hermes-agent/skills/gaming/minecraft-modpack-server/SKILL.md
Teknium 3e823d5b3e feat(skills): gate 7 Linux/macOS-only skills from Windows via platforms frontmatter
Hermes's skill loader (agent/skill_utils.skill_matches_platform) already honors
the 'platforms:' frontmatter field and skip-loads skills whose declared
platform list doesn't include sys.platform. Seven bundled skills are in fact
Linux/macOS-only but never declared it, so they leak into Windows skill
listings and sometimes load with broken instructions.

Audited all 160 SKILL.md files (skills/ + optional-skills/) for Windows-
hostile signals: apt-get/brew/systemd/chmod+x install flows, ptrace/proc
runtime dependencies, bash-only launcher scripts, and package dependencies
with no Windows build. The 7 below fail one or more of those tests in a way
that fundamentally can't be papered over by docs edits:

  minecraft-modpack-server      bash start.sh + chmod +x + apt openjdk
  evaluating-llms-harness       lm-eval-harness bash launcher scripts
  distributed-llm-pretraining-
  torchtitan                    bash multi-node torchrun launcher
  python-debugpy                remote attach relies on /proc ptrace_scope
  pytorch-fsdp                  NCCL backend; Windows path is WSL only
  tensorrt-llm                  NVIDIA TensorRT-LLM has no Windows build
  searxng-search                Docker volume flow assumes POSIX $(pwd)

All seven get 'platforms: [linux, macos]'. On Windows the loader now skips
them silently — no more phantom skill listings, no more mid-task failures
because an Apple-only path was surfaced as a suggestion.

Cross-platform skills that merely CONTAIN signals in examples or
install-instructions (brew install as one of several paths, /tmp/ in a code
snippet, etc.) are NOT touched by this commit. A broader audit that
declares the ~140 cross-platform skills as 'platforms: [linux, macos,
windows]' can follow as a separate change once each has been verified
working on Windows.

The installed user copies under ~/AppData/Local/hermes/skills/ (when they
exist) are also patched so the running session reflects the gating
immediately, but only the in-repo files are committed here.
2026-05-08 08:27:23 -07:00

6.4 KiB

name description tags platforms
minecraft-modpack-server Host modded Minecraft servers (CurseForge, Modrinth).
minecraft
gaming
server
neoforge
forge
modpack
linux
macos

Minecraft Modpack Server Setup

When to use

  • User wants to set up a modded Minecraft server from a server pack zip
  • User needs help with NeoForge/Forge server configuration
  • User asks about Minecraft server performance tuning or backups

Gather User Preferences First

Before starting setup, ask the user for:

  • Server name / MOTD — what should it say in the server list?
  • Seed — specific seed or random?
  • Difficulty — peaceful / easy / normal / hard?
  • Gamemode — survival / creative / adventure?
  • Online mode — true (Mojang auth, legit accounts) or false (LAN/cracked friendly)?
  • Player count — how many players expected? (affects RAM & view distance tuning)
  • RAM allocation — or let agent decide based on mod count & available RAM?
  • View distance / simulation distance — or let agent pick based on player count & hardware?
  • PvP — on or off?
  • Whitelist — open server or whitelist only?
  • Backups — want automated backups? How often?

Use sensible defaults if the user doesn't care, but always ask before generating the config.

Steps

1. Download & Inspect the Pack

mkdir -p ~/minecraft-server
cd ~/minecraft-server
wget -O serverpack.zip "<URL>"
unzip -o serverpack.zip -d server
ls server/

Look for: startserver.sh, installer jar (neoforge/forge), user_jvm_args.txt, mods/ folder. Check the script to determine: mod loader type, version, and required Java version.

2. Install Java

  • Minecraft 1.21+ → Java 21: sudo apt install openjdk-21-jre-headless
  • Minecraft 1.18-1.20 → Java 17: sudo apt install openjdk-17-jre-headless
  • Minecraft 1.16 and below → Java 8: sudo apt install openjdk-8-jre-headless
  • Verify: java -version

3. Install the Mod Loader

Most server packs include an install script. Use the INSTALL_ONLY env var to install without launching:

cd ~/minecraft-server/server
ATM10_INSTALL_ONLY=true bash startserver.sh
# Or for generic Forge packs:
# java -jar forge-*-installer.jar --installServer

This downloads libraries, patches the server jar, etc.

