I would like to see the internals of http requests as they arrive at my cloud service in IIS. I have looked at quite a bit of the information, but can't quite see how to enable it. For example, this site gives some helpful information. Following that page, what I have achieved is this:
Connected to my Cloud Service in Visual Studio and Updated the Log directories transfer period to 1 min (I tried different buffer sizes, but that had no effect).
Selected the cloud service in Visual Studio and chose to view diagnostic data. Then chose IIS logs inside Windows Azure Log directories:
At this point I get a 404 error:
So, it seems that while I have set up the potential to receive the log files, they are not actually being generated. It would be ideal if I could do this all without redeploying, but I think that I might need to enable something in web.config - just not sure what. I have read up on the link provided in this answer, but can't find what I actually need to enable beyond what I have already done. Any pointers would be great, happy to try a different (non-IIS) approach if that is easier.
Update
So, based on the helpful advice from MikeWo and kwill, I did some further digging. First I made sure that the storage account is configured correctly. It does seem to be, firstly because this is the same account I use for my web application where the users' uploaded files turn up correctly and secondly because I enabled Infrastructure logs using the same process I did for IIS and the logs turn up:
That made me think that the IIS logs were not being generated in the first place. So, I used remote desktop to connect to the server. Using IIS Manager, I first looked at the logging for the server:
The log file location doesn't exist. So it seems that the folder hasn't even been created and nothing is being logged here. Next, I looked at the logging for my site:
In this case, there were log files, but they were from over a month ago. Finally, I followed the instructions here and here in the hope that I would be able to increase the logging level on the site.
appcmd set config /section:httpLogging /dontLog:False
appcmd.exe set config "<mysite>" -section:system.webServer/httpLogging /dontLog:"false" /commit:apphost
appcmd.exe set config "<mysite>" -section:system.webServer/httpLogging /selectiveLogging:"LogAll" /commit:apphost
The commands were successful but this seemed to have no effect, I didn't see any more logs turn up in my IIS folders.
I then tried:
appcmd set config /section:httpLogging /dontLog:False /commit:WEBROOT
And received:
Description: The configuration section 'system.webServer/httpLogging' cannot be read because it is missing a section declaration
I am not too keen to go changing config files on the server, but I would if I got some reassurance that I am going down the right path. Also, I realise that these changes wouldn't be persistent, but I just wanted to see if I could get anything to work at all.
These are the diagnostics settings in Visual Studio it is using the same storage account as my application which works fine:
It is apparent that the IIS diagnostic files are turning up in the correct location to be transferred to storage:
Solution
kwill's answer put me on the right track in the end. The IIS folder did exist, but the last log was from over a month ago. I added a dummy file and it turned up in the blob. I will add a separate question about why the IIS logs are not being updated.