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780

answers:

1

Hi I am trying to put up a small webapp but I am getting above error. Below is my code

HttpClient httpclient = new DefaultHttpClient();
HttpPost httppost = new HttpPost("SomeURL"); // Using a URL local to my machine
// after setting nameValuePair and setting it on httppost
httppost.setEntity(new UrlEncodedFormEntity(nvps, HTTP.UTF_8));

// This is where I am getting the above mentioned exception
HttpResponse response = httpclient.execute(httppost);

I am using httpclient-4.0-beta2.jar and httpcore-4.0.1.jar. It looks like BasicHttpContext is getting conflicted with some other jars in my app, but I couldn't figure it out. Any clue will be appreciated.

+2  A: 

It looks like you have a jar file with an old/newer version of BasicHttpContext. If there was a direct conflict, you'd receive a 'ClassNotFoundException'. ClassLoaders are typically jerks about this kind of thing. In this case, the class exists however does not have the method that another library (I believe it's httpclient that's invoking the Context) was compiled against.

Malaxeur
Yes it looks like that my httpclient is for JDK1.5 and httpcore is for JDK1.3 . I tried to get httpcore for JDK1.5 but couldn't find any and using lower version of httpclient throws many more errors.
Ravi Gupta
When I tried to call the constructor like this HttpContext localContext = new BasicHttpContext();it says :- No match was found for constructor () in type org.apache.http.protocol.BasicHttpContextIts surely a conflict with an existing jar, I am inching towards rootcause and fix.
Ravi Gupta
http://hc.apache.org/httpcomponents-core/httpcore/apidocs/org/apache/http/protocol/BasicHttpContext.htmlLooks like if you replace httpcore 4.0 with httpcore 4.1 you should be fine.
Malaxeur
Why would the minimum JDK for a library be relevant, Ravi?
Robert Grant