java.lang.NoSuchMethodError: com/jcraft/jsch/Session.setDaemonThread(Z)V - nosuchmethoderror

i'm using the JSch jar to implement SFTP communication.
downloaded the JSch and using the vfs2 jar.
when running the code on weblogic server - it runs perfectly.
when running it on websphere application server (same code) i'm getting the following exception:
[9/22/14 20:05:39:756 IDT] 00000023 SystemOut O |E |20:05:39 |22 |admin | |com/jcraft/jsch/Session.setDaemonThread(Z)V
java.lang.NoSuchMethodError: com/jcraft/jsch/Session.setDaemonThread(Z)V
at org.apache.commons.vfs2.provider.sftp.SftpClientFactory.createConnection(SftpClientFactory.java:225)
at org.apache.commons.vfs2.provider.sftp.SftpFileProvider.doCreateFileSystem(SftpFileProvider.java:96)
at org.apache.commons.vfs2.provider.AbstractOriginatingFileProvider.getFileSystem(AbstractOriginatingFileProvider.java:103)
at org.apache.commons.vfs2.provider.AbstractOriginatingFileProvider.findFile(AbstractOriginatingFileProvider.java:81)
at org.apache.commons.vfs2.provider.AbstractOriginatingFileProvider.findFile(AbstractOriginatingFileProvider.java:65)
at org.apache.commons.vfs2.impl.DefaultFileSystemManager.resolveFile(DefaultFileSystemManager.java:693)
at org.apache.commons.vfs2.impl.DefaultFileSystemManager.resolveFile(DefaultFileSystemManager.java:621)
There is no other jar of JSch with same class. the method exists.
what am i doing wrong? is there any setting that needs to be done in websphere?
it does load the Session class, it previously created it. just this method it does not see - in websphere 7.0.0.19
please advise
thanks

the class Session already existed in some other Astrix jar
because of that , and because it was prior in load configuration, it was loaded before the proper Session class
only when searching the entire C drive using WinRar - it can search in archive properly - i searched for Session.Class and found it
then only left to remove the Astrix jar - that was not in use any how...

Related

Can I deploy a Grails 4 app to Google Cloud Platform?

I have been able to run through the following Grails 3 guide for deploying a Grails application to GCP.
https://guides.grails.org/grails-google-cloud/guide/index.html
I've tried to mirror this using my own Grails 4 application but it fails when I try to access it.
appengineDeploy completes successfully but when I try and access the webapp URL, I get a long stacktrace which culminates in the following error;
Failed to instantiate [org.grails.orm.hibernate.HibernateDatastore]: Constructor threw exception; nested exception is java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: com/mysql/cj/api/io/SocketFactory
...
...
Caused by: java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: com.mysql.cj.api.io.SocketFactory
I've been trying all sorts of various versions of the socket factory dependency to try and solve and redeploy but all result in the same error.
I have used various version of the j-6 connector (com.google.cloud.sql:mysql-socket-factory-connector-j-6) and my most recent attempt used the j-8 (1.0.14).
At this point it would be great to even know if what I'm trying is even possible. Java 11 support has been added quite recently and I have made the necessary config adjustments to get my app to deploy, but I cannot then access it.
Upgrading to version 8 of mysql-connector-java in tandem with mysql-socket-factor-connector-j-8 appears to have made this particular issue go away (and moved me to the next).
Dependencies are as follows;
runtime "mysql:mysql-connector-java:8.0.15"
runtime "com.google.cloud.sql:mysql-socket-factory-connector-j-8:1.0.14"

Squirrel-SQL throws class not found exception

I am running Squirrel-SQL version 3.9.0 using JDK 10 on MS-Windows 10. I have configured the Microsoft SQL server JDBC driver sqljdbc42.jar along with it's native DDLs to enable native kerberos authentication. But when I try to connect to my database, I get the message JDBC Driver class not found class java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: javax.xml.bind.DatatypeConverter. How do you fix this issue?
I was able to fix this issue by placing the jaxb-api-2.3.0.jar into squirrel-sql-3.9.0/lib folder and restarting the application.
had same problem . i updgrated everything to last version of Squirel 4.5.1 (janvier 2023) & last JDK 19 & last driver SqlServer , but problem continue to occur
i found another post on StackOverflow who asked which repository had this jaxb jar
How do I resolve Could not find artifact javax.xml.bind:jaxb-api:pom:2.3.0-b161121.1438 in central (https://repo1.maven.org/maven2)?
this is the link to jaxb jar, i added it in lib/ under squirell directory , then it worked
https://maven.java.net/#nexus-search;gav~javax.xml.bind~jaxb-api~2.3.0-b161121.1438~~

connecting MySQL using wamp and hibernate in eclipse [duplicate]

