Minecraft Bedrock Edition – Ubuntu Dedicated Server Guide

Minecraft Bedrock Edition Logo
Minecraft: Bedrock Edition Logo

Minecraft Bedrock Edition is the version of Minecraft that powers the iPhone / Android versions (formerly Minecraft Pocket Edition), the Xbox / PlayStation / Nintendo Switch editions and the free Windows 10 Minecraft edition.

Mojang has released a dedicated server which is considered to be in alpha testing.  I have found it to be very stable and able to run on a wide variety of hardware.

This script and guide are written to help you get a robust Minecraft Bedrock dedicated server up and running in only a few minutes!

This is the standalone version. The easiest and most problem-free way to run this is using Docker (installed as simply as sudo apt install docker.io): Legendary Minecraft Bedrock Container

I’ve also released a way for Java and Bedrock players to play on the same server using Geyser: Minecraft Java + Bedrock Server Together – Geyser + Floodgate

It’s now possible to convert your worlds between Bedrock and Java versions. Check out my guide on Chunker here for more information.

Features

  • Sets up the official Minecraft Bedrock Server (currently in alpha testing)
  • Fully operational Minecraft Bedrock edition server in a couple of minutes
  • Ubuntu / Debian distributions supported
  • Sets up Minecraft as a system service with option to autostart at boot
  • Automatic backups when server restarts
  • Supports multiple instances — you can run multiple Bedrock servers on the same system
  • Updates automatically to the latest or user-defined version when server is started
  • Easy control of server with start.sh, stop.sh and restart.sh scripts
  • Adds logging with timestamps to “logs” directory
  • Optional scheduled daily restart of server using cron

Requirements

  • A computer with a 64 bit processor (if you are trying to use ARM read my article on the limitations). 32 bit binaries of the official server are not available so it needs to be 64 bit!
  • 1 GB of RAM or higher
  • The only officially supported platform by Microsoft is Ubuntu 22.04 / 20.04 (current LTS, recommended)
  • Other Linux flavors supported by this script as well as long as they use systemd (for the service). The script assumes apt is installed but there are minimal dependencies so you could install these on another distro (that doesn’t have apt present) and use the script normally.

Recommended Gear

Game Editions

Minecraft: Bedrock Edition is the “Windows 10” version of Minecraft as well as the version of Minecraft on the Xbox / Playstation / Switch. The versions of Minecraft for Android and iOS are also the Bedrock edition.

All of these versions support cross-platform play with each other (but not with the Java edition).

Minecraft Bedrock Digital Code
Minecraft Bedrock Digital Code

This is the PC Minecraft for Windows 10 (Bedrock) edition of Minecraft. It is able to play cross-platform with other players on Android / iOS / Playstation / Xbox / Switch. Available as a code that is instantly activated to give you permanent access to the game!

Links: Amazon.com*, Amazon.co.jp*, Amazon.co.uk*, Amazon.de*, Amazon.es*, Amazon.fr*, Amazon.it*

Minecraft Bedrock Playstation
Minecraft Bedrock Playstation

The Sony PlayStation version of Minecraft: Bedrock edition.

Links: Amazon.com*, Amazon.ca*, Amazon.com.au*, Amazon.co.jp*, Amazon.co.uk*, Amazon.de*, Amazon.es*, Amazon.fr*, Amazon.it*, Amazon.nl*, Amazon.se*, Amazon.sg*

Minecraft Bedrock Nintendo Switch
Minecraft Bedrock Nintendo Switch

This is the Nintendo Switch version of Minecraft: Bedrock edition.

Links: Amazon.com*, Amazon.ca*, Amazon.com.au*, Amazon.co.jp*, Amazon.co.uk*, Amazon.de*, Amazon.es*, Amazon.fr*, Amazon.it*, Amazon.nl*, Amazon.pl*, Amazon.se*, Amazon.sg*

Minecraft Bedrock Xbox One
Minecraft Bedrock Xbox One

This is the Microsoft Xbox version of Minecraft: Bedrock edition.

Links: Amazon.com*, Amazon.ca*, Amazon.com.au*, Amazon.co.uk*, Amazon.de*, Amazon.es*, Amazon.fr*, Amazon.it*, Amazon.nl*, Amazon.sg*

Recommended Storage (Solid State Drive)

I strongly recommend a Solid State drive (SSD) for your server. This is because Minecraft is constantly reading/storing chunks to the disk which makes I/O performance very important.

