It should say "Hello How are you?" http://www.habibsweb.com/test/index.aspx
here is my web.config file:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?
<configuration
<!--
The <appSettings> section is used to configure application-specific configuration
settings. These can be fetched from within apps by calling the
"ConfigurationSettings.AppSettings(key)" method:
<appSettings>
<add key="connectionstring" value="server=localhost;trusted_connection=true;database=pubs"/>
</appSettings
--
<system.web
<!--
The <sessionState" section is used to configure session state for the application.
It supports four modes: "Off", "InProc", "StateServer", and "SqlServer". The
later two modes enable session state to be stored off the web server machine -
allowing failure redundancy and web farm session state scenarios.
<sessionState mode="InProc"
stateConnectionString="tcpip=127.0.0.1:42424"
sqlConnectionString="data source=127.0.0.1;trusted_connection=true"
cookieless="false"
timeout="20" /
--
<!--
The <customErrors> section enables configuration of what to do if/when an
unhandled error occurs during the execution of a request. Specifically, it
enables developers to configure html error pages to be displayed in place of
a error stack trace:
<customErrors mode="RemoteOnly" defaultRedirect="GenericErrorPage.htm">
<error statusCode="403" redirect="NoAccess.htm"/>
<error statusCode="404" redirect="FileNotFound.htm"/>
<customErrors
-->
<customErrors mode="RemoteOnly"/>
<!--
The <authentication> section enables configuration of the security authentication
mode used by ASP.NET to identify an incoming user. It supports a "mode"
attribute with four valid values: "Windows", "Forms", "Passport" and "None":
The <forms> section is a sub-section of the <authentication> section,
and supports configuring the authentication values used when Forms
authentication is enabled above:
<authentication mode="Windows"
<forms name=".ASPXAUTH"
loginUrl="login.aspx"
protection="Validation"
timeout="999999" /
</authentication
--
<!--
The <authorization> section enables developers/administrators to configure
whether a user or role has access to a particular page or resource. This is
accomplished by adding "<allow>" and "<deny>" sub-tags beneath the <authorization>
section - specifically detailing the users/roles allowed or denied access.
Note: The "?" character indicates "anonymous" users (ie: non authenticated users).
The "*" character indicates "all" users.
<authorization>
<allow users="joeuser" />
<allow roles="Admins" />
<deny users="*" />
</authorization
--
</system.web
</configuration
is there something I am missing?On the page you have tracing enabled. Set EnableTracing = False.
THANK YOU...figured it was something stupid like that.
0 comments:
Post a Comment