Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

I am getting this message when I run my web application. It runs fine but I get this message during shutdown.

SEVERE: A web application registered the JBDC driver [oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver] but failed to unregister it when the web application was stopped. To prevent a memory leak, the JDBC Driver has been forcibly unregistered.

Any help appreciated.

share|improve this question
1  
Could be duplicate of stackoverflow.com/questions/2604630/… – skaffman Jul 23 '10 at 16:46

11 Answers

up vote 104 down vote accepted

Since version 6.0.24, Tomcat ships with a memory leak detection feature, which in turn can lead to this kind of warning messages when there's a JDBC 4.0 compatible driver in the webapp's /WEB-INF/lib which auto-registers itself during webapp's startup using the ServiceLoader API, but which did not auto-deregister itself during webapp's shutdown. This message is purely informal, Tomcat has already taken the memory leak prevention action accordingly.

What can you do?

  1. Ignore those warnings. Tomcat is doing its job right. The actual bug is in someone else's code (the JDBC driver in question), not in yours. Be happy that Tomcat did its job properly and wait until the JDBC driver vendor get it fixed so that you can upgrade the driver.

  2. Downgrade to Tomcat 6.0.23 or older so that you will not be bothered with those warnings. But it will silently keep leaking memory. Not sure if that's good to know after all. Those kind of memory leaks are one of the major causes behind OutOfMemoryError issues during Tomcat hotdeployments.

  3. Move the JDBC driver to Tomcat's /lib folder and have a connection pooled datasource to manage the driver. Note that Tomcat's builtin DBCP does not deregister drivers properly on close. See also bug DBCP-322. The DBCP project is however currently stalling. I wouldn't expect quick updates. You would rather like to replace DBCP by another connection pool which is doing its job better then DBCP. For example BoneCP or Tomcat JDBC Pool maybe?

share|improve this answer
3  
This is good advice. It's not warning of a memory leak, it's a warning that Tomcat took some forcible action to prevent a leak – matt b Jul 23 '10 at 17:43
@BalusC, we are not using Tomcat's connection pool, do you think the message should still show up?? – mona Sep 3 '10 at 15:48
can we keep it this way or do you suggest to use the fix shown in DBCP-322 that you provided in the answer? I was wondering if we could just ignore those warnings! Thanks for your quick responses... – mona Sep 3 '10 at 15:57
I have the same issue as in mona's comment. We're using C3P0 in Spring, but still get the issue. And I'm even running Tomcat 6.0.23, which is below 6.0.24. – Mathias Lin Mar 8 '11 at 7:31
8  
If option (1) is the way to go, why does Tomcat log these as SEVERE, though? SEVERE to me means "page the admin", not "ignore". – Peter Becker Oct 17 '11 at 23:16
show 1 more comment

In your servlet context listener contextDestroyed() method, manually deregister the drivers:

        // This manually deregisters JDBC driver, which prevents Tomcat 7 from complaining about memory leaks wrto this class
        Enumeration<Driver> drivers = DriverManager.getDrivers();
        while (drivers.hasMoreElements()) {
            Driver driver = drivers.nextElement();
            try {
                DriverManager.deregisterDriver(driver);
                LOG.log(Level.INFO, String.format("deregistering jdbc driver: %s", driver));
            } catch (SQLException e) {
                LOG.log(Level.SEVERE, String.format("Error deregistering driver %s", driver), e);
            }

        }
share|improve this answer
that works great!! thank you!! – Florito Jun 17 '11 at 13:03
Nice! Worked perfectly. – Jim Tough Jul 13 '12 at 19:23

I see this issue come up a lot. Yes, Tomcat 7 does automatically deregister it, but it that REALLY taking control of your code and a good coding practice? Surely YOU want to know that you have all the correct code in place to close all your objects, shut down database connection pool threads, and get rid of all warnings. I certainly do.

This is how I do it.

