Getting some weird issue trying to run Cassandra on Windows 10 - cassandra

I am trying to install Cassandra. I followed the instructions here.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EEXtVn3zAqc
I had Java 14 and I when I tried to run Cassandra I got a message saying that Java 8 or 11 needs to be installed. So, I got Java 11 from the link below.
https://www.oracle.com/java/technologies/javase-jdk11-downloads.html
I downloaded Cassandra and added the path to Environment Variables. I added the Java path to Environment Variables too. Now, I navigate to the Cassandra path in the Command Prompt and type 'cassandra.bat -f' and I get this message: 'Cassandra 4.0 requires either Java 8 (update 151 or newer) or Java 11 (or newer). Java 11.0.8 is not supported.' I already have Java 11; I got it just for Cassandra. I am on Windows 10. How can I make this work?

Related

How can I solve logstash error during installation time?

I am using JDK 15 and trying to install logstash. But when I use the command with configuration file I am getting this error -
"Error: Could not create the Java Virtual Machine. Error: A fatal
exception has occurred. Program will exit."
I have added an image of the error below. Please help me to solve the error.
Logstash does not support Java 15 yet, there is an open issue about it, but you won't be able to use Java 15 to run logstash until support is available.
You will need to use another Java version, currently logstash supports Java 8, Java 11 or Java 14.
You can also unset the JAVA_HOME environment variable and logstash will use its bundled java, which is AdoptOpenJDK 11.

Cassandra does not start on Java 10

I have a brand new Windows 10 Home installation, with a brand-new installation of JDK 10.0.1 (which is what Oracle recommended when I went to the JDK download site.) I just now downloaded Cassandra 3.11.2, un-tar'd it, and put the bin directory on my classpath.
When I attempt to start Cassandra using the cassandra -f command, I get this error:
PS C:\javatools> cassandra -f
*---------------------------------------------------------------------*
*---------------------------------------------------------------------*
WARNING! Automatic page file configuration detected.
It is recommended that you disable swap when running Cassandra
for performance and stability reasons.
*---------------------------------------------------------------------*
*---------------------------------------------------------------------*
Failed 64-bit check. Re-running to get version from 32-bit
*---------------------------------------------------------------------*
*---------------------------------------------------------------------*
Cassandra 3.0 and later require Java 8u40 or later.
Java 10 is clearly "Java 8 rel 40 or later". I verified that I was, in fact, running the version of Java I thought I was:
PS C:\javatools> java -version
java version "10.0.1" 2018-04-17
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment 18.3 (build 10.0.1+10)
Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM 18.3 (build 10.0.1+10, mixed mode)
How can I get Cassandra to recognize that I do, in fact, have "Java 8u40 or later"?
Cassandra does not support any Java release newer than Java 8.
References are as follows:
declined bug report against Java 9: CASSANDRA-9608
declined bug report against Java 10: CASSANDRA-14446
Furthermore, even though the documentation does indicate it's a "work in progress", it does indicate the following on the Getting Started page:
Prerequisites
The latest version of Java 8, either the Oracle Java Standard Edition
8 or OpenJDK 8. To verify that you have the correct version of java
installed, type java -version.
While it doesn't explicitly say "Java 9 and newer are not supported", this is apparently supposed to be inferred from this indicator.
Finally, the misleading error message appears to be a wontfix item.
I've managed to run cassandra 3.11.3 on java-11-openjdk-amd64 on localhost (ubuntu 18.04).
(Strangely, java -version shows openjdk version "10.0.1" 2018-04-17)
I tweaked a lot in jvm.options, because many gc options are not supported anymore, and ThreadPriorityPolicy could not be set to 42. (last thing is most annoying: it was really good compaction threads were low priority).
Also, to run nodetool I have to specify jvm 1.8 by JAVA_HOME.

Batch file Exception in thread "main" java.lang.UnsupportedClassVersionError: com/aionemu/c [duplicate]