I'm trying to add a database-enabled JSP to an existing Tomcat 5.5 application (GeoServer 2.0.0, if that helps).
The app itself talks to Postgres just fine, so I know that the database is up, user can access it, all that good stuff. What I'm trying to do is a database query in a JSP that I've added. I've used the config example in the Tomcat datasource example pretty much out of the box. The requisite taglibs are in the right place -- no errors occur if I just have the taglib refs, so it's finding those JARs. The postgres jdbc driver, postgresql-8.4.701.jdbc3.jar is in $CATALINA_HOME/common/lib.
Here's the top of the JSP:
<%# taglib uri="http://java.sun.com/jsp/jstl/sql" prefix="sql" %>
<%# taglib uri="http://java.sun.com/jsp/jstl/core" prefix="c" %>
<sql:query var="rs" dataSource="jdbc/mmas">
select current_validstart as ValidTime from runoff_forecast_valid_time
</sql:query>
The relevant section from $CATALINA_HOME/conf/server.xml, inside the <Host> which is in turn within <Engine>:
<Context path="/gs2" allowLinking="true">
<Resource name="jdbc/mmas" type="javax.sql.Datasource"
auth="Container" driverClassName="org.postgresql.Driver"
maxActive="100" maxIdle="30" maxWait="10000"
username="mmas" password="very_secure_yess_precious!"
url="jdbc:postgresql//localhost:5432/mmas" />
</Context>
These lines are the last in the tag in webapps/gs2/WEB-INF/web.xml:
<resource-ref>
<description>
The database resource for the MMAS PostGIS database
</description>
<res-ref-name>
jdbc/mmas
</res-ref-name>
<res-type>
javax.sql.DataSource
</res-type>
<res-auth>
Container
</res-auth>
</resource-ref>
Finally, the exception:
exception
org.apache.jasper.JasperException: Unable to get connection, DataSource invalid: "java.sql.SQLException: No suitable driver"
[...wads of ensuing goo elided]
The infamous java.sql.SQLException: No suitable driver found
This exception can have basically two causes:
1. JDBC driver is not loaded
In case of Tomcat, you need to ensure that the JDBC driver is placed in server's own /lib folder.
Or, when you're actually not using a server-managed connection pool data source, but are manually fiddling around with DriverManager#getConnection() in WAR, then you need to place the JDBC driver in WAR's /WEB-INF/lib and perform ..
Class.forName("com.example.jdbc.Driver");
.. in your code before the first DriverManager#getConnection() call whereby you make sure that you do not swallow/ignore any ClassNotFoundException which can be thrown by it and continue the code flow as if nothing exceptional happened. See also Where do I have to place the JDBC driver for Tomcat's connection pool?
Other servers have a similar way of placing the JAR file:
GlassFish: put the JAR file in /glassfish/lib
WildFly: put the JAR file in /standalone/deployments
2. Or, JDBC URL is in wrong syntax
You need to ensure that the JDBC URL is conform the JDBC driver documentation and keep in mind that it's usually case sensitive. When the JDBC URL does not return true for Driver#acceptsURL() for any of the loaded drivers, then you will also get exactly this exception.
In case of PostgreSQL it is documented here.
With JDBC, a database is represented by a URL (Uniform Resource Locator). With PostgreSQL™, this takes one of the following forms:
jdbc:postgresql:database
jdbc:postgresql://host/database
jdbc:postgresql://host:port/database
In case of MySQL it is documented here.
The general format for a JDBC URL for connecting to a MySQL server is as follows, with items in square brackets ([ ]) being optional:
jdbc:mysql://[host1][:port1][,[host2][:port2]]...[/[database]] » [?propertyName1=propertyValue1[&propertyName2=propertyValue2]...]
In case of Oracle it is documented here.
There are 2 URL syntax, old syntax which will only work with SID and the new one with Oracle service name.
Old syntax jdbc:oracle:thin:#[HOST][:PORT]:SID
New syntax jdbc:oracle:thin:#//[HOST][:PORT]/SERVICE
See also:
Where do I have to place the JDBC driver for Tomcat's connection pool?
How to install JDBC driver in Eclipse web project without facing java.lang.ClassNotFoundexception
How should I connect to JDBC database / datasource in a servlet based application?
What is the difference between "Class.forName()" and "Class.forName().newInstance()"?
Connect Java to a MySQL database
I've forgot to add the PostgreSQL JDBC Driver into my project (Mvnrepository).
Gradle:
// http://mvnrepository.com/artifact/postgresql/postgresql
compile group: 'postgresql', name: 'postgresql', version: '9.0-801.jdbc4'
Maven:
<dependency>
<groupId>postgresql</groupId>
<artifactId>postgresql</artifactId>
<version>9.0-801.jdbc4</version>
</dependency>
You can also download the JAR and import to your project manually.
url="jdbc:postgresql//localhost:5432/mmas"
