Regarding Crucible, I've just started testing it. Performance has never been an issue apart from generating new chunks (likely due to the rather weak hardware), but we've never had too many machines/chunkloaders/things eating up performance, anyway. Likely some more smaller ones, that I've forgotten by now.Our record was around 20-25 dirt blocks, which can easily be removed within 1 minute or 2. This occured maybe every few hours and really is more funny than disturbing. For some weird reason, random dirt blocks would spawn in the air near players.IndustrialCraft² Forge Hammers and Cable Cutters can be used infinitely.I've sticked to the second last version, 57, however, due to a reason I sadly don't remember.īugs we've encountered are an annoyance, but not too major: Personal experiences with Thermos and CrucibleĪfter hosting several Thermos servers (usually between 80 and 160 mods, about 10-15 partly self-coded plugins) for me and my friends (up to 10 people at a time) to play on, I'd say that Thermos is indeed a stable software, at least for my use case. If you insist on staying on such a version, follow Mojang's guide to patching the vulnerability manually.Ĭrucible has been patched to fix the vulnerability within only 4 days. It is generally a bad idea to use any pre-1.18.1 server software that has not been patched against the CVE-2021-44228 vulnerability.Īny server software released prior to is generally vulnerable to this remote control exploit. While some of them might be genuinely improved versions, it is generally not recommended to use any of them, as potential "optimizations" are a good way to break things, especially when combining mod and plugin support. In Short: Mohist is accused of breaking the Bukkit API and is de facto replacing the files of the very popular plugin EssentialsX with their own ones, albeit only after the user confirms to do so.Īpart from these two, there are probably hundreds of other forks of Thermos. There is also the fork "Mohist", but there appear to be major reasons against using that ( Source 1, Source 2). There is, however, a promising newer project/fork still receiving updates to the day of writing: Crucible MCPC/MCPC+ -> Cauldron -> KCauldron -> Thermos There have been way too many forks and forks of forks (and so on) of MCPC+ to name them all, but (in regards to 1.7.10) the arguably most important steps were: Initially, md-5 created the Spigot based MCPC/MCPC+ around back in 2013, which first allowed to combine plugin and mod support. Forge servers WITH plugin support (Thermos-like) This guide focuses on Forge servers that also support Bukkit plugins. Setting up a Forge server which does not need to support Bukkit plugins, is a fairly easy progress. A good overview of them can be found here. There are major differences between Forge servers with and without support of Bukkit plugins. This guide assumes that you have concrete reasons to stay on Minecraft 1.7.10, such as specific mods not available for newer versions, and are aware of potential risks of using very outdated versions, as well as the benefits of using newer versions. If you find anything inaccurate or know something that seems like it belongs here, you're welcome to open an issue or create a pull request! Finding the best server software to use Īs getting an overview of such an old version can be quite exhausting and confusing, this guide aims to provide you with information, links, and tips regarding Minecraft 1.7.10 modding and server hosting. While very most active modders have moved on to newer versions, some efforts of the community still go into support for 1.7.10 servers, mods, plugins. It is, however, still one of the Minecraft versions with the broadest mod support and many modpacks have been and are still being created in 1.7.10. It's been some time since the release of Minecraft 1.7.10. Modded servers in Minecraft 1.7.10 in 2022
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