If I have a standard AXD HttpHandler and the default ignore route for *.axd, then why is ASP.NET MVC still handling requests in subdirs, for instance if there is a request made for /Content/Css/css.axd?d.... If the request is made at root /css.axd?d.... everything works fine.
+2
A:
I guess the route was deliberately made like that by design, maybe because the wildcard at a start of string isn't as performant.
Unfortunately this won't work:
routes.IgnoreRoute("{ *pathAndResource }.axd/{ *pathInfo }")
The solution is to use constraints - see Phil Haack's blog post
Phil's blogs uses a regular expression constraint, but you could create you own custom contraint alternatively to make things more readable:
routes.IgnoreRoute("match axds"
"{*url}", new { controller = "MyController", action = "MyAction" }, new
{
myCustomConstraint = new FileExtensionConstraint(".axd")
}
MVC-dot-net
2009-11-03 16:38:33
Why is that default IgnoreRoute there then? In every new ASP.NET MVC projects created...
mare
2009-11-04 11:10:19
The default ignore route is needed to support asp.net 2.0's built-in web resources which are always found at: /webresource.axd see: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/910442.
MVC-dot-net
2009-11-06 09:51:24