/mineflayer

Create Minecraft bots with a powerful, stable, and high level JavaScript API.

Primary LanguageJavaScriptMIT LicenseMIT

Mineflayer

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Create Minecraft bots with a powerful, stable, and high level JavaScript API, also usable from Python.

First time using Node.js? You may want to start with the tutorial. Know Python? Checkout some Python examples and try out Mineflayer on Google Colab.

Features

  • Supports Minecraft 1.8 to 1.20.1 (1.8, 1.9, 1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 1.13, 1.14, 1.15, 1.16, 1.17, 1.18, 1.19 and 1.20)
  • Entity knowledge and tracking.
  • Block knowledge. You can query the world around you. Milliseconds to find any block.
  • Physics and movement - handle all bounding boxes
  • Attacking entities and using vehicles.
  • Inventory management.
  • Crafting, chests, dispensers, enchantment tables.
  • Digging and building.
  • Miscellaneous stuff such as knowing your health and whether it is raining.
  • Activating blocks and using items.
  • Chat.

Roadmap

Checkout this page to see what our current projects are.

Installation

First install Node.js >= 18 from nodejs.org then:

npm install mineflayer

To update mineflayer (or any Node.js) package and its dependencies, use npm update --depth 9999

Documentation

link description
tutorial Begin with Node.js and mineflayer
FAQ.md Got a question ? go there first
api.md
unstable_api.md
The full API reference
history.md The changelog for mineflayer
examples/ Checkout all the mineflayer examples

Contribute

Please read CONTRIBUTING.md and prismarine-contribute

Usage

Videos

A tutorial video explaining the basic set up process for a bot can be found here.

If you want to learn more, more video tutorials are there, and the corresponding source codes for those bots is there.

tutorial 1 tutorial 2 tutorial 3 tutorial 4

Getting Started

Without a version specified, the version of the server will be guessed automatically. Without auth specified, the mojang auth style will be guessed.

Echo Example

const mineflayer = require('mineflayer')

const bot = mineflayer.createBot({
  host: 'localhost', // minecraft server ip
  username: 'Bot', // username or email, switch if you want to change accounts
  auth: 'microsoft' // for offline mode servers, you can set this to 'offline'
  // port: 25565,                // only set if you need a port that isn't 25565
  // version: false,             // only set if you need a specific version or snapshot (ie: "1.8.9" or "1.16.5"), otherwise it's set automatically
  // password: '12345678'        // set if you want to use password-based auth (may be unreliable). If specified, the `username` must be an email
})

bot.on('chat', (username, message) => {
  if (username === bot.username) return
  bot.chat(message)
})

// Log errors and kick reasons:
bot.on('kicked', console.log)
bot.on('error', console.log)

If auth is set to microsoft, you will be prompted to login to microsoft.com with a code in your browser. After signing in on your browser, the bot will automatically obtain and cache authentication tokens in the local file system so you don't have to sign-in again. To switch the account, update the supplied username. By default, cached tokens will be stored in your user's .minecraft folder. For more information on these options and others, see node-minecraft-protocol's API doc.

Connecting to a Realm

To join a Realm that your Minecraft account has been invited to, you can pass a realms object with a selector function like below.

const client = mineflayer.createBot({
  username: 'email@example.com', // minecraft username
  realms: {
    // This function is called with an array of Realms the account can join. It should return the one it wants to join.
    pickRealm: (realms) => realms[0]
  },
  auth: 'microsoft'
})

See what your bot is doing

Thanks to the prismarine-viewer project, it's possible to display in a browser window what your bot is doing. Just run npm install prismarine-viewer and add this to your bot:

const { mineflayer: mineflayerViewer } = require('prismarine-viewer')
bot.once('spawn', () => {
  mineflayerViewer(bot, { port: 3007, firstPerson: true }) // port is the minecraft server port, if first person is false, you get a bird's-eye view
})

And you'll get a live view looking like this:

viewer

More Examples

example description
viewer Display your bot world view in the browser
pathfinder Make your bot go to any location automatically
chest Use chests, furnaces, dispensers, enchantment tables
digger Learn how to create a simple bot that is capable of digging blocks
discord Connect a discord bot with a mineflayer bot
jumper Learn how to move, jump, ride vehicles, attack nearby entities
ansi Display your bot's chat with all of the chat colors shown in your terminal
guard Make a bot guard a defined area from nearby mobs
multiple-from-file Add a text file with accounts and have them all login

And many more in the examples folder.

