I have a client who has a main website (it's huge) rooted at (on my dev box)
C:\inetpub\wwwroot\Website.com\trunk
It's controlled with Subversion (SVN) (sucks to be the client by the way because I think SVN is terrible, but that's just my "religious" opinion). Anyway, their whole website is done up in Classic ASP and VBScript.
They have this new set of pages they want me to write under the directory
C:\inetpub\wwwroot\Website.com\trunk\mydir\purchase\
And they want it done up in ASP.NET and VB.NET and the usual N-Tier architecture for hitting the DB (which is SQL Server 2005 by the way). I am using VS2010.
So I did the usual rigamarole of adding a Class Library project for the data layer and business layer yada yada. No problem there. Now I am adding the front-end. I went into VS-2010 and said "New Web Site" and created an ASP.NET Empty Web Site in
C:\inetpub\wwwroot\Website.com\trunk\mydir\purchase\
OK. By the way, there's IIS7 on the dev box and it works fine, to the point that typing
http://localhost/index.asp
Serves up the page
C:\inetpub\wwwroot\Website.com\trunk\index.asp
just fine.
OK, so I am building my ASP.NET page and I want to put a Server-Side-Include for my header of the page. Can't use master pages and can't use Server.MapPath because the ASP.NET web development server is brainless and does not map the paths correctly. The include says
<!--
When I open up my browser to
http://localhost/mydir/purchase/index.aspx
The page loads just fine, but in VS2010 when I do a Build, I get the "Failed to map path '/includes/header.asp'" error....but I am working just fine in the browser with the above URL because I am on an over-arching IIS7 super-website!
Gawd, VS2010 is retarded...
The ASP.NET Web Development Server and VS2010 think the website root (/) is at
C:\inetpub\wwwroot\Website.com\trunk\mydir\purchase\
but of course it is not that, in "reality". But this stupid error is keeping me from debugging. So I get why the error is popping up. Any way to keep the "include" statement there and suppress the error, so I can debug using VS2010?
I am going to kill the first person to tell me to use
Response.Write
or
Server.MapPath
or the tilde
~
because those functions are brainless, first because they don't allow you to use ".." and secondly because they are getting the website root wrong.
So....any thoughts??? Thanks!
Brian