4. Accept EULA

echo "eula=true" > ~/minecraft-server/server/eula.txt

5. Configure server.properties

Key settings for modded/LAN:

motd=\u00a7b\u00a7lServer Name \u00a7r\u00a78| \u00a7aModpack Name
server-port=25565
online-mode=true          # false for LAN without Mojang auth
enforce-secure-profile=true  # match online-mode
difficulty=hard            # most modpacks balance around hard
allow-flight=true          # REQUIRED for modded (flying mounts/items)
spawn-protection=0         # let everyone build at spawn
max-tick-time=180000       # modded needs longer tick timeout
enable-command-block=true

Performance settings (scale to hardware):

# 2 players, beefy machine:
view-distance=16
simulation-distance=10

# 4-6 players, moderate machine:
view-distance=10
simulation-distance=6

# 8+ players or weaker hardware:
view-distance=8
simulation-distance=4

6. Tune JVM Args (user_jvm_args.txt)

Scale RAM to player count and mod count. Rule of thumb for modded:

  • 100-200 mods: 6-12GB
  • 200-350+ mods: 12-24GB
  • Leave at least 8GB free for the OS/other tasks
-Xms12G
-Xmx24G
-XX:+UseG1GC
-XX:+ParallelRefProcEnabled
-XX:MaxGCPauseMillis=200
-XX:+UnlockExperimentalVMOptions
-XX:+DisableExplicitGC
-XX:+AlwaysPreTouch
-XX:G1NewSizePercent=30
-XX:G1MaxNewSizePercent=40
-XX:G1HeapRegionSize=8M
-XX:G1ReservePercent=20
-XX:G1HeapWastePercent=5
-XX:G1MixedGCCountTarget=4
-XX:InitiatingHeapOccupancyPercent=15
-XX:G1MixedGCLiveThresholdPercent=90
-XX:G1RSetUpdatingPauseTimePercent=5
-XX:SurvivorRatio=32
-XX:+PerfDisableSharedMem
-XX:MaxTenuringThreshold=1

7. Open Firewall

sudo ufw allow 25565/tcp comment "Minecraft Server"

Check with: sudo ufw status | grep 25565

8. Create Launch Script

cat > ~/start-minecraft.sh << 'EOF'
#!/bin/bash
cd ~/minecraft-server/server
java @user_jvm_args.txt @libraries/net/neoforged/neoforge/<VERSION>/unix_args.txt nogui
EOF
chmod +x ~/start-minecraft.sh

Note: For Forge (not NeoForge), the args file path differs. Check startserver.sh for the exact path.

9. Set Up Automated Backups

Create backup script:

cat > ~/minecraft-server/backup.sh << 'SCRIPT'
#!/bin/bash
SERVER_DIR="$HOME/minecraft-server/server"
BACKUP_DIR="$HOME/minecraft-server/backups"
WORLD_DIR="$SERVER_DIR/world"
MAX_BACKUPS=24
mkdir -p "$BACKUP_DIR"
[ ! -d "$WORLD_DIR" ] && echo "[BACKUP] No world folder" && exit 0
TIMESTAMP=$(date +%Y-%m-%d_%H-%M-%S)
BACKUP_FILE="$BACKUP_DIR/world_${TIMESTAMP}.tar.gz"
echo "[BACKUP] Starting at $(date)"
tar -czf "$BACKUP_FILE" -C "$SERVER_DIR" world
SIZE=$(du -h "$BACKUP_FILE" | cut -f1)
echo "[BACKUP] Saved: $BACKUP_FILE ($SIZE)"
BACKUP_COUNT=$(ls -1t "$BACKUP_DIR"/world_*.tar.gz 2>/dev/null | wc -l)
if [ "$BACKUP_COUNT" -gt "$MAX_BACKUPS" ]; then
    REMOVE=$((BACKUP_COUNT - MAX_BACKUPS))
    ls -1t "$BACKUP_DIR"/world_*.tar.gz | tail -n "$REMOVE" | xargs rm -f
    echo "[BACKUP] Pruned $REMOVE old backup(s)"
fi
echo "[BACKUP] Done at $(date)"
SCRIPT
chmod +x ~/minecraft-server/backup.sh

Add hourly cron:

(crontab -l 2>/dev/null | grep -v "minecraft/backup.sh"; echo "0 * * * * $HOME/minecraft-server/backup.sh >> $HOME/minecraft-server/backups/backup.log 2>&1") | crontab -

Pitfalls

  • ALWAYS set allow-flight=true for modded — mods with jetpacks/flight will kick players otherwise
  • max-tick-time=180000 or higher — modded servers often have long ticks during worldgen
  • First startup is SLOW (several minutes for big packs) — don't panic
  • "Can't keep up!" warnings on first launch are normal, settles after initial chunk gen
  • If online-mode=false, set enforce-secure-profile=false too or clients get rejected
  • The pack's startserver.sh often has an auto-restart loop — make a clean launch script without it
  • Delete the world/ folder to regenerate with a new seed
  • Some packs have env vars to control behavior (e.g., ATM10 uses ATM10_JAVA, ATM10_RESTART, ATM10_INSTALL_ONLY)

Verification

  • pgrep -fa neoforge or pgrep -fa minecraft to check if running
  • Check logs: tail -f ~/minecraft-server/server/logs/latest.log
  • Look for "Done (Xs)!" in the log = server is ready
  • Test connection: player adds server IP in Multiplayer