Updated IIS FTP Service Extensibility References

It's hard to believe that it has already been six years since I wrote my Extensibility Updates in the FTP 8.0 Service blog, and it has been nine years since I wrote my FTP 7.5 Service Extensibility References blog. (Wow… where has all that time gone?) In any event, those blogs introduced several of the APIs that were added to the IIS FTP service which allow developers to provide custom pre-processing and post-processing functionality. (For example, automatically unzipping a compressed file after it has been uploaded, or implementing anti-leeching functionality.)

That being said, for some reason the managed-code APIs that were introduced in later versions of IIS were never fully documented, but we have rectified that problem. With that in mind, the links listed below will take you to the appropriate article for each API.

And as always, there are a dozen or so articles in the Developing for FTP section of the official IIS documentation that will walk you through the process of creating your own custom FTP functionality for IIS.

I hope this helps!

Comments

  • Anonymous
    April 29, 2019
    6 years eh? Oh how I have counted the time between then and now, how I longed for an update to your FTP 7.5 Service Extensibility References article. My life is now complete.
    • Anonymous
      June 18, 2019
      Thanks, Carlton. Happy to be of service. :-D
  • Anonymous
    May 10, 2019
    Hi there,I'm pretty concerned about the state of IIS. The most exciting thing about any windows release for web developers is often the new IIS features. I was super surprised to find Microsoft has made any announcements about support for TLS 1.3.Nowadays it seems IIS is rarely updated, and yet surely IIS is core to so much of Microsoft's cloud offering. There's probably no other single feature that would boost the speed and security more of all of every website & azure cloud service running on windows than adding TLS 1.3 support.In fact, IIS.net site seems almost dead. Is Microsoft stopping developing IIS?
    • Anonymous
      June 18, 2019
      Hello AvazaT - IIS has not been abandoned, nor has IIS.NET, although I can see why you might think so.As far as IIS is concerned, the product team has been focused on protocol and standards compliance work, which are required for interoperability with the rest of the web. Two of the technologies that they have been researching are QUIC and TLS 1.3, although they currently do not have an ETA on a deliverable for either of those.For IIS.NET, there was a recent initiative here at Microsoft to consolidate a lot of our content into a single location, (which is http://docs.microsoft.com), instead of publishing content to dozens of disparate locations as we did in the past. As a result of this migration, most of the IIS content was moved to http://docs.microsoft.com/iis, which is where any future articles will be posted.The parent https://www.iis.net/ website is still the main portal for IIS content, and the https://forums.iis.net/ and https://blogs.iis.net/ subsites are still up and going. That being said, I will admit that the https://blogs.iis.net/ has seen a lot less activity recently, and that is because several of the predominant bloggers for IIS - myself included - are working on other projects these days, and the folks who are currently working on IIS aren't anywhere near as vocal as I was. ;-)