I am trying to use Notepad++ as my all-in-one tool edit, run, compile, etc.
I have JRE installed, and I have setup my path variable to the .../bin directory.
When I run my "Hello world" in Notepad++, I get this message:
java.lang.UnsupportedClassVersionError: test_hello_world :
Unsupported major.minor version 51.0
at java.lang.ClassLoader.defineClass1(Native Method)
at java.lang.ClassLoader.defineClassCond(Unknown Source)
.........................................
I think the problem here is about versions; some versions of Java may be old or too new.
How do I fix it?
Should I install the JDK, and setup my path variable to the JDK instead of JRE?
What is the difference between the PATH variable in JRE or JDK?
The version number shown describes the version of the JRE the class file is compatible with.
The reported major numbers are:
Java SE 19 = 63,
Java SE 18 = 62,
Java SE 17 = 61,
Java SE 16 = 60,
Java SE 15 = 59,
Java SE 14 = 58,
Java SE 13 = 57,
Java SE 12 = 56,
Java SE 11 = 55,
Java SE 10 = 54,
Java SE 9 = 53,
Java SE 8 = 52,
Java SE 7 = 51,
Java SE 6.0 = 50,
Java SE 5.0 = 49,
JDK 1.4 = 48,
JDK 1.3 = 47,
JDK 1.2 = 46,
JDK 1.1 = 45
(Source: Wikipedia)
To fix the actual problem you should try to either run the Java code with a newer version of Java JRE or specify the target parameter to the Java compiler to instruct the compiler to create code compatible with earlier Java versions.
For example, in order to generate class files compatible with Java 1.4, use the following command line:
javac -target 1.4 HelloWorld.java
With newer versions of the Java compiler you are likely to get a warning about the bootstrap class path not being set. More information about this error is available in a blog post New javac warning for setting an older source without bootclasspath.
java.lang.UnsupportedClassVersionError happens because of a higher JDK during compile time and lower JDK during runtime.
In Eclipse, I just went to menu command Window -> Preferences -> Java -> Compiler and then set "Compiler compliance level" to 1.6.
Don't worry, I got it solved.
It is actually simple - you need to install BOTH JRE / JDK with the same version.
JRE 6 -> JDK 6
JRE 7 -> JDK 7
And so on.
This error means you're trying to load a Java "class" file that was compiled with a newer version of Java than you have installed.
For example, your .class file could have been compiled for JDK 7, and you're trying to run it with JDK 6.
So the solution is to either:
Upgrade your Java runtime or
Recompile the class if you have the source, using your local Java compiler (if you have one).
javac FileName.java
For developers, this can happen if another developer checks in a .class file, and they've got a newer version of java than you have!
You are trying to run your program with a Java version that does not support the version in which the code was compiled. So basically you must have compiled your code with a higher version and trying to run it using a lower version.
As you are getting
Unsupported major.minor version 51.0
and version 51.0 corresponds to J2SE 7 you have most probably compiled your code in Java 7 and trying to run it using a lower version. Check what java -version displays. It should be the Java 7 version. If not make appropriate changes in the PATH/JAVA_HOME. Or you can compile with the same version you are trying to run the code. If the configurations are confusing you can always give absolute path /home/user/jdk1.7.0_11/bin/javac and /home/user/jdk1.7.0_11/bin/java.
I had a similar situation on Mac, and the following process worked for me:
In the terminal, type
vi ~/.profile
Then add this line in the file, and save
export JAVA_HOME=/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk<version>.jdk/Contents/Home
where version is the one on your computer, such as 1.7.0_25.
Exit the editor, then type the following command make it become effective
source ~/.profile
Then type java -version to check the result
java -version
What is .profile file?
.profile file is a hidden file. It is an optional file which tells the system which commands to run when the user whose profile file it is logs in. For example, if my username is bruno and there is a .profile file in /Users/bruno/, all of its contents will be executed during the log-in procedure.
Source: http://computers.tutsplus.com/tutorials/speed-up-your-terminal-workflow-with-command-aliases-and-profile--mac-30515
In Eclipse's menu Window -> Preferences -> Java -> Compiler check also "Configure Project Specific Settings".
If you stil have the error with same Java version: try to delete build folder of your project manually. Then restart Eclipse.
You can have some JAR library compiled in Java 7, and you have only Java 6 as Java Runtime. It could happen with some new libraries.
The most common issue is misconfiguration of your JAVA_HOME variable which should point to the right Java Development Kit library, if you've multiple installed.
To find where SDK Java folder is located, run the following commands:
jrunscript -e 'java.lang.System.out.println(java.lang.System.getProperty("java.home"));'
Debian/Ubuntu
To check which java (openjdk) you've installed, check via:
dpkg -l "openjdk*" | grep ^i
or:
update-java-alternatives -l
To change it, use:
update-alternatives --config java
Prefix with sudo if required.
to select the alternative java version.
Or check which are available for install:
apt-cache search ^openjdk
Prefix with sudo if required.
Then you can install, for example:
apt-get install openjdk-7-jre
Prefix with sudo if required.
Fedora, Oracle Linux, Red Hat
Install/upgrade appropriate package via:
yum install java-1.7.0-openjdk java-1.7.0-openjdk-devel
The java-1.7.0-openjdk package contains just the Java Runtime Environment. If you want to develop Java programs then install the java-1.7.0-openjdk-devel package.
BSD
There is an OpenJDK 7 package in the FreeBSD Ports collection called openjdk7 which probably needs to be reconfigured.
