G
Guest
I work as a IIS Admin for a company and we have migrated some ASP.NET apps
from IIS 5 to IIS 6. They worked fine under IIS 5. They had their session
state set to time out after 120 minutes and they were using InProc,
cookieless="false". The Machine.config file did not get analyzed before
migrating, before I started withthis company and that file is no longer
available via tape backup. The current machine.config has its session state
set identically to the web.config for this app. I can get the session state
to go less than 20 minutes by altering the web.config, but I can't get it to
exceed 20 minutes. The machine.config has its "allowoverride" set for "True".
I have done several file scans the web.config is getting parsed and there are
no hits on any files in the app folder from the rtvscan.exe process, so it
looks as though real time Norton scanning is not a factor here. In fact,
there does not appear to be anything accessing those files during the 20 plus
minutes that I sit and wait for the session state to timeout.
We are using .Net Framework v1.1.4322.573. I see where an upgrade to
servicepack to v1.1.4322.947 has been known to correct this issue when it
comes to using cookieless sessions,
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;828330 , but does
anyone have any clue as to why this might be happening?
Thanks in advance
from IIS 5 to IIS 6. They worked fine under IIS 5. They had their session
state set to time out after 120 minutes and they were using InProc,
cookieless="false". The Machine.config file did not get analyzed before
migrating, before I started withthis company and that file is no longer
available via tape backup. The current machine.config has its session state
set identically to the web.config for this app. I can get the session state
to go less than 20 minutes by altering the web.config, but I can't get it to
exceed 20 minutes. The machine.config has its "allowoverride" set for "True".
I have done several file scans the web.config is getting parsed and there are
no hits on any files in the app folder from the rtvscan.exe process, so it
looks as though real time Norton scanning is not a factor here. In fact,
there does not appear to be anything accessing those files during the 20 plus
minutes that I sit and wait for the session state to timeout.
We are using .Net Framework v1.1.4322.573. I see where an upgrade to
servicepack to v1.1.4322.947 has been known to correct this issue when it
comes to using cookieless sessions,
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;828330 , but does
anyone have any clue as to why this might be happening?
Thanks in advance