19 KiB
AzerothCore Startup Scripts
A comprehensive suite of scripts for managing AzerothCore server instances with advanced session management, automatic restart capabilities, and production-ready service management.
📋 Table of Contents
- Overview
- Components
- Quick Start
- Configuration
- Detailed Usage
- Multiple Realms Setup
- Service Management
- Troubleshooting
🎯 Overview
The AzerothCore startup scripts provide multiple approaches to running server instances:
- Development/Testing: Simple execution for debugging and development
- Production with Restarts: Automatic restart on crashes with crash detection
- Background Services: Production-ready service management with PM2 or systemd
- Session Management: Interactive console access via tmux/screen
All scripts are integrated into the acore.sh
dashboard for easy access.
📦 Automatic Deployment
Important: When you compile AzerothCore using the acore dashboard (./acore.sh compiler build
), all startup scripts are automatically copied from apps/startup-scripts/src/
to your bin/
folder. This means:
- ✅ Portable Deployment: You can copy the entire
bin/
folder to different servers - ✅ Self-Contained: All restart and service management tools travel with your binaries
- ✅ No Additional Setup: Scripts work immediately after deployment
- ✅ Production Ready: Deploy to production servers without needing the full source code
This makes it easy to deploy your compiled binaries along with the management scripts to production environments where you may not have the full AzerothCore source code.
🔧 Components
Core Scripts
run-engine
: Advanced script with session management and configuration prioritysimple-restarter
: Wrapper around starter with restart functionality (legacy compatibility)starter
: Basic binary execution with optional GDB supportservice-manager.sh
: Production service management with PM2/systemd
Configuration
conf.sh.dist
: Default configuration templateconf.sh
: User configuration (create from .dist)gdb.conf
: GDB debugging configuration
Examples
restarter-auth.sh
: Auth server restart examplerestarter-world.sh
: World server restart examplestarter-auth.sh
: Auth server basic start examplestarter-world.sh
: World server basic start example
🚀 Quick Start
1. Basic Server Start (Development)
# Start authserver directly
./starter /path/to/bin authserver
# Start worldserver with config
./starter /path/to/bin worldserver "" /path/to/worldserver.conf
2. Start with Auto-Restart
# Using simple-restarter (legacy)
./simple-restarter /path/to/bin authserver
# Using run-engine (recommended)
./run-engine restart authserver --bin-path /path/to/bin
3. Production Service Management
# Create and start a service
./service-manager.sh create auth authserver --bin-path /path/to/bin
# List all services
./service-manager.sh list
# Stop a service
./service-manager.sh stop auth
4. Using acore.sh Dashboard
# Interactive dashboard
./acore.sh
# Direct commands
./acore.sh run-authserver # Start authserver with restart
./acore.sh run-worldserver # Start worldserver with restart
./acore.sh service-manager # Access service manager
⚙️ Configuration
Configuration Priority (Highest to Lowest)
conf.sh
- User configuration file- Command line arguments - Runtime parameters
- Environment variables -
RUN_ENGINE_*
variables conf.sh.dist
- Default configuration
Creating Configuration
# Copy default configuration
cp scripts/conf.sh.dist scripts/conf.sh
# Edit your configuration
nano scripts/conf.sh
Key Configuration Options
# Binary settings
export BINPATH="/path/to/azerothcore/bin"
export SERVERBIN="worldserver" # or "authserver"
export CONFIG="/path/to/worldserver.conf"
# Session management
export SESSION_MANAGER="tmux" # none|auto|tmux|screen
export SESSION_NAME="ac-world"
# Interactive mode control
export AC_DISABLE_INTERACTIVE="0" # Set to 1 to disable interactive prompts (useful for non-interactive services)
# Debugging
export GDB_ENABLED="1" # 0 or 1
export GDB="/path/to/gdb.conf"
# Logging
export LOGS_PATH="/path/to/logs"
export CRASHES_PATH="/path/to/crashes"
export LOG_PREFIX_NAME="realm1"
📖 Detailed Usage
1. Run Engine
The run-engine
is the most advanced script with multiple operation modes:
Basic Execution
# Start server once
./run-engine start worldserver --bin-path /path/to/bin
# Start with configuration file
./run-engine start worldserver --config ./conf-world.sh
