Re: Question about strong-name dlls



Firstly, thank you for all your answers, I really appreciate :-)

- When I tell you that runs from my computer, I mean running connected to
the server project, not in a local project. Even more, a few days ago my
computer gave the same error as the other computers.

- I log as administrator and when I want to set the permissions to the
project folder, there is no user with asp in its name. I know it's strange,
but it's what happens.

--
Regards,

Diego F.


"Kevin Spencer" <kevin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> escribió en el mensaje
news:ejagv1VXFHA.228@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Hi Diego,
>
>> - why does it work from my computer?
>
> Now you're making me repeat myself. I told you that Windows Server 2003
> has much tighter security than XP, and that the ASP.Net user account and
> permissions are different as well.
>
>> - how can I activate asp.net user in Windows 2003?
>
> You don't activate it. You grant it the permissions it needs. First you
> have to find out what it is. Second, you have to be an Administrator on
> the server machine. Third, you set the permissions it needs in order to do
> what it needs to do. Assuming that your network has a network
> administrator, why not ask him/her to do it for you?
>
> --
> HTH,
>
> Kevin Spencer
> Microsoft MVP
> .Net Developer
> Sometimes you eat the elephant.
> Sometimes the elephant eats you.
>
> "Diego F." <diegofrNO@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message
> news:%23UVrEpVXFHA.4032@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> Two questions the:
>> - why does it work from my computer?
>> - how can I activate asp.net user in Windows 2003?
>>
>> --
>> Regards,
>>
>> Diego F.
>>
>> "Kevin Spencer" <kevin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> escribió en el mensaje
>> news:uUf49TVXFHA.3620@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>>> >I didn't found that user. Anyway, I'll show you exactly what is the
>>> >problem. I'm making some tests with simple libraries.
>>>
>>> Well, Diego, you're going to have to found that user if you want to
>>> solve your problem, because that user doesn't have the permission to
>>> perform what you want on that machine. On a Windows 2003 server, the
>>> ASP.Net process is named w3wp.exe. I believe it runs by default under
>>> the Network_Service account on Windows 2003 Server.
>>>
>>> --
>>> HTH,
>>>
>>> Kevin Spencer
>>> Microsoft MVP
>>> .Net Developer
>>> Sometimes you eat the elephant.
>>> Sometimes the elephant eats you.
>>>
>>> "Diego F." <diegofrNO@xxxxxxxx> wrote in message
>>> news:%23Xyqo$UXFHA.796@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>>>>I didn't found that user. Anyway, I'll show you exactly what is the
>>>>problem. I'm making some tests with simple libraries.
>>>>
>>>> I create a new class library with just one class with this method
>>>> public void CreateFile(string path)
>>>>
>>>> {
>>>>
>>>> System.IO.StreamWriter sw;
>>>>
>>>> sw = System.IO.File.CreateText(path + "\\test.txt");
>>>>
>>>> sw.WriteLine("test");
>>>>
>>>> sw.Close();
>>>>
>>>> }
>>>>
>>>> I compile that library and add the reference in my project, that is
>>>> hosted in a Win 2003 server. I call this method and in my computer
>>>> works, but in other computer I get the Security Exception: That
>>>> assembly does not allow partially trusted callers.
>>>>
>>>> So I see that's a problem I'll meet in any dll. Do you see exactly my
>>>> problem? I don't know if that's because I'm using the VS 2005 beta1,
>>>> but I'm missing some step.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> --
>>>>
>>>> Regards,
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Diego F.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> "Kevin Spencer" <kevin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> escribió en el
>>>> mensaje news:%23SVwYqUXFHA.3228@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>>>>> Hi Diego,
>>>>>
>>>>> There IS an ASP.Net user. There is no aspnet user. On a Windows 2003
>>>>> server, it runs under a different account. Check Task Manager. Also,
>>>>> on a Windows 2003 server, security is much tighter.
>>>>>
>>>>> --
>>>>> HTH,
>>>>>
>>>>> Kevin Spencer
>>>>> Microsoft MVP
>>>>> .Net Developer
>>>>> Sometimes you eat the elephant.
>>>>> Sometimes the elephant eats you.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>


.



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