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I recently upgraded from Spring 3.2.11.RELEASE to Spring 4.2.3.RELEASE.

When running my unit tests, I'm getting this error:

java.lang.ExceptionInInitializerError: null
    at org.springframework.test.web.servlet.result.MockMvcResultHandlers.<clinit>(MockMvcResultHandlers.java:44)

And:

java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError: Could not initialize class org.springframework.test.web.servlet.result.MockMvcResultHandlers

Line 44 of MockMvcResultHandlers looks like this:

private static final Log logger = LogFactory.getLog(MockMvcResultHandlers.class.getPackage().getName());

I confirmed that I have commons-logging 1.2 as a dependency in Maven.

Any ideas of what the issue could be?

Thanks!

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  • I just told maven surefire to print the full stack trace and it looks like a NullPointerException is happening at line 44 but I'm a bit unsure why... Caused by: java.lang.NullPointerException at org.springframework.test.web.servlet.result.MockMvcResultHandlers.<clinit>(MockMvcResultHandlers.java:44) ... 71 more
    – Matt
    Dec 16, 2015 at 16:28

2 Answers 2

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I've confirmed that the NullPointerException is coming from MockMvcResultHandlers.class.getPackage().

Update: From what I've read, some people are saying that using the maven-surefire-plugin with a forkCount greater than 0 might fix it. Unfortunately, in my particular situation, I can't update the forkCount to verify that.

Update: I opened a JIRA against Spring and they said it will be fixed in 4.2.4: https://jira.spring.io/browse/SPR-13802

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You might have a conflicting spring-test version included by another dependency. I would try to identify whether other dependencies are importing a different version. You can do this in intelliJ, if you use it (and probably other IDEs do it but that's what I use), and you can also do a maven dependency tree. I find both methods useful.

Maven Dependency Tree:

mvn dependency:tree -Dverbose > tree.txt

or, to isolate your specific dependency,

mvn dependency:tree -Dverbose -Dincludes=spring-test > tree.txt

I find it useful to output to a file and then search through it using less or some other tool.

In IntelliJ:

In the Maven Projects tab at right, expand all (CTRL+PLUS in Windows) and look through the dependencies of dependencies and see if you see commons-logging. This is obviously more of a brute force method.

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  • Nothing really stands out after running mvn dependency:tree. It shows commons-logging 1.2 being favoured over all others.
    – Matt
    Dec 16, 2015 at 16:39
  • You might not have a dependency version conflict. But it looks from your errors as though the problem is not with logging, but with MockMvcResultHandlers.
    – barclay
    Dec 16, 2015 at 16:46

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