See: OpenJDK wiki page.
Windows
Just install appropriate Java SE Development Kit library from the Oracle site or install
Jenkins
If you're experiencing this issue with Jenkins, see:
JENKINS-30561 - Unable to launch agent using SSH
However selecting the right version of Java (newer) with update-alternatives should work.
I got the same problem with a project written in 1.7 and tried to execute in 1.6.
My solution in Eclipse:
Right click on your Project Properties -> Java Build Path -> Libraries
Select your JRE System Library and click Edit on the right, and choose the target JRE.
Now go to Java Compiler on the left, and change the Compiler compliance level to your target.
That worked for me.
I have faced the same problem when I was working with an Ant script to build my application.
I use Eclipse for my application development, and I changed the compiler version in build properties of the project. But that didn't work for me. Then I found out that I can provide the compiler version in the Ant script.
I modified the Ant script at the section where it compile Java files.
<target name="build-java" depends="prepare-build">
<echo message="Compiling java files"/>
<javac ....
target="1.5"...
</javac>
</target>
This worked for me to resolve the unsupported major minor issue.
When I installed JDK 1.7, the problem got solved.
Based on this...
J2SE 8 = 52
J2SE 7 = 51
J2SE 6.0 = 50
J2SE 5.0 = 49
JDK 1.4 = 48
JDK 1.3 = 47
JDK 1.2 = 46
JDK 1.1 = 45
In Eclipse, right click on project in package explorer:
Build Path -> Configure Build Path
Under:
Java Build Path -> Libraries -> Add Library -> JRE System Library -> Installed JREs -> Search.
Add the required JRE by selecting the library in the list available after the search is complete.
As answered elsewhere by several people, the Java program is being run on an older version of Java than the one it was compiled it for. It needs to be "crosscompiled" for backward compatibility. To put it another way, there is a mismatch between source and target Java versions.
Changing options in Eclipse menus don't answer the original poster, who said he/she is not using Eclipse. On OpenJDK javac version 1.7, you can crosscompile for 1.6 if you use parameters -source and -target, plus provide the rt.jar -file of the target version (that is, the older one) at compile time. If you actually install the 1.6 JRE, you can point to its installation (for example, /usr/lib/jvm/java-6-openjdk-i386/jre/lib/rt.jar on Ubuntu, /usr/jdk/jdk1.6.0_60/jre/lib/rt.jar on SunOS apparently. Sorry, I don't know where it is on a Windows system). Like so:
javac -source 1.6 -target 1.6 -bootclasspath /usr/lib/jvm/java-6-openjdk-i386/jre/lib/rt.jar HelloWorld.java
It looks like you can just download rt.jar from the Internet, and point to it. This is not too elegant though:
javac -source 1.6 -target 1.6 -bootclasspath ./rt.jar HelloWorld.java
If you use Maven, set your Java compile level. Open a command line and write java -version for your compile level:
If you use IntelliJ IDEA, select project → File → Settings → Build Execution Deployment → Compiler → Java Compiler. Then change byte code as 1.7 like this image:
If you're facing this issue while using Maven, you can compile your code using the plug-in Maven Compiler.
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-compiler-plugin</artifactId>
<version>3.1</version>
<configuration>
<source>1.6</source>
<target>1.6</target>
</configuration>
</plugin>
.....
UPDATE: set source and target to 1.8, if you are using JDK 8.
I had the same error message when running Ant from Eclipse, but the other solutions mentioned here didn't solve my problem. The funny thing was that running Ant from the Windows command line was running fine, so it had to be a configuration issue within Eclipse.
It turned out that under Eclipse you can specify the environment that Ant should be running with and this was set as a JRE instead of a JDK.
Go to: Run -> External Tools -> External Tools Configurations ...
Select the Ant build.xml for your project (if you have multiple projects)
Activate the Tab 'JRE'
Here was selected 'Separate JRE: jre6'. When I changed this to a JDK from the 1.6 or 1.7 series, the error was gone.
You have used a higher version of the JDK to compile and trying to run from a lower version of JDK/JRE.
To check this, see the version information:
javac -version
java -version
They will be different and javac will have a higher version number.
To get around this, run using java from the JDK version or if you have a newer JRE/JDK that will work as well.
which javac will tell you the location, for example, /usr/bin/javac. Just run directly using /usr/bin/java <program>.
OR you can set the environment variable as a permanent solution.
How do I fix it?
This error means that the JRE that is being used to execute your class code does not recognise the version of Java used. Usually because the version of Java that generated your class file (i.e. compiled it) is newer.
To fix it, you can either
a) Compile your Java sources with the same, or older, version of the Java compiler as will be used to run it. i.e. install the appropriate JDK.
b) Compile your Java sources with the newer version of the Java compiler but in compatibility mode. i.e. use the -target parameter.
c) Run your compiled classes in a JRE that is the same, or newer, version as the JDK used to compile the classes.
You can check the versions you are currently using with
javac -version for the compiler, and java -version for the runtime.
Should I install the JDK, and setup my PATH variable to the JDK
instead of JRE?
For compilation, certainly, install and configure the specific JDK that you want.
For runtime, you can use the one that comes with the JDK or a standalone JRE, but regardless, make sure that you have installed the right versions and that you have configured your PATH such that there are no surprises.
