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Home/ Questions/Q 508415
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T06:54:18+00:00 2026-05-13T06:54:18+00:00

Hi all, I seem to have found a discrepancy when testing ASP.NET applications locally

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Hi all, I seem to have found a discrepancy when testing ASP.NET applications locally on the built-in web server with Visual Studio 2008 (Cassini).

I’ve set up a host on my local machine associating dev.testhost.com with 127.0.0.1, since I have an application that needs to change its appearance depending on the host header used to call it.

However, when I request my test application using http://dev.testhost.com:1234/index.aspx, the value of Request.Url.Host is always "localhost". Whereas the value of Request.Headers["host"] is "dev.testhost.com:1234" (as I would expect them both to be).

I’m NOT concerned that the second value includes the port number, but I am mighty confused as to why the HOST NAMES are completely different! Does anyone know if this is a known issue, or by design? Or am I being an idiot?!

I’d rather use Request.Url.Host, since that avoids having to strip out the port number when testing… – Removed due to possibly causing confusion! – Sam

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T06:54:18+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 6:54 am

    Request.Headers["host"] is the value received from the application that connects to the server, while the other value is the one the server gets when it tries to get the domain name.

    The browser uses in the request the domain name entered because that is used in the case of virtual domains. The server reports the one set in the server preferences, or the first one it finds.

    EDIT: Looking at the code of Cassini to see if it uses some particular settings, I noticed the following code:

    public string RootUrl {
      get {
        if (_port != 80) {
          return "http://localhost:" + _port + _virtualPath;
        }
        else {
          return "http://localhost" + _virtualPath;
        }
      }
    }
    
    //
    // Socket listening
    //
    
    public void Start() {
      try {
        _socket = CreateSocketBindAndListen(AddressFamily.InterNetwork, IPAddress.Loopback, _port);
      }
      catch {
        _socket = CreateSocketBindAndListen(AddressFamily.InterNetworkV6, IPAddress.IPv6Loopback, _port);
      }
      // …
    }
    

    The explanation seems to be that Cassini makes explicit reference to localhost, and doesn’t try to make a reverse DNS lookup. Differently, it would not use return "http://localhost" + _virtualPath;.

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