![]() ![]() This just tells http.sys that it’s ok to talk to this url. > netsh http add urlacl url= user=everyone Second, run these commands, replacing 192.168.1.42:58938 with whatever IP and port you are using: First, start an administrative command prompt. If you’re running Windows 7, pretty much all incoming connections are locked down, so you need to specifically allow incoming connections to your application. (But with your IP, and port number, of course) 2 - Allow incoming connections Which is much better, in my opinion, just don’t forget to add. They are now separate per project, and stored in //.vs/config/nfig. UPDATE FOR VISUAL STUDIO 2015: As was pointed out to me in a comment by Søren Nielsen, in Visual Studio 2015 the IIS Express configuration files have moved. Open* D:\Users\Documents\IISExpress\config\nfig *and find your site. Normally when you run an application in IIS Express, it’s only accessible on In order to access it from another machine, it needs to be bound to your public IP address as well. 1 – Bind your application to your public IP address This post by Scott Hanselman almost describes how to do it, but since I had to make some adjustments I thought I might write a shorter post with just the steps you need for this. I could of course deploy it to IIS and make it publicly available, but since I’m now using IIS Express for running my sites from Visual Studio instead of the built-in web server Cassini, it almost simple to let other computers on my network access the site. ![]() ![]() In this case I wanted to access it from IE6 running in XP Mode. Sometimes (waaaay to often) I have to check that a site I’m working on looks like it should in Internet Explorer 6, Safari on Mac or some other browser that I can’t run in Windows 7. ![]()
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