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I'm attempting to test a website I have running in a local IISExpress instance with some other machines / devices on my local network. I am running Win7 Pro.

When I first attempt to browse to my machine from another machine on my local network segment, I get a 400 error: Hostname is invalid.

I understand that I need to grant remote access to the ACL with a command on the elevated command prompt like:

netsh http add urlacl url=http://mymachinename:50333/ user=everyone

Now I get a 503 service is unavailable error.

Windows Firewall is currently shut off, and I am able to browse my local IISExpress instance with the address http://localhost:50333

What is the final piece to this configuration puzzle?

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10 Answers 10

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It looks like you are missing a binding information entry in applicationhost.config file.

  1. Open your applicationhost.config file. Possible locations are:

    • %userprofile%\Documents\IISExpress\config\applicationhost.config
    • $(solutionDir)\.vs\config\applicationhost.config (VS2015)
    • Failing that, inspect the output from iisexpress.exe to be sure.
  2. Locate your WebSite entry and add following binding with your machine name.

         <binding protocol="http" bindingInformation=":50333:your-machine-name" />
    
  3. Restart IIS Express

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  • 9
    Never mind. Visual Studio created a duplicate config entry for the item. I removed it and it worked.
    – marknuzz
    Oct 26, 2012 at 23:10
  • 3
    IIS Express doesn't always use the config file at that path. Read the output from iisexpress.exe carefully to see which config file it is using. Apr 3, 2013 at 13:17
  • 6
    Key point item 3, restart IIS Express! Locate the icon in your system-tray and stop it to force it to restart. Not sure if there is a more elegant way. But this worked for me. Thanks! May 23, 2013 at 13:33
  • 10
    If you are too lazy to add every hostname/ipaddress combination use a * instead of "your-machine-name"
    – StarQuake
    Oct 6, 2014 at 10:45
  • 8
    One more hint: If you right-click on IISExpress' systray icon, you can select "Show all applications" which will open up a dialog showing all applications you're currently running locally. Right-click on the desired application (don't left-click or it will open the browser), then you will see "Path" and "Config" below. Left-Click on "Config" and it will open up the related Applicationhost.config file where you need to add/edit the bindings as described above. That is an easy way to locate the current configuration.
    – Matt
    Nov 22, 2016 at 14:48
35

There was only 1 thing that worked for me.

using *:portnumber:* was no good. Yes, after doing that and making sure the Windows Firewall was open, I could connect to the port, but I still got the "503" error.

I tested a few things locally, and discovered that only http://localhost worked. Using the real IP address (not 127.0.0.1, but, for instance, 192.168.1.50), still returned a 503 even on the local machine. I tried using the real host name in the bindings, but IIS Express refused to start. This may actually have something to do with how the host name was being resolved. I didn't explore that further.

Finally, I ended up using this configuration:

<binding protocol="http" bindingInformation="*:53351:localhost" />
<binding protocol="http" bindingInformation="192.168.1.50:53351:*" />

In that way, I was able to connect from a remote machine using http://192.168.1.50:53351.

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  • 1
    I hit this exact error, but did not want to hard-code the current IP into the config, since it can change. I found the wildcard works on the IP and hostname parts, so I ended up with: <binding protocol="https" bindingInformation="*:44300:*" /> <binding protocol="http" bindingInformation="*:8888:*" /> edit: really tried to understand SO markdown, I quit :). Jun 4, 2017 at 20:09
20

After wasting more than 3h on such a full subject I decided to share my setup with you. My configuration is Visual Express 2012 for Web update 4 on windows 8. This was my first come back to MS VS since studies (at least 8 years) and now I'm sure that linux rules. On django this kind of setup took me 10min of searching documentation.

  1. turn off firewall for testing

    netsh advfirewall set allprofiles state off
    
  2. setup bindings in my case local address is localIP=192.168.1.102 (because links can not contain nonnumeric domain, use it below instead of mylocaldomain.com, see stackoverflow policy) in Documents\IISExpress\config\applicationhost.config

    <bindings>
        <binding protocol="http" bindingInformation="*:53351:mylocaldomain.com" />
        <binding protocol="http" bindingInformation="*:53351:localhost" />
    </bindings>
    
  3. add autorun for ISS Express start service automatically

    <site name="NeuronCharts" id="2" serverAutoStart="true">
    
  4. Add some weird rules to http server (I still do not know if this is nesseary)

    netsh http add urlacl url=http://mylocaldomain.com:53351/ user=everyone
    
  5. run IISExpress manually not from VS IDE

  6. you will see that ISSExpress is registering bindings
  7. run browser http://mylocaldomain.com:53351 if it is working then we can add firewall rule
  8. add firewall rule

    netsh advfirewall firewall add rule name="IISExpressWeb" dir=in protocol=tcp localport=53351 remoteip=any action=allow
    

set remoteip to any if you want to access you server from outside world if you want to access for local network use localsubnet

