We are integrating an internal framework into our weblogic application and we are running into deployment problems.
Technologies Used
Weblogic 10.3.6 application
Spring 3.0
Maven 2
Eclipse J2EE
The Problem
On startup of the weblogic application, we receive the following NoSuchMethodError while initializing one of the beans. This error is occuring when calling classes in the org.joda.time (2.0) jar.
Caused By: java.lang.NoSuchMethodError: org.joda.time.DateTimeZone.convertLocalToUTC(JZ)J
at org.joda.time.LocalDate.toDateTimeAtStartOfDay(LocalDate.java:715)
at org.joda.time.LocalDate.toDateTimeAtStartOfDay(LocalDate.java:690)
. . . excluded . . .
Things We Have Tried
After Googling "NoSuchMethodError spring", many of the problems seem to be incompatible Spring versions. After printing the dependency tree, the only Spring version in use is 3.0.
Googling "NoSuchMethodError" usually gave JAR hell solutions.
Multiple versions of the same dependency. After doing some maven dependency management, the only joda-time jar in use is 2.0. Additionally, the local repository was purged of any unnecessary jars.
.war / runtime may not have the correct jars included in the lib directory. After looking into the WEB_INF/lib directory, the only joda-time jar is version 2.0, which contains all of the appropriate class files
One mysterious thing is that the DateTimeZone.convertLocalToUTC(JZ)J has been a part of the org.joda.time project since 1.0, so even if we have incompatible versions, the method should still be found, especially if the class and package are able to be found.
Finally there are no other DateTimeZone classes in the project (ctrl+shift+T search in eclipse) so I'm confused as to which class is being loaded if the org.joda.DateTimeZone class is not being loaded.
Questions:
Can anyone explain why the method could not be found?
Are there more places to check for existing or conflicting jars?
Is there a way to check the DateTimeZone class that the LocalDate class is using during runtime via Eclipse debug?
Here's some interesting reading:
prefer-web-inf-classes Element
The weblogic.xml Web application deployment descriptor contains a
element (a sub-element of the
element). By default, this element is set to
False. Setting this element to True subverts the classloader
delegation model so that class definitions from the Web application
are loaded in preference to class definitions in higher-level
classloaders. This allows a Web application to use its own version of
a third-party class, which might also be part of WebLogic Server. See
“weblogic.xml Deployment Descriptor Elements.”
taken from: http://docs.oracle.com/cd/E15051_01/wls/docs103/programming/classloading.html
Other troubleshooting tips:
You can try: -verbose:class and check your managed server's logs to check if the class is being loaded properly.
An efficient way to confirm which intrusive jar might be getting loaded is by running a whereis.jsp within the same webcontext (i.e., JVM instance) of this app.
--whereis.jsp --
<%# page import="java.security.*" %>
<%# page import="java.net.URL" %>
<%
Class cls = org.joda.time.DateTimeZone.class;
ProtectionDomain pDomain = cls.getProtectionDomain();
CodeSource cSource = pDomain.getCodeSource();
URL loc = cSource.getLocation();
out.println(loc);
// it should print something like "c:/jars/MyJar.jar"
%>
You can also try jarscan on your $WEBLOGIC_HOME folder to see if you can find the jar that contains this class: https://java.net/projects/jarscan/pages/Tutorial
A NoSuchMethodError is almost always due to conflicting library versions. In this case I'm guessing there are multiple versions of joda libraries in the two projects.
Weblogic is pulling the org.joda jar.
Tryu adding this in your weblogic.xml to exclude the jar that weblogic is pulling, and instead use your appllication jar.
The below is from my application, you can have a look what all we have to removed for our application.
