isIISExpressEnabled) 
            && isIISExpressEnabled && File.Exists(pathToConfigFile))
        {                
            hosts.Add(IISExpress.Start(
                new Dictionary<string, string> {
                    {"systray", "false"},
                    {"config", quotedPathToConfigFile},
                    {"site", "Site1" }                        
                }));

            hosts.Add(IISExpress.Start(
                new Dictionary<string, string> {
                    {"systray", "false"},
                    { "config", quotedPathToConfigFile},
                    {"site", "Site2" }
                }));

        }
    }

    /// <summary>
    /// Stop all started hosts
    /// </summary>
    public static void Stop()
    {
        foreach(var h in hosts)
        {
            h.Stop();
        }
    }
}
2

Figure I'd throw my solution in here too. Derived from the SeongTae Jeong's solution and another post (Can't remember where now).

  1. Install the Microsoft.Web.Administration nuget.
  2. Reference the IIS Installed Versions Manager Interface COM type library as noted above.
  3. Add the following class:

    using System;
    using System.Diagnostics;
    using System.IO;
    using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
    using IISVersionManagerLibrary;
    using Microsoft.Web.Administration;
    
    public class Website
    {
        private const string DefaultAppPool = "Clr4IntegratedAppPool";
        private const string DefaultIISVersion = "8.0";
    
        private static readonly Random Random = new Random();
        private readonly IIISExpressProcessUtility _iis;
        private readonly string _name;
        private readonly string _path;
        private readonly int _port;
        private readonly string _appPool;
        private readonly string _iisPath;
        private readonly string _iisArguments;
        private readonly string _iisConfigPath;
        private uint _iisHandle;
    
        private Website(string path, string name, int port, string appPool, string iisVersion)
        {
            _path = Path.GetFullPath(Path.Combine(Environment.CurrentDirectory, path));
            _name = name;
            _port = port;
            _appPool = appPool;
            _iis = (IIISExpressProcessUtility)new IISVersionManager()
                .GetVersionObject(iisVersion, IIS_PRODUCT_TYPE.IIS_PRODUCT_EXPRESS)
                .GetPropertyValue("expressProcessHelper");
            var commandLine = _iis.ConstructCommandLine(name, "", appPool, "");
            var commandLineParts = new Regex("\\\"(.*?)\\\" (.*)").Match(commandLine);
            _iisPath = commandLineParts.Groups[1].Value;
            _iisArguments = commandLineParts.Groups[2].Value;
            _iisConfigPath = new Regex("\\/config:\\\"(.*?)\\\"").Match(commandLine).Groups[1].Value;
            Url = string.Format("http://localhost:{0}/", _port);
        }
    
        public static Website Create(string path,
            string name = null, int? port = null,
            string appPool = DefaultAppPool,
            string iisVersion = DefaultIISVersion)
        {
            return new Website(path,
                name ?? Guid.NewGuid().ToString("N"),
                port ?? Random.Next(30000, 40000),
                appPool, iisVersion);
        }
    
        public string Url { get; private set; }
    
        public void Start()
        {
            using (var manager = new ServerManager(_iisConfigPath))
            {
                manager.Sites.Add(_name, "http", string.Format("*:{0}:localhost", _port), _path);
                manager.CommitChanges();
            }
            Process.Start(new ProcessStartInfo
            {
                FileName = _iisPath,
                Arguments = _iisArguments,
                RedirectStandardOutput = true,
                UseShellExecute = false
            });
            var startTime = DateTime.Now;
            do
            {
                try
                {
                    _iisHandle = _iis.GetRunningProcessForSite(_name, "", _appPool, "");
                }
                catch { }
                if (_iisHandle != 0) break;
                if ((DateTime.Now - startTime).Seconds >= 10)
                    throw new TimeoutException("Timeout starting IIS Express.");
            } while (true);
        }
    
        public void Stop()
        {
            try
            {
                _iis.StopProcess(_iisHandle);
            }
            finally
            {
                using (var manager = new ServerManager(_iisConfigPath))
                {
                    var site = manager.Sites[_name];
                    manager.Sites.Remove(site);
                    manager.CommitChanges();
                }
            }
        }
    }
    
  4. Setup your test fixture as follows. The path is relative to the bin folder of your test suite.

    [TestFixture]
    public class Tests
    {
        private Website _website;
    
        [TestFixtureSetUp]
        public void Setup()
        {
            _website = Website.Create(@"..\..\..\TestHarness");
            _website.Start();
        }
    
        [TestFixtureTearDown]
        public void TearDown()
        {
            _website.Stop();
        }
    
        [Test]
        public void should_serialize_with_bender()
        {
            new WebClient().UploadString(_website.Url, "hai").ShouldEqual("hai");
        }
    }
    

And one more point if this is going to also run on a build server. First you will need to install IIS Express on the build server. Second, you'll have to create an applicationhost.config on the build server. You can copy one from your dev box under C:\Users\<User>\Documents\IISExpress\config\. It needs to be copied to the corresponding path of the user your build server is running as. If it is running as system then the path would be C:\Windows\System32\config\systemprofile\Documents\IISExpress\config\.

1

No, you don't inherit the interface. You can create an instance of IISVersionManager with the new keyword. How that gets you a reference to an IIISExpressProcessUtility instance is completely unclear. The MSDN docs are awful. Maybe you can new one but it doesn't look like it supports that.

5
  • Read through stackoverflow.com/questions/1093536/… if you want to know how newing is working on an interface.
    – Pradeep
    Jan 23, 2011 at 13:36
  • 1
    It's COM specific, all methods are exposed through interfaces. Jan 23, 2011 at 14:23
  • Many thanks for your support! I made some tests and updated my post.
    – Mike
    Jan 23, 2011 at 21:51
  • 2
    Yes, sorry but I did warn you about this. I'm afraid you are severely ahead of the curve. Crappy MSDN docs is actually a major flag, the kind of programmers that Microsoft can hire are sorta aware that a automation interface is important but don't know how to actually implement one. COM is something that guys with a beard and a belly know how to do. It isn't documented well at all because it doesn't work. Buzz words you want to avoid are "CTP" and "Express". Jan 23, 2011 at 22:57
  • 1
    Thanks for your support anyway. However, since IIS Express is now released, I still hope that Microsoft will complete/correct the COM documentation on MSDN in the near future.
    – Mike
    Jan 24, 2011 at 4:22
1

If you modify the web.config file of the web application, IIS (including Express) will restart the app pool. This will allow you to deploy updated assemblies.

One way to modify web.config is to copy it to a new file, and then move it back.

copy /Y path/web.config path/web_touch.config
move /Y path/web_touch.config path/web.config

You may want more control over IIS Express than simply restarting the app pool. But if that's all you need, this will work.

1

I have adopted a different solution. You can simply kill the process tree using "taskkill" and the name of the process. This works perfectly locally and on TFS 2013

public static void FinalizeIis()
{
    var startInfo = new ProcessStartInfo
    {
        UseShellExecute = false,
        Arguments = string.Format("/F /IM iisexpress.exe"),
        FileName = "taskkill"
    };

    Process.Start(startInfo);
}

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