# Start with specific server config
./run-engine start worldserver --server-config /path/to/worldserver.conf
Restart Mode
# Automatic restart on crash
./run-engine restart worldserver --bin-path /path/to/bin
# Restart with session management
./run-engine restart worldserver --session-manager tmux
Session Management
# Start in tmux session
./run-engine start worldserver --session-manager tmux
# Attach to existing session
tmux attach-session -t worldserver
# Start in screen session
./run-engine start worldserver --session-manager screen
# Attach to screen session
screen -r worldserver
Configuration Options
./run-engine restart worldserver \
--bin-path /path/to/bin \
--server-config /path/to/worldserver.conf \
--session-manager tmux \
--gdb-enabled 1 \
--logs-path /path/to/logs \
--crashes-path /path/to/crashes
2. Simple Restarter
Legacy-compatible wrapper with restart functionality:
# Basic restart
./simple-restarter /path/to/bin worldserver
# With full parameters
./simple-restarter \
/path/to/bin \
worldserver \
./gdb.conf \
/path/to/worldserver.conf \
/path/to/system.log \
/path/to/system.err \
1 \
/path/to/crashes
Parameters:
- Binary path (required)
- Binary name (required)
- GDB configuration file (optional)
- Server configuration file (optional)
- System log file (optional)
- System error file (optional)
- GDB enabled flag (0/1, optional)
- Crashes directory path (optional)
3. Starter
Basic execution script without restart functionality:
# Simple start
./starter /path/to/bin worldserver
# With GDB debugging
./starter /path/to/bin worldserver ./gdb.conf /path/to/worldserver.conf "" "" 1
4. Service Manager
Production-ready service management:
Creating Services
# Auto-detect provider (PM2 or systemd)
./service-manager.sh create auth authserver --bin-path /path/to/bin
# Force PM2
./service-manager.sh create world worldserver --provider pm2 --bin-path /path/to/bin
# Force systemd
./service-manager.sh create world worldserver --provider systemd --bin-path /path/to/bin
# Create service with restart policy
./service-manager.sh create world worldserver --bin-path /path/to/bin --restart-policy always
Restart Policies
Services support two restart policies:
on-failure
(default): Restart only on crashes or errors (exit code != 0, only works with PM2 or systemd without tmux/screen)always
: Restart on any exit, including clean shutdown (exit code 0)
Important: When using --restart-policy always
, the in-game command server shutdown X
will behave like server restart X
- the service will automatically restart after shutdown. Only the shutdown message differs from a restart message.
# Service that restarts only on crashes (default behavior)
./service-manager.sh create auth authserver --bin-path /path/to/bin --restart-policy on-failure
# Service that always restarts (even on manual shutdown)
./service-manager.sh create world worldserver --bin-path /path/to/bin --restart-policy always
# Update existing service restart policy
./service-manager.sh update worldserver --restart-policy always
Service Operations
# Start/stop services
./service-manager.sh start auth
./service-manager.sh stop world
./service-manager.sh restart auth
# View logs
./service-manager.sh logs world
./service-manager.sh logs world --follow
# Attach to console (interactive)
./service-manager.sh attach world
# List services
./service-manager.sh list
./service-manager.sh list pm2
./service-manager.sh list systemd
# Delete service
./service-manager.sh delete auth
Health and Console Commands
Use these commands to programmatically check service health and interact with the console (used by CI workflows):
# Check if service is currently running (exit 0 if running)
./service-manager.sh is-running world
# Print current uptime in seconds (fails if not running)
./service-manager.sh uptime-seconds world
# Wait until uptime >= 10s (optional timeout 240s)
./service-manager.sh wait-uptime world 10 240
# Send a console command (uses pm2 send or tmux/screen)
./service-manager.sh send world "server info"
# Show provider, configs and run-engine settings
./service-manager.sh show-config world
Notes:
- For
send
, PM2 provider usespm2 send
with the process ID; systemd provider requires a session manager (tmux/screen). If no attachable session is configured, the command fails. wait-uptime
fails with a non-zero exit code if the service does not reach the requested uptime within the timeout window.
