Difference between revisions of "Setting up a server"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(→Setting up a Server: fix UDP/TCP confusion) |
|||
Line 46: | Line 46: | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
+ | * See the [[Setting up a server/Debian]] page for more Debian related informatian. | ||
* For more possible commands study the [[Command line]] page. | * For more possible commands study the [[Command line]] page. | ||
− | |||
* This forum thread "[https://forum.minetest.net/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=2870 Illustrated Server Creation Guide]" may be of general interest. | * This forum thread "[https://forum.minetest.net/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=2870 Illustrated Server Creation Guide]" may be of general interest. | ||
* See this forum thread for more information about "[https://forum.minetest.net/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=8924 How to create and maintain a server - Windows]" | * See this forum thread for more information about "[https://forum.minetest.net/viewtopic.php?f=10&t=8924 How to create and maintain a server - Windows]" |
Revision as of 14:03, 9 August 2015
Setting up a Server
- Start your server on your desired port
- Note: It is recommended to leave the port at the default (30000)
- Find out your internal IP of the computer you are running the server on
- Linux: open a terminal and type
ifconfig
and hit enter - Windows: Start → Run … →
cmd.exe
→ipconfig
- Linux: open a terminal and type
- Check the port forwarding settings on your router
- forward your chosen port for UDP (30000 if you left it default) to the internal IP
- In addition, alter any firewalls you may have to pass the traffic at that port
- To see how to run a server, please read the section below
- Let your friends know your external IP
- Add
server_announce = 1
to your minetest.config to announce it to a public server list.
Running a Server
Linux
- Open a terminal.
- Type in
YOUR/MINETEST/DIRECTORY/bin/minetestserver
or just drop the minetestserver executable (located in/Minetest/bin/
) into the terminal (PLEASE READ THE NOTES BELOW!)- If you want to specify a specific game ID, the game ID choices are located in
/Minetest/games/
. Add in--gameid thegameid
to the end of the command. - If you get the error “Multiple worlds are available.”, the world choices are located in
/Minetest/worlds/
. Add in--worldname theWorld
to the end of the command.
- If you want to specify a specific game ID, the game ID choices are located in
- If your server crashes, then look at the
debug.txt
in/Minetest/bin/
- Enjoy running a Minetest server!
For easy use you can create an file named minetestserver.sh, add the lines below and put it in your /Minetest/bin/ folder. To run the server, just run the file in a terminal.
#!/bin/bash -x ./minetestserver --gameid minetest --worldname world
Windows
- Open command prompt by going in the Minetest installation folder, then in the “bin” folder, hold Shift, do a right click on a empty file (not on minetest.exe), click “Open command window here”.
- Type this:
minetest.exe --server
.- If you get the error “Multiple worlds are available.”, use
minetest.exe --server --worldname world_name
instead, whereworld_name
is the name of the world.
- If you get the error “Multiple worlds are available.”, use
- If your server crashes, then look at the
debug.txt
in/Minetest/bin/
- Enjoy running a Minetest server!
If you don't like to start the crashed server, simply start the server out of a batch file which contains the following code:
@echo off :crash minetest.exe --server --worldname world_name goto crash
See also
- See the Setting up a server/Debian page for more Debian related informatian.
- For more possible commands study the Command line page.
- This forum thread "Illustrated Server Creation Guide" may be of general interest.
- See this forum thread for more information about "How to create and maintain a server - Windows"