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Sending commands |
RCON is enabled by default, so you can exec
into the container to
access the Minecraft server console:
docker exec -i mc rcon-cli
Note: The -i
is required for interactive use of rcon-cli.
To run a simple, one-shot command, such as stopping a Minecraft server, pass the command as arguments to rcon-cli
, such as:
docker exec mc rcon-cli stop
The -i
is not needed in this case.
If rcon is disabled you can send commands by passing them as arguments to the packaged mc-send-to-console
script. For example, a player can be op'ed in the container mc
with:
docker exec mc mc-send-to-console op player
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+- container name +- Minecraft commands start here
In order to attach and interact with the Minecraft server, add -it
when starting the container, such as
docker run -d -it -p 25565:25565 --name mc itzg/minecraft-server
With that you can attach and interact at any time using
docker attach mc
and then Control-p Control-q to detach.
For remote access, configure your Docker daemon to use a tcp
socket (such as -H tcp://0.0.0.0:2375
)
and attach from another machine:
docker -H $HOST:2375 attach mc
Unless you're on a home/private LAN, you should enable TLS access.