I will be traveling and I will need to show someone a
secure folder in an IIS website and I will be on a public
computer. When we are done, I will need to be able to log
off so no one else using that computer will find
their way into that part of the website. The security is
Windows authentitication using Clear Text.
Can ASP log me off. If so I will need to code this before
I leave. Can anyone point me to where I can get some
examples of code to do this ?
Our current websites are hosted on Win2K Servers using classic ASP and IIS 5.0. We will be acquiring a 3rd party website that is written in ASP.NET. Hate to sound stupid, but is it possible to run ASP.NET on Win2K or does it need to be run under Win2003?
Overnight my work PC has been upgraded - I'm re-installing all my software, and PWS does not work
It may be that it's a permissions thing (I need to get this sorted, as it is stopping me from installing a few things) However, I also suspect that PWS for NT is no longer any good for W2K Is there a new version for W2K?
I've searched several articles about this and cannot get any suggestions to work. My IIS on Windows 2000 Server won't run ASP pages like default.asp. I've tried reinstalling IIS, syncing the passwords for IUSR....etc.
Will CDO work under Windows Server 2000? I'm guessing it will. The problem is that I wrote a nice little ASP app under Windows Server 2003 which works REALLY well. Sends out the email with NO problem. 'Course, it uses an external SMTP server, but I'm assuming this shouldn't matter, right?.
Because when I port it over to Windows Server 2000, it blows right past it. Is there a particular setup procedure that needs to be done for Windows Server 2000 to enable CDO to work properly?
I've recently installed an asp component called smartupload, it works very well. The problems start when a mac user uploads a jpg or gif, windows will not open the file.it works fine with a windows user.
I recently downloaded and installed (hopefully correctly) MSDE 2000 Release A. I previously, and still do, have the version of IIS that comes with XP Professional installed on my computer. I wanted MSDE 2000 Release A so that I could do database access using ASP from my websites, which are on my computer. When I went to my first test website, I recieved the following error:
Error Type:
Microsoft OLE DB Provider for ODBC Drivers (0x80004005) [Microsoft][ODBC SQL Server Driver]Neither DSN nor SERVER keyword supplied /testDB.asp, line 26
The ASP code that I used on my web to connect to the database (which is currently just an empty text file) is the following: Code:
I'm using formmail.asp which is an emailing utility. Basically, the user fills out a request page, clicks "Submit" and the page posts to formmail.asp which emails the user information.
I'm running IIS5 on a Win2k server box and recently ran the Windows Updates (the last time I do that). Anyway, that emailing form doesn't work now on any of the sites I host. Any ideas?
I have been using the CDONTS.Newmail object for a number of years to send nicely formatted HTML Emails with inline images.
I am now trying to switch over to using CDO and I cannot reproduce this functionality. I am using the AddAttachment method instead of the old AttachURL method but the attached images just show as separately attached files rather than in line in the HTML.
According to MSDN:
"If you populate the HTMLBody property before calling the AddAttachment method, any inline images are displayed as part of the message."
Well, I am doing that but it is not working. The images show up as if I had attached them using the old AttachFile method.
I persist the login info using cookies so that a user doesn't have to login every time they come to our website, unless they previously logged out. Everything works OK on W98 SE, and Windows XP Pro machines.
On a W2K machine, IE6.0.2800.1106 SP1, the following function won't delete cookies, or deletes them but they're mysterioulsy re-created when the web page is subsequently referenced. Therefore, a web user can't logout.
I am planning to design a database (destined for the web) that will have between 20000 and 45000 records in it and will receive a lot of reads but very very few writes (just from me).
Now the question is should I use:
1) The combination of Access 2000 (accessible through ASP or ASP.NET) using OLEDB Jet
or
2) SQL Server 2000 ?
Of course I know that the SQL Server option is a better one, especially since it's said that an Access DB can have about 9 users or so accessing it at the same time. But is that a general rule or is it about many people writing to the DB? In other words, if an Access DB has hardly any writes and 99.9% reads can it be used as efficiently as it would be used on SQL Server 2000?
I have one 3 tier architecture application running on Windows 2000 Server.
I have created replica of same machine on another machine where OS is Windows 2000 Advance Server.
But when I port same running application on new machine i.e. Machine with OS as Windows 2000 Advance Server, my middle tier (Active-X Dll, COM+ application) fails.
It throws common error Invalid Procedure Call or argument
What could be the problem? Do I need to change any settings for running application on Windows 2000 advance Server.