These are much cheaper than they used to be. Here’s a decent 120 GB one (higher capacity options are available) at a very low price:

Kingston A400 SSD
Kingston A400 2.5″ SATA SSD

The Kingston A400 is reliable, widely available around the world, has low power requirements and performs very well. It’s also very affordable. This drive has been benchmarked over 1000 times at Pi Benchmarks and is the #1 most popular SSD among the community!

Links: AliExpress*, Amazon.com*, Amazon.ca*, Amazon.com.au*, Amazon.co.jp*, Amazon.co.uk*, Amazon.de*, Amazon.es*, Amazon.fr*, Amazon.it*, Amazon.nl*, Amazon.pl*, Amazon.se*, Amazon.sg*

If you have a M.2 NVME slot in your motherboard you can go with a high end drive. This will give your server maximum performance even if a large number of players are running around on the server changing blocks and triggering disk writes.

This is the one I have in my machine. These range from 250 GB to 2 TB depending on how big your server might grow:

The Samsung 980 Pro (NVMe) is a professional grade SSD and one of the fastest in the world. The Samsung NVMe drives have been at the top of this category for a long time and are well trusted for both their performance and reliability / long life.

Links: AliExpress*, Amazon.com*, Amazon.ca*, Amazon.com.au*, Amazon.co.jp*, Amazon.co.uk*, Amazon.de*, Amazon.es*, Amazon.fr*, Amazon.it*, Amazon.nl*, Amazon.pl*, Amazon.se*, Amazon.sg*

Computer / CPU / Memory

Almost any PC made in the last few years will be a x86_64 bit computer. If you have an older computer around that isn’t being used then it will most likely have the right CPU and amount of memory (as well as fast storage) to run a basic server.

Throwing a SSD in one of these older computers will provide an excellent server experience for small and larger player counts.

The speed of your storage will make the largest difference. Older HDDs are going to have significantly slower performance than any modern SSD even with all other hardware equal. This is because the Minecraft server is constantly reading/writing chunks of your world as well as updates to it to the disk so this tends to be the bottleneck.

Operating System

I highly recommend using Ubuntu Server to run the Minecraft dedicated server. It is available here.

At the time of writing the current version is Ubuntu Server 20.04. This is a secure and robust operating system and will leave plenty of resources available for the server to run.

The script should run on any Debian based flavor of Linux but since the Minecraft Bedrock server is compiled natively for Ubuntu I recommend sticking with it. If you have a GUI flavor of Ubuntu and a decent PC (>= 2 GB of RAM) the server will work just fine on it.

Note: People have reported in the comments that Ubuntu 16.x is no longer working with the latest official Mojang binaries. Ubuntu 18.04 is the minimum requirement for the latest versions, and 20.04 is recommended!

Installation

Log into your Linux server either using SSH or a mouse and keyboard and paste/type the following command:

curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/TheRemote/MinecraftBedrockServer/master/SetupMinecraft.sh | bash

The script will setup the Minecraft sever and ask you some questions on how to configure it. I’ll explain here what they mean.

The first question will be the installation path. This is the root installation path for ALL servers you will have. If you add additional servers later you should select the exact same installation path. It should always be left as the default (~).

The only exception is if you have something like a completely dedicated disk for the Minecraft server. In that case you should always use the same root path of /mnt/yourdrive or wherever the path is for every new/additional server you install.

“Start Minecraft server at startup automatically (y/n)?” – This will set the Minecraft service to start automatically when your server boots. This is a great option to set up a Minecraft server that is always available.

“Automatically restart and backup server at 4am daily (y/n)?” – This will add a cron job to the server that reboots the server every day at 4am. This is great because every time the server restarts it backs up the server and updates to the latest version. See the “Scheduled Daily Reboots” section below for information on how to customize the time or remove the reboot.

That is it for the setup script. The server will finish configuring and start!

First Run

The server will start up and start displaying output to the console.

[2019-03-30 20:25:12 INFO] Starting Server
[2019-03-30 20:25:12 INFO] Version 1.10.0.7
[2019-03-30 20:25:12 INFO] Level Name: Bedrock level
[2019-03-30 20:25:12 INFO] Game mode: 0 Survival
[2019-03-30 20:25:12 INFO] Difficulty: 1 EASY
[2019-03-30 20:25:20 INFO] IPv4 supported, port: 19132
[2019-03-30 20:25:20 INFO] IPv6 supported, port: 19133
[2019-03-30 20:25:23 INFO] Server started.