That URL looks wrong, do you need the following?
url="jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/mmas"
I faced the similar issue.
My Project in context is Dynamic Web Project(Java 8 + Tomcat 8) and error is for PostgreSQL Driver exception: No suitable driver found
It got resolved by adding Class.forName("org.postgresql.Driver") before calling getConnection() method
Here is my Sample Code:
try {
Connection conn = null;
Class.forName("org.postgresql.Driver");
conn = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:postgresql://" + host + ":" + port + "/?preferQueryMode="
+ sql_auth,sql_user , sql_password);
} catch (Exception e) {
System.out.println("Failed to create JDBC db connection " + e.toString() + e.getMessage());
}
I found the followig tip helpful, to eliminate this issue in Tomcat -
be sure to load the driver first doing a Class.forName("
org.postgresql.Driver"); in your code.
This is from the post - https://www.postgresql.org/message-id/e13c14ec050510103846db6b0e#mail.gmail.com
The jdbc code worked fine as a standalone program but, in TOMCAT it gave the error -'No suitable driver found'
No matter how old this thread becomes, people would continue to face this issue.
My Case: I have the latest (at the time of posting) OpenJDK and maven setup. I had tried all methods given above, with/out maven and even solutions on sister posts on StackOverflow. I am not using any IDE or anything else, running from bare CLI to demonstrate only the core logic.
Here's what finally worked.
Download the driver from the official site. (for me it was MySQL https://www.mysql.com/products/connector/). Use your flavour here.
Unzip the given jar file in the same directory as your java project. You would get a directory structure like this. If you look carefully, this exactly relates to what we try to do using Class.forName(....). The file that we want is the com/mysql/jdbc/Driver.class
Compile the java program containing the code.
javac App.java
Now load the director as a module by running
java --module-path com/mysql/jdbc -cp ./ App
This would load the (extracted) package manually, and your java program would find the required Driver class.
Note that this was done for the mysql driver, other drivers might require minor changes.
If your vendor provides a .deb image, you can get the jar from /usr/share/java/your-vendor-file-here.jar
Summary:
Soln2 (recommend)::
1 . put mysql-connector-java-8.0.28.jar file in the <where you install your Tomcat>/lib.
Soln1::
1 . put mysql-connector-java-8.0.28.jar file in the WEB-INF/lib.
2 . use Class.forName("com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver"); in your Servlet Java code.
Soln1 (Ori Ans) //-20220304
In short:
make sure you have the mysql-connector-java-8.0.28.jar file in the WEB-INF/lib
make sure you use the Class.forName("com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver");
additional notes (not important), base on my trying (could be wrong)::
1.1 putting the jar directly inside the Java build path doesnt work
1.2. putting the jar in Data management > Driver Def > MySQL JDBC Driver > then add it as library to Java Build path doesnt work.
1.3 => it has to be inside the WEB-INF/lib (I dont know why)
1.4 using version mysql-connector-java-8.0.28.jar works, only version 5.1 available in Eclipse MySQL JDBC Driver setting doesnt matter, ignore it.
<see How to connect to MySql 8.0 database using Eclipse Database Management Perspective >
Class.forName("com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver");
Class.forName("com.mysql.jdbc.Driver");
both works,
but the Class.forName("com.mysql.jdbc.Driver"); is deprecated.
Loading class `com.mysql.jdbc.Driver'. This is deprecated. The new driver class is `com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver'. The driver is automatically registered via the SPI and manual loading of the driver class is generally unnecessary.
<see https://www.yawintutor.com/no-suitable-driver-found-for-jdbcmysql-localhost3306-testdb/ >
If you want to connect to a MySQL database, you can use the type-4 driver named Connector/} that's available for free from the MySQL website. However, this driver is typically included in Tomcat's lib directory. As a result, you don't usually need to download this driver from the MySQL site.
-- Murach’s Java Servlets and JSP
I cant find the driver in Tomcat that the author is talking about, I need to use the mysql-connector-java-8.0.28.jar.
<(striked-out) see updated answer soln2 below>
If you're working with an older version of Java, though, you need to use the forName method of the Class class to explicitly load the driver before you call the getConnection method
