Keleborn 83c6977de5 Refactor guild managment into a singleton (#1913)
The idea is to centralize the creation, assignment, and management of
bot guilds into a single class that can be referenced.

The way this is intended to work.

when the manager is created, if the config option to delete guilds is
set, then it deletes all bot guilds.

On startup 
1. Load all guild names from database. Shuffle keys for some
randomization.
2. Load Guilds from database
3. For existing guilds, identify the guild faction, number of members,
and assess if the guild is 'full' based on the number of bots set in
config.
4. Determine if the leader of the guild is a real player based on the
leader account.
5. Mark any playerbot guild names as not available (false).

The validation process (2-5) is set to run once an hour. 

Guild Creation.
Now guild creation occurs on an as needed bases during the
initialization process. Previously, all of the guilds would be created
at once, and then randomly assigned.
When a bot is not in a guild during initialization, it will check if
there are any partially filled guilds of that bots faction where the bot
can be assigned to. If not, and the cache of bot guilds is less than the
set number in config, it will randomly return the available name. This
then goes to the CreateGuild function where the core guild manager
creates a guild, the guild emblem is set, and the cache updated.
If a bot is assigned to guild, but fails to join then it throws an
error.

Checking for real player guilds function now lives in the guild manager.

---------

Co-authored-by: bashermens <31279994+hermensbas@users.noreply.github.com>
2026-01-03 15:15:28 +01:00
2025-11-05 21:10:17 +01:00
2026-01-03 14:47:31 +01:00
2021-12-30 17:13:09 +01:00
2021-12-30 17:13:09 +01:00
2025-11-05 21:10:17 +01:00
2022-03-12 22:27:09 +01:00
2024-03-05 11:06:57 +08:00
2024-04-08 21:38:36 +08:00
2025-11-18 18:08:16 +01:00

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Playerbots Icon

Playerbots Module

mod-playerbots is an AzerothCore module that adds player-like bots to a server. The project is based off IKE3's Playerbots.

Features include:

  • The ability to log in alt characters as bots, allowing players to interact with their other characters, form parties, level up, and more
  • Random bots that wander through the world, complete quests, and otherwise behave like players, simulating the MMO experience
  • Bots capable of running most raids and battlegrounds
  • Highly configurable settings to define how bots behave
  • Excellent performance, even when running thousands of bots

We also have a Discord server where you can discuss the project, ask questions, and get involved in the community!

Installation

Supported platforms are Ubuntu, Windows, and macOS. Other Linux distributions may work, but may not receive support.

All mod-playerbots installations require a custom branch of AzerothCore: mod-playerbots/azerothcore-wotlk/tree/Playerbot. This branch allows the mod-playerbots module to build and function. Updates from the upstream are implemented regularly to this branch. Instructions for installing this required branch and this module are provided below.

Cloning the Repositories

To install both the required branch of AzerothCore and the mod-playerbots module from source, run the following:

git clone https://github.com/mod-playerbots/azerothcore-wotlk.git --branch=Playerbot
cd azerothcore-wotlk/modules
git clone https://github.com/mod-playerbots/mod-playerbots.git --branch=master

For more information, refer to the AzerothCore Installation Guide and Installing a Module pages.

Docker Installation

Docker installations are considered experimental (unofficial with limited support), and previous Docker experience is recommended. To install mod-playerbots on Docker, first clone the required branch of AzerothCore and this module:

git clone https://github.com/mod-playerbots/azerothcore-wotlk.git --branch=Playerbot
cd azerothcore-wotlk/modules
git clone https://github.com/mod-playerbots/mod-playerbots.git --branch=master

Afterwards, create a docker-compose.override.yml file in the azerothcore-wotlk directory. This override file allows for mounting the modules directory to the ac-worldserver service which is required for it to run. Put the following inside and save:

services:
  ac-worldserver:
    volumes:
      - ./modules:/azerothcore/modules:ro

Additionally, this override file can be used to set custom configuration settings for ac-worldserver and any modules you install as environment variables:

services:
  ac-worldserver:
    environment:
      AC_RATE_XP_KILL: "1"
      AC_AI_PLAYERBOT_RANDOM_BOT_AUTOLOGIN: "1"
    volumes:
      - ./modules:/azerothcore/modules:ro

For example, to double the experience gain rate per kill, take the setting Rate.XP.Kill = 1 from woldserver.conf, convert it to an environment variable, and change it to the desired setting in the override file to get AC_RATE_XP_KILL: "2". If you wanted to disable random bots from logging in automatically, take the AiPlayerbot.RandomBotAutologin = 1 setting from playerbots.conf and do the same to get AC_AI_PLAYERBOT_RANDOM_BOT_AUTOLOGIN: "0". For more information on how to configure Azerothcore, Playerbots, and other module settings as environment variables in Docker Compose, see the "Configuring AzerothCore in Containers" section in the Install With Docker guide.

Before building, consider setting the database password. One way to do this is to create a .env file in the root azerothcore-wotlk directory using the template. This file also allows you to set the user and group Docker uses for the services in case you run into any permissions issues, which are the most common cause for Docker installation problems.

Use docker compose up -d --build to build and run the server. For more information, including how to create an account and taking backups, refer to the Install With Docker page.

Documentation

The Playerbots Wiki contains an extensive overview of AddOns, commands, raids with programmed bot strategies, and recommended performance configurations. Please note that documentation may be incomplete or out-of-date in some sections, and contributions are welcome.

Bots are controlled via chat commands. For larger bot groups, this can be cumbersome. Because of this, community members have developed client AddOns to allow controlling bots through the in-game UI. We recommend you check out their projects listed in the AddOns and Submodules page.

Contributing

This project is still under development. We encourage anyone to make contributions, anything from pull requests to reporting issues. If you encounter any errors or experience crashes, we encourage you report them as GitHub issues. Your valuable feedback will help us improve this project collaboratively.

If you make coding contributions, mod-playerbots complies with the C++ Code Standards established by AzerothCore. Each Pull Request must include all test scenarios the author performed, along with their results, to demonstrate that the changes were properly verified.

We recommend joining the Discord server to make your contributions to the project easier, as a lot of active support is carried out through this server.

Please click on the "" button to stay up to date and help us gain more visibility on GitHub!

Acknowledgements

mod-playerbots is based on ZhengPeiRu21/mod-playerbots and celguar/mangosbot-bots. We extend our gratitude to @ZhengPeiRu21 and @celguar for their continued efforts in maintaining the module.

Also, a thank you to the many contributors who've helped build this project:

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