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Global.asa Syntax

The Global.asa file is an optional file in which you can specify event scripts and declare objects that have session or application scope. It is not for content that is displayed to clients; instead it stores event information and objects used globally by the application. This file must be named Global.asa and must be stored in the root directory of the application. An application can only have one Global.asa file.

Global.asa files can contain only the following:

If you include script that is not enclosed by <SCRIPT> tags or that defines an object that does not have session or application scope, the server returns an error. The server ignores both tagged script that the application or session events do not use, as well as any HTML in the file.

The scripts contained in the Global.asa file may be written in any supported scripting language. If multiple event or object scripts use the same scripting language, they can be combined inside a single set of <SCRIPT> tags.

When you save changes to the Global.asa file, the server finishes processing all of the current application requests before it recompiles the Global.asa file. During that time, the server refuses additional requests and returns an error message stating that the request cannot be processed while the application is being restarted.

After all of the current user requests have been processed, the server deletes all active sessions, calling the Session_OnEnd event for each session it deletes, closes the application, and calls the Application_OnEnd event. The Global.asa file is then recompiled. Subsequent user requests will start the application and create new sessions, and trigger the Application_OnStart and Session_OnStart events.

Procedures declared in the Global.asa file can be called only from one or more of the scripts associated with the Application_OnStart, Application_OnEnd, Session_OnStart, and Session_OnEnd events. They are not available to the ASP pages in the ASP-based application.

To share procedures across an application, you can declare the procedures in a separate ASP file, and then use Server.Transfer Method and Server.Execute Method. You can also use server-side include (SSI) statements to include the file in the ASP pages that call the procedures.

Note

To increase security on you Web server, do not store sensitive data in include files. If you do store sensitive data in include files, change the IIS script mapping for the .inc extension from ssinc.dll to asp.dll so that ASP can throw an exception if an invalid character is passed. Alternatives to using #include in ASP applications are Server.Transfer Method and Server.Execute Method.

The examples provided in later topics use Microsoft? Visual Basic? Scripting Edition (VBScript) as the primary scripting language. However, ASP scripts can be written in any supported scripting language, such as Microsoft JScript?. For more information about how to change the primary language, see Working with Scripting Languages.

Requirements

Client: Requires Windows XP Professional, Windows 2000 Professional, or Windows NT Workstation 4.0.

Server: Requires Windows Server 2003, Windows 2000 Server, or Windows NT Server 4.0.

Product: IIS

See Also

Concepts

Server.Transfer Method

Server.Execute Method

ASP Built-In Object Events