Even with JDBC 4.0, you sometimes get a message that says, "No suitable driver found." In that case, you can use the forName method of the Class class to explicitly load the driver. However, if automatic driver loading works, it usually makes sense to remove this method call from your code.
How to load a MySQL database driver prior to JDBC 4.0
Class.forName{"com.mysql.jdbc.Driver");
-- Murach’s Java Servlets and JSP
I have to use Class.forName("com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver"); in my system, no automatic class loading. Not sure why.
<(striked-out) see updated answer soln2 below>
When I am using a normal Java Project instead of a Dynamic Web Project in Eclipse,
I only need to add the mysql-connector-java-8.0.28.jar to Java Build Path directly,
then I can connect to the JDBC with no problem.
However, if I am using Dynamic Web Project (which is in this case), those 2 strict rules applies (jar position & class loading).
<see TOMCAT ON ECLIPSE java.sql.SQLException: No suitable driver found for jdbc:mysql >
Soln2 (Updated Ans) //-20220305_12
In short:
1 . put mysql-connector-java-8.0.28.jar file in the <where you install your Tomcat>/lib.
eg: G:\pla\Java\apache-tomcat-10.0.16\lib\mysql-connector-java-8.0.28.jar
(and for an Eclipse Dynamic Web Project, the jar will then be automatically put inside in your project's Java build path > Server Runtime [Apache Tomcat v10.0].)
Additional notes::
for soln1::
put mysql-connector-java-8.0.28.jar file in the WEB-INF/lib.
use Class.forName("com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver"); in your Servlet Java code.
this will create an WARNING:
WARNING: The web application [LearnJDBC] appears to have started a thread named [mysql-cj-abandoned-connection-cleanup] but has failed to stop it. This is very likely to create a memory leak. Stack trace of thread:
<see The web application [] appears to have started a thread named [Abandoned connection cleanup thread] com.mysql.jdbc.AbandonedConnectionCleanupThread >
and that answer led me to soln2.
for soln2::
put mysql-connector-java-8.0.28.jar file in the <where you install your Tomcat>/lib.
this will create an INFO:
INFO: At least one JAR was scanned for TLDs yet contained no TLDs. Enable debug logging for this logger for a complete list of JARs that were scanned but no TLDs were found in them. Skipping unneeded JARs during scanning can improve startup time and JSP compilation time.
you can just ignore it.
<see How to fix "JARs that were scanned but no TLDs were found in them " in Tomcat 9.0.0M10 >
(you should now understand what Murach’s Java Servlets and JSP was talking about: the jar in Tomcat/lib & the no need for Class.forName("com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver");)
to kinda fix it //-20220307_23
Tomcat 8.5. Inside catalina.properties, located in the /conf directory set:
tomcat.util.scan.StandardJarScanFilter.jarsToSkip=\*.jar
How to fix JSP compiler warning: one JAR was scanned for TLDs yet contained no TLDs?
It might be worth noting that this can also occur when Windows blocks downloads that it considers to be unsafe. This can be addressed by right-clicking the jar file (such as ojdbc7.jar), and checking the 'Unblock' box at the bottom.
Windows JAR File Properties Dialog:
As well as adding the MySQL JDBC connector ensure the context.xml (if not unpacked in the Tomcat webapps folder) with your DB connection definitions are included within Tomcats conf directory.
A very silly mistake which could be possible resulting is adding of space at the start of the JDBC URL connection.
What I mean is:-
suppose u have bymistake given the jdbc url like
String jdbcUrl=" jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/web_customer_tracker?useSSL=false&serverTimeZone=UTC";
(Notice there is a space in the staring of the url, this will make the error)
the correct way should be:
String jdbcUrl="jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/web_customer_tracker?useSSL=false&serverTimeZone=UTC";
(Notice no space in the staring, you may give space at the end of the url but it is safe not to)
Run java with CLASSPATH environmental variable pointing to driver's JAR file, e.g.
CLASSPATH='.:drivers/mssql-jdbc-6.2.1.jre8.jar' java ConnectURL
Where drivers/mssql-jdbc-6.2.1.jre8.jar is the path to driver file (e.g. JDBC for for SQL Server).
The ConnectURL is the sample app from that driver (samples/connections/ConnectURL.java), compiled via javac ConnectURL.java.
I was using jruby, in my case I created under config/initializers
postgres_driver.rb
$CLASSPATH << '~/.rbenv/versions/jruby-1.7.17/lib/ruby/gems/shared/gems/jdbc-postgres-9.4.1200/lib/postgresql-9.4-1200.jdbc4.jar'
or wherever your driver is, and that's it !
