Administrative rights are required to profile IIS -dot trace - azure

I'm trying to profile a remote Azure web site using dotTrace Perfomance standalone program, but I get "Administrative rights are required to profile IIS" error message under "Application options" when connect to Remote Computer URL, I running dottrace in a Windows 7 computer and using "run as administrator " option.
Any idea what the problem could be?

If you work with Azure Virtual Machine where you launch IIS and your application, you can either install dotTrace and then profile everything locally on the virtual machine, or copy remote agent there and then profile from the local machine remotely.
If you have Azure Website, then it will be impossible to profile it via dotTrace.

Related

Is it possible to connect to the Azure App Service windows machine with RD?

I have an App Service in my Azure resource group. My ASP NET application is hosted on the windows environment inside that app service. I am wondering if it is possible to connect to this desktop windows server using Remote Desktop or something like this. There is a KUDU feature on the Azure but the only one thing that I can do with this is to show server's CMD. That is not enough, because I need to access to the windows desktop GUI like on typical PC. Do you know any tool that would allow me to do this?
App Service runs your applications in a sandbox and it's simply not possible to remote desktop to the underlying VM. There's no Windows GUI that you can access.
The Virtual Machines service allow full control of the VM and you can access the Windows GUI using remote desktop.

Azure VM: the user account used to connect to remote PC did not work

I have an Azure Virtual Machine connected with Azure Active Directory. A user from this AD is added to this machine as an admin. Other people can successfully RDP to the machine with this user's credential, but I get error saying "The user account used to connect to remote PC did not work. Try again". Well, I am trying the whole day. Does anyone know what can cause this?
The fun fact is, I can RDP to the machine using the local admin, but again it fails with AD user.
I tried connecting with Microsoft Remote Desktop for Mac, mstsc for Windows and with Remote Desktop Connection Manager. The same result everywhere.
I tried different usernames format:
alex.sikilinda#mydomain.com - other people can successfully login using this format
AzureAD\alex.sikilinda#mydomain.com - for windows client getting the same error, for Microsoft Remote Desktop for Mac getting "Your session ended because of an error. If this keeps happening, contact your network administrator for assistance. Error code: 0x807"
AzureAD\AlexSikilinda mstsc error - "Remote machine is AAD joined. If you are signing in to your work account, try using work email instead", Mac - "Your session ended because of an error. If this keeps happening, contact your network administrator for assistance. Error code: 0x807"
Microsoft Remote Desktop for Mac version 10.2.3 (1343)
Windows 10 version 16299 (also tried with 1803 on another machine, the same result).
I also came across the same error for the win10 that is AAD join, and I tried the following way to solve this:
Change VM Remote desktop settings same as the picture
Create a new RDP config file
Open mstsc.exe, click on Show Options and then click Save As(give it a new name such as AzureAD_RDP, save it somewhere easy to find).
Open the saved file using Notepad. Verify that the following two lines are present, if not, add them, and save.
enablecredsspsupport:i:0
authentication level:i:2
RDP to the target VM
Open the RDP config file that you just edited, enter the IP address of the VM, do not enter any username, and then connect.
Here you could use AzureAD\UPN or username to log in.
I haven't tried disabling the NLA (and wouldn't recommend), however in my case was the legacy MFA getting in the way of getting into the VM, even if only enabled for the account, and not forced.
In my case, we're using the Conditional Access with MFA, but we have to exclude the VM from the cloud apps (Azure Windows VM Sign-In), because we're not using Windows Hello (thanks Microsoft for a half baked solution!).
See Login to Windows virtual machine in Azure using Azure Active Directory authentication for more details.

Windows Azure free trial hosting

I have created one windows azure free account for checking cloud hosing. I configured IIS and database on the server using remote desktop. after that when i try to access this test application using http://xyz.cloudapp.net:81/logon.apsx, but logon page not loading. If i try it in remote desktop of virtual machine, its working fine.

How do I connect Release Management 2013 client on a non-domain Windows 10 box?

I've got 2 machines:
A corporate desktop machine which is running Windows 7 SP1 which resides on the corporate domain and which I log into using a corporate domain account.
A personal laptop that I use when working from home via the Cisco VPN client but presently sits on my desk connected to the corporate WiFi (though I had it connected to the wire and on the same subnet as my desktop machine today also). This machine is not on the corporate domain; I log into this machine with a Microsoft Account.
I need to run Visual Studio 2013 Release Management Client from both machines. The machine on my desktop works fine when entering either the IP address or the URL into the Release Management Server URL entry field and everything hooks up and all is glorious.
On my Windows 10 laptop however, it's a different story. Every attempt to connect is met with the error:
The server specified could not be reached. Please ensure the
information that is entered is valid (please contact your Release
Management administrator for assistance). <-- I'm the admin
I can ping the machine both with IP address and with hostname, ruling out DNS issues. Both client machines are on the same subnet. Both machines are using the same outbound port.
Checking the event log I see a bunch of Message: The remote server returned an error: (401) Unauthorized.
Checking with Fiddler, on my desktop machine, I can walk through the handshake of each of the stages of startup and all is good. But in Fiddler on my laptop I see 3 401 Unauthorized errors before Release Management Client bombs and returns the rather uninformative message I posted above.
I've attempted to create a shadow account on my laptop and do the Shift-Right Click-Run As Different User dance, but I must be missing something because I can't get this to run.
I've talked to the network administrator who suggests that I should be able to access all of the same resources from both machines and that it must be a Release Management issue.
Is this an incompatibility between VS2013 Release Management & Windows 10 or something else? Has anyone else had this issue and overcome it? I have access to be able to administer the Release Management environment if there's changes that need to be made there and I'm a local administrator on both machines. I'm not however a domain administrator if changes need to be made there.
I would bet you simply have a security issue as the workstation is not domain-joined and the WPF client is using Integrated Authentication.
Often creating a local "shadow" user with same username and password, and running the client app under that account (run as) works.
Another option is to join the workstation to the domain or use a domain-joined VM.
After fully investigating the situation, it appears to have been a combination of factors. I am posting a response because this appears to be a relatively common problem:
The workstation was sending an unexpected credential to the server. To get around this, you have to configure the user account on the server without a domain in the username and create a shadow account on your local machine. When running the client application, you must either log into this shadow account on the local machine or you must SHIFT+RIGHT CLICK and choose "Run as" entering your local shadow credentials. This will then pass the shadow account to the server which will now authenticate without referencing the domain. OR
Create a user account on the server that matches the credentials on your local machine including MACHINENAME\LocalUsername
There appeared to be a network issue when attempting to connect to the Release Management Server from the non-domain machine when connected inside the network. When connecting via the VPN from home, this situation was resolved, but only after we'd ensured the account and local machine accounts were correctly configured. The domain connected machine always connected properly.

How to access remote desktop from two machines in windows azure

I published the cloud service from VS2010 with Remote Desktop enabled. I downloaded the remote desktop connection for that instance. I just logged in to cloud server using Remote Desktop. Now i published same application from another computer. When i want to connect Remote Desktop from new machine its unable to connect to server. Even i tried from previous machine i am getting the same thing.
Application has 1 role & 1 instance. help me with this thing.
You must allow the RDP while publishing it to the cloud...Check the publish settings once...

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