Once you see the “Server started” line you will be able to connect from the client.

To add the server to the client open Minecraft and click “Play”. Then at the top of the screen select the “Servers” tab and click “Add Server”.

This will ask you for a Server Name and Server IP Address. For the name you can put anything and for the server IP address put the address of your Linux server. Leave the port as the default 19132. For more information on how to let people from outside your network on go to the “Port Forwarding” section below.

Now choose the server you just added in the list and connect!

Start, Stop and Restart Server

The server can be started, stopped and restarted two different ways. You can use the provided scripts in the Minecraft folder or you can use systemctl. Here are the commands:

cd ~/minecraftbe
./start.sh
./stop.sh
./restart.sh

-OR-

sudo systemctl start minecraftbe
sudo systemctl stop minecraftbe
sudo systemctl restart minecraftbe

Automatic Backups

The server backs up each time it starts. This helps you recover easily if something goes wrong. This system works best if you configured the server to restart daily since it means you will have a backup every day.

To access these backups type:

cd ~/minecraftbe/backups
ls

When a backup is made the filename will be the date and time the backup was taken. If you need to restore a backup it’s very easy. Substitute the timestamp in my example to the backup you want to roll back to. Type:

cd ~/minecraftbe
./stop.sh
rm -rf worlds
tar -xf backups/2019.02.15.22.06.30.tar.gz
./start.sh

Your world has now been restored! It’s a good idea to download these backups off the server periodically just in case the server’s storage fails.

Installing Resource Packs / RTX Support

For instructions on how to install resource packs (including optional RTX support) view my step by step Minecraft Bedrock Dedicated Server Resource Packs guide here.

Scheduled Daily Reboots

The daily reboots are scheduled using cron. It’s very easy to customize the time your server restarts.

To change the time that the server restarts type: crontab -e

This will open a window that will ask you to select a text editor (I find nano to be the easiest) and will show the cronjobs scheduled on the server. The Minecraft one will look like the following:

0 4 * * * /home/ubuntu/minecraftbe/restart.sh
Crontab's syntax layout
Crontab’s syntax layout

There are 5 fields here. The default restart time is set to reboot at 0 minutes of the 4th hour of the day (4 AM). The other 3 fields are left as * to represent every day of every month. Make any desired changes here and press Ctrl+X to exit nano and update the cronjob.

To remove the daily reboot simply delete the line and save.

Reconfigure / Update Scripts

The scripts can always be reconfigured and updated by downloading the latest SetupMinecraft.sh and running the installer again. It will update all of the scripts in the Minecraft directory and reinstall the startup service for you.

Running SetupMinecraft.sh again will also give you a chance to reconfigure options such as the memory dedicated to the server, daily reboots, starting the server on boot, etc.

This will not overwrite your world or any other data so it is safe to run!

Port Forwarding

If everyone on your server is on the same LAN or WiFi network as you then you don’t need to do this. If you want people to connect from outside your local network then you need to set up port forwarding on your router.

The process for this is different for every router so the best thing to do is just look at your router and find the model # and put that in google with port forwarding for easy instructions on how to do it for your specific router.

You want to forward port 19132. The type of connection is both TCP and UDP. On some routers you need to do both a TCP entry and then a second entry as UDP.

Once you do this people will be able to connect to your Minecraft server through your public IP address. This is different than your local IP which is usually a 192.x.x.x or 10.x.x.x. If you don’t know what that is just go to google and type “what’s my ip” and Google will kindly tell you!

Version Override

You can revert to a previous version with the revert.sh script included in your directory like this:

james@jamesgigabyte-linux:~/minecraftbe/james$ ./revert.sh
Set previous version in version_pin.txt: bedrock-server-1.19.10.20.zip

If you have a specific version you would like to run you can also create version_pin.txt yourself like this:

echo "bedrock-server-1.18.33.02.zip" > version_pin.txt

The version hold can be removed by deleting version_pin.txt. This will allow it to update to the latest version again!

Wired vs. Wireless

Going with an ethernet (wired) connection is going to be faster and more reliable. There’s so much wireless traffic and other interference in the air that running your server on WiFi is not recommended.

Even if it is working great 99% of the time it can ruin your experience very quickly if the WiFi drops for a couple of seconds and you get blown up by a creeper!

All that being said, the server works fine on wireless. The script will work fine as is with a wireless connection.

