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Getting Started

This page covers how to install and set up a minimal configuration of Velocity.

Installing Java

Velocity is written in Java, so if you do not already have Java installed, you will need to install it before you continue. Velocity requires Java 17 or newer. See our Java installation guide for detailed instructions.

Downloading Velocity

Head over to the downloads page to get the latest version of Velocity. We recommend getting the latest stable version. After downloading Velocity, move the JAR file to a dedicated folder for just the proxy or upload it to your server.

Launching Velocity for the first time

Once you have downloaded Velocity, we will launch it for the first time to generate the configuration file, velocity.toml. You can use the start script created to launch Velocity once you're done configuring Velocity.

Launching Velocity under Windows

Create a start.bat with the following contents in the same directory where you intend to place the proxy files.

start.bat
@echo off
java -Xms1G -Xmx1G -XX:+UseG1GC -XX:G1HeapRegionSize=4M -XX:+UnlockExperimentalVMOptions -XX:+ParallelRefProcEnabled -XX:+AlwaysPreTouch -jar velocity.jar
pause
tip

Make sure to change the velocity.jar to the name of the Velocity JAR that you downloaded, or rename the Velocity JAR to velocity.jar.

Once saved, double-click the start.bat file. If it worked, you should now receive a console similar to the output in the next section.

Launching Velocity under macOS or Linux

Create a start.sh with the following contents in the same directory where you intend to place the proxy files. You may do this using a file transfer client, or using a text editor running on the host.

start.sh
#!/bin/sh

java -Xms1G -Xmx1G -XX:+UseG1GC -XX:G1HeapRegionSize=4M -XX:+UnlockExperimentalVMOptions -XX:+ParallelRefProcEnabled -XX:+AlwaysPreTouch -XX:MaxInlineLevel=15 -jar velocity*.jar

Once saved, open a terminal (or log into the machine) if you haven't already, navigate to the directory where you have placed the Velocity JAR file and the start.sh file. Then run chmod +x start.sh and then ./start.sh. If it worked, you should now receive a console similar to the output in the next section.

After launch

Here's a sample of what you'll see once we've started the proxy:

[05:41:13 INFO]: Booting up Velocity 3.3.0-SNAPSHOT (git-74c932e5-b363)...
[05:41:13 INFO]: Loading localizations...
[05:41:13 INFO]: Connections will use epoll channels, libdeflate (Linux aarch64) compression, OpenSSL (Linux aarch64) ciphers
[05:41:13 INFO]: Loading plugins...
[05:41:13 INFO]: Loaded 0 plugins
[05:41:13 INFO]: Listening on /[0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0%0]:25565
[05:41:13 INFO]: Done (0.36s)!

Velocity has launched, and you are now ready to configure the proxy completely. Go ahead and type end at the console and press enter. The proxy will shut down:

> end
[05:42:10 INFO]: Shutting down the proxy...
[05:42:10 INFO]: Closing endpoint /0.0.0.0:25565

If you used the Windows batch script from earlier, the window will ask you to press a key. You can either press a key or close the command window.

Configuring your servers

We now need to configure each server to accept connections from the proxy.

Velocity is a highly configurable proxy. While most users will not need to change everything in the config, there are tons of options covered on the configuration reference page along with an explanation on how each option works. However, in this section we will do the bare minimum to get the proxy up and running.

Open the velocity.toml file in a text editor and search for the [servers] section. This section specifies the servers that Velocity can connect to. Here's what the [servers] section will look like initially:

velocity.toml
[servers]
# Configure your servers here. Each key represents the server's name, and the value
# represents the IP address of the server to connect to.
lobby = "127.0.0.1:30066"
factions = "127.0.0.1:30067"
minigames = "127.0.0.1:30068"

# In what order we should try servers when a player logs in or is kicked from a server.
try = [
"lobby",
"factions"
]

On the left side, you will specify a name for the server (for example, lobby) and on right is a string indicating the IP address and port for the server. You will now need to add your servers to the list. You can change the list of servers as needed.

The try setting is special. It is a list of servers Velocity should try to connect the player to when the player first logs onto the proxy or gets kicked from a server. If you decided to change the name of the lobby server, then you should replace lobby in this list with the name you chose for the first server the player should log into first.

caution

The following setup is generic and is intended to apply to any Minecraft server. This setup is not only not ergonomic (players will lack skins, proper UUIDs, and all connections will appear to come from the proxy) but also dangerously insecure. After you place your servers in offline mode, you must follow the "Player Information Forwarding" and "Securing Your Servers" topics to complete your setup.

Open the server.properties file for each of your servers and set the online-mode setting to false. This allows Velocity to connect to your server. Once you're done, restart your server. While Velocity is now ready for use, you will almost certainly want to secure your servers and configure player information forwarding.