From 86bf7fae804ff5ca3f532529b5f86f7e9c762969 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: LAX1DUDE Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2022 03:01:24 -0800 Subject: [PATCH] fixed spelling --- README.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 8467f01..8914be5 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ To play the game, launch the run.bat script in both the bungee_command and bukki **The default behavior in Eaglercraft if no :port is provided when connecting to a server is to use port 80, not port 25565. This is so the game's multiplayer connections in a production environment do not default to a port that is currently blocked by any firewalls. Also this enables you to use Cloudflare and nginx to create reverse proxy connections on your site to host multiple servers on the same domain using different ws:// URLs for each socket.** -If you want SSL, set up [nginx](https://www.nginx.com/) as a reverse proxy from port 443 to the port on the bungeecord server. You can very easily configure SSL on an nginx virtual host when it is in proxy mode, much more easily than you could if I created my own websocket SSL config option in bungee. To connect to a server running an SSL websocket on the multiplayer screen, use this format: `wss://[url]/`. You can also add the :port option again after the domain or ip address at the beggining of the URL to change the port and connect with SSL. **If you set up the Eaglercraft index.html on an https:// URL, Chrome will only allow you to make wss:// connections from the multiplayer screen. It is an security feature in Chrome, if you want to support both ws:// and wss:// you have to host the Eaglercraft index.html on an http:// URL**. The best advice I have for security is to use Cloudflare to proxy both the site and the websocket, because you can use http and ws on your servers locally and then you can configure cloudflare to do the SSL for you when the connections are proxied. And it conceils your IP address to the max and you can also set up a content delivery network for the big assets.epk and classes.js files all for free on their little starter package +If you want SSL, set up [nginx](https://www.nginx.com/) as a reverse proxy from port 443 to the port on the bungeecord server. You can very easily configure SSL on an nginx virtual host when it is in proxy mode, much more easily than you could if I created my own websocket SSL config option in bungee. To connect to a server running an SSL websocket on the multiplayer screen, use this format: `wss://[url]/`. You can also add the :port option again after the domain or ip address at the beggining of the URL to change the port and connect with SSL. **If you set up the Eaglercraft index.html on an https:// URL, Chrome will only allow you to make wss:// connections from the multiplayer screen. It is a security feature in Chrome, if you want to support both ws:// and wss:// you have to host the Eaglercraft index.html on an http:// URL**. The best advice I have for security is to use Cloudflare to proxy both the site and the websocket, because you can use http and ws on your servers locally and then you can configure cloudflare to do the SSL for you when the connections are proxied. And it conceils your IP address to the max and you can also set up a content delivery network for the big assets.epk and classes.js files all for free on their little starter package **To change the default servers on the server list, see the base64 in the javascript at line 8 of [stable-download/web/index.html](https://github.com/LAX1DUDE/eaglercraft/tree/main/stable-download/web/index.html). Copy and decode the base64 in the quotes using [base64decode.org](base64decode.org) and open the resulting file with NBTExplorer (the minecraft one). You will see the list of default servers in a 'servers' tag stored as NBT components, and you can edit them and add more as long as you follow the same format the existing servers have. When you're done, encode the file back to base64 using [base64encode.org](base64encode.org) and replace the base64 between the quotes on line 8 in index.html with the new base64 from base64encode.org.**