This article is part of the Installation Guide. You can read it alone or click on the previous link to easily move between the steps.
Getting started
This how-to will attempt to help with TrinityCore, and also show how this can be done in a way that also shows you the basics of how linux compilations works.
Hint
DON'T clone, compile or run server as sudo or root.
Advices:
- Read your distributions' documentation on how to install packages, and also have at least knowledge on how it works with regards to adding users.*
- Run/install TrinityCore on a dedicated machine, or a machine that you know you have full control over.
- Do NOT install the software on a shared server solution or any server where other users may have access or might require resources to be available at all times.
Your server may be abruptly killed by an angry administrator or system staff for overuse of system resources.
Creating a user to work with
Start with logging in to your Linux-machine and create an account for the server itself - on most recent distributions this can easily be done with the following command :
sudo adduser <username>
Note : Change <username> into the preferred username of your server-account - we will as far as possible avoid using specific usernames in this how-to.
Sample usernames found in various parts of this guide: wow , trinity ( - select a logical name that makes sense to you when creating the user - ).
sudo su - <username>
Note : Change your current user to <username> so everything will run and compile with the user you just have created.
Required software
See Requirements
Content
Building the server itself
Getting the source code
3.3.5 (wotlk client)
cd ~/ git clone -b 3.3.5 git://github.com/TrinityCore/TrinityCore.git
This will clone 3.3.5a branch, this is the RECOMMENDED branch for starters.
master (legion client)
cd ~/ git clone -b master git://github.com/TrinityCore/TrinityCore.git
This will clone master branch, note that this is NOT the recommended branch for starters.
The directory TrinityCore will be created automatically and all the source files will be stored in there.
FreeBSD users will need to apply the patch located here for g3d to compile properly, before doing anything else.
Compiling the source code
Creating the build-directory
To avoid issues with updates and colliding source builds, we create a specific build-directory, so we avoid any possible issues due to that (if any might occur)
cd TrinityCore mkdir build cd build
Configuring for compiling
To configure the core, we use space-separated parameters attached to the configuration-tool (cmake) - do read the entire section before even starting on the configuration-part.
This is for your own good, and you HAVE been warned. A full example will also be shown underneath the explanations.
cmake ../ [additional parameters]
The above parameters when combined into a full example :
By default this is the only row you will need to run to setup your install: cmake ../ -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/home/<username>/server Another Examples Below: cmake ../ -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/home/wow/server -DTOOLS=0 cmake ../ -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/home/$USER/server -DTOOLS=0 -DWITH_WARNINGS=1
The 1st row builds the core with the tools, set installation base directory to /home/<username>/server.
The 2nd row builds the core without the tools, set installation base directory to /home/wow/server.
The 3nd row builds the core without the tools, set installation base directory to /home/$user/server and enables warnings.
NOTE: If you see
"-- Performing Test boost_filesystem_copy_links_without_NO_SCOPED_ENUM - Failed" IGNORE, it's a warning.
Note that you WILL have to configure the server well if you ever want to use the RA-access functionality.
Building the core
After configuring and checking that everything is in order (read cmakes output), you can build Trinity (this will take some time unless you are on a rather fast machine)
make make install
If you have multiple CPU cores, you can enable the use of those during compile :
make -j <number of cores> make install
Alternatively:
make -j $(nproc) install
After compiling and installing, you will find your core binaries in /home/<username>/server/bin, and the standard configuration files in the /home/<username>/server/etc folder.
(As usual, replace <username> with the username you created earlier). Now you can continue reading on and learn how how to update the source tree.
Keeping the code up to date
TrinityCore developers are always at work fixing and adding new features to the core. You can always check them here. To update the core files, do the following :
cd ~/TrinityCore/ # For 3.3.5 Branch git pull origin 3.3.5 # For master Branch git pull origin master
Now return to the compilation-section again, and repeat the instructions there.
Installing MySQL Server
When configuring MySQL make sure you remember the password you set for the default root account and that you enabled both MyISAM and InnoDB engines.
SPECIAL NOTES! you don't need to read this unless you want to do custom instalations.
Things to notice :
-DWITH_COREDEBUG=0 not required, this flag is only for core developers as its default is : 0 it may cause crashes if using on production environments if you want to compile core on debug mode you need to use -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug
The new method for custom SSL-libraries are:
-DOPENSSL_LIBRARIES=<path to OpenSSL libraries directory>
-DOPENSSL_INCLUDE_DIR=<path to OpenSSL br /includes directory>
The paths for installation can be done without any other parameters but this :
-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/path/to/where/you/want/core/to/be/installed
It will create the following structure:
<path>/bin/ - binaries will be placed here
<path>/etc/ - config files will be placed here
Also, compile has been tested on Debian 9 x32/x64, Ubuntu 17.10/18.04 x64 - all without problems IF YOU DO NOT MESS AROUND ON YOUR OWN!
We don't recommend to mix deps on older linuxes and update your distribution to one modern linux (debian 9, ubuntu 18.04)
Please remember to rename the worldserver.conf.dist and authserver.conf.dist files in worldserver.conf and authserver.conf respectively, unless you want to keep the configuration files of a previously compiled version of the core.
This article is part of the Installation Guide. You can read it alone or click on the previous link to easily move between the steps.