<wls:container-descriptor>
<wls:prefer-application-packages>
<wls:package-name>antlr.*</wls:package-name>
<wls:package-name>org.slf4j.*</wls:package-name>
<wls:package-name>org.slf4j.helpers.*</wls:package-name>
<wls:package-name>org.slf4j.impl.*</wls:package-name>
<wls:package-name>org.slf4j.spi.*</wls:package-name>
<wls:package-name>org.hibernate.*</wls:package-name>
<wls:package-name>org.springframework.*</wls:package-name>
<wls:package-name>javax.persistence.*</wls:package-name>
<wls:package-name>org.apache.commons.*</wls:package-name>
<wls:package-name>org.apache.xmlbeans.*</wls:package-name>
<wls:package-name>javassist.*</wls:package-name>
<wls:package-name>org.joda.*</wls:package-name>
<wls:package-name>javax.xml.bind.*</wls:package-name>
<wls:package-name>com.sun.xml.bind.*</wls:package-name>
<wls:package-name>org.eclipse.persistence.*</wls:package-name>
</wls:prefer-application-packages>
<wls:show-archived-real-path-enabled>true</wls:show-archived-real-path-enabled>
</wls:container-descriptor>
Related
When deploying a Springboot maven project(version 2.3.4.RELEASE) to an external Tomcat container,official guide says you need to mark the "spring-boot-starter-tomcat" dependency as provided ,but actually even if without doing that,the final war package which contains lib like "spring-boot-starter-tomcat","tomcat-embed-core" and "tomcat-embed-websocket" also works fine in tomcat8.5.54 or tomcat 9.0 ,so I am confused about that,"Do we really need set spring-boot-starter-tomcat as provided or not?" ,anyone could explains why?
"Traditional Deployment"
You don't want to have multiple versions of the same classes on the classpath. This can lead to many errors during runtime. For example, if you have a
public class MyServlet implements javax.servlet.Servlet
and you package both MyServlet.class and javax.servlet-api.jar (which contains javax.servlet.Servlet) into your application, you might get an error:
Servlet class MyServlet is not a javax.servlet.Servlet
What happens is: when the application classloader loads MyServlet, it looks for javax.servlet.Servlet in the application first and it finds it in javax.servlet-api.jar. The server compares this class with the one loaded by the server's classloader and concludes that they differ, since classes from different JARs are not equal. If the application is shipped without javax.servlet-api.jar this does not happen: the classloader does not find javax.servlet.Servlet in its own classpath, so it looks in the parent classloader.
Remark: This example can not actually be reproduced on Tomcat. Due probably to many incorrectly packaged applications the WebappClassLoader has an exception to the class loading rule: special classes such as those starting with javax.servlet or org.apache.tomcat are always loaded from the server's classloader (cf. the source code for a list of these exceptions).
TL;DR: due to the remark above, leaving spring-boot-starter-tomcat in the compile scope probably will do no harm, but it is a risk not worth taking.
In my Vaadin application, I have my own widgetset specified like below in web.xml
<init-param>
<param-name>widgetset</param-name>
<param-value>com.foo.bar.AppWidgetSet</param-value>
</init-param>
And, I had placed my AppWidgetSet.gwt.xml file in src/main/java/com/foo/bar/AppWidgetSet.gwt.xml
This setup worked fine until I upgraded to vaadin 7.7.0 (from 7.6.8). After upgrade, I got following error, when I try to access the app through a browser.
INFO: Requested resource [/VAADIN/widgetsets/AppWidgetset/AppWidgetset.nocache.js] not found from filesystem or through class loader. Add widgetset and/or theme JAR to your classpath or add files to WebContent/VAADIN folder.
It seems like vaadin is looking for a different location for the widgetset, so I placed my AppWidgetSet.gwt.xml in the root of the classpath (src/main/java/AppWidgetSet.gwt.xml) and re-built the app.
Then it worked again.
Is specifying the widgetset as an init param no longer available? Do I have to place the widgetset xml in the root of the classpath itself?
I have similar issues after upgrading my Vaadin application from 7.6.8 to 7.7.2. I've noticed that package under src/main/resources started to multiply recursively :
Below was the state with version 7.6.8, prior updating POM to 7.7.7 :
src/main/resources
myPackage
MyAppWidgetset.gwt.xml
After updating POM to 7.7.7, under "myPackage" appeared new "myPackage" with xml file ! Just to emphasize that after every rebuild, those folders constantly creating and creating, so after 4th build there are more than 10 subfolders !
src/main/resources
....myPackage
........myPackage
................MyAppWidgetset.gwt.xml
................................myPackage
................................................MyAppWidgetset.gwt.xml
...
