Treecapitator

Treecapitator

5M Downloads

Treecapitator

DaftPVF's Treecapitator mod for Minecraft. Takes trees down in one blow. Most popular mods supported by default. This repo contains source files for Forge (dependant on bspkrsCore).

Links of Interest

Technical Info

Setup Java

The Java JDK is used to compile Treecapitator.

  1. Download and install the Java JDK.
    • Windows/Mac download link. Scroll down, accept the Oracle Binary Code License Agreement for Java SE, and download it (if you have a 64-bit OS, please download the 64-bit version).
    • Linux: Installation methods for certain popular flavors of Linux are listed below. If your distribution is not listed, follow the instructions specific to your package manager or install it manually here.
      • Gentoo: emerge dev-java/oracle-jdk-bin
      • Archlinux: pacman -S jdk7-openjdk
      • Ubuntu/Debian: apt-get install openjdk-7-jdk
      • Fedora: yum install java-1.7.0-openjdk
  2. Set up the environment.
    • Windows: Set environment variables for the JDK.
      1. Go to Control Panel\System and Security\System, and click on Advanced System Settings on the left-hand side.
      2. Click on Environment Variables.
      3. Under System Variables, click New.
      4. For Variable Name, input JAVA_HOME.
      5. For Variable Value, input something similar to C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.7.0_45 exactly as shown (or wherever your Java JDK installation is), and click Ok.
      6. Scroll down to a variable named Path, and double-click on it.
      7. Append ;%JAVA_HOME%\bin EXACTLY AS SHOWN and click Ok. Make sure the location is correct; double-check just to make sure.
  3. Open up your command line and run javac. If it spews out a bunch of possible options and the usage, then you're good to go. If not try the steps again.

Setup Gradle

Gradle is used to execute the various build tasks when compiling Treecapitator.

  1. Download and install Gradle.
    • Windows/Mac download link. You only need the binaries, but choose whatever flavor you want.
      • Unzip the package and put it wherever you want, eg C:\Gradle.
    • Linux: Installation methods for certain popular flavors of Linux are listed below. If your distribution is not listed, follow the instructions specific to your package manager or install it manually here.
      • Gentoo: emerge dev-java/gradle-bin
      • Archlinux: You'll have to install it from the AUR.
      • Ubuntu/Debian: apt-get install gradle
      • Fedora: Install Gradle manually from its website (see above), as Fedora ships a "broken" version of Gradle. Use yum install gradle only if you know what you're doing.
  2. Set up the environment.
    • Windows: Set environment variables for Gradle.
      1. Go back to Environment Variables and then create a new system variable.
      2. For Variable Name, input GRADLE_HOME.
      3. For Variable Value, input something similar to C:\Gradle-1.10 exactly as shown (or wherever your Gradle installation is), and click Ok.
      4. Scroll down to Path again, and append ;%GRADLE_HOME%\bin EXACTLY AS SHOWN and click Ok. Once again, double-check the location.
  3. Open up your command line and run gradle. If it says "Welcome to Gradle [version].", then you're good to go. If not try the steps again.

Setup Git

Git is used to clone Treecapitator and update your local copy.

  1. Download and install Git here.
  2. Optional Download and install a Git GUI client, such as Github for Windows/Mac, SmartGitHg, TortoiseGit, etc. A nice list is available here.

Setup Treecapitator

This section assumes that you're using the command-line version of Git.

  1. Open up your command line.
  2. Navigate to a place where you want to download Treecapitator's source (eg C:\Development\Github\Minecraft\) by executing cd [folder location]. This location is known as mcdev from now on.
  3. Execute git clone [email protected]:bspkrs/Treecapitator.git. This will download Treecapitator's source into mcdev.
  4. Right now, you should have a directory that looks something like:

mcdev
\-Treecapitator
    \-Treecapitator's files (should have build.gradle)

Compile Treecapitator

  1. Execute gradle setupDecompWorkspace. This sets up Forge and downloads the necessary libraries to build Treecapitator. This might take some time, be patient.
    • You will generally only have to do this once until the Forge version in build.properties changes.
  2. Execute gradle build. If you did everything right, BUILD SUCCESSFUL will be displayed after it finishes. This should be relatively quick.
    • If you see BUILD FAILED, check the error output (it should be right around BUILD FAILED), fix everything (if possible), and try again.
  3. Go to mcdev\Treecapitator\build\libs.
    • You should see a .jar file named [#.#.#]Treecapitator-<version>.jar.
  4. Copy the jar into your Minecraft mods folder, and you are done!

Updating Your Repository

In order to get the most up-to-date builds, you'll have to periodically update your local repository.

  1. Open up your command line.
  2. Navigate to mcdev in the console.
  3. Make sure you have not made any changes to the local repository, or else there might be issues with Git.
    • If you have, try reverting them to the status that they were when you last updated your repository.
  4. Execute git pull master. This pulls all commits from the official repository that do not yet exist on your local repository and updates it.

Contributing

Submitting a Pull Request (PR)

So you found a bug in the code? Think you can make it more efficient? Want to help in general? Great!

  1. If you haven't already, create a GitHub account.
  2. Click the Fork icon located at the top-right of this page (below your username).
  3. Make the changes that you want to and commit them.
    • If you're making changes locally, you'll have to do git add -A, git commit and git push in your command line.
  4. Click Pull Request at the right-hand side of the gray bar directly below your fork's name.
  5. Click Click to create a pull request for this comparison, enter your pull request title, and create a detailed description explaining what you changed.
  6. Click Send pull request, and wait for feedback!

Creating an Issue

Crashing? Have a suggestion? Found a bug? Create an issue now!

  1. Make sure your issue hasn't already been answered or fixed. Also think about whether your issue is a valid one before submitting it.
  2. Go to the issues page.
  3. Click New Issue right below Star and Fork.
  4. Enter your issue title (something that summarizes your issue), and then add a detailed description ("Hey, could you add/change xxx?" or "Hey, found an exploit: stuff").
    • If you are reporting a bug, make sure you include the following:
      • Version (can be found in the mcmod.info file or in the mod list)
      • ForgeModLoader log (please use gists for large amounts of text!)
      • Detailed description of the bug
  5. Click Submit new issue, and wait for feedback!

This README is shamelessly based off of pahimar's version.

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.