puppet-minecraft
installs and configures your Minecraft or
CraftBukkit server with Puppet!
This is a derivative work of Branan Purvine-Riley's Minecraft module, with improvements including: version selection, CraftBukkit support, a plugin resource, and settings managed via templates. It is released under the original Apache License, Version 2.0.
This module has been tested on Ubuntu Server 12.04.4 with Puppet 3.4.3.
The simplest possible usage is:
include minecraft
This entire class is parameterized (see the minecraft class for details), and can be configured through hiera.
Parameters are available which control how the Minecraft installation behaves:
user
: The user account for the Minecraft servicegroup
: The user group for the Minecraft serviceinstall_dir
: The directory in which Minecraft stores its datasource
: Minecraft (semvar) or CraftBukkit ('recommended', 'beta', or 'dev'), or direct source (URL forwget
)autostart
: Start the service at bootmanage_java
: Manage the JRE packageheap_size
: The maximum Java heap size for the Minecraft service in megabytesheap_start
: The initial Java heap size for the Minecraft service in megabytes
A particular version of Minecraft server can be downloaded by
specifying the source
parameter. This parameter accepts a semantic
version (representing a vanilla Minecraft server), a snapshot version,
or for a CraftBukkit
installation, one of 'recommended', 'beta', or 'dev'. Latest vanilla
version as of this writing is 1.7.5.
Please note that once a JAR file (the server) has been downloaded to
install_dir
, if you want to switch, you will need to manually remove
it so that the wget::fetch
resource can update; this is a good
thing as it means the tags (e.g. "recommended") will not auto-update
your server. This is good because you must beware incompatibilities
among Minecraft and CraftBukkit versions with world files, settings,
etc, so backup and test thoroughly before you update. (At least rolling
back to an old version is easy.)
Speaking of old versions, prior to the release of Minecraft 1.6, the downloads were hosted at a different location, but since these are quite old, this module does not currently support it. Submit a Pull Request if you add support, or make an issue if you want me to do so.
Full configuration of the Minecraft server is supported. Simply specify the parameter with the server setting when declaring the class:
class { 'minecraft':
source => 'dev',
heap_size => 2048,
difficulty => 2,
motd => 'Managed by Puppet!',
ops => [ 'op1', 'op2' ]
}
Hiera configuration can also be done. In YAML:
minecraft::source: 'dev'
minecraft::heap_size: 2048
minecraft::difficulty: 2
minecraft::motd: 'Managed by Puppet, with Hiera!'
minecraft::ops:
- 'op1'
- 'op2'
Note that the server property name will use an underscore instead of a
dash, and may not exactly match the server.properties
name. Also,
refrain from using 'undef' for the server properties, as Puppet will
place 'undef' as a string in the template; instead, use the emptry
string: ''. (It's either this or add a bunch of template logic to
check for an undef value first, for every parameter, do it and Pull
Request if you'd like.)
This module manages the Minecraft player settings through templates. To add players to a particular list, declare an array of them:
class { 'minecraft':
ops => 'me',
banned_players => [ 'griefer', 'badboy' ],
banned_ips => '127.0.0.1', # Don't actually do this
white_list_players => [ 'my_best_friend' ] # Minecraft auto-includes ops
}
Note that when any of these parameters is set to undef, Puppet will not manage the corresponding file, allowing you to manage it via commands in Minecraft. However, if specified, Puppet will manage the file, and overwrite any manual changes on the next application of Puppet. (There is also the "replace" attribute on the Puppet file resource, but this is not what we want because, if the file is being managed, we want changes in the manifest to be updated in the files.)
To enable the whitelist, you must both set it to true in the class, and add players to the whitelist here, as they affect separate templates. Additionally, blacklists (banned IPs/players) is pointless if the whitelist is enabled, and is only shown here concurrently for demonstration purposes.
If manage_java
is true, this module will use
Puppetlabs' Java module
to install the necessary Java Runtime Environment.
CraftBukkit plugins can be installed by using the defined resource
minecraft::plugin
. You must specify the plugin name (lacking the
'.jar' file extension) and the complete URL for the download source.
The Dynmap plugin can be configured like this:
minecraft::plugin { 'dynmap':
source => 'http://dev.bukkit.org/media/files/757/982/dynmap-1.9.1.jar'
}
Or using Hiera like this:
minecraft::plugins:
dynmap:
source: http://dev.bukkit.org/media/files/757/982/dynmap-1.9.1.jar
Once enabled, a web-based map of the server will be available at localhost:8123. James Fryman's nginx module could then be used to proxy the server through map.domain.tld like thus:
nginx::resource::vhost { 'map.domain.tld':
proxy => 'http://localhost:8123',
proxy_set_header => [ 'Host $host' ],
}
Or again in Hiera,
nginx::nginx_vhosts:
map.domain.tld:
proxy: http://localhost:8123
proxy_set_header:
- Host $host
Note that Nginx setup is not within the scope of this module, and is simply provided as a tip.
This package uses
Puppetlabs' stdlib module
for the ensure_resource
function, which it uses on the screen
package (utilized for running the Minecraft server as a background
service). This is currently the safest way to declare a
possibly-conflicting dependency.
Testing of this package occurs on an Ubuntu 12.04.4 LTS machine, using Puppet 3.4.3. This is made easy using vagrant, and my own box.
My contributions as indicated by the git repository's history are Copyright 2014 Andrew Schwartzmeyer, and as stated above, are released under the included license.