IIS Error: The service could not bind instance 1

by joey.westcott 15. March 2008 04:22

I got this error the other day and was stumped on what caused it.  It all started when the place i work decided to install webfiltering, most of the time this would not bother me and i would just go about my normal business. Not this time, so myself and another coworker thought that we would just bypassed the filter using an ssh tunnel to our boxes at home and with the use of a proxy run all web traffic over the ssh.  By the way this works great.  My solution after the break.

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Monitor Your Websites With Sound

by joey.westcott 24. February 2008 13:20
This weekend I had some fun messing around with the idea of monitoring one of my sites via sounds. All of the sites I run are .Net 2.0 or .Net 3.5, with that it allowed me to create a .Net solution that would work with any of my sites.

The idea started with a single thought of "boy it would be kinda neat to hear a sound when someone viewed a page in my site." So I spent all of 30 mins figuring out what i wanted to do create. I built a simple library for playing sounds based on a file or a path to a file. I then took the new lib and built a simple HttpModule for attaching to a site and tapping into begin request event.

This could be used for monitoring a few different sites along with a few different request types, not to mention that you could also include a different sound for events like, app start, begin request, end request, a request for .* file types (ie: if you wanted to know when someone downloaded one of your .rar files, you could just play a different sound file.) I'm sure that you could prob add a hundred more options to this list if you really wanted to.

Anyway I enjoyed hearing all the hits to my different sites this weekend and thought that you might like to as well.


sound playing lib.
namespace YetAnotherDeveloper.Common.SoundUtility
{

    public
sealed class Player
    {
        private
Player() { }

        public
static void PlaySound(string filePath)
        {
            SoundPlayer player =
new SoundPlayer();
            player.SoundLocation = filePath;
            player.Play();
        }

    }

}


simple http module example.
namespace YetAnotherDeveloper.HttpModules
{
    public
class PlaySoundModule : IHttpModule
    {
        public
void Dispose() { }  

        //Tap into the events.

        public
void Init(HttpApplication context)
        {
            context.BeginRequest += new EventHandler(context_BeginRequest);
         }

         void context_BeginRequest(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {
            YetAnotherDeveloper.Common.SoundUtility.Player.PlaySound(@"C:\Sounds\PageLoad.wav");
        }
    }
}


Modified webconfig to include this module in its pipeline.
<httpModules>
     <add name="ScriptModule" type="System.Web.Handlers.ScriptModule, System.Web.Extensions, Version=3.5.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=31BF3856AD364E35"/>
    < add name="PlaySoundModule" type="YetAnotherDeveloper.HttpModules.PlaySoundModule, YetAnotherDeveloper.HttpModules"/>
</httpModules>

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Using C# to dynamically change virtual directories in IIS

by joey.westcott 22. November 2007 19:51

At work I have a need to change where a virtual direcorty is mapped in IIS.  So being the lazy developer that I am, I wrote a program that helps me take care of this.  Its a simple application that runs in the system tray and allows the remapping of the virtual directory with a couple of clicks.  I have created a page that I will try to keep updated when and if things change with it.  The source code should be posted by the end of the weekend if anyone desires to have a look at it.

This program will create and delete an IIS virtual directory as needed in C#.   

More details here Virtual Directory Manager

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