Visual Studio 웹 사이트 및 웹 응용 프로그램 타입의 프로젝트를 생성하여
Visual Studio 가상 서버를 이용한 빌드가 아닌, 아래와 같이 사용자 지정 서버 사용을 이용하여 빌드가 가능하다.




이 때, 디버깅 관련 오류가 뜨는 경우가 있다.
그 해결법으로...

1. 루프백 확인 비활성화
  • 시작, 실행을 차례로 누르고 regedit를 입력한 다음 확인누른다.
  • 레지스트리 편집기에서 HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Lsa 레지스트리 키를 찾아 누른다.
  • Lsa를 마우스 오른쪽 단추로 누르고 새로 만들기를 가리킨 다음 DWORD 값을 누른다.
  • DisableLoopbackCheck를 입력한 다음 Enter 키를 누른다.
  • DisableLoopbackCheck를 마우스 오른쪽 단추로 누른 다음 수정을 누른다.
  • 값 데이터 상자에 1을 입력한 다음 확인을 누른다.
  • 레지스트리 편집기를 종료하고 컴퓨터를 다시 시작한다.


2. 호스트 이름 지정방법
   루프백 주소에 매핑되며 사용자 컴퓨터의 웹 사이트에 연결할 수 있는 호스트 이름을 지정하려면 다음과 같이 하면 된다.

  • 시작, 실행을 차례로 누르고 regedit를 입력한 다음, 확인을 누른다.
  • 레지스트리 편집기에서 HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Lsa\MSV1_0의 레지스트리 키를 찾아 누른다.
  • MSV1_0을 마우스 오른쪽 단추로 누르고 새로 만들기를 가리킨 다음 다중 문자열 값을 누른다.
  • BackConnectionHostNames를 입력한 다음 Enter 키를 누른다.
  • BackConnectionHostNames를 마우스 오른쪽 단추로 누른 다음 수정을 누른다.
  •  값 데이터 상자에서 로컬 컴퓨터에 있는 사이트의 호스트 이름을 하나 또는 여러 개 입력 한 후 확인을 누른다.
  • 레지스트리 편집기를 끝낸 다음 IISAdmin 서비스를 다시 시작한다.

       

Visual Studio에서 프로젝트를 소스세이프에 추가 하려고 할 때
아래와 같이 VSS 웹서비스 형식으로 등록하는 화면으로 나올 경우가 있다.
VSS에 로그인하여 추가 하려고 하는데, 이런 화면이 나타나면 당황스럽다.


웹 서비스 형식으로 하고 싶지 않을 경우 설정을 변경해야 한다.

Visual Studio 상단 메뉴를 보면, 도구라는 메뉴가 있는데, 하위 메뉴의 옵션을 클릭한다.


옵션화면에 왼쪽 트리 메뉴를 보시면 소스 제어라는 항목이 있을 것이다.
아래 화면과 같이 설정을 변경하면, 원하는 화면으로 될 것이다.


결과 화면


ASP.NET

·         Extending the GridView to Include Sort Arrows: Scott Mitchell has a nice article that describes how to add a visual indicator to the GridView control to indicate the current sort order on columns.

·         Using ASP.NET 3.5's ListView and DataPager Controls: Sorting Data: Scott Mitchell continues his ListView control series with a good article on enabling sorting scenarios with the new ListView control.

·         Building a Grouping Grid with the ListView and LinqDataSource Controls: Matt Berseth has an awesome post that shows off using the new ListView control and LinqDataSource controls to build a hierarchical grouping grid.  A post to bookmark.

·         Using the ListView, DataPager and LinqDataSource Controls: Matt Berseth has a good tutorial post that shows off using these new controls to join data from two database tables using LINQ.

·         Some ASP.NET 3.5 ListView Control Examples: Mike Ormond has a nice post that provides a number of samples that show how to use the new ASP.NET ListView control.  For even more ListView articles, check out my last link-listing post which pointed to a bunch of them.

·         Large File Uploads in ASP.NET: Jon Galloway has a nice post that provides some good details on handing large file uploads using ASP.NET.

ASP.NET AJAX

·         Four ASP.NET AJAX JavaScript UI Methods You Should Learn: Dave Ward has another great post in his series about ASP.NET AJAX's client-side JavaScript Helper Methods.

