The explanatory comment in web. Config says that 'loginPage' attribute should be "The path to the login page to use. Must point to a physical file or a page in a site that does NOT require login." 'Require login' means denied Read permissions for the Anonymous user.
This Anonymous user is the one in the domain specified for this site For instance, if you want to have login page set for the website site, you should make sure that extranet\Anonymous has read permission to the item you specified Hope this helps.
The explanatory comment in web. Config says that 'loginPage' attribute should be "The path to the login page to use. Must point to a physical file or a page in a site that does NOT require login." 'Require login' means denied Read permissions for the Anonymous user.
This Anonymous user is the one in the domain specified for this site. For instance, if you want to have login page set for the 'website' site, you should make sure that extranet\Anonymous has read permission to the item you specified. Hope this helps.
The loginPage attribute is actually a URL, not an item path. Include the full path with extension -- e.g. /MyAccount/Login.aspx.
Check security settings on login item. Probably anonymous user don't have access rights to login item.
Nope - anonymous does have access right to the login item :( – kastru Mar 1 '10 at 14:00.
Techphoria414 is correct, you need to supply the URL to the login page. Test that you can actually visit the login page while anonymous.
Once you have the login page coming up in the url in the browser using the path yoursite/login or whatever sitecore tree path you have set up. Then add it to the web.config. Also, in the content tree you can click on security and access viewer for the login item.
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