MyAppWidgetset.gwt.xml
It seems as if there is a bug in 7.7.2 as regards custom widgetsets. First, check if you really need them. With no client side custom widgets, just forget any widgetset annotations or any related web.xml parametrization and let Vaadin make use of its new default AppWidgetset. If not, consider refactoring and converting custom client stuff into separate projects, installed in local Maven repo and then used via dependency, still not putting any own gwt.xml anywhere in main project's path. Finally, if none of above may be used (as in my case, too), just wait for bug fix in 7.7.3.
See: https://dev.vaadin.com/ticket/20320
As I noticed, new 7.7.2 plugin does not put anything into source (i.e. /VAADIN/widgetsets), but stores compiled JS directly in output artifact and war archive. So, the workaround for #Lahiru Chandima could be not rely entirely on new, ascetic 7.7.2 plugin and make use of some old elements like <webappDirectory> and/or <hostedWebapp>, mentioning ${basedir}/src... locations.
For #dobrivoje I'd recommend doing compilation as needed, then remove surprisingly created unnecessary (nested) packages and xml file and forget client compilation for some time (is it really needed in every build?) by commenting out Maven goals:
<!-- goal>update-widgetset</goal>
<goal>compile</goal -->
I am trying to add metrics library to existing webservice on WAS 7. I am getting below error
Error 404: javax.servlet.UnavailableException: SRVE0203E: Servlet [AdminServlet]: com.yammer.metrics.reporting.AdminServlet was found, but is missing another required class. SRVE0206E: This error typically implies that the servlet was originally compiled with classes which cannot be located by the server. SRVE0187E: Check your class path to ensure that all classes required by the servlet are present.SRVE0210I: This problem can be debugged by recompiling the servlet using only the classes in the application's runtime class path SRVE0234I
What are the other run-time dependencies required for metrics-servlet-2.2.0?
I have metrics-core-2.2.0.jar and metrics-servlet-2.2.0.jar in my WEB-INF\lib folder.
Threads, ping and healthcheck servlets work fine.
I think your missing some more required jars, are you not using maven or gradle for dependency management
Please refer here to know all required jars that metrics-servlet-2.2.0.jar depends on. http://mvnrepository.com/artifact/com.yammer.metrics/metrics-servlets/3.0.0-BETA1
My suggestion is, it is always difficult to maintain dependencies without Maven/Gradle or any other build tools :).
I need to integrate a REST client into an existing OSGi application implemented using Apache Felix. The REST service is based on RESTeasy implementation (version 2.3.2.Final) of JAX-RS. I created a separate bundle with clients' dependencies, exporting required RESTeasy packages and importing them in the bundle where the client is used, but unfortunately I cannot get it working inside of the OSGi context.
I tried two different approaches. First one using the generic ClientRequest:
ClientRequest request = new ClientRequest(MyService.URL_TEST+"/stats");
request.body(javax.ws.rs.core.MediaType.APPLICATION_XML, stats);
ClientResponse<String> response = request.post(String.class);
The error that I get in this case is pretty weird:
[java] java.lang.RuntimeException: java.lang.ClassCastException:
org.jboss.resteasy.client.core.executors.ApacheHttpClient4Executor cannot be cast to
org.jboss.resteasy.client.ClientExecutor
where I it is known for sure that ApacheHttpClient4Executor implements the ClientExecutor interface.
When I try to use my own REST client wrapper around RESTeasy like this:
MyService myService = MyServiceClient.getInstance();
myService.saveStatistics(stats);
I get a different exception:
[java] java.lang.LinkageError: ClassCastException: attempting to
castjar:file:/D:/Development/Eclipses/eclipse_4.2_j2ee_x64/lib/jaxrs-api-2.3.2.Final.jar
!/javax/ws/rs/ext/RuntimeDelegate.classtobundle:
//78.0:1/javax/ws/rs/ext/RuntimeDelegate.class
As far as I understand, the LinkageError most probably has to do with the way RESTeasy initializes the RuntimeDelegate using some classloader tricks, which probably fall under the restrictions of OSGi framework. I get the suspicion that the java.lang.ClassCastException mentioned first has the same source.
Is there any way to get RESTeasy working inside of OSGi?