I had this exact issue when developing a Spring Boot application in STS, but ultimately deploying the packaged war to WebSphere(v.9). Based on previous answers my situation was unique. ojdbc8.jar was in my WEB-INF/lib folder with Parent Last class loading set, but always it says it failed to find the suitable driver.
My ultimate issue was that I was using the incorrect DataSource class because I was just following along with online tutorials/examples. Found the hint thanks to David Dai comment on his own question here: Spring JDBC Could not load JDBC driver class [oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver]
Also later found spring guru example with Oracle specific driver: https://springframework.guru/configuring-spring-boot-for-oracle/
Example that throws error using org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.DriverManagerDataSource based on generic examples.
#Config
#EnableTransactionManagement
public class appDataConfig {
\* Other Bean Defs *\
#Bean
public DataSource dataSource() {
// configure and return the necessary JDBC DataSource
DriverManagerDataSource dataSource = new DriverManagerDataSource("jdbc:oracle:thin:#//HOST:PORT/SID", "user", "password");
dataSource.setSchema("MY_SCHEMA");
return dataSource;
}
}
And the corrected exapmle using a oracle.jdbc.pool.OracleDataSource:
#Config
#EnableTransactionManagement
public class appDataConfig {
/* Other Bean Defs */
#Bean
public DataSource dataSource() {
// configure and return the necessary JDBC DataSource
OracleDataSource datasource = null;
try {
datasource = new OracleDataSource();
} catch (SQLException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
datasource.setURL("jdbc:oracle:thin:#//HOST:PORT/SID");
datasource.setUser("user");
datasource.setPassword("password");
return datasource;
}
}
I was having the same issue with mysql datasource using spring data that would work outside but gave me this error when deployed on tomcat.
The error went away when I added the driver jar mysql-connector-java-8.0.16.jar to the jres lib/ext folder
However I did not want to do this in production for fear of interfering with other applications. Explicity defining the driver class solved this issue for me
spring.datasource.driver-class-name: com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver
You will get this same error if there is not a Resource definition provided somewhere for your app -- most likely either in the central context.xml, or individual context file in conf/Catalina/localhost. And if using individual context files, beware that Tomcat freely deletes them anytime you remove/undeploy the corresponding .war file.
For me the same error occurred while connecting to postgres while creating a dataframe from table .It was caused due to,the missing dependency. jdbc dependency was not set .I was using maven for the build ,so added the required dependency to the pom file from maven dependency
jdbc dependency
For me adding below dependency to pom.xml file just solved like magic! I had no mysql connector dependency and even adding mssql jdbc jar file to build path did not work either.
<dependency>
<groupId>com.microsoft.sqlserver</groupId>
<artifactId>mssql-jdbc</artifactId>
<version>9.4.0.jre11</version>
</dependency>
In my case I was working on a Java project with Maven and encountered this error.
In your pom.xml file make sure you have this dependencies
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>mysql</groupId>
<artifactId>mysql-connector-java</artifactId>
<version>8.0.11</version>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
and where you create connection have something like this
public Connection createConnection() {
try {
String url = "jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/yourDatabaseName";
String username = "root"; //your my sql username here
String password = "1234"; //your mysql password here
Class.forName("com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver");
return DriverManager.getConnection(url, username, password);
} catch (SQLException | ClassNotFoundException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
return null;
}
faced same issue. in my case ':' colon before '//' (jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/dbname) was missing, and it just fixed the problem.
make sure : and // are placed properly.
I ran into the same error. In my case, the JDBC URL was correct, but the issue was with classpath. However, adding MySQL connector's JAR file to the -classpath or -cp (or, in the case of an IDE, as a library) doesn't resolve the issue. So I will have to move the JAR file to the location of Java bytecode and run java -cp :mysql_connector.jar to make this work. If someone runs into the same issue as mine, I'm leaving this here.
I encountered this issue by putting a XML file into the src/main/resources wrongly, I deleted it and then all back to normal.

