7

I have created a web application using Microsoft Azure and uploaded static html pages to the web application.

It works fine, however, I would like to set a custom 404 page. Where or how can I do this using the Azure portal ?

Just to be clear, this is not a visual studio project, it's just some static html files. I just want to tell azure to use my 404 page instead of the default text it displays when a page cannot be found.

EDIT

Please note, this has nothing to do with IIS. I dont even have a web.config file. I am simply hosting some static html files in Azure and want a custom 404 page. I have already made the 404.html page.

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  • 1
    Possible duplicate of Enable custom errors in Azure
    – J. Titus
    Jul 12, 2016 at 17:58
  • I dont think so @J.Titus . This has nothing to do with IIS. I dont even have a web.config . I am just using plain Azure for hosting files. see it as a testing environment for my static files.
    – Janpan
    Jul 12, 2016 at 18:00
  • When you say uploaded...to the web application, do you mean Azure Web App? Jul 12, 2016 at 18:08
  • @AbhaySaraf yes, but it seems I got it sorted for now.
    – Janpan
    Jul 12, 2016 at 18:13
  • 1
    Great. Just to clarify Azure Web Apps/ Azure Cloud services are still using an IIS server in the backend to serve the request and hence web.config is still the mechanism to achieve any configuration. Jul 12, 2016 at 18:21

3 Answers 3

20

Seems like you have to add a web.config file in your root directory. This seems like a workaround, but doing that and adding the following code works:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<configuration>
    <system.webServer>
        <httpErrors errorMode="Custom" defaultResponseMode="ExecuteURL">
            <remove statusCode="404" subStatusCode="-1" />
            <error statusCode="404" path="/404.asp" responseMode="ExecuteURL" />
        </httpErrors>
    </system.webServer>
</configuration>
4
  • 3
    I added my web.config in the folder under wwwroot followed this a bit (i added <clear /> 500, 401, etc.) and it worked like a charm
    – O'Mutt
    Sep 6, 2016 at 3:41
  • I just used IIS manager to create code similar to the above. It left out the attributes on httpErrors but still works nicely.
    – CrispinH
    Jun 28, 2017 at 17:08
  • Thanks, Janpan :)
    – Momoro
    Jan 19, 2020 at 3:40
  • Thank you for you answer, but you refer to 404.ASP - This does not really exist - So where to put the HTML code for the 404 page?
    – NoChance
    Jul 31, 2022 at 9:15
4

Follow these steps to configure a custom 404 page for a Azure Static Web App:

  • Create a file named staticwebapp.config.json in root page (same folder as starting page i.e. index.html)

  • put these lines inside it:

     {       
        "responseOverrides": {
          "404": {
            "rewrite": "/404.html"
          }
        }
     }
    
  • Put your custom 404 page in root or subfolder (in this example 404.html is in root folder)

0

After a lot of testing and research, it was found that using responseMode="ExecuteURL" would result in a correct redirect, but the browser would report 200 Status rather than a 404. To fix this we removed the "/" and changed to responseMode="File" based on insight from this post: web.config errors fail with responseMode="File"

We are just hosting a simple static HTML site, not a web app, and this code worked:

    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
    <configuration>
        <system.web>
            <customErrors defaultRedirect="404.html" mode="RemoteOnly">
                <error statusCode="404" redirect="404.html" />
                <error statusCode="500" redirect="500.html" />
            </customErrors>
        </system.web>
        <system.webServer>
            <httpErrors existingResponse="Replace" defaultResponseMode="File" errorMode="Custom">
                <remove statusCode="404" />
                <error statusCode="404" path="404.html" responseMode="File" />
                <remove statusCode="500" />
                <error statusCode="500" path="500.html" responseMode="File" />
            </httpErrors>
        </system.webServer>      
    </configuration>

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