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I have created a webAPI project and I would like to start hosting it in IIS.

The method in the controller looks like this:

    [TokenAuthentication]
    [HttpGet]
    [Authorize(Roles=Roles.PING)]
    [Route("~/Ping")]
    public DateTime Ping()
    {
        return DateTime.UtcNow;

    }

My WebApiConfig looks like this:

public static class WebApiConfig
{
    public static void Register(HttpConfiguration config)
    {
        var cors = new EnableCorsAttribute("*", "*", "*");
        config.EnableCors(cors);
        config.MapHttpAttributeRoutes();
        GlobalConfiguration.Configuration.Filters.Add(new ValidateModelAttribute());
        //config.Routes.MapHttpRoute(
        //    name: "DefaultApi",
        //    routeTemplate: "{controller}/{id}",
        //    defaults: new { id = RouteParameter.Optional }
        //);
    }
}

When I run the project via visual studio, and go to the link http://localhost:53722/ping I get an unauthorized response which is what I expect.

When I put the website on IIS in an applicaion with the virtual path "/Account" I get a 404 response and it is trying to use the StaticFile Handler.

Through searching online I have runAllManagedModulesForAllRequests set to true. I have also found Configure ASP.NET Web API application as a Virtual Directory under ASP.NET MVC application which seems like the "/Account/" should not be interfering with the route.

I can not put the API at the route directory because I will be running multiple microservices under the same site.

How would I get the route to work using the virtual directory?

Thanks, Steven

1 Answer 1

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Each site should be running as an Application and not a Virtual Directory (and ideally with each having its own application pool).

Out of the box you would normally go for

 [Route("ping")]

This would give you a url of http://blah.com/ping If you are running this api in a sub folder/application then it maybe something like http://blah.com/subapp/ping

This is all i have...

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