Setting up a server

This page is a guide, separated into sections, for setting up a Minetest server. It assumes you want to run a server that is publicly facing the Internet, as compared to a LAN server if you want to play with players on the same network.

Choosing Hardware

It's recommended that you use a VPS or dedicated server to host a game server which you want to make publicly available. Residential Internet connections tend to be unreliable and also have less upload speed. You may also not be able to keep a server online 24/7 when hosting from home.

That being said, hosting from home will work fine if you have some hardware you can keep online, and you have a good enough Internet connection. Keep in mind that if you are behind CGNAT, you are unable to host a public server from home at all as it won't be accessible to the wider internet.

Minetest does have a Host Server option in the main menu, which is fine for temporary servers for a couple of friends, but if you want to run a public server you would want to run it dedicated as it can be kept online independent of the client being active.

External and Internal IPs

When hosting from home it is necessary to know both your external and internal IP and understanding the difference between the two. The guide will reference these addresses multiple times later so it is good to know what they are for you.

External IP

Your external IP address is the Internet facing address you have. It is what websites see and what people will need to connect to when joining your server. In order to find your external IP address you can simply search "what is my ip address" on DuckDuckGo and it should show it:

Internal IP

Your internal IP address is the address that your computer has on the local network. It is the address the computer uses when communicating to other computers on the local network as well as the router. See the following instructions for each platform:

Windows:

  1. Open a command prompt: Press Win + X, type cmd.exe and press Enter.
  2. Type ipconfig
  3. Depending on your setup, you may have multiple network connections that show up. What you should focus on is an Ethernet or Wi-Fi connection, depending on how you have your computer connected to the router.

Your internal IP will be the address listed as "IPv4 Address", and should (but may not necessarily) begin with 192.168.X.X.

Linux:

  1. Open a terminal.
  2. Type ip addr
  3. Look for "inet" near "wlan0", "eth0" or something similar in the resulting output. It's usually somewhere within 192.168.0.0/16 but may be in another block.

macOS:

  1. Open a terminal.
  2. Type netstat -nr
  3. Figure it out

Checking for CGNAT

Carrier-grade NAT (CGNAT) is a technique used by some ISPs where many customers will share one single IP address, in order to conserve the amount of IPv4 addresses the ISP owns. As mentioned above this also means that you will be unable to host a server from home without additional steps, as it won't be directly accessible from the wider Internet. So if you are going to be hosting from home you should first check whether you are behind CGNAT.

Then follow the steps for your operating system to run a traceroute:

Windows:

  1. Open a command prompt: Press Win + X, type cmd.exe and press Enter.
  2. Type tracert <external IP>.

Linux:

  1. Open a terminal.
  2. Type traceroute <external IP> (requires traceroute to be installed)

Analysing the traceroute

Whether you are behind CGNAT or not can be determined based on the amount of hops the traceroute will return. If the traceroute returns a single hop and then finishes then you are not behind CGNAT:

traceroute to 78.71.XX.XX (78.71.XX.XX), 30 hops max, 60 byte packets
 1  78-71-XX-XX.example.org (78.71.XX.XX)  0.567 ms  0.643 ms  0.702 ms

However, if there are two or even more hops, or if the traceroute does not complete, then you are most likely behind CGNAT and will not be able to host a publicly available server without extra steps.

If you are behind CGNAT

First of all, try contacting your ISP or check their website. Some ISPs are willing to move you onto a bare IP (may also be referred to as a "public" IP) if requested, by contacting them directly or through a page on their website. If asked for the motivation, say that you want to host a game server.

If they are unwilling to do this, or require you to upgrade to a business plan to provide this service, you will need to rent a VPS/dedicated in the cloud to host your server or to create a tunnel to your home network.

Obtaining a server binary

Linux

Note: If you are going to be running a Minetest server on a non-headless system, using the regular minetest binary with the --server argument works the same as minetestserver. If you are on a headless Linux system without a graphical environment minetestserver is recommended as it is smaller and does not have extra dependencies that are unnecessary for a server.

Usually your Linux distribution of choice will have minetestserver in its official repositories. However this package may be several releases outdated, so obtaining a server binary through other means is to be recommended. This repository by ROllerozxa contains up-to-date prebuilt headless server binaries that should work on any relatively recent Linux distro you would run your server on, built from an automated CI workflow that you can fork if you want to customise the build optioms.

You may also choose to build from source manually, in which case you should specify -DRUN_IN_PLACE=TRUE -DBUILD_CLIENT=FALSE -DBUILD_SERVER=TRUE which will build a minetestserver binary running in place. When built, you can move bin/ and builtin/ to a new folder, or if you're building on a separate machine from the server, transfer them onto the server. See the README.md file for more information about compiling Minetest from source.

There also exist ready made Docker images for minetestserver, such as the Dockerfile in the Minetest source tree or Warr1024's Docker image.

Windows

The regular Windows builds provided on the download page work fine, running it as minetest.exe --server to access the server portion of it.

Running the Server

As of 5.8.0, Minetest no longer ships with a default game meaning you will have to provide your own game to use with the server. You can browse the games on ContentDB and download one to put in the games/ folder for your server.

Linux

  1. Open a terminal.
  2. Navigate to wherever you've put your Minetest server files (referred to as /Minetest/ from now on), and run the server with /bin/minetestserver. (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 --gameidthegameid 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 --worldnametheWorld to the end of the command.
  3. If your server crashes, then look in the debug.txt log file in /Minetest/
  4. Make sure you make your server safe from damage.

