I was getting the error "ServletContainer cannot be cast to Servlet" and could not understand why, despite reading related answers in stackoverflow.
My shipment-location-webapp web.xml specifies:
<servlet-class>org.glassfish.jersey.servlet.ServletContainer</servlet-class>
And its pom.xml specified the following dependency on the jar file where the superclass(es) for ServletContainer are found:
<dependency>
<groupId>javax.servlet</groupId>
<artifactId>servlet-api</artifactId>
</dependency>
When the shipment-location-webapp run configuration tomcat:run goal was executed, it read the web.xml, tried to load the ServletContainer implementation of Servlet and reports the error:
"ServletContainer cannot be cast to Servlet"
This is odd, because no such error occurs when we run Tomcat as an eclipse “server”. It finds the servlet-api jar file either in the Tomcat lib or in the shipment-location-webapp WEB-INF/lib (it can be found in both places).
The problem is resolved by setting the scope for this jar to “provided” in the pom:
<dependency>
<groupId>javax.servlet</groupId>
<artifactId>servlet-api</artifactId>
<scope>provided</scope>
</dependency>
It makes sense that running Tomcat as a server still works, since this jar file is still found as “provided” in the Tomcat lib, but why does this fix the problem with the run configuration tomcat:run goal??? If it found the file in the Tomcat lib it should have worked without the scope change. In fact, we can remove servlet-api from the Tomcat lib and it still works!!! It is no longer “provided” by the container, but by some other “provider”.
It turns out that the tomcat:run plugin opens the servlet-api-2.5.jar (“provided” or not) in my local maven repository. If I navigate through my .m2/repository/javax/servlet/servlet-api/2.5 directories and delete the jar, executing tomcat:run restores it and then you can’t delete it because it is currently open. But even knowing where tomcat:run finds this jar does not explain why it generates the "ServletContainer cannot be cast to Servlet" error when this dependency is not declared in the pom as “provided”.
So I actually have two questions now: 1) where does this tomcat:run goal look for jars? 2) does the "provided" scope really cause it to fetch the jar to my local respository instead of expecting it to be provided?