When in VS2013 or below – it will be located in ~/Documents/IISExpress/config.
Step 2: Assuming the Visual Studio solution is already setup and ready to go, we need to tell IIS express to accept connections from not only requests bound to localhost, but also the IP address from step 1. Just open a command prompt and type: `ipconfig` and then note the IP address. **Step 1:** Find out the IP address of your machine. The rest of these steps will apply regardless of whether you’re running Windows in a VM or not.
Running VMWare? Go out and by Parallels ? But if that isn’t reasonable … a quick Google turns up several articles on how to enable bridged networking there as well. You can select either the Default Adapter or the specific adapter that you’ll be accessing the network with the most often. To enable bridged networking – while the VM is running, you can go to the device menu of the Parallels window, select Network 1, then Bridged Network. But we’re all Professional Software Developers here, so what could go wrong? Of course this comes with the disclaimer that once you do this, Windows can be seen by the masses. We’ll then have an IP address that other devices on the same subnet can hit. This will give your virtualized Windows an IP on the subnet just as any other machine, instead of a virtual one that only the host machine can see. Step 0: Running Parallels? Set the networking mode to “bridged”. So in hopes that by writing it down the steps get burned into my brain, and that these steps help somebody else from wracking their brain … here they are … how to debug Visual Studio code, but not from Windows: The Steps … OR if I”m building a website, I just need to see how it looks on a real deviceĪnd every time I initially have to setup the environment to support such a situation – I have to stop and think to myself … how did I do that before?.
I have installed the desktop version of iTunes on my Windows 10 computer. So I have Visual Studio 2019 v16.10.1 with Xamarin.Forms Hot Restart for iOS enabled.