Service Configuration
# Update service settings
./service-manager.sh update world --session-manager screen --gdb-enabled 1
# Edit configuration
./service-manager.sh edit world
# Restore missing services from registry
./service-manager.sh restore
🌍 Multiple Realms Setup
Method 1: Using Service Manager (Recommended)
# Create multiple world server instances with different restart policies
./service-manager.sh create world1 worldserver \
--bin-path /path/to/bin \
--server-config /path/to/worldserver-realm1.conf \
--restart-policy on-failure
./service-manager.sh create world2 worldserver \
--bin-path /path/to/bin \
--server-config /path/to/worldserver-realm2.conf \
--restart-policy always
# Single auth server for all realms (always restart for stability)
./service-manager.sh create auth authserver \
--bin-path /path/to/bin \
--server-config /path/to/authserver.conf \
--restart-policy always
Method 2: Using Run Engine with Different Configurations
Create separate configuration files for each realm:
conf-realm1.sh:
export BINPATH="/path/to/bin"
export SERVERBIN="worldserver"
export CONFIG="/path/to/worldserver-realm1.conf"
export SESSION_NAME="ac-realm1"
export LOG_PREFIX_NAME="realm1"
export LOGS_PATH="/path/to/logs/realm1"
conf-realm2.sh:
export BINPATH="/path/to/bin"
export SERVERBIN="worldserver"
export CONFIG="/path/to/worldserver-realm2.conf"
export SESSION_NAME="ac-realm2"
export LOG_PREFIX_NAME="realm2"
export LOGS_PATH="/path/to/logs/realm2"
Start each realm:
./run-engine restart worldserver --config ./conf-realm1.sh
./run-engine restart worldserver --config ./conf-realm2.sh
Method 3: Using Examples with Custom Configurations
Copy and modify the example scripts:
# Copy examples
cp examples/restarter-world.sh restarter-realm1.sh
cp examples/restarter-world.sh restarter-realm2.sh
# Edit each script to point to different configuration files
# Then run:
./restarter-realm1.sh
./restarter-realm2.sh
🛠️ Service Management
Service Registry and Persistence
The service manager includes a comprehensive registry system that tracks all created services and enables automatic restoration:
Service Registry Features
- Automatic Tracking: All services are automatically registered when created
- Cross-Reboot Persistence: PM2 services are configured with startup persistence
- Service Restoration: Missing services can be detected and restored from registry
- Migration Support: Legacy service configurations can be migrated to the new format
Using the Registry
# Check for missing services and restore them
./service-manager.sh restore
# List all registered services (includes status)
./service-manager.sh list
# Services are automatically added to registry on creation
./service-manager.sh create auth authserver --bin-path /path/to/bin
Custom Configuration Directories
You can customize where service configurations and PM2/systemd files are stored:
# Set custom directories
export AC_SERVICE_CONFIG_DIR="/path/to/your/project/services"
# Now all service operations will use these custom directories
./service-manager.sh create auth authserver --bin-path /path/to/bin
This is particularly useful for:
- Version Control: Keep service configurations in your project repository
- Multiple Projects: Separate service configurations per project
- Team Collaboration: Share service setups across development teams
Migration from Legacy Format
If you have existing services in the old format, use the migration script:
# Migrate existing registry to new format
./migrate-registry.sh
# The script will:
# - Detect old format automatically
# - Create a backup of the old registry
# - Convert to new format with proper tracking
# - Preserve all existing service information
PM2 Services
When using PM2 as the service provider:
Automatic PM2 Persistence: The service manager automatically configures PM2 for persistence across reboots by:
- Running
pm2 startup
to set up the startup script - Running
pm2 save
after each service creation/modification - This ensures your services automatically start when the system reboots
NOTE: pm2 cannot run tmux/screen sessions, but you can always use the attach
command to connect to the service console because pm2 supports interactive mode.
