When I run my project, I get numerous outputs of this error:
Sep 9, 2009 8:22:23 AM org.apache.catalina.core.StandardWrapperValve invoke SEVERE: Servlet.service()
I had faced the same issue, because the jar library was copied by other Linux user(root), and the logged in user(process) did not have sufficient privilege to read the jar file content.
I had this:
class Util {
static boolean isNeverAsync = System.getenv().get("asyncc_exclude_redundancy").equals("yes");
}
you can probably see the problem, the env var might return null instead of string. So just to test my theory, I changed it to:
class Util {
static boolean isNeverAsync = false;
}
and the problem went away. Too bad that Java can't give you the exact stack trace of the error though, kinda weird.
Realised that I was using OpenJDK when I saw this error. Fixed it once I installed the Oracle JDK instead.
You're missing the necessary class definition; typically caused by required JAR not being in classpath.
From J2SE API:
public class NoClassDefFoundError extends LinkageError
Thrown if the Java Virtual Machine or a ClassLoader instance tries to load in the definition of a class (as part of a normal method call or as part of creating a new instance using the new expression) and no definition of the class could be found.
The searched-for class definition existed when the currently executing class was compiled, but the definition can no longer be found.
I recently ran into this error on Windows 10. It turned out that windows was looking for .dll files necessary for my project and couldn't find them because it looks for them in the system path, PATH, rather than the CLASSPATH or -Djava.library.path
NoClassDefFound error is a nebulous error and is often hiding a more serious issue. It is not the same as ClassNotFoundException (which is thrown when the class is just plain not there).
NoClassDefFound may indicate the class is not there, as the javadocs indicate, but it is typically thrown when, after the classloader has loaded the bytes for the class and calls "defineClass" on them. Also carefully check your full stack trace for other clues or possible "cause" Exceptions (though your particular backtrace shows none).
The first place to look when you get a NoClassDefFoundError is in the static bits of your class i.e. any initialization that takes place during the defining of the class. If this fails it will throw a NoClassDefFoundError - it's supposed to throw an ExceptionInInitializerError and indicate the details of the problem but in my experience, these are rare. It will only do the ExceptionInInitializerError the first time it tries to define the class, after that it will just throw NoClassDefFound. So look at earlier logs.
I would thus suggest looking at the code in that HibernateTransactionInterceptor line and seeing what it is requiring. It seems that it is unable to define the class SpringFactory. So maybe check the initialization code in that class, that might help. If you can debug it, stop it at the last line above (17) and debug into so you can try find the exact line that is causing the exception. Also check higher up in the log, if you very lucky there might be an ExceptionInInitializerError.