·         Five Tab Themes Created for the ASP.NET AJAX Control Toolkit: Matt Berseth posts some really cool themes created for the ASP.NET AJAX Control Toolkit's Tab control. Very slick!

·         CNN Style Scrolling Ticker with the Marquee Toolkit Control: Matt Berseth posts another great one that shows how to implement a scrolling marquee UI using the ASP.NET AJAX Control Toolkit.

Visual Studio

·         Did You Know?: Lisa Feigenbaum from the VB team has posted a really cool series of blog posts that talk about some of the new VS 2008 editor and IDE features.  Read Part 1: Intellisense Everywhere, Part 2: IntelliSense is now Transparent, Part 3: Ctrl+Tab to Navigate Windows, Part 4: What You Can Do with Debugger DataTips, and Part 5: VB IntelliSense now filters as you type.

·         Web Server Settings for ASP.NET Web Application Projects can now be stored per user as well as per project: The VS Web Tools Team has a nice post that describes how you can now store web server settings per-user instead of per-project.  This is very useful for multi-developer scenarios (where you don't want to check-in these values into source control).

·         Using Ctrl-Break to Stop VS Building: Steven Harman points out a cool tip/trick, which is that you can use the Ctrl-Break key within Visual Studio to kill the current compilation build.  A useful tip if you've accidentally kicked off a long build or get tired waiting for it to finish.

·         Visual Studio 2008 Trouble Shooting Guide: If you run into any issues installing VS 2008, make sure to check out this blog post.  It details a bunch of common causes of failures, and how to fix them.

.NET

·         Marshaling between Managed and Unmanaged Code: Yi Zhang and Xiaoying Guo from my team in Shanghai have written a great MSDN article that describes how to use the marshaling interop features of the CLR to call native code.  One of the tools they highlight is an awesome P/Invoke Interop Assistant application they built that makes it much, much easier to generate p/invoke interop signatures when calling native methods.  A must-have tool for anyone doing native/managed interop!

·         .NET Framework 3.5 Poster: Brad Abrams posts about the cool new .NET Framework 3.5 posters now available for download (now in multiple file formats).

IIS

·         Microsoft Web Deployment Tool Technical Preview 1: Yesterday the IIS team posted the first preview of a new Microsoft Web Deployment tool.  This tool works with both IIS6 and IIS7 and enables automated deployment, synchronization, and migrating of applications on web servers.  If you are looking for a great way to automate the deployment of your ASP.NET applications then this tool is definitely one to check out.  To learn more, read the walkthroughs at the bottom of this page (in particular the "Introduction to MS Deploy" one).  This tool is awesome and should make automated deployment much easier.
Hope this helps,
Scott

Update: This shiped a few days ago.  More details here: http://weblogs.asp.net/scottgu/archive/2005/11/10/430283.aspx

 

Later this week Microsoft is shipping on the web a new free add-on to Visual Studio that enables what we call “Visual Studio 2005 Web Deployment Projects”.  This add-on provides a lot of additional deployment features and capabilities that complement the built-in web project support in the product.  The below blog post provides a quick overview of some of the new things coming.  There are also some MSDN whitepapers that will document it more exhaustively over the next week as well.

 

Some background

 

The web project model changed in a number of ways between VS 2003 and VS 2005.  There was a lot of discussion this August over missing features that weren’t supported or were broken by it in Beta2 (examples: exclude file from project support, file-based assembly refreshes, the ability to not check-in \bin assemblies in source control, etc).  These specific issues were fixed in the final release of VS 2005, and a number of folks who previously had a lot of concerns have posted positive impressions of the new model lately.

 

One of the things we on the team still weren’t happy with, though, was the level of support in the vanilla product for more advanced deployment configurations/options beyond the core "Publish Web" scenarios built-into VS 2005 – specifically around assembly naming/output, advanced MSBuild customization, and other common scenarios that we’ve heard requests for over the years (for example: the ability to modify connection string settings depending on the build configuration, etc).

 

A couple of guys on my team have cranked over the last 2 months adding richer support for these scenarios that integrate nicely in the shipping product.  We’ve packaged up this work in a new free download we call “VS 2005 Web Deployment Projects” and which we worked to make sure was available for download this week (which is the week of VS 2005 launch -- so basically immediately when the product releases).  This download does not touch any shipping binaries within VS 2005, but instead uses the extensibility support within the IDE and ASP.NET to integrate in a fairly cool way. 

