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+<h1>Use .NET 5.0 To Be Rid of Windows Server!</h1>
+
+<p>
+ I work at a three-letter company. The majority of our development teams are
+ heavily invested in Java and .NET Framework. Our team has traditionally shied
+ away from .NET Framework for what I'm guessing is a pretty common reason: it
+ only runs on Windows. For many shops this probably isn't a big deal but for
+ our team it was a bit of an annoyance. Most of our software gets wrapped up in
+ containers and deployed to an on-site Kubernetes cluster. However, we have one
+ small application that needs to talk to a proprietary vendor library written
+ in .NET Framework. That means that 99% of our stuff is deployed using the same
+ methods and in the same location. The other 1% was this little app, and it
+ actually caused us quite a few headaches. Luckily, .NET 5.0 came out recently.
+ It represents the convergence of .NET Core and .NET Framework into a single,
+ cross-platform runtime. This is one of the only times in my career that a
+ single upgrade has magically solved everything.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+ The library in question is an older .NET Framework (not .NET Standard, which
+ can be included in Framework or Core projects) collection of .dlls that lets
+ us communicate with the vendor's systems. It's basically a platform-dependent
+ SDK. Our only requirement was to make accessible a table of information on the
+ vendor's system via the SDK. At the time, the simplest thing to do seemed to
+ be an ASP.NET Core app that rendered a very basic HTML table constructed from
+ vendor data. And it worked just fine, tested great. The whole project wasn't
+ more than a few thousand SLOC.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+ Everything was going swimmingly all the way through deployment. We knew that
+ because we had to target .NET Framework for our project to build, we would
+ need to build a Windows Server instance. So we did that and set used Visual
+ Studio + IIS to create a deployment pipeline. This was alright; click publish
+ and the new version builds, deploys, and goes live. Then things started to get
+ weird.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+ Our application had some config to know which servers to log into. This was
+ stored in <code>appsettings.Env.json</code>, where <code>Env</code> changed
+ for Development and Production. For whatever reason, regardless of the
+ environment we specified (typically
+ <code>ASPNETCORE_ENVIRONMENT=Production</code>), the config would default to
+ Development after an application restart. There were a few problems
+ interacting at once here. First, why was the app restarting? It seemed like if
+ we started it up, it would run great. If we left it alone for a while, it
+ would die. Then, accessing its URL again would slowly bring it back to life.
+ When it came back to life it had the Development config. Only a manual app
+ restart would bring the Production config back, and then only until it went to
+ sleep again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+ Keep in mind this was a purely default deployment environment. Vanilla Windows
+ Server 2016, base install of IIS with no tweaking. Even the ASP.NET Core
+ project was scaffolded by the <code>dotnet</code> CLI tool. We just added some
+ source code that changed the homepage by running a few library functions.
+</p>
+
+<p>Eventually we tracked down the</p>
+
+- resources - patching/AMI upgrades - IIS weirdness
+
+<p>
+ quick ASP.NET Core app on top of their .NET Framework library app, fired up
+ Windows Server, and shoved it there. It wouldn't let us forget about it. For a
+ myriad of reasons, maintaining IIS as a reverse proxy to the application (for
+ certificates, etc.) produced strange and unusual behavior. For example, IIS
+ comes with a collection of
+</p>