Step 1: Register a Listener

web.xml

<listener>
    <listener-class>com.mysite.MySpecialListener</listener-class>
</listener>

Step 2: Implement the Listener

com.mysite.MySpecialListener.java

public class MySpecialListener extends ApplicationContextListener {

    @Override
    public void contextInitialized(ServletContextEvent sce) {
        // On Application Startup, please…

        // Usually I'll make a singleton in here, set up my pool, etc.
    }

    @Override
    public void contextDestroyed(ServletContextEvent sce) {
        // On Application Shutdown, please…

        // 1. Go fetch that DataSource
        Context initContext = new InitialContext();
        Context envContext  = (Context)initContext.lookup("java:/comp/env");
        DataSource datasource = (DataSource)envContext.lookup("jdbc/database");

        // 2. Deregister Driver
        try {
            java.sql.Driver mySqlDriver = DriverManager.getDriver("jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/");
            DriverManager.deregisterDriver(mySqlDriver);
        } catch (SQLException ex) {
            logger.info("Could not deregister driver:".concat(ex.getMessage()));
        } 

        // 3. For added safety, remove the reference to dataSource for GC to enjoy.
        dataSource = null;
    }

}

Please feel free to comment and/or add...

share|improve this answer
It looks so lovely when your application ends and your logs just say: [INFO]Shutting down application. [INFO]Closing connection pool. [INFO]Deregistering MySQLDriver. [INFO]Closing Log FileHandler. – Spider Oct 19 '11 at 11:20
2  
But DataSource does NOT have a close method – Jim Apr 4 '12 at 8:16
Yes, there is no method close() for DataSource. – Sangram Anand Jul 10 '12 at 6:30
BasicDataSource has a close() – PhilJ Jan 21 at 14:41
Funnily enough, it was there in the version I was using :) Removed it as it's no longer there. The dataSource = null will do the trick instead. – Spider Jan 21 at 15:49
show 1 more comment

BalusC: this has nothing to do with pools and whatever. This is purely driver registration/deregistration issue in mysql`s driver or tomcats webapp-classloader. Copy mysql driver into tomcats lib folder (so its loaded by jvm directly, not by tomcat), and message will be gone. That makes mysql jdbc driver to be unloaded only at JVM shutdown, and noone cares about memory leaks then.

share|improve this answer
that don't works... I tried to copy the jdbc driver has you say: TOMCAT_HOME/lib/postgresql-9.0-801.jdbc4.jar - Tomcat 7.0\lib\postgresql-9.0-801.jdbc4.jar with no results... – Florito Jun 17 '11 at 12:50
1  
@Florito - you have to remove it from your web-apps WEB-INF/lib as well – Collin Peters Jul 5 '11 at 16:20

I found that implementing a simple destroy() method to de-register any JDBC drivers works nicely.

/**
 * Destroys the servlet cleanly by unloading JDBC drivers.
 * 
 * @see javax.servlet.GenericServlet#destroy()
 */
public void destroy() {
    String prefix = getClass().getSimpleName() +" destroy() ";
    ServletContext ctx = getServletContext();
    try {
        Enumeration<Driver> drivers = DriverManager.getDrivers();
        while(drivers.hasMoreElements()) {
            DriverManager.deregisterDriver(drivers.nextElement());
        }
    } catch(Exception e) {
        ctx.log(prefix + "Exception caught while deregistering JDBC drivers", e);
    }
    ctx.log(prefix + "complete");
}
share|improve this answer

I was having a similar problem, but additionally I was getting a Java Heap Space error anytime I modified/saved JSP pages with Tomcat server running, therefore the context were not fully recharged.

My versions were Apache Tomcat 6.0.29 and JDK 6u12.

Upgrading JDK to 6u21 as suggested in References section of URL http://wiki.apache.org/tomcat/MemoryLeakProtection solved the Java Heap Space problem (context now reloads OK) although JDBC Driver error still appears.

share|improve this answer

I will add to this something I found on the Spring forums. If you move your JDBC driver jar to the tomcat lib folder, instead of deploying it with your webapp, the warning seems to disappear. I can confirm that this worked for me

http://forum.springsource.org/showthread.php?87335-Failure-to-unregister-the-MySQL-JDBC-Driver&p=334883#post334883

share|improve this answer

I found the same issue with Tomcat version 6.026.

I used the Mysql JDBC.jar in WebAPP Library as well as in TOMCAT Lib.

