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I'm trying to use IIS 7 to run an HTML5 app via localhost directly out of the folder of the GIT repository where I am developing files (e.g. I go to [ip address]/myApp and it runs C:/git/myApp/index.html).

So I set up a new web site in IIS that has the following advanced settings:

Application Pool: myApp
Bindings: http:*:80:newAutoDemo
ID: 2
Name: myApp
Physical Path: C:/git/myApp
Physical Path Credentials Login type: Interactive
Start Automatically: true

However, when I try to go to [ip address]/myApp, it looks for files in C:/inetpub/wwwroot/myApp instead of my GIT directory (throwing a 404 error). Any idea how to fix it so that it links directly?

Note: I would like this to run on other computers on the same LAN as well as the computer with IIS running.

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    [ip address]/myApp would be how "Virtual Directories" are set up, not web sites. You have to use the new binding to get to that folder.
    – JB King
    Jul 19, 2013 at 19:20

1 Answer 1

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A new WebSite in IIS means that it's no longer under the default http://localhost/ site. Looks like you've got it set up to respond to http://newAutoDemo, so you'd need to make sure your DNS points that domain name to this IP address (if you're testing from a single machine, you can do it in the hosts file).

If you want to access it as http://{ipaddress}/myApp, then rather than creating a brand new website in IIS, you'll just want a new virtual directory or application underneath Default Web Site.

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  • I was able to access it correctly from the same computer by editing the hosts file. Would I need to be a network admin in order to make it work the same way for the whole LAN? Jul 19, 2013 at 22:49
  • Actually, using a virtual directory was exactly what I wanted. But for some other reason I can't get other computers to connect to IIS... Jul 19, 2013 at 23:32
  • If you were doing the separate website thing, you would need to have your network team modify the DNS for the whole network - or else every user would have to modify their hosts file.
    – Joe Enos
    Jul 20, 2013 at 14:31
  • If other machines on your network can't access the default website on this machine, then it's still a network thing - maybe a firewall rule, or maybe just machines unable to talk to each other based on their location within the network.
    – Joe Enos
    Jul 20, 2013 at 14:31
  • It turned out to be a firewall issue on my machine. Running the command listed in Sohail's answer here (stackoverflow.com/questions/11238830/…) fixed it. Jul 22, 2013 at 23:39

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