Proxy your local Minecraft server with a public server using your domain. It's not a Bungeecord or a plugin.
Use frp to connect the local server to the container's port with the public server. Then use mc-router to change the port to connect by domain.
flowchart LR subgraph Public server subgraph Container subgraph frps frps-25566[:25566] frps-25567[:25567] end mc-router <-- example.com --> frps-25566 mc-router <-- sub.example.com --> frps-25567 end end subgraph Local server 2 frps-25567 <---> frpc-2 minecraft-2[Minecraft server] <--> frpc-2[frpc] end subgraph Local server 1 minecraft-1[Minecraft server] <--> frpc-1[frpc] frps-25566 <---> frpc-1 end minecraft-client[Minecraft client] <-- $domain:25565 --> mc-router - Clone this repository.
- Create
.env. - Run
docker compose up -d.
- Download from releases.
- Extract frpc from a downloaded file.
- Create
frpc.ini - Run
frpc -c frpc.ini.
※ The public server address is 203.0.113.0.
ROUTER_MAPPING=example.com=frp:25566,sub.example.com=frp:25567※ frp is the address that means frps container.
[common] server_addr = 203.0.113.0 server_port = 7000 [minecraft] type = tcp local_port = 25565 remote_port = 25566[common] server_addr = 203.0.113.0 server_port = 7000 [minecraft] type = tcp local_port = 25565 remote_port = 25567Default: 0.60.0
frps version to use.
Default: (empty)
frps command options. For example, you can set a token.
Default: 7000
Require
Mapping of address and port. For example: example.com=frp:25565