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I changed the return type of one method in an interface in a library. Previously it was void and I modified it to return an object. I did not change the code in my module as I did not want to do anything with the returned object(it was for a different module) I compiled my module with the new library jar and ran unit tests which ran fine but when I pushed the jar along with the library jar to production and ran the module, i get java.lang.NoSuchMethodError for the method I changed on the interface. I modified the interface as well as the implementation, both are in the library jar and I use spring annotations to inject the implementation object in my module. What is the possible cause of this problem?

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In the Java bytecode the return type of a method is part of the method signature, and it differentiates between two methods with the same name and same parameters (this is something that you cannot do in the Java language). So your code which calls this method somehow wasn't recompiled and it still tries to call the method which returns void.

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It sounds like you haven't recompiled everything, or haven't pushed all the recompiled jar files to prod.

Additionally, you didn't specify whether you restarted the server. If you've got some sort of "hot restart" going on, you'll have to have configured all the classloaders very carefully to get it right. If you can restart the container completely, that may help.

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Have you clear out your production deployment environment as it appears as though the old method signature is still hanging around somewhere?

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We always configure our production (and QA) build process to clear all classes and recompile precisely because of problems like this. Sometimes the compiler dependency heuristics get it wrong (especially when you have a static final field defined as a constant, where the compiler just optimizes away the whole dependency).

In this case, although the code using the method didn't change (actually especially because it didn't change) the compiled bytecode does not resolve to the right method signature and can't find what it was looking for. At the bytecode level there is a reference to the return type that the JVM is looking up and not finding.

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void is not a subtype of any other type. So if you change the interface to return a non-void type, then the implementing classes that still return void will no longer be compatible with this method.

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