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Disabling Visual Studio Development Server - Any way to do this per project?

When debugging my website project I usually go to start options in the web project's properties and select 'Don't open a page' and 'Use custom server' wi开发者_StackOverflow中文版th a url that's in my host file pointing to my local IIS.

Even when I do this though visual studio still spawns it's own Development Server instance every time I hit f5.

Is there any way to disable this?

Also for web application projects that have shared ascx files for instance Visual Studio will also launch an instance of Development Server each time I debug the solutions for each for these projects. This results in a million instances of Development Server running on my machine at any given moment.

Is there any way to disable development server for a given project completely? Without pointing it to a localhost sub application?


I've just solved the same thing by doing the following

  1. Select the project
  2. Right click->Properties->Web Tab
  3. From the Start Action, select Dont open a page
  4. From Web Server select Use Custom Web Server, specify http://127.0.0.1 as start page


Click on Project, Properties, Web. Under Servers,select Use Local IIS Web Server. If the site has not been created on IIS yet, click on Create Virual Directory. Your project will now run in IIS when you debug.


When I create a website project, I prefer to host the site on IIS, mostly because it is easier to run the IIS application pools under a service account, is more flexible with authentication options, and is more like production (when compared to Cassini).

Unlike the Web Application Project, a website gives no built-in support for "adding itself" to your local IIS. If you already have a filesystem-based website project, what I usually do is:

  1. Remove the website project from my solution.
  2. Configure the application/virtual folder in IIS to use the filesystem-based website I just removed.
  3. Right click on my solution and select Add Existing Web Site.
  4. Choose "Local IIS", instead of "File System", and pick my site from the list of applications.

Besides the fact that it is manual, it makes for smooth debugging without the development server, and TFS is sufficiently aware of the file system that it manages my source code correctly

I hope this helps.


I recently faced this issue with a WCF project. Didn't want to use IIS (as the service was self-hosted). Didn't want to go for a workaround of 'Don't open a page', etc.

Found the solution in answer to Prevent Visual Studio 2010 from starting ASP.net development server.

Worked perfectly fine for me.

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