This Minecraft Java server plugin is designed to allow other client libraries to control the server it is running on. These client libraries can be written in other programming languages thus allowing for interoperability between the Java plugin ecosystem and other languages. The plugin is design to be run on Paper Minecraft servers (alternatively Spigot servers).
This plugin is heavily inspired by RaspberryJuice (and its client library MCPI) and attempts a more modern approach for communication between server and client that also works for more modern versions of Minecraft.
This plugin uses Protocol Buffers and the gRPC library and protocols to communicate with clients written in other programming languages and is itself written in Kotlin.
- Download Paper or another Minecraft server that implements its API (alternatively Spigot)
- Download the compiled and bundled jar depending on the table in versions (but probably latest)
- Put the
mcpq-<version>.jarplugin in the server'spluginsfolder:server │ paper-<mcversion>.jar └───plugins │ mcpq-<version>.jar │ ... - Choose and install a supported client library, for example, Python
- You're done!
| Major (Protocol) | Minor (Plugin) | Paper | Spigot | Minecraft Compatible | Release (Plugin Download) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 0 | ✅ | ✅ | 1.18.2 - 1.21.4 | mcpq-1.0.jar |
| 2 | 0 | ✅1 | ✅1 | 1.20.1+ | mcpq-2.0.jar |
| 2 | 1 | ✅ | ❌ | 1.20.1+ | mcpq-2.1.jar |
Version Notes:
1: Limited output for blocking commands
- The plugin's major version reflects the version number of the protobuf protocol version and thus which types of communication is possible with the server.
- The minor version is incremented with patches and additional functionality of this plugin.
- The plugin is compatible with certain Minecraft versions depending on the type and version of API the plugin uses.
- E.g. the plugin
mcpq-2.0.jarwould require Minecraft Version 1.20.1 or newer for both Paper and Spigot (Spigot API)
- E.g. the plugin
TLDR; if you use Paper, then use a plugin that is build against Paper API (not Spigot compatible)
Originally the plugin was built against the Spigot/Bukkit API, which meant that Spigot as well as all forks, like Paper, were automatically supported. However, Paper decided to hard fork Spigot, which means that starting from Minecraft version 1.21.4 and onwards Paper will no longer be a fork of Spigot and thus the Paper API will slowly diverge from the Spigot/Bukkit API.
For us this means the following:
- The main branch will be built against the Paper API and will no longer be compatible with Spigot!
- A separate main-spigot branch will be maintained for Spigot compatibility.
- Provisionally, support for Spigot will remain in place for major releases and essential bug fixes.
This setup allows us to use the more powerful Paper API for plugin versions that are built against it, so if you are using Paper use a plugin that is build against that API instead!
TLDR; download the newest version of the plugin that supports your Minecraft version and your server (see table above) and choose a client version that supports that version (or older)
A plugin should be compatible with older client versions as backwards compatibility should be kept, which is enabled by the protobuf protocol. (Breaking changes of the protocol are recorded here)
E.g., a client build against protocol v1 should also be able to communicate wtih a plugin built against protocol v2
However, using newer client versions with older plugin versions will very likely not work and is not supported.
E.g., a client build against protocol v2 is not compatible with a plugin built against protocol v1
A client library allows for communication with the server plugin. Due to its design gRPC allows for implementations in a large number of programming languages.
The following official client implementations exist:
- Python: mcpq-python
If you implement your own client for the protobuf interface, please let me know so that I can add a link to this list!
The plugin comes with a config file that will be generated/read from plugins/mcpq/config.yml in which the following can be configured:
- host: localhost - hostname or ip address from which connections to the plugin are accepted. The default
localhostdoes only allow connections from the same device the server is running on, while0.0.0.0would allow connections from anywhere. - port: 1789 - the port on which a MCPQ client can connect to the plugin
- debug: false - whether to print additional debug information especially for gRPC
Before building make sure to download the correct version of the protobuf protocol version,
which is integrated at src/main/proto as a git submodule, using one of the two methods below.
You can checkout the version of the protocol that you want to build for.
When cloning the repository, either clone it with:
# clone the repository and all its submodules
git clone --recurse-submodules https://github.com/mcpq/mcpq-pluginor, if you already cloned the repository:
# update and clone into the repository all submodules
git submodule update --init --recursiveTo build the plugin use ./gradlew build or use the build target with the gradle plugin for IntelliJ IDEA (Community), which I also recommend for development.
The final plugin with all dependencies included will be a bundled jar at build/libs/mcpq-<version>.jar.
Note: The intent behind the chosen license, is to allow the licensed software to be used (as is) in any type of project, even commercial or closed-source ones. However, changes or modifications to the licensed software itself must be shared via the same license openly. Checkout this blog for an in-depth explanation.