 

We think the resulting feature-set offers the best of both worlds – specifically the productivity benefits of rapid development brought with the new dynamic web project model, as well as the richness of a highly customized build/deployment system.

 

VS 2005 Web Deployment Project Feature-Set

 

The VS 2005 Web Deployment Project download adds a number of features that integrate nicely inside VS 2005 including:

 

1) More control over the number of assemblies generated by a pre-compiled web project, as well as control over their naming.  Specifically, you can now generate a single named assembly for all pages + classes in your web project (for example: MyCompany.MyWebApp.dll).  Alternatively, you can also now optionally generate a separate named assembly for each directory of pages/controls in your project (for example: MyCompany.MyWebApp.SubFolder1.dll and MyCompany.MyWebApp.SubFolder2.dll).  This later option is particularly useful for large content web-apps where you would like the ability to incrementally patch code updates.

 

2) The ability to utilize the full power of MSBuild to customize your build process.  You can now use MSBuild to define pre and post build rules, exclude folders from building, automatically create IIS vdirs and site mappings, add custom assembly versioning information, and add any custom MSBuild task you want to your build process.

 

A VS 2005 Web Deployment Project stores all of its settings inside an MSBuild based project-file.  It also adds support for opening and editing the web deployment MSbuild project file directly in the IDE (w/ full intellisense support for it) – something that actually isn’t supported by any other project type in VS.

 

3) The ability to define and use custom build-configurations inside Visual Studio, and define per-build configuration options.  In addition to using the built-in “debug” and “release” configurations, for example, you could define custom build configurations like “staging”.  You can then vary your web deployment MSBuild tasks and actions based on these.

 

4) The ability to customize and modify a web application’s web.config file at deployment.  There is now IDE support for changing values likes connectionstrings or app-settings as part of the build process.  You can also vary these values based on the VS build configuration – so for example you could have one set of connectionstrings that you use for development (when you have the build configuration set to “debug”), and then have them modified as part of the build-process to your test/staging or production databases when you choose a “staging” or “release” build configuration in the IDE.

 

There are also a host of other features to take advantage of.  The upcoming whitepapers on MSDN will go into more detail on these, as well as the 40+ new web deployment related MSBuild tasks that it ships with that you can use to customize things even further.

 

Example Walkthrough of using a VS 2005 Web Deployment Project

 

Below is a simple example that walks-through using the VS 2005 Web Deployment Project download to customize the deployment of a VS 2005 based web site project.

 

Step 1: Development my web project

 

Below is a screen-shot of a common web application solution structure – where I have 1 or more class library projects and then a web-project containing my web app.

 

 

I can build the application using the standard web project model that ships with VS 2005, and take advantage of the productivity enhancements it provides.

 

Step 2: Adding a VS 2005 Web Deployment Project

 

As my web app progresses, I’ll need to think more about deployment.  To take advantage of the new deployment features the web deployment add-in provides, I can right-click on any of my web projects in the solution and add a Web Deployment Project (note: it is the 3rd item in the context menu below):

 

 

This will prompt me for what I want to name the project and where to store its project file:

 

 

The web deployment project will then show up as part of my solution:

 

 

Associated in the e:\WebSiteDeployment directory is a new MSbuild based project file that contains deployment and build settings for my web-project.

 

Note that a single web-site project can optionally have multiple deployment projects associated with it.  You can also have multiple web-site projects in a solution, each with a separate web deployment project (for example: a user control library project that you pre-compiled and then copied into another web app project that used it).

 

Step 3: Setting Build and Deployment Options

 

To customize build and deployment settings I can either use the built-in GUI property pages for the deployment project, or edit the MSBuild file directly.  I’ll show this second more advanced option later – for right now I can just right-click and pull up the property pages for the project, or double click on the WebSiteDeployment node (which is a short-cut for the same thing) to customize its properties.

 

There are several screens of information (the MSDN whitepaper will go into them all – for here I’ll just show a few highlights).  One thing to note is that the settings are configured per-VS build configuration – so you can have one set of options for “debug”, one set of options for “release” and optionally define your own build configurations like “staging” and configure custom options for that build configuration as well.  I’m going to change the settings below to apply for the “release” build configuration.