I need to log how many times one spesific file is downloaded from my website. First I thought this could be done simply by routing via a script that count number of downloads, and then redirect to the spesific file. But this soultion will not work when a user right click on the file/link and choose "save target as...". How can I solute this?
I'm trying to make a logout link to where once someone logs out, not only will they be sent to another page, but they will not be able to go back into their account by pressing the back button, but by logging back in.
how would the site know that that specific user has logged in?i know that once the user registers, the username and the password gets stored in a database and once the user logs in, the password and the usrname gets searched against the password and the username in the database.what if i want the users details to be outputed such as address and name once they log in?
i would like to automitically log when a user signs in, presumably using a seperate Access database. Can anyone point to to a simple way of accomplishing this?
I would like to log the IP Address of users browsing my page. Hoewever, using the "REMOTE_USER" from the Request.Servervariables only logs the proxy that all users who access the page willl have to through.
Is there any way how I can log the actual IP address of the user? I thought of Cookies or something like that, but i really do not have any clue. Or tell me if its not possible so I can stop working on it.
I'm developing an application that uses a custom 404 page to deliver all of my site's content. However, doing things this way renders IIS's regular log files pretty much useless.
Are there any established "best practices" for creating your own logging system? I know that others use this technique and I'm hoping someone has some ideas they can pass along. For example, do you log every single page request or do you just log totals per day, week, or month? How do you deal with the increasing volumes of data? Do you collect referrer data, etc.?
I've got a number of ASP scripts updating a particular SQL Server table. However, this table is being updated incorrectly by one of the 10 scripts. Is there a way to log all updates so I can troubleshoot the problem?
I have experienced some ASP errors in my web application and I'm unable to reproduce those errors because IIS is configured in a way that does not send any debugging messages to the user (and I cannot change it). Only standard string "An error occured on the web server when processing the url..." is sent.
So Is there any way to log such situations to the eventlog, a file, database or any other storage? OR Is there any way to allow me to send only piece on debugging information to the user. In other words: I'd like to send error code that would be understandable only by me?
I have a page where a user enters his or her login details after registering. After clicking login it takes them through an asp page which verifies that they are a valid user. However I have come across a problem Code:
I am amazed at how much help I have had in creating my first asp based website from this forum. There are obviously a significant number of real experts who are happy to take the time to help us novices. My site which now does what it aims to would not be working without this assistance and I am extremely grateful. Code:
Is it possible to insert or grab an existing message ID (from the header etc), log it into my DB, than once the read receipt is sent from the clients machine, pull it off my pop server, parse it and than log that it was read?
I have an asp application that allows users to access certain documents based on their ID and security level. This works fine, but I want to be able to log access attempts so that any potential abuser can be given proper warnings, etc. Basically, if I'm Attorney A then I should be able to access info on Case X, but Attorney B should not be able to, and any of his attempts to access Case X should be logged somehow.
I found the following script online that should capture the IP address of the offending machine, but when I test it I only get errors: Code:
On my site when people log in it changes a field in my database from 0 to 1 the website reads in all users marked as 1 as online.
When the users log off it marks them back to 0 and they are marked as offline unfortunately most people never log off. Whats the easiest way to log them off automatically? I have included some of my code below: This shows the members online: Code:
this is a continuation of my little login page I am setting up. the login pages authenticates the user using Active Directory. I also have a Database locally in MSSQL that has the users ref number (primary key, incrementing) first name, last name, and user id (same user id as ldap/AD etc) what I want to do is when the user logs in the page will call the Database and grab the full name as well as the ref number. Later in the page if the user submits a form to add data to another database I want it to populate a column in a table using the ref number. that should be rather easy once I actually have that ref number.so how would I tell the page to go to my database and grab his ref number (as well as his name to be able to display Welcome first Lastname instead of userid?
I am building an ASP application, in this application, one of the functions is that I have to know exactly how long a user has used a certain page of the application. so I need a way to long the time a user enters a page and when he leaves again.
when the user closes the browser, no time for leaving isrecorded.Is there a way to run a web service that can read cookies of all the users and write them to a database? Or am I looking too far for the solution.I'd like a clean solution, not with popups, or opening other windows in order to run extra asp code.
What is the easiest way to set up an area on my site where I can allow people to register and login to view information? I know this shouldn't be too hard, but I've never had to mess with it before. I have a mySQL database at my disposal.
I have a application online using ASP in which users log in and log out. However, a lot of users simply close the window, bypassing my log-out script. I have tried using the Javascript onUnload function with success, but refreshing the screen also triggers this at the wrong time