Skip to content

Gargron/docker-minecraft

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

23 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

docker-minecraft

A nice and easy way to get a Minecraft server up and running using docker. For help on getting started with docker see the official getting started guide. For more information on Minecraft and check out it's website.

Building docker-minecraft

Running this will build you a docker image with the latest version of both docker-minecraft and Minecraft itself.

git clone https://github.com/overshard/docker-minecraft
cd docker-minecraft
sudo docker.io build -t overshard/minecraft .

Running docker-minecraft

Running the first time will set your port to a static port of your choice so that you can easily map a proxy to. If this is the only thing running on your system you can map the port to 25565 and no proxy is needed. i.e. -p=25565:25565 Also be sure your mounted directory on your host machine is already created before running mkdir -p /mnt/minecraft.

sudo docker.io run -d=true -p=25565:25565 -v=/mnt/minecraft:/data overshard/minecraft /start

From now on when you start/stop docker-minecraft you should use the container id with the following commands. To get your container id, after you initial run type sudo docker.io ps and it will show up on the left side followed by the image name which is overshard/minecraft:latest.

sudo docker.io start <container_id>
sudo docker.io stop <container_id>

Notes on the run command

  • -v is the volume you are mounting -v=host_dir:docker_dir
  • overshard/minecraft is simply what I called my docker build of this image
  • -d=true allows this to run cleanly as a daemon, remove for debugging
  • -p is the port it connects to, -p=host_port:docker_port

About

An easy way to get a Minecraft server up and running using docker.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Shell 100.0%