Modules

A lot of the active development is happening inside of small npm packages which are used by mineflayer.

The Node Way™

"When applications are done well, they are just the really application-specific, brackish residue that can't be so easily abstracted away. All the nice, reusable components sublimate away onto github and npm where everybody can collaborate to advance the commons." — substack from "how I write modules"

Modules

These are the main modules that make up mineflayer:

module description
minecraft-protocol Parse and serialize minecraft packets, plus authentication and encryption.
minecraft-data Language independent module providing minecraft data for minecraft clients, servers and libraries.
prismarine-physics Provide the physics engine for minecraft entities
prismarine-chunk A class to hold chunk data for Minecraft
node-vec3 3d vector math with robust unit tests
prismarine-block Represent a minecraft block with its associated data
prismarine-chat A parser for a minecraft chat message (extracted from mineflayer)
node-yggdrasil Node.js library to interact with Mojang's authentication system, known as Yggdrasil
prismarine-world The core implementation of worlds for prismarine
prismarine-windows Represent minecraft windows
prismarine-item Represent a minecraft item with its associated data
prismarine-nbt An NBT parser for node-minecraft-protocol
prismarine-recipe Represent minecraft recipes
prismarine-biome Represent a minecraft biome with its associated data
prismarine-entity Represent a minecraft entity

Debug

You can enable some protocol debugging output using DEBUG environment variable:

DEBUG="minecraft-protocol" node [...]

On windows :

set DEBUG=minecraft-protocol
node your_script.js

Third Party Plugins

Mineflayer is pluggable; anyone can create a plugin that adds an even higher level API on top of Mineflayer.

The most updated and useful are :

  • pathfinder - advanced A* pathfinding with a lot of configurable features
  • prismarine-viewer - simple web chunk viewer
  • web-inventory - web based inventory viewer
  • statemachine - A state machine API for more complex bot behaviors
  • Armor Manager - automatic armor management
  • Dashboard - Frontend dashboard for mineflayer bot
  • PVP - Easy API for basic PVP and PVE.
  • Auto Eat - Automatic eating of food.
  • Auto Crystal - Automatic placing & breaking of end crystals.
  • Tool - A utility for automatic tool/weapon selection with a high level API.
  • Hawkeye - A utility for using auto-aim with bows.
  • GUI - Interact with nested GUI windows using async/await
  • Projectile - Get the required launch angle for projectiles
  • Movement - Smooth and realistic player movement, best suited for PvP
  • Collect Block - Quick and simple block collection API.

But also check out :

  • radar - web based radar interface using canvas and socket.io. YouTube Demo
  • auto-auth - chat-based bot authentication
  • Bloodhound - determine who and what is responsible for damage to another entity
  • tps - get the current tps (processed tps)
  • panorama - take Panorama Images of your world
  • player-death-event - emit player death event in Mineflayer.

Projects Using Mineflayer

Testing

Testing everything

Simply run: npm test

Testing specific version

Run npm run mocha_test -- -g <version>, where <version> is a minecraft version like 1.12, 1.15.2...

Testing specific test

Run npm run mocha_test -- -g <test_name>, where <test_name> is a name of the test like bed, useChests, rayTrace...

Example

npm run mocha_test -- -g "1.18.1.*BlockFinder" to run the block finder test for 1.18.1

License

MIT