I have a Spring Boot application that works as expected when ran with embedded tomcat, but I noticed that if I try to run it from an existing tomcat instance that I'm using with a previous project then it fails with a NoClassDefFoundError for a class that I don't use anywhere in my application.
I noticed in the /lib directory I had a single jar that contained a few Spring annotated classes, so as a test I cleaned out the /lib directory which resolved the issue. My assumption is that Spring is seeing some of the configurations/beans/imports on the classpath due to them existing in the /lib directory and either trying to autoconfigure something on its own, or is actually trying to instantiate some of these classes.
So then my question is - assuming I can't always fully control the contents of everything on the classpath, how can I prevent errors like this from occurring?
EDIT
For a little more detail - the class not being found is DefaultCookieSerializer which is part of the spring-session-implementation dependency. It is pulled into one of the classes in the jar located in /lib, but it is not any part of my application.
Check for features provided by #EnableAutoConfiguration. You can explicitly configure set of auto-configuration classes for your application. This tutorial can be a good starting point.
You can remove the #SpringBootApplication annotation from the main class and replace it with an #ComponentScan annotation and an #Import annotation that explicitly lists only the configuration classes you want to load. For example, in a Spring boot MVC app that uses metrics, web client, rest template, Jackson, etc, I was able to replace the #SpringBootApplication annotation with below code and get it working exactly as it was before, with all functional tests passing:
#Import({ MetricsAutoConfiguration.class,
InfluxMetricsExportAutoConfiguration.class,
ServletWebServerFactoryAutoConfiguration.class,
DispatcherServletAutoConfiguration.class,
WebMvcAutoConfiguration.class,
JacksonAutoConfiguration.class,
WebClientAutoConfiguration.class,
RestTemplateAutoConfiguration.class,
RefreshAutoConfiguration.class,
ValidationAutoConfiguration.class
})
#ComponentScan
The likely culprit of mentioned exception are incompatible jars on the classpath.
As we don't know with what library you have the issue we cant tell you the exact reason, but the situation looks like that:
One of Spring-Boot autoconfiguration classes is being triggered by the presence of class on the classpath
Trigerred configuration tries to create some bean of class that is not present in the jar you have (but it is in the specific version mentioned in the Spring BOM)
Version incompatibilities may also cause MethodNotFound exceptions.
That's one of the reasons why it is good practice not to run Spring Boot applications inside the container (make jar not war), but as a runnable jar with an embedded container.
Even before Spring Boot it was preferred to take account of libraries being present on runtime classpath and mark them as provided inside your project. Having different versions of the library on a classpath may cause weird ClassCastExceptions where on both ends names match, but the rest doesn't.
You could resolve specific cases by disabling autoconfiguration that causes your issue. You can do that either by adding exclude to your #SpringBootApplication or using a property file.
Edit:
If you don't use very broad package scan (or use package name from outside of your project in package scan) in your Spring Boot application it is unlikely that Spring Boot simply imports configuration from the classpath.
As I have mentioned before it is rather some autoconfiguration that is being triggered by existence of a class in the classpath.
Theoretical solution:
You could use maven shade plugin to relocate all packages into your own package space: see docs.
The problems is you'd have face:
Defining very broad relocation pattern that would exclude JEE classes that need to be used so that container would know how to run your application.
Relocation most likely won't affect package names used as strings in the Spring Boot annotations (like annotations #PackageScan or #ConditionalOnClass). As far as I know it is not implemented yet. You'd have to implement that by yourself - maybe as some kind of shade plugin resource processor.
When relocating classes you'd have to replace package names in all relevant configuration located in the jars. Possibly also merge some of those.
You'd also have to take into account how libraries that you use, or spring uses use package names or files.
This is definitely not a trivial tasks with many traps ahead. But if done right, then it would possibly allow you to disregard what is on the containers classpath. Spring Boot would also look for classes in relocated packages, and you wouldn't have those in ordinary jars.
I have this (https://github.com/Danix43/HerculesAPI) REST application made by Java with Spring Boot.
All good when for some reason the #SpringBootApplication annotation doesn't find anymore the interfaces TermometruService annothed with #Service.
I have tried everything from using #ComponentScan with the service package but then any Rest operation returns a RESOURCE_NOT_FOUND to changing the jdk version and a flush of maven repositories.
Project structure if useful
The log after running the application
2020-01-27 19:33:39.635 DEBUG 6248 --- [main] o.s.c.a.ClassPathBeanDefinitionScanner : Ignored because not a concrete top-level class: file [D:\Programe\Programare\Java\HerculesAPI\target\classes\com\herculesapi\services\TermometruService.class]
The problem was solved by annotating the TermometruServiceImple class with #Service. Also regarding the Github repository, it doesn't always have all the changes right away pushed but yes the TermometruService interface had the annotation.
Currently I have quite a bit of services written in Spring Boot 2.1.3 (in mono-repo) and I have a common package that's used in most of the services.
So my packages are organized in the following:
root
root.common
root.serviceA
root.serviceA.<subpackages>
root.serviceB
root.serviceB.<subpackages>
...
root.serviceX
root.serviceX.<subpackages>
In each service I have Program.java where it's tagged with #SpringBootApplication (e.g. root/serviceA/Program.java)
The problem now I'm having is that I have a component in root.common (e.g. root/common/JSONSerializer.java) which needs to be loaded in all the services. I tried tagging the file with #JsonComponent but obviously it doesn't work because it's outside root.service* package.
I managed to get it working by manually adding #Import tag in the main file but that means that for each service I have to manually add #Import({root.common.JSONSerializer.class}) which is tedious and error prone. Is there a way to include this file in the component scanning process?
You can set each Program class by following way:
#SpringBootApplication(scanBasePackages = {"root.serviceA", "root.common"})
REFERENCES
SpringBootApplication documentation
This may be an impossible task, but here goes...
Is it possible to register a spring bean, by (ONLY) adding a jar to the classpath of a spring-boot application?
Scenario: I would like to create a non-intrusive plugin jar, which when imported into a spring-boot project's classpath, will automatically be picked up and provide a service (e.g. via a RestController).
Constraints
I don't want to change or reconfigure the existing spring-boot application (i.e. no additional scan paths or bean config).
I don't have any knowledge of the target spring-boot application's package structure/scan paths.
I guess I was hoping that by default Spring scan's its own package structure (i.e. org.springframework.** looking for the presence of database libs, etc) and I could piggy-back off that - I haven't had any luck (so far).
I've setup an example project in github, to further clarify/illustrate my example and attempts.
** Solution Addendum **
This bit that got it working, was to add the following file, which points to an #Configuration config file...
plugin-poc\src\main\resources\META-INF\spring.factories
org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.EnableAutoConfiguration=org.thirdpartyplugin.PluginConfiguration
I think in such cases you would try to add a spring auto configuration that is annotated with #ConditionalOnClass to be only evaluated if the given class is on the classpath. This class can register the bean and would just be evaluated if the conditional evaluates to true
Here is the relevant part of the spring boot documentation : Creating your own auto-configuration
I'm learning Spring framework and build my first Spring application according to the quickstart on http://projects.spring.io/spring-framework/. I use the maven dependency to add the respective libraries, and add the three java file. However, I can't compile Application.java because of following error at Line 1:
The type org.springframework.beans.factory.support.BeanNameGenerator cannot be resolved. It is indirectly referenced from required .class files
And the whole project looks like this:
I don't know what I'm doing wrong. Please help me.
UPDATED:
Application.java
you will have to import the org.springframework.beans.factory.support package in your pom.xml file so that it can be available at compile time.