Book Image

Building Minecraft Server Modifications

By : Cody M. Sommer
Book Image

Building Minecraft Server Modifications

By: Cody M. Sommer

Overview of this book

If you have ever played Minecraft on a public server then the chances are that the server was powered by Bukkit. Bukkit plugins allow a server to be modified in more ways than you can imagine. Learning to program your own server mods will allow you to customize the game to your own liking. Building Minecraft Server Modifications is a complete guide that walks you through the creation of Minecraft server mods. From setting up a server, to testing your newly made plugins, this book teaches you everything you need to know. With the help of this book you can start practising for a career in software development or simply create something awesome to play with your friends. This book walks you through installing your own Minecraft server for you and your friends. Once your server is running, it will aid you in modifying the game by programming Bukkit plugins. You will learn how to program simple plugin features such as player commands and permissions. You will also learn more complex features including listening for events, creating a configurable plugin, and utilizing the Bukkit scheduler. All of this will be accomplished while writing your own server mods. You will become familiar with the most important aspects of the Bukkit API. Additional API features will become a breeze to learn after tackling these more complicated tasks.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Building Minecraft Server Modifications
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Testing your plugin


As you may recall, the purpose of our first plugin was to discover when a plugin is loaded. Issue a reload command by typing the following command:

>reload

You will notice that CraftBukkit will automatically disable and re-enable your plugin as shown in the following screenshot:

This time, you will see the Hello World! message once your plugin is enabled. If exactly one player is online, then it will say hello to that player. Let's observe this by logging onto the server and issuing the reload command from in-game. Open your Minecraft client and connect to your server. From in-game, first issue the following command:

/plugins

You will be given a list of all the plugins that are installed. For now, there is only one plugin given in the following screenshot:

Now that there is one player on the server we can test the plugin by reloading the server. From in-game issue the following command:

/reload

We notice that both in-game and in the console we see the Hello Codisimus...