Setting up a server/Debian
These instructions have been tested in Debian Jessie (“Testing” as of January 2015) which includes a minetest-server
package.
A simple Minetest server can be started in any Debian (or derivative distribution, like Ubuntu or Linux Mint) that has the minetest
package by going to its “Server” tab, however such a game only remains available for the duration of the host's playing session.
This guide is aimed at providing a more permanent, minimal server environment setup without a graphical desktop environment.
Installation and initial preparation
Commands prefixed with $ are to be run with limited privileges, whereas commands prefixed with # should be used with administrator privileges (usually using sudo
).
Preparing a Debian 7 virtual machine (optional)
If you wish to install Minetest in its own dedicated environment, it's an interesting option to do so on a KVM host, as a dedicated virtual machine.
This requires previous installation and configuration of KVM and the virtinst package on your host system. You can also configure a network bridge so your LAN will have direct access to the server on the same subnet.
The following command will prepare a virtual machine named "dungeon" in an existing KVM host:
sudo virt-install -n dungeon -r 1024 --disk path=/var/lib/libvirt/images/dungeon.img,bus=virtio,size=10 -l http://ftp.ca.debian.org/debian/dists/wheezy/main/installer-i386/ --accelerate -b br0,model=virtio --connect=qemu:///system --vnc --noautoconsole -v
Once installed, you can access the console via VNC.
Installing the Minetest server program
Install the minetest-server
package:
# apt-get install minetest-server
The current Debian package in Jessie does not automatically setup the Minetest server to start as a service. It can run under the root
user but it may be preferrable to create a user to run it:
# adduser minetest
Since version 0.4.10+repack-3 a manual configuration of Debian's minetest-server package is no longer required. Please check out the section about systemd and sysV-init below.
Before setting up automatic startup at boot, consider manually running the server to determine the best command line arguments.
Manually starting the server
The server can be started manually by invoking its command:
$ minetestserver --info
The last few lines of terminal output should be similar to this:
03:33:25: INFO[main]: Server: Loading environment metadata 03:33:25: INFO[main]: Server: Loading players 03:33:25: INFO[main]: Starting server on port 30000... 03:33:25: ACTION[main]: .__ __ __ 03:33:25: ACTION[main]: _____ |__| ____ _____/ |_ ____ _______/ |_ 03:33:25: ACTION[main]: / \| |/ \_/ __ \ __\/ __ \ / ___/\ __\ 03:33:25: ACTION[main]: | Y Y \ | | \ ___/| | \ ___/ \___ \ | | 03:33:25: ACTION[main]: |__|_| /__|___| /\___ >__| \___ >____ > |__| 03:33:25: ACTION[main]: \/ \/ \/ \/ \/ 03:33:25: ACTION[main]: World at [/home/minetest/.minetest/worlds/world] 03:33:25: ACTION[main]: Server for gameid="minetest" listening on port 30000. 03:33:25: INFO[ServerThread]: Server creating detached inventory "creative" 03:33:28: INFO[ServerThread]: ServerMap: SQLite3 database opened
Manually stopping the server
To stop the server, press Ctrl + C. Avoid killing it unless necessary, since that may cause world corruption.
The last few lines of terminal output should be similar to this:
03:34:52: INFO: sigint_handler(): Ctrl-C pressed, shutting down. 03:34:52: INFO[main]: Dedicated server quitting 03:34:52: INFO[main]: Server destructing 03:34:52: INFO[main]: Server: Saving players 03:34:52: INFO[main]: Server: Saving environment metadata 03:34:52: INFO[main]: Server: Stopping and waiting threads 03:34:52: INFO[main]: Server: Threads stopped 03:34:52: INFO[main]: ServerMap: Saved map to /home/minetest/.minetest/worlds/world 03:34:52: INFO[main]: RollbackManager::~RollbackManager() 03:34:52: INFO[main]: RollbackManager::flush() 03:34:52: INFO[main]: BanManager: saving to /home/minetest/.minetest/worlds/world/ipban.txt 03:34:52: INFO[main]: Server: Deinitializing scripting
Setup automatic startup at boot
With a boot-time scheduled command (only needed for version 0.4.10+repack-3 and below)
IMPORTANT: this manual setup of automatic minetest server at boot is not necessary since 0.4.10+repack-3. This improvement is available when installing the package from Debian experimental repositories at the time of this writing.
Once you're satisfied with command line arguments and having tested the server works, you can setup automatic startup at boot:
- Login as the user previously created. This can be a non-privileged user.
- Add the
minetestserver
command as determined after testing with manual server startup tocrontab
- Invoke the
crontab
editor:$ crontab -e
- Add your command to be executed at reboot to the very end of the file, for example:
@reboot /usr/games/minetestserver --info --worldname MyWorld
- Invoke the
- Save the file (Ctrl-X if using the
nano
editor)
Running the Minetest server as a systemd service or sysV-init daemon
Since version 0.4.10+repack-3 the Debian minetest-server package automatically creates a system-wide, unprivileged user called Debian-minetest. The home directory of this user is /var/games/minetest-server. You can do all the configuration in /etc/minetest/minetest.conf. All log files are written to /var/log/minetest.
systemd
Start the server with
# systemctl start minetest-server
Stop the server with
# systemctl stop minetest-server
You can disable the server on boot with
# systemctl disable minetest-server
You can start multiple servers with different configurations by using systemd's template unit feature.
# systemctl start minetest-server@pvp.service
Provided that you also saved the configuration file for this server in /etc/minetest/pvp.conf
, the server will now use this second configuration and log everything to /var/log/minetest/pvp.log
.
Simply replace pvp
after @ with your desired name.
sysV-init
If systemd is not your default init system and you still prefer to use the old sysV-init style configuration, you can use the service command to start or stop your server.
# service minetest-server start
or:
#service minetest-server stop
Further information
- For a detailed explanation of the server configuration file, see the minetest.conf page.
- You may also want to consider to use a different database backend for your world.
- See the Server commands page for a list of useful commands.
- Also see Item strings for the itemstrings for use with the
/give
and/giveme
commands. - See the Privileges page for detailed information on the privilege system.
- You may want to study this One-line script for installing/compiling Minetest Git, for Debian / Ubuntu / Mint
A few tips
- The
.minetest
directory contains game data (worlds, config, debug.txt
). - File structure with the folders Minetest adds after some usage as client and server, as well as the positions (…) that costum made content goes could look like this.
minetest/ ├── bin/ ├── builtin/ ├── cache/ │ ├── media/ │ └── tmp/ ├── client/ │ ├── serverlist/ │ └── shaders/ │ ├── … ├── doc/ ├── fonts/ ├── games/ │ ├── minetest_game/ │ ├── minimal/ │ └── … (installed extra games) ├── locale/ (lots of language folders) ├── mods/ │ └── … (installed extra mods and modpacks) ├── textures/ │ ├── base/ │ │ └── pack/ │ └── … (installed extra texturepacks) └── worlds/ └── … (saved worlds. Some with exclusive world mods)