Justsolved a problem similar to this. If an 11g database is configured for case sensitive passwords, but you're trying to connect using a 10g client, the 10g client will send the password all in upper case to the database, hence an invalid password when the password you typed in is clearly correct. 3Answers. You could use SQL to figure out the date, and then it will always be in the correct format: First of all, make sure your mysql field data type is relevant (it should be 'date' not time (), text, varchar etc.) import groovy.time.* def dateTime= new Date ().format ('yyyy/MM/dd') testRunner.testCase.testSteps ["Properties Itlooks like hibernate is trying to convert datatype as wildfly is using newer version of hibernate Generated sql which works fine when I run directly on oracle: UncategorizedSQLException(String task, String sql, SQLException ex) Constructor for UncategorizedSQLException. org.springframework.jdbc, class: UncategorizedSQLException Skip navigation links Exception thrown when we can't classify an SQLException into one of our generic data access exceptions. Author: Rod Johnson, Juergen Hoeller See .

jdbc exception on hibernate data access sqlexception for sql