Environment Variables
The startup scripts recognize several environment variables for configuration and runtime behavior:
Configuration Directory Variables
AC_SERVICE_CONFIG_DIR
: Override the default configuration directory for services registry and configurations- Default:
${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-$HOME/.config}/azerothcore/services
- Used for storing service registry and run-engine configurations
- Default:
Service Detection Variables
-
AC_LAUNCHED_BY_PM2
: Set to1
when launched by PM2 (automatically set by service-manager)- Disables the use of the
unbuffer
command for output capture - Enables non-interactive mode to prevent prompts
- More robust than relying on PM2's internal variables
- Disables the use of the
-
AC_DISABLE_INTERACTIVE
: Controls interactive mode (0=enabled, 1=disabled)- Automatically set based on execution context
- Prevents AzerothCore from showing interactive prompts in service environments
Configuration Variables
RUN_ENGINE_*
: See Configuration section for complete listSERVICE_MODE
: Set totrue
to enable service-specific behaviorSESSION_MANAGER
: Override session manager choice (tmux, screen, none, auto)
Systemd Services
When using systemd as the service provider:
# Systemd commands
systemctl --user status acore-auth # Check status
systemctl --user logs acore-auth # View logs
systemctl --user restart acore-auth # Restart
systemctl --user enable acore-auth # Enable auto-start
# For system services (requires sudo)
sudo systemctl status acore-auth
sudo systemctl enable acore-auth
Enhanced systemd Integration:
- Automatic Service Type: When using session managers (tmux/screen), services are automatically configured with
Type=forking
for proper daemon behavior - Smart ExecStop: Services with session managers get automatic
ExecStop
commands to properly terminate tmux/screen sessions when stopping the service - Non-Interactive Mode: Services without session managers automatically set
AC_DISABLE_INTERACTIVE=1
to prevent hanging on prompts
Session Management in Services
Services can be configured with session managers for interactive access:
# Create service with tmux
./service-manager.sh create world worldserver \
--bin-path /path/to/bin \
--session-manager tmux
# Attach to the session
./service-manager.sh attach world
# or directly:
tmux attach-session -t worldserver
🎮 Integration with acore.sh Dashboard
The startup scripts are fully integrated into the AzerothCore dashboard:
Direct Commands
# Run servers with simple restart (development/testing)
./acore.sh run-worldserver # Option 11 or 'rw'
./acore.sh run-authserver # Option 12 or 'ra'
# Access service manager (production)
./acore.sh service-manager # Option 15 or 'sm'
# Examples:
./acore.sh rw # Quick worldserver start
./acore.sh ra # Quick authserver start
./acore.sh sm create auth authserver --bin-path /path/to/bin
What Happens Behind the Scenes
- run-worldserver/run-authserver: Calls
simple-restarter
with appropriate binary - service-manager: Provides full access to the service management interface
- Scripts automatically use the correct binary path from your build configuration
🐛 Troubleshooting
Common Issues
1. Binary Not Found
Error: Binary '/path/to/bin/worldserver' not found
Solution: Check binary path and ensure servers are compiled
# Check if binary exists
ls -la /path/to/bin/worldserver
# Compile if needed
./acore.sh compiler build
2. Configuration File Issues
Error: Configuration file not found
Solution: Create configuration from template
cp scripts/conf.sh.dist scripts/conf.sh
# Edit conf.sh with correct paths
3. Session Manager Not Available
Warning: tmux not found, falling back to direct execution
Solution: Install required session manager
# Ubuntu/Debian
sudo apt install tmux screen
# CentOS/RHEL
sudo yum install tmux screen
4. Permission Issues (systemd)
Failed to create systemd service
Solution: Check user permissions or use --system flag
# For user services (no sudo required)
./service-manager.sh create auth authserver --bin-path /path/to/bin
# For system services (requires sudo)
./service-manager.sh create auth authserver --bin-path /path/to/bin --system
5. PM2 Not Found
Error: PM2 is not installed
Solution: Install PM2
npm install -g pm2
# or
sudo npm install -g pm2
7. Registry Out of Sync
# If the service registry shows services that don't actually exist
Solution: Use registry sync or restore
# Check and restore missing services (also cleans up orphaned entries)
./service-manager.sh restore
# If you have a very old registry format, migrate it
./migrate-registry.sh