Getting 'java.sql.SQLException: com.mysql.jdbc.Driver' with grails run-app (when BuildConfig.groovy doesn't need to be recompiled)

I've upgraded my grails application from 1.3.9 to 2.2.3 and then to 2.3.3. I read the release and upgrade notes for 1.3.9->2.2.3 and then from 2.2.3->2.3.3
I am using OpenJDK 6, Jetty 6 and the plugin jetty 1.1, MySQL 5.5 and I have the connector library under lib
Now my issue is if I run grails clean and then grails run-app the application runs without any problems but if I stop it and run grails run-app again I get a gigantic error (see here: http://pastebin.com/36MpXhir)
I also found that changing something like adding a space somewhere in BuildConfig.groovy (anything that makes it be recompiled) makes the application run normally.
Looking at the stacktrace the first thing that puzzles me is
[02.12.13 16:13:59.919] [main] pool.ConnectionPool Unable to create initial connections of pool.
java.sql.SQLException: com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
at org.apache.tomcat.jdbc.pool.PooledConnection.connectUsingDriver(PooledConnection.java:254)
at org.apache.tomcat.jdbc.pool.PooledConnection.connect(PooledConnection.java:182)
at org.apache.tomcat.jdbc.pool.ConnectionPool.createConnection(ConnectionPool.java:701)
at org.apache.tomcat.jdbc.pool.ConnectionPool.borrowConnection(ConnectionPool.java:635)
at org.apache.tomcat.jdbc.pool.ConnectionPool.init(ConnectionPool.java:486)
at org.apache.tomcat.jdbc.pool.ConnectionPool.<init>(ConnectionPool.java:144)
at org.apache.tomcat.jdbc.pool.DataSourceProxy.pCreatePool(DataSourceProxy.java:116)
at org.apache.tomcat.jdbc.pool.DataSourceProxy.createPool(DataSourceProxy.java:103)
at org.apache.tomcat.jdbc.pool.DataSourceProxy.getConnection(DataSourceProxy.java:127)
at org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.LazyConnectionDataSourceProxy.afterPropertiesSet(LazyConnectionDataSourceProxy.java:162)
There are references to org.apache.tomcat even though I'm using jetty (and removed tomcat from BuildConfig.groovy).
Did anyone else encounter such a problem?
Don't put jar files in the lib directory if they're available in a public Maven repo. It's far better to download jars once and keep them in a local cache, and reuse them as needed.
The MySQL driver is used as the commented-out example in the generated BuildConfig.groovy - just un-comment it :) You might want to bump up the version to the latest, e.g.
dependencies {
runtime 'mysql:mysql-connector-java:5.1.27'
}
This is a good site for finding Maven artifacts: http://mvnrepository.com/artifact/mysql/mysql-connector-java
If you do have a jar that's not in a Maven repo (e.g. one with shared code at your company) then you can put it in the lib directory, but it's not auto-discovered. Run grails compile --refresh-dependencies to get it added to the classpath.
For me same error has occurred while running the Grails Application.Then I debug and view the code history of my code which was committed recently.
From that I found the issue that was:
Inside the controller file I send the instance with-out properly
Eg:
**def list=[personInstance.]---> error occurred.**
**render list as JSON**
Then I correct my mistake-->clean the app --> run the app
Now its working fine.

