Pre-release protocol
This page documents the changes from the last stable Minecraft release (currently 1.3.2) to the current pre-release (or weekly release).
Contents
New packets
-None-
Changed packets
Time Update (0x04)
Server to Client
Time is based on ticks, where 20 ticks happen every second. There are 24000 ticks in a day, making Minecraft days exactly 20 minutes long.
The time of day is based on the timestamp modulo 24000. 0 is sunrise, 6000 is noon, 12000 is sunset, and 18000 is midnight.
The default SMP server increments both by 20 every second.
The 'Time' is the Age of the world. It is not changing on server commands and will increased by 20 every second.
Packet ID | Field Name | Field Type | Example | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
0x04 | Time | long | 45464654 | The 'Age of the world', in ticks |
Day Time | long | 21321 | The world (or region) time, in ticks | |
Total Size: | 17 Bytes |
Spawn Named Entity (0x14)
See the change in metadata below. (Under Protocol History, 2012-08-24)
Spawn Dropped Item (0x15)
TODO
It includes a new byte array after the "Damage" field, and before the "X" field if certain conditions are met. If the array does not exist, then the length of the array is "-1".
Spawn Mob (0x18)
See the change in metadata below. (Under Protocol History, 2012-08-24)
Entity Metadata (0x28)
See the change in metadata below. (Under Protocol History, 2012-08-24)
Click Window (0x66)
Client to Server
This packet is sent by the player when it clicks on a slot in a window.
Packet ID | Field Name | Field Type | Example | Notes |
0x66 | Window id | byte | 0
|
The id of the window which was clicked. 0 for player inventory. |
Slot | short | 36
|
The clicked slot. See below. | |
Right-click | byte | 1
|
||
Action number | short | 12
|
A unique number for the action, used for transaction handling (See the Transaction packet). | |
Shift | byte | 0
|
This is 1 if the user was holding keyboard shift when they clicked. See below. | |
Clicked item | slot | |||
Total Size: | 9 bytes + slot data |
When the user middle-clicks a slot, "shift" is 2 and "right click" is 3. The vanilla software treats a middle click as if no click occurred in the first place.
Locale and View Distance (0xCC)
Client to server
Sent when the player connects, or when settings are changed.
Packet ID | Field Name | Field Type | Example | Notes |
0xCC | Locale | string | en_GB | |
View distance | byte | 0 | 0-3 for 'far', 'normal', 'short', 'tiny'. | |
Chat flags | byte | 8 | Chat settings. See notes below. | |
Difficulty | byte | 0 | Client-side difficulty from options.txt | |
Show Cape | boolean | true | Client-side "show cape" option | |
Total Size: | 9 bytes + length of string |
Server List Ping (0xFE)
Client to Server
Packet ID | Field Name | Field Type | Example | Notes |
0xFE | Magic Number | byte | 1 | always 1 |
Total Size: | 2 bytes |
To load server info in the multiplayer menu, the notchian client connects to each known server and sends an 0xFE.
In return, the server sends a kick (0xFF), with its string containing §1 and data (server protocol version, server version string, server description, number of users, number of slots), delimited by a 0(0x00).
Note that as this is the last packet you'll see, you can get away with just chopping off the first three bytes (the ident and the string length) and decoding the remainder as a UCS-2 string.
The server severs the socket connection after sending the kick (0xFF) packet. You will need to open a new socket to continue communicating.
If the number of available slots sent is equal to or less than 0, the client should display it as "???".
This would be an example for such a kick message:
§1\047\012w42b\0Wiki.vg Minecraft Server\5\010
(protocol version 47, minecraft version 12w42b, motd 'Wiki.vg Minecraft Server', 5 users, 10 slots)
Note that '\0' is a 0x00.
The client will show a notice with the server version string if the server protocol version is not equal to the client version.
The official client and server are backward compatible and can read and write the old format too.
Changed data types
Entity Metadata Format
Note that entity metadata is a totally distinct concept from block metadata.
The entity metadata format is quirky dictionary format, where the key and the value's type are packed in a single byte.
To parse, repeat the following procedure:
- Read an unsigned byte
- If this byte == 127, stop reading
- Decompose the byte.
The bottom 5 bits (0x1F) serve as an identifier (key) for the data to follow.
The top 3 bits (0xE0) serve as a type. - Read and unpack based on the type (below)
Type | Meaning |
---|---|
0 | byte |
1 | short |
2 | int |
3 | float |
4 | string16 |
5 | short, byte, short (slot type) - If first short is empty, no further data is sent. |
6 | int, int, int (x, y, z) |
In Python-like code:
#socket is positioned at the beginning of the metadata array. Also note that the method unpack() doesn't exist in socket
metadata = {}
x = socket.unpack('byte')
while x != 127:
index = x & 0x1F # Lower 5 bits
ty = x >> 5 # Upper 3 bits
if ty == 0: val = socket.unpack('byte')
if ty == 1: val = socket.unpack('short')
if ty == 2: val = socket.unpack('int')
if ty == 3: val = socket.unpack('float')
if ty == 4: val = socket.unpack('string16')
if ty == 5:
val = {}
val["id"] = socket.unpack('short')
if val["id"] != -1:
val["count"] = socket.unpack('byte')
val["damage"] = socket.unpack('short')
if ty == 6:
val = []
for i in range(3):
val.append(socket.unpack('int'))
metadata[index] = (ty, val)
x = socket.unpack('byte')
return metadata
Removed packets
-None-
Protocol History
2012-10-11
- 12w41a
- Protocol version is now 46
- 0xcc Changed to include boolean 'show cape' field.
- Spawn named entity metadata includes an int at index 16, 1 = show cape, 0 = don't show cape
2012-10-04
- 12w40a
- Protocol version is now 45
- Packet 0x66 changed
2012-09-06
- 12w36a
- Protocol version is now 42
2012-08-24
- 12w34b
- Protocol version is now 41
- Changed Entity Metadata Format
2012-08-09
- 12w32a
- Protocol version is now 40
- Changed Time Update packet