 

Here are a few of the more common things developers will want to control:

 

1) Developers can control whether to pre-compile the web entirely, or to support html source updates.  Only the later option was supported in VS 2003 – and meant that you always had to deploy your .aspx source files on your production server (these were in turn dynamically compiled by ASP.NET at runtime the first time the app was run).  ASP.NET 2.0 still supports this compile option (we call it the “allow updates” option in VS 2005).  ASP.NET 2.0 also now supports a mode where you can optionally compile everything inside VS – including the .aspx/.ascx control definitions and html source.  This produces a more efficient version of the app, and eliminates the need for a first-time dynamic compile performance hit when your app is run.  It also allows you to protect more of the IP of your site, and enables you better compile-time checking of your application.  The first property page in the web deployment project allows you to choose either this new compile mode, or the preserve .aspx source mode that VS 2003 used.

 

2) Developers can control what granularity of assembly output they want the website compiled down to, as well as what names to use for the assemblies (this is controlled on the output assemblies tab):

 

 

The default option is to merge the entire web-site into a single assembly that you can name however you want.  This merges the output of all page/control compilation, app_code, and web-services into a single assembly (leaving one file to deploy). 

 

There are other options you can choose as well for more granular control over the assembly generation.  For example, the second option above lets you compile each folder in your website into a separate named assembly (for example: MyCompany.MyWebApp.Folder1, MyCompany.MyWebApp.Folder2).  This is useful for patching large applications where you want to make a tactical update to just a portion of the site.

 

If you have an AssemblyInfo.cs/.vb class in your app_code directory, the deployment project will use the meta-data it contains to version the produced assemblies.  Alternatively, you can also set the version information specifically in the IDE.  This in turn saves it as an MSBuild variable in your project file.  You could optionally use a custom MSbuild task to set this variable dynamically at build-time (for example: to use a policy like we do at Microsoft where the build number is based on the current date).

 

3) The developer can then optionally use the deployment tab for other common deployment scenarios:

 

 

One of these is the ability to replace the application’s web.config settings at build-time.  This can be done on a configuration section by section basis.  Simply list the name of the section to replace, and an XML file containing the replacement settings.  You can choose to have them replaced either in-line within the web.config file (the default), or to use the new configSource attribute option in ASP.NET 2.0 to dynamically point the web.config file at external configuration files that contain the values.

 

Because all values in the settings dialog can be configured on a per-VS build configuration basis, this means that you can have one set of configuration file replacement settings per build configuration (for example: one connectionstring setting for “debug”, one connectionstring setting for “staging” and one connectionstring setting for “release”). 

 

The other options included on this dialog is the ability to dynamically create and map an IIS vroot to the output directory as part of the build process, as well as the ability to delete the app_data directory as a post-build step (useful in cases where you want to delete the SQL Express database you’ve been using for development, and instead map your Membership, Roles, Profile, Personalization and HealthMon providers to a full SQL Server production database).

 

Step 4: Adding Optional Advanced MSBuild File Customization Rules

 

The above GUI property pages provide support for the most common build configuration settings.  One neat thing about the Web Deployment Projects, though, is that there is easy IDE support for dropping down into the MSBuild file directly and customizing things further.

 

To-do this in the IDE, simply right click on the web deployment project and select “Open Project File”:

 

 

This will bring up an XML editor with intellisense support for the project file:

 

 

You can make changes, and then hit save to update things dynamically.

 

The web deployment project adds support for pre and post build events that you can use to customize things.  For example, if you wanted to make sure a custom directory was created in your generated app after building, you could use the built-in MSbuild <MakeDir> task in the AfterBuild event:

 

  <Target Name="AfterBuild">

    <MakeDir Directories="$(TargetDir)\Upload" />

  </Target>

 

If you want to exclude a “Test” directory that contains some sample test pages from building in your release configuration you could add something like this:

 

  <ItemGroup>

    <ExcludeFromBuild Include="$(SourceWebPhysicalPath)\Test\**\*.*"/>

  </ItemGroup>

 

Note that you can use wild-card extensions when excluding things (above it is using *.* to exclude everything under the test directory) – so you can get quite fancy with your exclude rules.  MSBuild itself ships with tons and tons of built-in build tasks (like MakeDir).  The Web Deployment Project download adds support for another 40+ custom tasks specific to web application development/deployment.  The really cool thing is that it is also easy to build your own MSBuild tasks and add them to projects as well.

