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Clara and I run Minecraft on our home FreeBSD server that is located in a jail which keeps Java and other dependencies contained in one place. Although I haven't yet tested it, the idea is that you can run the server wherever Java is supported, including Linux, NetBSD and possibly other operating systems.



I could not let it go! The good news is that you can also run an Minecraft server on your other favorite OS. This is how I did it. I'm sure there are many more.



Getting Java installed



After you've installed NetBSD and have configured networking and enabled pkgin, you need to get an OpenJDK in order to run Minecraft.



OpenJDK 17 is required for Minecraft 1.17 and later. OpenJDK 16 however, is the most recent version as of July 20,22. To confirm, search:



If you're 16 you can still download current packages by opening the repo file.



and changing the repo URL, in my case 9.0 to 9.0_current



Thank you very much to Ryoon@ for his work on this. He does a tremendous amount of work for the NetBSD community. I feel I owe him a coffee or a beer the next time I'm able visit Japan.



Now we can put it in, along with other useful tools:



Running Minecraft



From here it is possible to run Minecraft is basically the same as running any Java-enabled server. I have all my files in one location:



Then log into my local account and then start:



Now is the time to start!



You'll notice Java throws a system not supported exception, which those of us using NetBSD know all too well. From my testing I've found that you can ignore it:



After you have run the server for the first time, be sure to remember about accepting the EULA.



Create an introduction script



I like to link to minecraft.jar the most recent version of the server



You can then reference it in launch.sh using tmux for the server to remain active after disconnecting. I also prefer to give Minecraft more memory:



Now we're ready to go!



Follow-up



My next step would be creating an appropriate chroot environment for Java and Minecraft like the way I use FreeBSD jails. top-minecraft-servers.info I have an NetBSD chroot exploration guide in the works for many years. I'll clean it up and post it soon.


Website: https://top-minecraft-servers.info/
     
 
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