To fix the above by removing the Jar from the TOMCAT lib folder.

So what I understand is that TOMCAT is handling the JDBC memory leak properly. But if the MYSQL Jdbc jar is duplicated in WebApp and Tomcat Lib, Tomcat will only be able to handle the jar present in the Tomcat Lib folder.

share|improve this answer

If you are getting this message from a Maven built war change the scope of the JDBC driver to provided, and put a copy of it in the lib directory. Like this:

<dependency>
  <groupId>mysql</groupId>
  <artifactId>mysql-connector-java</artifactId>
  <version>5.1.18</version>
  <!-- put a copy in /usr/share/tomcat7/lib -->
  <scope>provided</scope>
</dependency>
share|improve this answer

Solution for per-app deployments

This is a listener I wrote to solve the problem: it autodetects if the driver has registered itself and acts accordingly.it

Important: it is meant to be used ONLY when the driver jar is deployed in WEB-INF/lib, not in the Tomcat /lib, as many suggest, so that each application can take care of its own driver and run on a untouched Tomcat. That is the way it should be IMHO.

Just configure the listener in your web.xml before any other and enjoy.

add near the top of web.xml:

<listener>
    <listener-class>utils.db.OjdbcDriverRegistrationListener</listener-class>    
</listener>

save as utils/db/OjdbcDriverRegistrationListener.java:

package utils.db;

import java.sql.Driver;
import java.sql.DriverManager;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.util.Enumeration;

import javax.servlet.ServletContextEvent;
import javax.servlet.ServletContextListener;

import oracle.jdbc.OracleDriver;

import org.slf4j.Logger;
import org.slf4j.LoggerFactory;

/**
 * Registers and unregisters the Oracle JDBC driver.
 * 
 * Use only when the ojdbc jar is deployed inside the webapp (not as an
 * appserver lib)
 */
public class OjdbcDriverRegistrationListener implements ServletContextListener {

    private static final Logger LOG = LoggerFactory
            .getLogger(OjdbcDriverRegistrationListener.class);

    private Driver driver = null;

    /**
     * Registers the Oracle JDBC driver
     */
    @Override
    public void contextInitialized(ServletContextEvent servletContextEvent) {
        this.driver = new OracleDriver(); // load and instantiate the class
        boolean skipRegistration = false;
        Enumeration<Driver> drivers = DriverManager.getDrivers();
        while (drivers.hasMoreElements()) {
            Driver driver = drivers.nextElement();
            if (driver instanceof OracleDriver) {
                OracleDriver alreadyRegistered = (OracleDriver) driver;
                if (alreadyRegistered.getClass() == this.driver.getClass()) {
                    // same class in the VM already registered itself
                    skipRegistration = true;
                    this.driver = alreadyRegistered;
                    break;
                }
            }
        }

        try {
            if (!skipRegistration) {
                DriverManager.registerDriver(driver);
            } else {
                LOG.debug("driver was registered automatically");
            }
            LOG.info(String.format("registered jdbc driver: %s v%d.%d", driver,
                    driver.getMajorVersion(), driver.getMinorVersion()));
        } catch (SQLException e) {
            LOG.error(
                    "Error registering oracle driver: " + 
                            "database connectivity might be unavailable!",
                    e);
            throw new RuntimeException(e);
        }
    }

    /**
     * Deregisters JDBC driver
     * 
     * Prevents Tomcat 7 from complaining about memory leaks.
     */
    @Override
    public void contextDestroyed(ServletContextEvent servletContextEvent) {
        if (this.driver != null) {
            try {
                DriverManager.deregisterDriver(driver);
                LOG.info(String.format("deregistering jdbc driver: %s", driver));
            } catch (SQLException e) {
                LOG.warn(
                        String.format("Error deregistering driver %s", driver),
                        e);
            }
            this.driver = null;
        } else {
            LOG.warn("No driver to deregister");
        }

    }

}
share|improve this answer

Removing the app (tomcat6) solves it. The conf files are preserved. It breaks itself somehow. I am not really sure how it does it.

share|improve this answer
Does it answer the question? Shouldn't it be a comment? – CCoder Nov 13 '12 at 4:41

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.