paperweight-userdev
paperweight is the name of Paper's custom build tooling. The paperweight-userdev Gradle plugin part of that provides access to internal code (also known as NMS) during development.
This guide is written using the Gradle Kotlin DSL and assumes you have some basic knowledge of Gradle. If you want to see a fully-functioning plugin that uses paperweight-userdev, check out this example plugin.
Why this is useful
This is the only supported way of accessing server internals, as redistributing the server JAR is against the Minecraft EULA and general license assumption. Even if you manually depended on the patched server, you would be hindering other people working on your project and would be missing deployed API javadocs/sources in your IDE.
On top of that, Spigot and pre-1.20.5 Paper versions still use Spigot mappings, which are a mix of obfuscated fields/methods and mapped as well as custom named classes. This can make it hard to work with in a development environment. This plugin lets you use fully deobfuscated types, names, and fields during development, and then remaps your plugin, so it can still be used with the obfuscated server. However, this does not apply to reflection. Look at something like this library to be able to use non-obfuscated names in reflection if you want to support obfuscated servers.
As of Minecraft version 1.20.5, Paper ships with a Mojang-mapped runtime instead of re-obfuscating the server to Spigot mappings. See here for more details.
Adding the plugin
Add the plugin to your build.gradle.kts
file.
plugins {
id("io.papermc.paperweight.userdev") version "1.7.1" // Check for new versions at https://plugins.gradle.org/plugin/io.papermc.paperweight.userdev
}
The latest version of paperweight-userdev
supports dev bundles for Minecraft 1.17.1 and newer, so it's best practice to keep it up to date!
Only the latest version of paperweight-userdev
is officially supported, and we will ask you to update first if you are having problems with old versions.
paperweight-userdev releases are available through the Gradle Plugin Portal, but if you
want to use SNAPSHOT versions, you must add Paper's Maven repository to settings.gradle.kts
with:
pluginManagement {
repositories {
gradlePluginPortal()
maven("https://repo.papermc.io/repository/maven-public/")
}
}
Adding the dev bundle dependency
If you try to load your Gradle project now, you will receive an error saying you have to declare
a dev bundle dependency. You can do that by adding to your dependencies
block in your build.gradle.kts
file.
You should remove any dependency on the Paper API, as the dev bundle includes that.
Gradle tasks
reobfJar
This task creates a plugin JAR that is re-obfuscated to Spigot's runtime mappings. This means it will work on standard Paper servers.
The output will be inside the build/libs
folder. The JAR whose filename includes -dev
is Mojang-mapped (not re-obfuscated) and will not work on most servers.
If you have the shadow Gradle plugin applied in your build script, paperweight-userdev will
detect that and use the shaded JAR as the input for the reobfJar
task.
The -dev-all.jar
file in build/libs
is the shaded, but not re-obfuscated JAR.
You can make the reobfJar
task run on the default build
task with:
tasks.assemble {
dependsOn(tasks.reobfJar)
}
1.20.5 and beyond
As of 1.20.5, Paper ships with a Mojang-mapped runtime instead of re-obfuscating the server to Spigot mappings. Additionally, CraftBukkit classes will no longer be relocated into a versioned package. This requires plugins to be deobfuscated before loading when necessary.
Most of this process is done automatically by paperweight, but there are some important things to know when using server internals (or "NMS") from now on.
Default mappings assumption
- By default, all Spigot/Bukkit plugins will be assumed to be Spigot-mapped if they do not specify their mappings namespace in the manifest. The other way around, all Paper plugins will be assumed to be Mojang-mapped if they do not specify their mappings namespace in the manifest.
- Spigot-mapped plugins will need to be deobfuscated on first load, Mojang-mapped plugins will not.
Compiling to Mojang mappings
This is the preferred option, as the one-time plugin remapping process during server startup will be skipped and it may allow you to keep version compatibility across smaller updates without changes or additional modules. However, this makes your plugin incompatible with Spigot servers.
If you want your main output to use Mojang mappings, you need to remove all dependsOn(reobfJar)
lines and add the following code to your build script:
paperweight.reobfArtifactConfiguration = io.papermc.paperweight.userdev.ReobfArtifactConfiguration.MOJANG_PRODUCTION
Compiling to Spigot mappings
If you want your main output to use Spigot mappings, add the following code to your build script:
paperweight.reobfArtifactConfiguration = io.papermc.paperweight.userdev.ReobfArtifactConfiguration.REOBF_PRODUCTION
This is useful for plugins that have loaders for both Spigot and Paper and want to keep compatibility with both.
If you are using Gradle with the Groovy DSL, you should instead access the fields via static methods like getMOJANG_PRODUCTION()
.