The following starts a Bedrock Dedicated Server running a default version and exposing the default UDP port:
docker run -d -it -e EULA=TRUE -p 19132:19132/udp itzg/minecraft-bedrock-server
For Minecraft Java Edition you'll need to use this image instead:
EULA
(no default) : must be set toTRUE
to accept the Minecraft End User License AgreementVERSION
(LATEST
) : can be set to a specific server version or the following special values can be used:LATEST
: determines the latest version and can be used to auto-upgrade on container startPREVIOUS
: uses the previously maintained major version. Useful when the mobile app is gradually being upgraded across devices1.11
: the latest version of 1.111.12
: the latest version of 1.121.13
: the latest version of 1.131.14
: the latest version of 1.14
UID
(default derived from/data
owner) : can be set to a specific user ID to run the bedrock server processGID
(default derived from/data
owner) : can be set to a specific group ID to run the bedrock server process
The following environment variables will set the equivalent property in server.properties
, where each is described here.
SERVER_NAME
SERVER_PORT
GAMEMODE
DIFFICULTY
LEVEL_TYPE
ALLOW_CHEATS
MAX_PLAYERS
ONLINE_MODE
WHITE_LIST
VIEW_DISTANCE
TICK_DISTANCE
PLAYER_IDLE_TIMEOUT
MAX_THREADS
LEVEL_NAME
LEVEL_SEED
DEFAULT_PLAYER_PERMISSION_LEVEL
TEXTUREPACK_REQUIRED
For example, to configure a flat, creative server instead of the default use:
docker run -d -it --name bds-flat-creative \
-e EULA=TRUE -e LEVEL_TYPE=flat -e GAMEMODE=creative \
-p 19132:19132/udp itzg/minecraft-bedrock-server
- UDP 19132 : the Bedrock server port.
NOTE that you must append
/udp
when exposing the port, such as-p 19132:19132/udp
/data
: the location where the downloaded server is expanded and ran. Also contains the configuration properties fileserver.properties
When running the container on your LAN, you can find and connect to the dedicated server in the "LAN Games" part of the "Friends" tab, such as:
For more information about managing Bedrock Dedicated Servers in general, check out this Reddit post.
The examples directory contains an example Docker compose file that declares:
- a service running the bedrock server container and exposing UDP port 19132
- a volume to be attached to the service
The service configuration includes some examples of configuring the server properties via environment variables:
environment:
EULA: "TRUE"
GAMEMODE: survival
DIFFICULTY: normal
From with in the examples
directory, you can deploy the composition by using:
docker-compose up -d
You can follow the logs using:
docker-compose logs -f bds
The examples directory contains an example Kubernetes manifest file that declares:
- a peristent volume claim (using default storage class)
- a pod deployment that uses the declared PVC
- a service of type LoadBalancer
The pod deployment includes some examples of configuring the server properties via environment variables:
env:
- name: EULA
value: "TRUE"
- name: GAMEMODE
value: survival
- name: DIFFICULTY
value: normal
The file is deploy-able as-is on most clusters, but has been confirmed on Docker for Desktop and Google Kubernetes Engine:
kubectl apply -f examples/kubernetes.yml
You can follow the logs of the deployment using:
kubectl logs -f deployment/bds