J
Jason Shohet
I had to go to our server room and put a new version of a .NET website into
production -- simply copying over newer pages. I've done it hundreds of
times on 2000 servers. This was my first time on a 2003 server.
I copied over the files. Then I went to a browser on a machine outside on
the internet (not on our network). The OLD site with the old files were
still there... Hmmm.
I went back to the 2003 server. I DELETED all the files in the site. Then
I copied in the new pages. Went to look at it again. Both on the server,
and the outside (internet) computer, the site was still showing the old
pages! Getting desparate now, I deleted the entire site. Whiped it out
entirely. And the website was still displaying!!!! I then took down IIS
completely, restarting it.
Finally, phew, no site, no webpages. I added the site again (a new subweb),
copied my pages in and everything
worked.
Anyone know what happened? Some caching thing that comes turned on by
default on 2003 server web edition?
TY Jason Shohet
production -- simply copying over newer pages. I've done it hundreds of
times on 2000 servers. This was my first time on a 2003 server.
I copied over the files. Then I went to a browser on a machine outside on
the internet (not on our network). The OLD site with the old files were
still there... Hmmm.
I went back to the 2003 server. I DELETED all the files in the site. Then
I copied in the new pages. Went to look at it again. Both on the server,
and the outside (internet) computer, the site was still showing the old
pages! Getting desparate now, I deleted the entire site. Whiped it out
entirely. And the website was still displaying!!!! I then took down IIS
completely, restarting it.
Finally, phew, no site, no webpages. I added the site again (a new subweb),
copied my pages in and everything
worked.
Anyone know what happened? Some caching thing that comes turned on by
default on 2003 server web edition?
TY Jason Shohet