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As a local developer I'd like to be able to publish a site (via WebDeploy) from Visual Studio 2013 to an IIS (localhost) without starting Visual Studio with admin rights.

Is this possible and if so how?

I tried to Edit Permissions... for the site and give my account Modify rights but it doesn't seem to work... or I need to set something else too.

I did some more experimenting and tested also FTP-Deploy (ftps). It works without admin rights but it has a drawback. It's really really slow (localhost!) so I consider it as a last resort. I don't even want to think how long it runs when the site grows...

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    Oh, I thought it would be about IIS administration and not programming... here it'll get for sure closed as off-topic because I think it has nothing to do with programming :( If I sumbled upon such a question I would myself flag it accordingly.
    – t3chb0t
    Feb 2, 2015 at 17:41
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    It's using a programming tool, therefore it's probably on the boundry of being off-topic.
    – AStopher
    Feb 3, 2015 at 8:49
  • Publishing a site to localhost is typically done by developers and hobbyists, not professional server/network admins. And once you take out the localhost aspect, it becomes "how do i publish a site to an IIS server using Visual Studio?" -- which seems more like a question for SO anyway, if it's not answered by VS's own help pages.
    – cHao
    Feb 3, 2015 at 9:21
  • If you're asking how to configure IIS to allow a non-admin to publish, that's a whole different question (more appropriate for SF). But the way this question is worded is distinctly from a developer POV, making it less useful for SF's audience.
    – cHao
    Feb 3, 2015 at 9:31
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    @cHao I think the other question is about how to publish at all because it doesn't seem to work for the OP - I can do it as an admin like I'm doing this currently but I don't like being forced to start Visual Studio as an admin.
    – t3chb0t
    Feb 3, 2015 at 9:40

2 Answers 2

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It doesn't work without running as administrator (or with elevated privileges).

The reason is that you need elevated privileges to the C:\inetpub\ folder, which is the default folder for IIS. You could (you shouldn't) disable UAC which is the original of this 'problem', but that is a workaround, and not a real solution.

I think creating a new website in IIS that points to another folder (one that isn't protected by UAC) solves the issue for you.

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Another work around is to create a share to the c:\inetpub\wwwroot dir (give yourself read/write permissions) and publish to the share like so: \\mypc\wwwroot\mywebsite. It helped me get around the annoying UAC security without disabling it.

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