  1. start firewall

    netsh advfirewall set allprofiles state on
    
  2. check again if everything is working on local and public ip

Wish you luck

Rafal

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  • 3
    This caused IIS Express to no longer run on Win8 with VS2013 without running VS2013 as Administrator. It's caused by IIS Express now trying to open to external traffic as a result of the netsh command. I also was never able to actually get it to serve that traffic; I'd get a 503. To reverse the problem caused by the netsh command in this answer, run this from a Command Prompt running as Administrator: netsh http delete urlacl url=http://*:55416/ (replace port with your port) Dec 15, 2014 at 15:46
  • fwiw - I don't need step 4 (the netsh call that @Rafal isn't sure is necessary) and, although I don't need the "localhost" binding in step 2 to run the VS2013 projects in my solution, the front end loads significantly faster when that "localhost" binding is left in place.
    – lukkea
    Jun 23, 2015 at 17:18
  • I found that following the above instructions still resulted in 503 using localhost. I found that the guest (Windows) machine name needed to be in the bindings in applicationhost.config, and on the host (Mac) the guest machine name needed to be mapped to 127.0.0.1 in /etc/hosts. Only then did a request to the guest machine on the host succeed.
    – Matt
    Jan 10, 2016 at 19:55
  • One addition to step 5. Use iisexpress.exe /siteid:id where id is the value of your site's id attribute in <site id="id"> setting, otherwise it will start the 1st site.
    – Mudit Jain
    Aug 29, 2016 at 23:57
10

Found the problem had to do with a bad urlacl mapping. To figure this out:

netsh http show urlacl 

and look for things like http://+:80/ or the port you are binding to.

Then use

netsh http delete url=<the url from the list>

This fixed the problem for me.

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  • 4
    should be netsh http delete urlacl url=<the url from the list> , this worked for me thanks!
    – sergiogx
    Dec 9, 2016 at 18:21
  • 1
    This is discussed in more detail on the msdn blog. This was ultimately my issue as well. Jun 27, 2017 at 21:49
  • 3
    Thanks, the exact syntax is netsh http delete urlacl <yoururl>
    – yoel halb
    Jun 27, 2018 at 4:46
8

Nothing worked for me. Finally I found iisexpress-proxy

See my answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/33623399/631527

Another solution is ngrok

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  • Amazing! I tried all those other solutions and they didn't work either. "Bad request" or "Service unavailable". Too complicated. I installed the node module and ran it, it instantly works!!
    – TetraDev
    Jan 29, 2016 at 22:17
  • WORKS! holy! Thank you!
    – Don P
    Nov 30, 2018 at 21:31
  • check out ngrok also
    – Toolkit
    Dec 1, 2018 at 7:35
  • 1
    It SIMPLY works like a charm with ngrok! It is weird having to route first from localhost to iis-proxy and then from proxy to ngrok, but hey, worked!. For example, I have my iisexpress on port 3028. I ran iisexpress-proxy 3028 to 12345 and then ./ngrok.exe http 12345. 😅 Apr 9, 2019 at 19:16
  • @TetraDev, the "Bad request" or "Service unavailable" was because the host header received when accesing localhost from ngrok was not a localhost one as explained here
    – Dani
    Dec 31, 2019 at 14:57
4

What helped me, was right clicking the 'IISExpress' icon, 'Show All applications'. Then selecting the website and I saw which aplicationhost.config it uses, and the the correction went perfectly.

IISExpress configuration

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The problem is updating the applicationhost.config file inside the web folder instead of the solution's. The solution config file is the one to change

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1

Regarding Anthony Rizzolo's answer: in Windows 8.1, I had to type like this:

netsh http delete urlacl url=<the url from the list>

For example:

netsh http delete urlacl url=http://+:8689/
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After solution of @vikomall don't forget to start VS as adminisrator. This fix it for me.

0

None of the answers above worked for me.

I have had two entries in netsh for the same service

netsh http show urlacl

enter image description here

One using a strong wildcard, the other one using a weak wildcard.

Removing the one with the weak wildcard did the job.

More about the strong and weak wildcard in the context of netsh

When the host element of a UrlPrefix consists of a single plus sign (+), the UrlPrefix matches all possible host names in the context of its scheme, port and relativeURI elements, and falls into the strong wildcard category.

When an asterisk (*) appears as the host element, then the UrlPrefix falls into the weak wildcard category. This kind of UrlPrefix matches any host name associated with the specified scheme, port and relativeURI that has not already been matched by a strong-wildcard, explicit, or IP-bound weak-wildcard UrlPrefix. This host specification can be used as a default catch-all in some circumstances, or can be used to specify a large section of URL namespace without having to use many UrlPrefixes.

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-gb/windows/desktop/Http/urlprefix-strings

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