What is the difference between the PATH variable in JRE or JDK?
The PATH environment variable tells the command shell where to look for the command you type. When you type java, the command shell interpreter will look through all the locations specified in the PATH variable, from left to right, to find the appropriate java runtime executable to run. If you have multiple versions of Java installed - i.e. you have the java executable in multiple locations specified in the PATH variable, then the first one encountered when going from left to right will be the one that is executed.
The compiler command is javac and only comes with the JDK. The runtime command is java and comes with the JDK and is in the JRE.
It is likely that you have one version (51.0 = Java 7) of javac installed, and you also have the same version of java installed, but that another previous version of java is appearing earlier in the PATH and so is being invoked instead of the one you expect.
Had this problem when I reverted to Java 6 and tried to run classes previously compiled with Java 7. What worked for me was Preferences > java > compiler --> set compliance level to 1.6 and crucially "configure project settings"..
Today, this error message appeared in our Tomcat 7 on Ubuntu 12.04.2 LTS (Precise Pangolin):
/var/log/tomcat7/localhost.2014-04-08.log:
Apr 8, 2014 9:00:55 AM org.apache.catalina.core.StandardContext filterStart
SEVERE: Exception starting filter struts2
java.lang.UnsupportedClassVersionError: controller/ReqAccept : Unsupported major.minor version 51.0 (unable to load class controller.ReqAccept)
The Struts application is compiled with Java 7.
It turned out, someone uses "service tomcat [stop/start]" to restart Tomcat 7,
$ ps -ef | grep java
tomcat7 31783 1 32 20:13 ? 00:00:03 /usr/lib/jvm/default-java/bin/java...
$ /usr/lib/jvm/default-java/bin/java -version
java version "1.6.0_27"
Which causes the "Unsupported major.minor version 51.0" error.
When we used "/etc/init.d/tomcat7 [stop/start]" to restart Tomcat 7, the problem was solved.
$ ps -ef | grep java
tomcat7 31886 1 80 20:24 ? 00:00:10 /usr/local/java/jdk1.7.0_15/bin/java
$ /usr/local/java/jdk1.7.0_15/bin/java -version
java version "1.7.0_15"
I solved it. I ran:
JAVA_HOME=/usr/lib/jvm/java-7-openjdk-i386
The error is misleading, Unsupported major.minor version 51.0. This gives the impression that version 51 (Java 7) is not supported. And we should use Java 6.
The error should have been:
The current Java version, 50, is unsupported. Use Java version 7 (51:0 and greater) instead.`
Your Java file is compiled with a different version (higher compiler version) than the version (lower runtime version) you are trying to run it with.
It is basic understanding that classes compiled with lower versions are expected to run in the later higher versions. But the opposite (compiled with higher compiler version and trying to run it with lower runtime version) is quite not possible sometimes.
Hence you are shown this error, when trying to execute your program. Unsupported major.minor version x.x
Q: I have created an application in Java 7, but when my users try to
run it they get an Unsupported major.minor version 51.0 error. What
does this mean and what can I do about it?
A: If you compile an application using javac in Java 7, the resulting classfiles will have the 51.0 version number. Versions of
Java prior to 7 do not recognize this number, so your users will have
to upgrade to Java 7 prior to running your application. If you are not
using any Java 7 APIs you can try to compile your application using
javac -target 1.6 to create a 1.6-compatible classfile. If your
application is deployed using webstart you can specify the minimum
version required. For more information, see the docs on Java Web Start
and JNLP here. This issue will go away once we trigger autoupdate to
Java 7 for end-users currently having Java 6 on their desktops. The
timeline for this is not yet determined, we want to give developers
time to work out any issues between their code and JDK 7 first.
(Source: oracle.com.)
Oh Mac OS X I was able to solve this problem by setting the JAVA_HOME variable:
export JAVA_HOME=/Library/Java/JavaVirtualMachines/jdk1.7.0_75.jdk/Contents/Home
First let's get some basics right...
JRE is a component in NetBeans/Eclipse/standalone that is going to provide you with libraries, JVM, Java plugins & Java web start. Note that it does not provide compliers or debuggers.
JDK is the superset of JRE along with compliers and debuggers.
So when you have your default library as a JRE instead of JDK, you are going to have a nice time importing stuff, but it won't compile.
Instead, set your path to JDK (I use NetBeans, and I set them using netbeans.conf in netbeans/etc/netbeans.conf and change the path).
In my case the problem was in the server runtime configuration:
Check the JRE is the version you need:
The project was in version 1.7 and the server JRE was set as 1.6, after changing to the proper java version it's launched fine.
I had the problem whereby I was having to run a Maven compilation on my project from the command line in order to run my unit tests; if I made a change to the test class and let Eclipse automatically recompile it, then I got the "Unsupported major.minor version 51.0" error.
I do have both JDK6 and JDK7 installed, but all my JRE settings were pointing at 1.6, both in the pom and from the project properties page in Eclipse. No amount of Maven Update Project and/or refreshing solved this.
Finally I tried closing the project and re-opening it, and this seemed to fix it! HTH
You have compiled your Java class with JDK 7 and you are trying to run same class on JDK 6 .
Install JDK 7.0.55 and set the Java for Eclipse for JDK 7.0.55.
Build the project with JDK 7.0.55 by configuring on build path JDK 7.0.55.
Set the compiler in Eclipse for JDK 7.0.55 by menu Windows -> Preferences -> Java -> Compiler - choose 1.7.

