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Troubleshoot common build issues in Azure Spring Apps

Note

The Basic, Standard, and Enterprise plans will be deprecated starting from mid-March, 2025, with a 3 year retirement period. We recommend transitioning to Azure Container Apps. For more information, see the Azure Spring Apps retirement announcement.

The Standard consumption and dedicated plan will be deprecated starting September 30, 2024, with a complete shutdown after six months. We recommend transitioning to Azure Container Apps. For more information, see Migrate Azure Spring Apps Standard consumption and dedicated plan to Azure Container Apps.

This article applies to: ❎ Basic/Standard ✅ Enterprise

This article describes how to troubleshoot build issues with your Azure Spring Apps deployment.

Build exit codes

The Azure Spring Apps Enterprise plan uses Tanzu Buildpacks to transform your application source code into images. For more information, see Tanzu Buildpacks.

When you deploy your app in Azure Spring Apps using the Azure CLI, you see a build log in the Azure CLI console. If the build fails, Azure Spring Apps displays an exit code and error message in the CLI console indicating why the buildpack execution failed during different phases of the buildpack lifecycle.

The following list describes some common exit codes:

  • 20 - All buildpack groups have failed to detect.

    Consider the following possible causes of an exit code of 20:

    • The builder you're using doesn't support the language your project used.

      If you're using the default builder, check the language the default builder supports. For more information, see the Supported APM types section of How to configure APM integration and CA certificates.

      If you're using the custom builder, check whether your custom builder's buildpack supports the language your project used.

    • You're running against the wrong path; for example, your Maven project's pom.xml file isn't in the root path.

      Set BP_MAVEN_POM_FILE to specify the location of the project's pom.xml file.

    • There's something wrong with your application; for example, your .jar file doesn't have a /META-INF/MANIFEST.MF file that contains a Main-Class entry.

  • 51 - Buildpack build error.

    Consider the following possible causes of an exit code of 51:

    • If Azure Spring Apps displays the error message Build failed in stage build with reason OOMKilled in the Azure CLI console, the build failed due to insufficient memory.

      Use the following command to increase memory using the build-memory environment variable:

      az spring app deploy \
          --resource-group <your-resource-group-name> \
          --service <your-Azure-Spring-Apps-name> \
          --name <your-app-name> \
          --build-memory 3Gi
      
    • The build failed because of an application source code error; for example, there's a compilation error in your source code.

      Check the build log to find the root cause.

    • The build failed because of a download dependency error; for example, a network issue caused the Maven dependency download to fail.

    • The build failed because of an unsupported JDK version. For example, the JAR file has been compiled using non-Java LTS versions, which are not supported by the buildpack. For supported versions, see the Deploy Java applications section of How to deploy polyglot apps in the Azure Spring Apps Enterprise plan.

  • 62 - Failed to write image to Azure Container Registry.

    Consider the following possible cause of an exit code of 62:

    • If Azure Spring Apps displays the error message Failed to write image to the following tags in the build log, the build failed because of a network issue.

      Retry to fix the issue.

If your application is a static file or dynamic front-end application served by a web server, see the Common build and deployment errors section of Deploy web static files.

Next steps