![]() ![]() My equipment is all capable of gigabit speeds (and I was able to see that on Comcast), so I'm not the bottleneck.Īs far as I can tell, I'm not able to host anything from my internet? I'd love to know if this is intentional, or if I need to do some special configuration. I've only been able to get 100/100, even hooked straight into the box. Secondarily, I'm still not seeing my gigabit speeds ~2 days into the installation. I furthermore, had no luck even just hooking my machine straight into the fiber terminal, nutty as that may be. Just on the off-chance it was my equipment, I proceeded to put my computer into the DMZ and disable my machine's firewall. Normally, I'd host the server, so I went to go open port 26000 UDP on my router (ASUS RT-AC88U), but found no luck seeing my server from the outside world. Unjust ban on the only active DM server, what can be done?īaI server | South American Xonotic server (located in Chile)įull server tutorial start-2-finish with maps & config from live server .I recently had my new connection installed on the 31st, and went to play some Xonotic with some friends. Xonotic server running behind UDP proxy not working Server not visible on the server browser for others or me Bougo Wrote: Here is what the xonotic server launcher and xonotic itself expect as far as filesystem goes: For example, the Arch Linux packager did it like that: ![]() That can be done at runtime or at compile time.Īt compile time, you can use the DP_FS_BASEDIR make variable to make the engine look for the data files in a data subdirectory. You will have to sort that out, or explicitly tell the engine where it should find its data files. Your server failed to launch because the launcher set a working directory which did not contain data files. The working directory is set by the launcher to be either its own directory or its parent, depending on where the server binary is found. In any system, it is always nice to separate default files from personal files, usually you should not touch the "main" data directory, so as to not lose any data with an update for example. In a multi-user system, this allows users to each have their own settings in their home directory while the core data files sit in a root-owned directory somewhere in the system hierarchy. The data directory can be two different locations, which each serve a different purpose in some cases: it can be a directory called "data" which is a subdirectory of the working directory, or it can be a directory called "data" found in $HOME/.xonotic/. Data files in the data directory* (maps, models, etc.) A server.cfg file in the data directory* ![]() A xonotic-linux32-dedicated binary in the same directory or in the parent directory Here is what the xonotic server launcher and xonotic itself expect as far as filesystem goes: I tried installing the full version of Xonotic from ports but that did not remove these errors. I'm not sure what the FS_OpenVirtualFile errors are but it appears to work okay. I ran the server and got the following text: The directory it outputs is "/usr/local/share/xonotic" which is the "root" xonotic folder. I placed a pwd command along with the usual echo error messages. sh to start the server.ĮDIT: It turns out that I need to use the "xonotic-dedicated" binary in /usr/bin/ The working directory matters that's mostly why you normally have to use the. xonotic-linux32-dedicated +serverconfig server.cfg Here's something you can do if you think everything is set up alright: run the server directly using. Try perhaps to add pwd after the cd dirname line and see where the script brings you. I don't know about BSD so I can't tell for sure where the point of failure might be. Server_linux.sh is fairly simple, in your case it only checks if there's an executable file called xonotic-linux32-dedicated (or linu圆4 if uname -m returns x86_64) in the script's directory. Bougo Wrote: First of all, thank you for reading the readme! ![]()
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