 

Once you’ve made any custom tweaks, just hit save on the project file and close the window.  Note that you can still use the property page dialogs above even after customizing the project file – it will preserve your settings and not blow them away.

 

Step 5: Building the Web Deployment Project

 

Now that I have my deployment project all setup, I can simply do a “Build Solution” to build all the projects in my solution – including my new web deployment project.  This will then generate an output folder for my website.  Contained within it is a \bin directory that has two assemblies (one for my data class library, and one for my web project):

 

 

The web.config file for my application has also been updated to have my production connectionstring settings.

 

One typical optimization that we’ll recommend would be to only build the web deployment project when your application is ready to be deployed – and not during actual development (instead when actively developing just work with the web project directly as normal).  You can easily configure this in the VS build configuration manager:

 

 

For example: with the above settings we are configuring the WebSiteDeployment project to not build when the “debug” release configuration is set – and only do so when in “release” mode.

 

You can then use the build configuration drop-down on the toolbar to quickly switch between debug and release modes depending on where you are with the project:

 

 

Step 6: Optional Setup Project

 

One last bonus step that is also possible is adding a “Web Setup” project into our above solution.  This is a standard VS 2005 project type that supports packaging a .msi file along with logic to create a vroot and deploy an application when executed:

 

 

I can easily configure the WebSetup project to pipe in the output from my WebSiteDeployment project into the MSI. 

 

Then, while I select “Build Solution” again I’ll build my web deployment project, pipe it into the setup project, and I’ll be left with a .MSI setup program for my web application that will walk me through creating an IIS vroot and deploy my production app on a web-server when run:

 

 

Next Steps

 

Our plan is to post the first release of the VS 2005 Web Deployment Project for free download on MSDN this week.  We'll then gather and incorporate feedback and release an updated version later this year. 

 

We hope you find it useful.  Let us know what you think and what additional features and MSBuild tasks you’d like to see added to it.

 

Thanks,

XAML 파일을 열 때, 미리보기 화면과 코드 부분으로 나누어 열리는 것을 볼 수 있습니다.
Visual Studio 설치시, 나누어 보기가 디폴트 설정으로 되어 있을 것입니다.
나누어 보기 함으로써, 개발 PC 리소스를 마니 잡아, 버벅대는 현상을 볼수 있는데,
아래와 같은 옵션 설정으로 코드 보기만 함으로써 좀 더 쾌적한 환경에서 개발할 수 있습니다.

Visual Studio 상단 메뉴에 [도구]를 클릭하면, 옵션이라는 항목이 보입니다.



텍스트 편집기 - XAML 항목이 보이는데, 기타를 클릭하시면 기본 보기 옵션이 나타납니다.


"항상 전체 XAML 뷰에서 문서 열기" 라는 항목을 체크하시면 옵션 설정은 끝납니다.


How to: Creating Code Snippets for Visual Studio 2005/2008

Code Snippets was one of my favorite "new features" in Visual Studio 2005 and has continued to be in Visual Studio 2008.  If you've never used them, what they are (simple explanation) is a macro-capability built into the Visual Studio IDE.  They allow you to type single/multiple key strokes to define blocks of code.  So imagine: If I want to open a database connection, adapter, create a dataset, and fill it.  I could type the 5+ lines of code each time I have to do this (which is often) or I could just type something like "DataSetCode" and hit the enter button, and all of the code that I would normally hand write each time, would show up in the IDE (like a Macro).  It even has the ability to prompt me for pieces like the dataset name, connection string pieces, etc., that might vary each time I write my code.

Great feature!  There are some already built in to Visual Studio, others that you can download. 

If you want to learn how to build your own, check these links out (taken from this MSDN article)

BTW, if you don't like hand writing XML, then you might want to download this free Code Snippet Editor called: "Snippy": Click here to access the download

~ Robert Shelton

 

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Published Tuesday, December 18, 2007 8:49 AM by Public Sector DPE Team

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