PS: discussion about a similar issue with RESTeasy, but outside of OSGi: java.lang.LinkageError: ClassCastException
Update:
these are the libraries included into restclient bundle:
activation-1.1.jar commons-codec-1.2.jar commons-httpclient-3.1.jar commons-io-2.1.jar commons-logging-1.0.4.jar flexjson-2.1.jar httpclient-4.1.2.jar httpcore-4.1.2.jar javassist-3.12.1.GA.jar jaxb-api-2.2.3.jar jaxb-impl-2.2.4.jar jaxrs-api-2.3.2.Final.jar jcip-annotations-1.0.jar jettison-1.3.1.jar jsr250-api-1.0.jar junit-4.10.jar log4j-1.2.14.jar resteasy-jaxb-provider-2.3.2.Final.jar resteasy-jaxrs-2.3.2.Final.jar resteasy-jettison-provider-2.3.2.Final.jar scannotation-1.0.3.jar slf4j-api-1.6.4.jar slf4j-log4j12-1.6.4.jar myservice-common-0.1.0.3.jar my-service-client-0.1.0.3-SNAPSHOT.jar stax-api-1.0-2.jar xmlpull-1.1.3.1.jar xpp3_min-1.1.4c.jar xstream-1.4.2.jar
These are the exports from the restclient bundle: javax.ws.rs, javax.ws.rs.ext, javax.ws.rs.core, org.jboss.resteasy.client, org.jboss.resteasy.client.cache, org.jboss.resteasy.client.extractors, org.jboss.resteasy.client.marshallers, org.jboss.resteasy.client.core.executors, javax.xml.bind.annotation, org.jboss.resteasy.plugins.providers, org.jboss.resteasy.plugins.providers.jaxb, org.jboss.resteasy.spi
Have a look at the SpringSource Bundle Repo, it's got some very useful pre-built bundles of common libraries including the Apache HTTP Client which we are using (in conjunction with gson) to do our RESTful comms.
(unfortunately a legacy module of my project still uses OSGi, but using RESTeasy 3.0.16 now)
When I need to OSGify a dependency my preferred solution now is to wrap it using the excellent Apache Ops4j Pax Tipi project.
The project provides a preconfigured Maven setup (parent POM handles the bundling) and you just have to adapt the GAV coordinates of the original project in a Tipi sub module with a org.apache.ops4j.pax.tipi prefix and build the new bundle project which draws in the original dependency, unpacks and wraps it as OSGi bundle.
You can start from an existing Tipi sub project that best matches your project setup (dependencies, etc.) and adapt any OSGi imports/exports missing (most often, these are created automatically by the maven-bundle-plugin anyway).
This worked quite well for me as long as the original project did not contain too many exotic or malformed dependencies.
However you may run into snags like transitive dependencies using the root package, as I currently experience, which can be a real show stopper (finding out which library is a real nightmare).
Unfortunately, RESTeasy seems to be affected by this, as I get exactly the same error (default package , even after declaring non-test and non-provided dependencies as optional:
The default package '.' is not permitted by the Import-Package syntax.
Upgrading the maven-bundle-plugin to the latest release 3.0.1 yields a different error (even less helpful):
[ERROR] Bundle org.ops4j.pax.tipi:org.ops4j.pax.tipi.resteasy-jaxrs:bundle:3.0.16.Final.1 : Can not parse name from bundle native code header:
[ERROR] Error(s) found in bundle configuration
Update seems to be solved by upping Tipi version in POM to 1.4.0, testing...
Is RESTEasy mandatory ?
I personally use jersey in OSGi and it is working perfectly, both as client and server.
This problem isn't limited to RESTeasy. It also occurs with Jersey.
It is occurring because you have two copies of the JAX-RS classes on the classpath.
You can see this in the LinkageError:
[java] java.lang.LinkageError: ClassCastException: attempting to cast jar:file:/D:/Development/Eclipses/eclipse_4.2_j2ee_x64/lib/jaxrs-api-2.3.2.Final.jar!/javax/ws/rs/ext/RuntimeDelegate.class to bundle://78.0:1/javax/ws/rs/ext/RuntimeDelegate.class
i.e. one copy is coming from:
D:/Development/Eclipses/eclipse_4.2_j2ee_x64/lib/jaxrs-api-2.3.2.Final.jar
and the other from the OSGI bundle.