Connecting a MySQL database to Glassfish classpath is not set or classname is wrong

I'm swapping out a derby database for a MySQL one. I had everything working before but after what I thought was the proper configuration I'm getting the error:
Caused by: javax.resource.ResourceException: Class name is wrong or classpath is not set for : com.mysql.jdbc.jdbc2.optional.MysqlDataSource
Full error output from console:
Caused by: javax.resource.ResourceException: Class name is wrong or classpath is not set for : com.mysql.jdbc.jdbc2.optional.MysqlDataSource
at com.sun.gjc.common.DataSourceObjectBuilder.getDataSourceObject(DataSourceObjectBuilder.java:292)
at com.sun.gjc.common.DataSourceObjectBuilder.constructDataSourceObject(DataSourceObjectBuilder.java:114)
at com.sun.gjc.spi.ManagedConnectionFactory.getDataSource(ManagedConnectionFactory.java:1292)
at com.sun.gjc.spi.DSManagedConnectionFactory.getDataSource(DSManagedConnectionFactory.java:148)
at com.sun.gjc.spi.DSManagedConnectionFactory.createManagedConnection(DSManagedConnectionFactory.java:101)
at com.sun.enterprise.resource.allocator.LocalTxConnectorAllocator.createResource(LocalTxConnectorAllocator.java:87)
I've double checked some of the names, the connection pool and other resources.I've also added the MySQL driver .jars to the library of glassfish in both projects. The database was definitely working correctly through eclipse because I was able to view tables and display the resources inside the database context of eclipse. So I know that at least THOSE drivers are working correcly. Also the persistence.xml file looks good. it references the jdbc/mydatabase jndi reference like it should and default JTA is selected as the manament type.
Does anyone have another suggestion? Thank you
I've also added the MySQL driver .jars to the library of glassfish in both projects.
It was apparently not done right. The JAR has to go in /glassfish/domains/[domainname]/lib/ext folder of the Glassfish installation where [domainname] usually defaults to domain1. You can and should not configure it from the Eclipse side on.
Looks like I am replying very late, but however people who would be referring to this thread may find the following information being useful. So I am posting it here:
Download the connector Jar from http://dev.mysql.com/downloads/connector/j/5.0.html
unzip the pack and copy mysql-connector-java-verno-bin.jar
past the same at [GlassFish Installation Directory]/domains/[domain name]/lib folder
restart your domain and ping to check your connection in JDBC Connection Pools
There you go. If your MySql is running then it will ping the DB successfully
I copied the jar file to $glassfish_install_folder\glassfish\lib, after that it worked. I use glassfish 4.0.
Check this link from oracle.
I encountered this issue in 2018 and would like to note that if you are using glassfish 4 (current is 5) then it seems you have to use the Connector/J 5.1.47 version for it to work. If you use the current version (Connector/J 8.0.13) then exception mentioned in the original question keeps appearing, no matter where you place the .jar file.
With Connector/J 5.1.47 it works perfectly.
Solution is
> asadmin add-library /path/to/mysql-connector-java-bin.jar
Check this link:
https://blog.payara.fish/using-mysql-with-payara
I encountered this issue in 2019 and would like to note that if you are using docker image payara/server-full (I am using 5.194 so far) as I do the location to place the driver jar is:
/opt/payara/appserver/glassfish/domains/production/lib/
In the end I am doing something like this in the Dockerfile of payara server:
RUN wget http://central.maven.org/maven2/org/mariadb/jdbc/mariadb-java-client/2.2.0/mariadb-java-client-2.2.0.jar \
-O /opt/payara/appserver/glassfish/domains/production/lib/mariadb-java-client-2.2.0.jar