Tutorial

How To Set Up a Minecraft Server on Linux

Published on August 7, 2012
How To Set Up a Minecraft Server on Linux
Not using Ubuntu 12.04?Choose a different version or distribution.
Ubuntu 12.04

Status: Deprecated

This article is deprecated and no longer maintained.

Reason

Ubuntu 12.04 reached end of life (EOL) on April 28, 2017 and no longer receives security patches or updates.

See Instead

This article may still be useful as a reference, but may not follow best practices or work on this or other Ubuntu releases. We strongly recommend using a recent article written for the version of Ubuntu you are using.

If you are currently operating a server running Ubuntu 12.04, we highly recommend upgrading or migrating to a supported version of Ubuntu:

Setting up a Minecraft server on Linux (Ubuntu 12.04) is a fairly easy task on the command line.

When choosing your server, be sure that it has (at a minimum)1GB of RAM, preferably at least 2GB.

The first thing you need to do is to connect to your server through SSH. If you are on a mac, you can open up Terminal, or if you are on a PC, you can connect with PuTTY. Once the command line is opened, login by typing:

ssh username@ipaddress

Enter the password when prompted. Although you can set up the server on the root user, it is not as secure as setting it up under another username. You can check out this tutorial to see how to add users.

Step One—Install the Requirements

Before going further, we should run a quick update on apt-get, the program through which we will download all of the server requirements.

sudo apt-get update

After that, we need to be sure that Java is installed on our server. You can check by typing this command:

 java -version

If you don’t have Java installed, you will get a message that says “java: command not found”. You can, then, download java through apt-get:

sudo apt-get install default-jdk

You also need to supply your server with Screen which will keep your server running if you drop the connection:

sudo apt-get install screen

There is a complete guide on how to install and use screen here.

Install the Minecraft Server

Start off by creating a new directory where you will store the Minecraft files:

mkdir minecraft

Once the directory is created, switch into it:

cd minecraft

Within that directory, download the Minecraft server software:

wget -O minecraft_server.jar https://s3.amazonaws.com/Minecraft.Download/versions/1.7.4/minecraft_server.1.7.4.jar

Since we have installed screen, you can start it running (-S sets the sessions title):

screen -S "Minecraft server"

After the file downloads, you can run it with Java:

java -Xmx1024M -Xms1024M -jar minecraft_server.jar nogui

The launching text should look something like this:

2012-08-06 21:12:52 [INFO] Loading properties
2012-08-06 21:12:52 [WARNING] server.properties does not exist
2012-08-06 21:12:52 [INFO] Generating new properties file
2012-08-06 21:12:52 [INFO] Default game type: SURVIVAL
2012-08-06 21:12:52 [INFO] Generating keypair
2012-08-06 21:12:53 [INFO] Starting Minecraft server on *:25565
2012-08-06 21:12:53 [WARNING] Failed to load operators list: java.io.FileNotFoundException: ./ops.txt (No such file or directory)
2012-08-06 21:12:53 [WARNING] Failed to load white-list: java.io.FileNotFoundException: ./white-list.txt (No such file or directory)
2012-08-06 21:12:53 [INFO] Preparing level "world"
2012-08-06 21:12:53 [INFO] Preparing start region for level 0
2012-08-06 21:12:54 [INFO] Preparing spawn area: 4%
2012-08-06 21:12:55 [INFO] Preparing spawn area: 12%
2012-08-06 21:12:56 [INFO] Preparing spawn area: 20%
2012-08-06 21:12:57 [INFO] Preparing spawn area: 24%
2012-08-06 21:12:58 [INFO] Preparing spawn area: 32%
2012-08-06 21:12:59 [INFO] Preparing spawn area: 36%
2012-08-06 21:13:00 [INFO] Preparing spawn area: 44%
2012-08-06 21:13:01 [INFO] Preparing spawn area: 48%
2012-08-06 21:13:02 [INFO] Preparing spawn area: 52%
2012-08-06 21:13:03 [INFO] Preparing spawn area: 61%
2012-08-06 21:13:04 [INFO] Preparing spawn area: 69%
2012-08-06 21:13:05 [INFO] Preparing spawn area: 77%
2012-08-06 21:13:06 [INFO] Preparing spawn area: 85%
2012-08-06 21:13:07 [INFO] Preparing spawn area: 93%
2012-08-06 21:13:08 [INFO] Done (15.509s)! For help, type "help" or "?"

Your Minecraft server is now all set up. You can exit out of screen by pressing

ctl-a d

To reattach screen, type

screen -R

You can change the settings of your server by opening up the server properties file:

 nano ~/minecraft/server.properties

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thx for the file minecraft_server.jar

Consider updating the tutorial to include the use of screen or tmux.

screen -t “Minecraft server”

java -jar minecraft_server.jar nogui

Issue ctl-a D to detatch the screen and leave it running to reattach use screen -R

This is absolutely super basic. There are good server startup/shutdown scripts here: http://www.minecraftwiki.net/wiki/Tutorials/Server_startup_script

Moisey Uretsky
DigitalOcean Employee
DigitalOcean Employee badge
January 23, 2013

Great suggestion about wrapping it in a screen, we’ll get the article updated for that.

Thanks this was the easiest walk thru and it worked for me on a headless Ubuntu 12.04.1 Server LTS, via SSH from a Linux Mint machine.

Moisey Uretsky
DigitalOcean Employee
DigitalOcean Employee badge
January 26, 2013

Awesome =]

How do you play on your own server? just type in your ip?

I mean, i get how it’s set up and all right now, but how do you play on the world with your friends? and is this worldwide or LAN? I am on ChrUbuntu 12.04.2 LTS. Please reply soon. Thanks! P.S my mc is on 1.4.7 if that makes any difference.

Once your server is created and is running, to play you just open up MineCraft on your home computer and select Multiplayer at the start screen and then connect to your server with your IP address or with domain name if you have pointed a domain to it.

I’ve done this all and everything works but the server keeps saying: “[WARNING] Can’t keep up! Did the system time change, or is the server overloaded?” Even though the server is empty?

@Mees Pepijn van Dijk Do you have enough RAM? Try adding swap.

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