As the title says, i use Minecraft with the standard Forge profile "forge (1.13.2-forge-25.0.219)" and every time i press play the game crashes and the output log says at the end "Process crashed with exit code 1"
I don't use any mods whatsoever.
I'm using Pop!-OS 19.04 (its very similar to Ubuntu 19 afaik).
I then saved (Ctrl+O), agreed to save (Enter) and exited (Ctrl+X) the text editor.
And just to be sure, i restarted my pc.
I then run Minecraft forge, as i tried oh so many times before and low and behold, it started flawlessly.
P.S.: to everyone who knows a bit more about linux (i don't really know much), as far as as i read, it isn't a good practice to change /etc/enviroment bc the changes are applied for all users. If you have a better way of changing the variables, please post it here.
As the title says, i use Minecraft with the standard Forge profile "forge (1.13.2-forge-25.0.219)" and every time i press play the game crashes and the output log says at the end "Process crashed with exit code 1"
I don't use any mods whatsoever.
I'm using Pop!-OS 19.04 (its very similar to Ubuntu 19 afaik).
here is the Ubuntu Paste link for the copied "Minecraft game output": https://paste.ubuntu.com/p/77fqKH77G4/
and here is the "latest.log": https://paste.ubuntu.com/p/ssBfHWqkdC/
I don't know how important these information are:
Starting usual Minecraft 1.13.2 goes without a problem. Same with 1.14.x but not with 1.12.x
Use java 8.
Thanks, i got it to work, after changing an enviroment variable.
For anyone else having the same issue:
It seems Pop!_OS sets the Java 11 Runtime as default.
To change that i added some lines to "/etc/enviroment".
First i opened a terminal (Super+T).
Then i enterd the following command:
after typing in the password, i then added the following lines:
I then saved (Ctrl+O), agreed to save (Enter) and exited (Ctrl+X) the text editor.
And just to be sure, i restarted my pc.
I then run Minecraft forge, as i tried oh so many times before and low and behold, it started flawlessly.
P.S.: to everyone who knows a bit more about linux (i don't really know much), as far as as i read, it isn't a good practice to change /etc/enviroment bc the changes are applied for all users. If you have a better way of changing the variables, please post it here.