Reputation: 753
I inherited a classic ASP project and and have deployed it on a IIS 7.5. I am able to access the site, however at certain point I get a generic 500 error page. I want to know what is going on, so I think the best is to see the logs
For the record, I am a newbie with IIS/ASP so the question can sound a bit silly.. Thanks for any suggestion!
Upvotes: 9
Views: 15327
Reputation: 9864
About actually logging Asp errors wherever they happen, as the question title seems to ask, a custom error page should be added.
This requires "HTTP Errors", so first install it if not already done. See Keith answer.
Then, add an .asp
error page. This page has to be as robust as possible, with minimal dependencies. If it fails too, you will not have any log.
This page could first do something like:
Dim error
Set error = Server.GetLastError
LogErrorToFile
Sub LogErrorToFile()
Dim logFso
Dim log
On Error Resume Next
Set logFso = Server.CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
If error.Number <> 0 Then
Exit Sub
End If
Set log = logFso.OpenTextFile("YourLogPath.txt", 8, True)
If error.Number <> 0 Then
Exit Sub
End If
log.WriteLine "URL: " & Request.ServerVariables("URL")
log.WriteLine "File: " & error.File
log.WriteLine "Line, col: " & error.Line & ", " & error.Column
log.WriteLine "Description" & error.Description & vbCrLf
log.Close
End Sub
Then add in this page whatever you wish.
The object returned by GetLastError
is documented here.
Next, ask your site to use this error page in case of Asp errors. For this, set the 500,100 error page to your error page. In web.config, assuming your error file is named err500.asp
and lies at the root of your site, this can be done with:
<system.webServer>
<httpErrors errorMode="DetailedLocalOnly">
<remove statusCode="500" subStatusCode="100" />
<!-- subStatusCode="100" are ASP errors -->
<error statusCode="500" subStatusCode="100" path="/err500.asp" responseMode="ExecuteURL" />
</httpErrors>
</system.webServer>
This answer is a simplification of this blog post. The sample code on this blog post is more complete and handles a log to database.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 21254
You should install the HTTP Errors feature in IIS. This is enough to view the error message -- you won't need logging.
To install HTTP Errors:
Once installed, configure IIS to show detailed error messages:
You should now see detailed error messages.
IIS logs won't help you because they do not include the detailed error messages.
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 1535
This will write the error info to the screen. Modify the "If blnLogFailure" section if you want to write to a file.
On Error Resume Next
Set objASPError = Server.GetLastError
blnLogFailure = TRUE
myMessage = "ERROR IN PROCESSING: " & objASPError.File & vbCrLf
myMessage = myMessage & "ASP Code: " & objASPError.ASPCode & vbCrLf
myMessage = myMessage & "Number: " & objASPError.Number & vbCrLf
myMessage = myMessage & "Source: " & objASPError.Source & vbCrLf
myMessage = myMessage & "Line Number: " & objASPError.Line & vbCrLf
myMessage = myMessage & "Description: " & objASPError.Description & vbCrLf
myMessage = myMessage & "ASP Description: " & objASPError.ASPDescription & vbCrLf
for each item in Request.ServerVariables
myMessage = myMessage & "ITEM: " & item & " VALUE: " & Request.ServerVariables(item) & vbCrLf
next
If blnLogFailure Then
Response.Write myMessage
End If
Upvotes: 1