What version of Java does Cassandra 3 require

The recommended version of Java for Cassandra 2.0 was Java 7. But which version is recommended or required for Cassandra 3 (specifically, version 3.5)?
Some information suggests that Java 7 or Java 8 are required; that is, that Java 7 is still OK:
The Cassandra Wiki says:
Cassandra requires the most stable version of Java 7 or 8
The change log for Cassandra 3.5 does not mention changing the required JRE. It does have a change (CASSANDRA-7028) to "Allow compilation in java 8". But allow is not the same as require.
Cassandra 3.0+ requires Java 8.
The cassandra-env.sh script, used by the cassandra shell script, examines the JVM version and refuses to run if the JVM version is before 1.8.
If you try to run code directly using one of the classes of the cassandra-all.jar using a Java 7 environment you will get a java.lang.UnsupportedClassVersionError complaining of Unsupported major.minor version 52.0.
The META-INF/MANIFEST.MF file in the JAR indicates it was compiled using a Java 8 compiler: Created-By: 1.8.0_45-b14 (Oracle Corporation).
The Datastax announcement about Cassandra 3 says that it requires Java 8.
In conclusion, the Cassandra Wiki is wrong and the Cassandra change log is misleading.

Error: Could not find or load main class org.apache.cassandra.service.CassandraDaemon

I want to try Cassandra. When trying to run Cassandra, writes an error:
Error: Could not find or load main class org.apache.cassandra.service.CassandraDaemon
What's the problem?
Java -version
Java version "1.7.0_67"
Java (TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.7.0_67-b01)
Java HotSpot (TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 24.65-b04, mixed mode)
python --version
Python 2.7.8
You'll get that error when you've downloaded a source distribution of Cassandra but haven't built it or when the CassandraDaemon.class file isn't in your classpath.
For the first problem:
You'll need the JDK 1.7 (which you already have) and ant to build C*.
Navigate to wherever you've extracted cassandra (I'll use ~/cassandra for this explanation) , Run ant and enjoy the awesome.
For the second, if your classpath is setup incorrectly something has gone wrong in the build process or the classpath has been modified. I'd verify that the classpath is what is expected by displaying it in the startup script (the cassandra executable) by adding echo $CLASSPATH near the bottom of the script (in my case it was line 212 for C* 2.1.0).
P.S. On windows you'll need to set CASSANDRA_HOME before being able to run C*.

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