Benchmarking / Testing Storage

If you’re getting poor performance you may want to run my storage benchmark with:

sudo curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/TheRemote/PiBenchmarks/master/Storage.sh | sudo bash

PC results won’t show up on the site yet (it’s meant for Raspberry Pi) but it will run on Linux just fine and give you a score. If you search for the model of your drive on Pi Benchmarks you can compare your score with others and make sure the drive is performing correctly!

Troubleshooting Note – Oracle Virtual Machines

A very common problem people have with the Oracle Virtual Machine tutorials out there that typically show you how to use a free VM is that the VM is much more difficult to configure than just about any other product / offering out there.

It is because there are several steps you need to take to open the ports on the Oracle VM. You need to both:

  • Set the ingress ports (TCP/UDP) in the Virtual Cloud Network (VCN) security list
  • *and* set the ingress ports in a Network Security Group assigned to your instance

Both of these settings are typically required before you will be able to connect to your VM instance. This is purely configuration related and has nothing to do with the script or the Minecraft server itself.

I do not recommend this platform due to the configuration difficulty but the people who have gone through the pain of configuring an Oracle VM have had good experiences with it after that point. Just keep in mind it’s going to be a rough ride through the configuration for most people.

Troubleshooting Note – Hyper-V

There is a weird bug in Hyper-V that breaks UDP connections on the Minecraft server. The fix for this is that you have to use a Generation 1 VM with the Legacy LAN network driver.

Conclusion

The Minecraft Bedrock Edition dedicated server runs much better than previous third party servers in the past that were missing critical features. The performance is very good even on low end hardware. It has never been easier to set up a Minecraft Bedrock server.

If you have any feedback or suggestions let me know in the comment section. A lot of the changes and developments in this script and guide are directly from readers.

Have fun!

Other Resources

For a guide on how to set up resource packs check out my Minecraft Bedrock Resource Pack guide

If you’re trying to run this on the Raspberry Pi check out the Raspberry Pi specific guide here

1,555 thoughts on “Minecraft Bedrock Edition – Ubuntu Dedicated Server Guide”

  1. Avatar for yongnamii

    Hi,

    Today the server is suddenly stucked at “Checking for the latest version of Minecraft Bedrock server …”. Tried a fresh download of the setup but it stucks at “waiting for http”, has anyone experience this?

      1. Avatar for James A. Chambers

        Go ahead and run the latest updates here Matt. If you didn’t get your copy of SetupMinecraft.sh about 10 minutes ago it’s not new enough still.

        The new version doesn’t even use wget anymore (yay!) so if it’s getting stuck it’s for sure not updated. To update it just download SetupMinecraft.sh from GitHub again and then when it asks for the server label if you put in your existing label it will update all your scripts. If you have multiple servers you can just repeat the process and the script will safely update all the servers. Make sure you have backups first but it’s quite safe!

        I had to redo quite a bit to get this working again. It was doing it for me too but only with wget and not with curl. I also added some randomization to the user agent for good measure. Hopefully this is the last time we have to deal with the stuck updates/blocking for a good long while here!

  2. Avatar for Bill

    Hello,

    First off, thank you for this awesome script! Recently my game will not connect to the server because it says it’s out of date. I have my server to reboot nightly and I know in the docs it says your script checks for server updates. However, that appears to not be working. I tried to start over and it looks like I might be getting blocked when using your script to try to update. It just hangs on the below:

    Resolving www.minecraft.net (www.minecraft.net)... 96.17.176.50, 96.17.176.8
    Connecting to www.minecraft.net (www.minecraft.net)|96.17.176.50|:443... connected.
    HTTP request sent, awaiting response...

    I get a similar message when I used the restart script. It’s hanging on checking for updates.

    Any ideas on this one?

    Thanks!

    1. Avatar for James A. Chambers

      Hey Bill,

      Can you completely remove the SetupMinecraft.sh file you have downloaded and download a fresh copy of it from GitHub? There have been a significant amount of changes and this is the only way to make sure you get all of them.

      For sure people have been getting blocked from fetching updates as you suspected. Specifically, Microsoft/Mojang started blocking “robots” on their servers. The script has been updated to account for this and should take care of it for you if you do a completely fresh download of SetupMinecraft.sh from GitHub. Give that a try and let me know if it gets you going, at the very least it should take care of the blocking issue!

