Where is the IIS Express configuration / metabase file found?

Visual StudioIis Express

Visual Studio Problem Overview


Where can the IIS Express configuration / metabase file be found?

Visual Studio Solutions


Solution 1 - Visual Studio

The configuration file is called applicationhost.config. It's stored here:

My Documents > IIS Express > config

usually, but not always, one of these paths will work

%userprofile%\documents\iisexpress\config\applicationhost.config
%userprofile%\my documents\iisexpress\config\applicationhost.config

Update for VS2019
If you're using Visual Studio 2019+ check this path:

$(solutionDir)\.vs\{projectName}\config\applicationhost.config

Update for VS2015 (credit: @Talon)
If you're using Visual Studio 2015-2017 check this path:

$(solutionDir)\.vs\config\applicationhost.config

In Visual Studio 2015+ you can also configure which applicationhost.config file is used by altering the <UseGlobalApplicationHostFile>true|false</UseGlobalApplicationHostFile> setting in the project file (eg: MyProject.csproj). (source: MSDN forum)

Solution 2 - Visual Studio

For VS 2015 & VS 2017: Right-click the IIS Express system tray icon (when running the application), and select "Show all applications":

Context menu for IIS Express system tray icon showing the alternative

Then, select the relevant application and click the applicationhost.config file path:

Dialog showing arbritrary website with accompanying applicationhost.config file path

Solution 3 - Visual Studio

Since the introduction of Visual Studio 2015, this location has changed and is added into your solution root under the following location:

C:\<Path\To\Solution>\.vs\config\applicationhost.config

I hope this saves you some time!

Solution 4 - Visual Studio

To come full circle and include all versions of Visual Studio, @Myster originally stated that;

Pre Visual Studio 2015 the paths to applicationhost.config were:

%userprofile%\documents\iisexpress\config\applicationhost.config
%userprofile%\my documents\iisexpress\config\applicationhost.config

Visual Studio 2015/2017 path can be found at: (credit: @Talon)

$(solutionDir)\.vs\config\applicationhost.config

Visual Studio 2019 path can be found at: (credit: @Talon)

$(solutionDir)\.vs\config\$(ProjectName)\applicationhost.config

But the part that might get some people is that the project settings in the .sln file can repopulate the applicationhost.config for Visual Studio 2015+. (credit: @Lex Li)

So, if you make a change in the applicationhost.config you also have to make sure your changes match here:

$(solutionDir)\ProjectName.sln

The two important settings should look like:

Project("{XXXXXXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXXXXXXXXXX}") = "ProjectName", "ProjectPath\", "{XXXXXXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXX-XXXXXXXXXXXX}"

and

VWDPort = "Port#"

What is important here is that the two settings in the .sln must match the name and bindingInformation respectively in the applicationhost.config file if you plan on making changes. There may be more places that link these two files and I will update as I find more links either by comments or more experience.

Solution 5 - Visual Studio

I think all the answers here are relevant however if, like me, you are looking for where Visual Studio takes the template from when it creates a new version of the applicationHost.config then you can look here:

C:\Program Files (x86)\IIS Express\config\templates\PersonalWebServer

This happens a lot if you are often working on multiple branches of the same project and pressing 'debug' in a lot of them. Making an edit here will ensure that edit propagates to any new project/solution folders that get created.

Answer indirectly came from this answer

Solution 6 - Visual Studio

For Visual Studio 2019 (v16.2.4) I was only able to find this file here:

C:\Users<USERNAME>\Documents\IISExpress\config\applicationhost.config applicationhost.config

Hope this helps as I wasn't able to find the .vs folder location as mentioned in the above suggestions.

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionMysterView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - Visual StudioMysterView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - Visual Studiouser3638471View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - Visual StudioTalonView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - Visual StudioJoeView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - Visual StudioPhil MorrisView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - Visual StudioRichieMNView Answer on Stackoverflow