This causes problems for the RuntimeDelegate class, which by default uses the system class loader to create the RuntimeDelegate implementation (see javax.ws.rs.ext.FactoryFinder).
The problem can also occur if the same jar is loaded via two different class loaders.
There are a couple of workarounds:
remove the jaxrs-api-2.3.2.Final.jar from the system class path
set the thread context class loader to that of your bundle, prior to making any JAX-RS calls.
The FactoryFinder will use this to load the RuntimeDelegate.
To avoid polluting your code with calls to Thread.currentThread().setContextClassLoader(myBundleClassLoader), you can wrap your JAX-RS client using a Proxy. e.g. see the Thread context classloader section of https://puredanger.github.io/tech.puredanger.com/2007/06/15/classloaders/
I'm working on a project which includes persistence library (JPA 1.2), EJB 3 and Web presentation layer (JSF). I develop application using Eclipse and application is published on Websphere Application Server Community Edition (Geronimo 2.1.4) through eclipse plugin (but the same thing happens if I publish manually). When publishing to server I get the following error:
java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: Could not fully load class: manager.administration.vehicles.VehicleTypeAdminBean
due to:manager/vehicles/VehicleType
in classLoader:
org.apache.geronimo.kernel.classloader.TemporaryClassLoader#18878c7
at org.apache.xbean.finder.ClassFinder.(ClassFinder.java:177)
at org.apache.xbean.finder.ClassFinder.(ClassFinder.java:146)...
In web.xml I have reference to EJB:
<ejb-local-ref>
<ejb-ref-name>ejb/VehicleTypeAdmin</ejb-ref-name>
<ejb-ref-type>Session</ejb-ref-type>
<local>manager.administration.vehicles.VehicleTypeAdmin</local>
<ejb-link>VehicleTypeAdminBean</ejb-link>
</ejb-local-ref>
EJB project has a reference to persistence project, and Web project has references to both projects. I don't get any compilation errors, so I suppose classes and references are correct.
I don't know if it is app server problem, but I ran previously application on the same server using same configuration parameters.
Does anybody have a clue what might be the problem?
Looks almost like it couldn't find the class manager.vehicles.VehicleType when it was attempting to create/load the class manager.administration.vehicles.VehicleTypeAdminBean.
I've encountered similar problems before. When the class loader attempts to load the class it looks at the import statements (and other class usage declarations) and then attempts to load those classes and so on until it reaches the bottom of the chain (ie java.lang.Object). If it cannot find one class along the chain (in your case it looks like it cannot load VehicleType) then it will state that it cannot load the class at the top of the chain (in your case VehicleTypeAdminBean).
Is the VehicleType class in a different jar? If you have a web module and and EJB module do you have the jar containing the VehicleType class in the appropriate place(s). Sometimes with web projects you have to put the jars in the WebContent/WEB-INF/lib folder or it won't find them.
Are both of these projects deployed separately (ie. two ears? or one ear and one war?) or are they together (ie, one ear with jars and a war inside?). I'm assuming the second given you declared your EJB local?
The jars that you are dependent on also have to be declared in your MANIFEST.MF files in the projects that use it.
I'm kind of running on guesses since I do not know your project structure. Showing that would help quite a bit. But I'd still check on where VehicleType is located with regards to your EJB class. You might find it isn't where you think it is come packaging or runtime.
Thanks #Chris for WebContent/WEB-INF/lib idea ! it works for me by following these steps :
1- Export my EJBs to a JAR (MyEJBs.jar)
2- I created another jar with your_installation_path/IBM/SDP/runtimes/your_version/binCreateEJBStrub.bat via CMD.exe, by executing this command :
createEJBStubs.bat <my_path>/MyEJBs.jar -newfile –quiet
3- A new jar will be automatically created in the same directory as MyEJBs.jar named MyEJBs_withStubs.jar
4- Put your new jar in WebContent/WEB-INF/lib
5- Call your EJBs by :
MyEJBRemote eJBRemote;
InitialContext ic = new InitialContext();
obj = ic.lookup("your_ejb_name_jndi");
eJBRemote = (MyEJBRemote ) PortableRemoteObject.narrow(obj,
MyEJBRemote.class);
eJBRemote = (MyEJBRemote ) obj;
Now you can call your EJBs from another EAR