      1. Avatar for Bill

        Hi James,

        I’ve download the latest SetupMinecraft.sh and I can see it updated your scripts in my server folder but it still is not updating the server.
        It still gets stuck at Checking for the latest version of Minecraft Bedrock server … when trying to start the server.
        I wonder at this point if my IP address has been blacklisted and I need to wait a day or two before trying this again?

        Thanks!

        1. Avatar for James A. Chambers

          Hey Bill,

          Thanks for checking that for me. It looks like this is not a drill and that they are indeed blocking things again (or their web server is broken in a way that hangs wget).

          I just updated the server to use curl if you want to download the latest SetupMinecraft.sh from GitHub (I just committed it moments ago). Hopefully this makes it difficult enough to block that they stop targeting harmless scripts!

          1. Avatar for Bill

            Hi James,

            I just tried again and everything is working great again. Thanks so much for this awesome script!

            1. Avatar for James A. Chambers

              Hey Bill,

              Welcome back and thanks for confirming! Thanks for also being the first person to let me know something is wrong and humoring me while we initially tried the updates (I hadn’t fixed this very long ago so I wasn’t expecting it to really be back so soon!).

              I did some more permanent fixes this time like switching to curl which is a much more powerful application in general. It’s also required by the Minecraft server as a dependency anyway so this also lets me remove wget from the script entirely. Cheers and take care!

    2. Avatar for yongnamii

      hi, i found a solution, go to the minecraftbe directory and run the server by ./bedrock_server and it started without update!

  3. Avatar for Scott

    James,
    FYI: if you want to add it to the discussion…

    I ran the fixpermissions.sh and it corrected the issue.

  4. Avatar for Scott

    James,
    Ok, I need your HELP! after doing its nightly restate/backup this morning, Minecraft failed to restart.
    getting “There is no screen to be resumed matching sabinnet-mc-s.”

    So, I pulled a fresh/new copy of SetupMinecraft.sh and ran it…same result.
    looked in the Logs ( /opt/minecraft/minecraftbe/sabinnet-mc-s/logs) the latest one said:
    /bin/bash: /opt/minecraft/minecraftbe/sabinnet-mc-s/bedrock_server: Permission denied

    Did I screw up my permissions somehow? How do I fix it? It was working yesterday.
    Sorry, still relatively new to Linux/Ubuntu, but I’m learning.

  5. Avatar for Henrik

    Learned so much from this blog already – big thanks to James and all others contributing!
    I’m looking more into logging (basically helping some younger kids with a slightly safer playground then the open servers), but got a situation where the kids claim “I didn’t do it, the account is def. hacked”. Wanted to shed some light here; is it possible for me to see source IP of an inbound connection? (We do have a whitelist of registered users, but the only thing I now see is that a given user has been signed in, not where they signed in from.

    I don’t have high hopes for the “native” output of bedrock server terminal, but I assume there would be something on Ubuntu Server? Then I could correlate time etc.
    Any pointers on how I could log this would be highly appreciated 🙂

    1. Avatar for James A. Chambers

      Hey Henrik,

      Thanks for the kind words again! I absolutely think I can point you in the right direction at least. I’d just start logging an iptables rule for connections to the server. Here’s an example. You would just change this to be the Minecraft port (presumably 19132 unless you’ve changed it) and set the log prefix to something other than “Foo” like maybe “Minecraft” or something like that. Bedrock also uses UDP extensively which is a connectionless protocol and a little trickier but at the very least this should get when they hit the “ping” port that gives the numbers of players online etc. right before joining.

      You probably don’t need to bother with step 2 as step 1 will make it log connections to the /var/log/messages file when someone connects to the port and that should be everything you need! You may need to line up the join log entries with the iptables entries (which will be by IP) but it will definitely give you the missing IP piece that you don’t have now to provably connect the dots. With this in place you could just tail /var/log/messages or open it with nano /var/log/messages etc. to view all connection timestamps and find out what the rascals are up to. Hopefully that helps!

  6. Avatar for robin

    hi, i had some problem when i installed it. When I setup the Minecraft sever, I input server label, ipv4 and ipv6. After the setup is complete, it identified “Starting Minecraft robin server…
    There is no screen to be resumed matching robin.” Was there any wrong I did?

    1. Avatar for James A. Chambers

      Hey robin,

      Is this your first time ever installing the script? Is this a 32 bit or ARM device by chance? Checking the log files in the logs directory or trying to run the server yourself is usually the best way to check.

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