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I have published multiple .NET Core projects through VSTS to IIS and had no problems. However when I try to add a .NET Standard project I get a 403.14 - Forbidden error page. If I try and type in a specific route for the API to get a response it throws a 404 - Not Found error page.

I am using .NET Framework 4.6.1 which is also installed on my my IIS 8.0 server.

Is there any way to debug this issue or a way of fixing this issue?

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3 Answers 3

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You should check the Authentication the application is set to use in IIS.

If you aren't using Authentication, make sure that you have anonymous authentication enabled. You also need to make sure that the IIS user has access to the directory that your application is in.

If you want to use your domain account as authentication, then make sure Windows Authentication is turned on, and the account you are using has access to the directory your application is in. Also, make sure you are applying authentication at the action, controller, or application level in your code.

For more info, you can read the MSDN info here

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  • I double checked to make sure that Anonymous Authentication was enabled. I disabled everything that was restricting authentication in my controllers to make sure that wasn't the issue but that didn't help. I am able to access everything fine on my localhost. Thanks for your help though.
    – aamb
    Oct 10, 2017 at 16:16
  • IIS is likely using a different user than you are on your localhost, does IIS have access to that directory?
    – MBurnham
    Oct 10, 2017 at 16:17
  • Yes, IIS has access to that directory.
    – aamb
    Oct 10, 2017 at 16:19
  • Can you provide the code for your controller and config file?
    – MBurnham
    Oct 10, 2017 at 16:22
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.NET Standard is for non-executable assemblies (class libraries) so they can be shared between different executable assemblies.

When you publish an application to IIS, you need to use an executable DLL (.NET Framework or .NET Core), which rules out using .NET Standard. You can reference .NET Standard libraries from your application, but the entry point of the application cannot be .NET Standard.

However, it isn't clear why you are only discovering this when publishing to IIS, since an ASP.NET application that targets .NET Standard shouldn't run locally, either.

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  • Then how would you publish a Web API that uses .NET Framework to IIS?
    – aamb
    Oct 10, 2017 at 16:40
  • There should be no problem with that (is that what you are doing? your question seems to indicate otherwise...). Oct 10, 2017 at 16:48
  • Maybe I phrased it wrong. I am trying to publish a Web Application that uses .NET Framework to IIS. One is a Web API and one is a NuGet Server. Thanks for your help.
    – aamb
    Oct 10, 2017 at 16:51
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I was pointing to the wrong location on the server. I was pointing to the bin folder when I needed to be pointing to the project folder. Thanks for the help.

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