For easier server management (and also automatically restarting the server when it crashes) you can create a file named run_server.sh or the like in the /Minetest/ folder with this:

#!/bin/bash

while true
do
    ./bin/minetestserver --gameid minetest --worldname world --terminal
    sleep 2
done

If you're on a headless server you'd want to run the server in some kind of multiplexer like screen. Run screen -h 10000 -S minetest ./run_server.sh, Ctrl+A Ctrl+D to detach, and screen -r to reattach at a later date.

If you're going to be running multiple servers you may want to separate their files between eachother. One good way to do that would be to make a servers/ folder as a sibling to your bin/ folder, make a folder for each server, and use something like this for running the server:

#!/bin/bash

while true
do
    ../../bin/minetestserver --world "world" --config "minetest.conf" --logfile "server.log" --terminal
    sleep 2
done

It will store the server's world, config and log contained within its own folder such that it won't conflict with another server.

Windows

  1. Open command prompt by going in the Minetest installation folder. Then in the "bin" folder, click the blue "File" icon in the top left of the screen. In the drop down menu click "Open Windows Powershell here".
  2. Type this: .\minetest.exe --server.
    • If you get the error "Multiple worlds are available.", use .\minetest.exe --server --worldnameworld_name instead, where world_name is the name of the world.
  3. If your server crashes, then look at the debug.txt in /Minetest/bin/
  4. Make sure you make your server safe from damage.

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

Allowing external players to connect

Firewall

On Linux, you most likely know if you have a firewall installed and configured (e.g. iptables or ufw). Be sure to allow the Minetest server to communicate over UDP on the specified port.

On Windows, the Windows Defender firewall will prompt you whether Minetest should be allowed access. This may even pop up the first time you play singleplayer in the client, and if you did not grant it permission you will need to open the Windows Defender Firewall with Advanced Security and accept it from there.

Port forwarding

If you are self-hosting a server you will usually need to port forward the server in your router for it to be accessible to the outside internet. This isn't necessary for LAN play, as you'll simply provide the internal IP of the server accessible within the local network.

  1. Choose a port to run the server on. The default of 30000 is recommended, and if you host several it is recommended to increment upwards. (e.g. 30001, 30002...)
  2. Login to your router, and port forward UDP on the chosen port for your server computer. Depending on your router the port forwarding page may show you a list of devices connected with their hostname visible, otherwise you will need to input the internal IP of the computer you are hosting the server on.
  3. Alter any computer firewalls you may have to allow traffic to the port you choose.

Server list

Make your server listed in the server list and by setting the following settings in minetest.conf:

  • server_announce = true - makes Minetest announce the server to the server list.
  • server_name - set the value of this to your server's name.
  • server_description - set the value of this to a longer description describing your server.
  • server_address - if you have a domain name for your server, then set this to the domain name.
    • Should only be the domain name (e.g. coolserver.minetest.net, not https://coolserver.minetest.net/woah/). If you do not have a domain name pointed to your server then do not add this setting or write anything for it, or the server list will reject your server.
  • server_url - if you have a website for your server, then set this to the website URL.
  • motd - a message that is sent to the player when they join. Use this to welcome them.
  • Note: You need to restart to make changes in minetest.conf take effect.

Protecting your server

Protecting the Minetest world/server

When setting up a new server, you should consider which protections are needed. This is extremely important for public servers, because you cannot predict who will connect or what they will do on your server.

Common problems include:

  • Accidental or intentional damage to other players' work (griefing).
  • Chat spam (may include swearing or advertisements).
  • Aggression, harassment or other unwanted behaviours between players.
  • Trouble makers who evade bans.
  • Impersonation of well known people within the Minetest community.
  • Bugs, for example caused by mods, which allow a malicious player to execute arbitrary system commands.

Many of these problems can be removed or minimised by advanced planning and awareness:

  • Install a protection mod, such as areas or protectors. These allow players to protect areas, which cannot be changed by other players.
  • Enable rollback by adding enable_rollback_recording = true to minetest.conf. Rollback can tell you which player placed a node, and allows a player's actions to be reverted.
    • NOTE: The engine rollback functionality is very limited and can't roll back griefing caused by mod-made node changes (e.g. spawning a bunch of trees or covering things in water). In addition to rollback, you should also always make regular backups of the map database.
  • Install a mod to help you manage bans, such as xban2.
  • On the other hand, if you are setting up a private server, install a whitelist mod such as whitelist.
  • Create rules for your server and make sure you have enough time (or a team of moderators) to supervise your server and watch for players who breaks your rules.
  • Never grant privileges to a player just because they use a name you recognise. Player names are not reserved between servers, so you should always confirm who the player is.
  • Install and configure a chat filter mod like filter, to prevent swearing and/or sexual chat. This is useful to inform players of the rules rather than actual enforcement, as working around filters is fairly easy.

For more mods useful to server administration, see the Server Moderation and Tools tag on ContentDB. See also the SzUtilPack package which is a modpack by Warr1024 that contains a lot of useful mods for server management such as automatic restarts, pruning players or additional useful chatcommands.

Protecting the host machine

  • Standard advice on Linux/Windows server security applies.
  • On Linux you can add a dedicated user for running the minetest server.
  • Never, ever, disable mod security.
  • Make sure you trust mods you add to secure.trusted_mods

Managing your server

Server Configuration

For a detailed explanation of the server configuration file, see minetest.conf.

You may also want to consider to use a different database backend for your world.

Server Commands

Running /help in-game will show you a list of the built-in engine commands as well as any server commands installed by mods.

Privilege System

See the privileges page for detailed information on the privilege system.

See also