Install TigerVNC -
$ sudo apt install tigervnc-standalone-server
Configure VNC Server by running
Please use this guide instead, this one was written in a hurry and I forgot I had the older one.
~~Basically, you'll want to start with the MCP 1.12 release (temporarily at http://www.modcoderpack.com/files/mcp940.zip ), and then modify it to work with 1.12.2. This is actually quite simple. First, you need to edit conf/version.cfg and set both versions to 1.12.2. That on its own is not enough, but it's a critical step. Then you need to grab new SRG mappings. Normally you'd get that through the !srg command, but MCPBot doesn't have it for some versions. Instead, you can get it through forge's maven. (normally it's also on the export site but not for 1.12.2). The link is http://files.minecraftforge.net/maven/de/oceanlabs/mcp/mcp/1.12.2/mcp-1.12.2-srg.zip . To set that up, first delete the conf/patches folder (otherwise patches will be merged, breaking things), and then unzip the contents of that ZIP into conf, overwriting files as pr
It's possible to use create an MCP installation for versions of Minecraft where there hasn't been a full MCP release. It takes a little bit of manual setup, but the end result is highly useful.
Download and extract the most recent MCP build from http://www.modcoderpack.com/. (Currently, the latest build is http://www.modcoderpack.com/files/mcp940.zip)
Edit version.cfg
in the conf
folder, and change ClientVersion
and ServerVersion
to the version you want (for instance, 1.12.2).
Download the SRG zip for the version you want; these can generally be found at http://mcpbot.bspk.rs/mcp/<version>/mcp-<version>-srg.zip
(for example, http://mcpbot.bspk.rs/mcp/1.11.2/mcp-1.11.2-srg.zip) or at http://files.minecraftforge.net/maven/de/oceanlabs/mcp/mcp/<version>/mcp-<version>-srg.zip
(for example, http://files.minecraftforge.net/maven/de/oceanlabs/mcp/mcp/1.12.2/mcp-1.12.2-srg.zip). (For 1.12.1 and 1.12.2, only the minecraftforge link works)
Extract that zip into the MCP conf
folder, over
Minecraft mods, especially mods which change the client, are by and large written with Forge. If you visit their website, you'll be greeted abruptly by a mysterious message at the top of an SMF forum, with no clear path towards actually... making a mod. I'm documenting here the steps I went through to get started, in the hopes of helping the next person have an easier time of it.
I'll be using Scala for this guide, but it should be fairly easy to adapt these instructions to any JVM language (e.g. clojure or if you're feeling masochistic, Java). I'm also developing on OS X, so some of the commands will be a little different if you're on Linux or Windows. I'm assuming you have some proficiency with your operating system, so I won't go into details about how to adapt those commands to your system.
Minecraft doesn't have an official mod API (despite early [promises](http://notch.t
#!/bin/sh | |
# | |
# msys2-sshd-setup.sh — configure sshd on MSYS2 and run it as a Windows service | |
# | |
# Please report issues and/or improvements to Sam Hocevar <[email protected]> | |
# | |
# Prerequisites: | |
# — MSYS2 itself: http://sourceforge.net/projects/msys2/ | |
# — admin tools: pacman -S openssh cygrunsrv mingw-w64-x86_64-editrights | |
# |
#!/usr/bin/env python | |
# -*- mode: python, coding: utf-8 -*- | |
# | |
# This incredible piece of code makes git a bit Polish, a bit Western Ukrainian, | |
# пше прошу пана | |
# Joke is based on fact that 'git' is 'пше' in qwerty/йцукен layouts | |
# | |
# (c) 2013 Alexander Solovyov under terms of WTFPL | |
import sys |
#!/bin/bash | |
# Bash shell script for generating self-signed certs. Run this in a folder, as it | |
# generates a few files. Large portions of this script were taken from the | |
# following artcile: | |
# | |
# http://usrportage.de/archives/919-Batch-generating-SSL-certificates.html | |
# | |
# Additional alterations by: Brad Landers | |
# Date: 2012-01-27 |
urlencode() { | |
# urlencode <string> | |
old_lc_collate=$LC_COLLATE | |
LC_COLLATE=C | |
local length="${#1}" | |
for (( i = 0; i < length; i++ )); do | |
local c="${1:$i:1}" | |
case $c in |