Connectivity Guide

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Getting Server Information

OpenKore comes with a list of official servers information only, because of the high amount of private servers, it is impossible to have and keep them updated, so private servers players should follow this guide to get and update their server information. Before continuing, read the list of unsupported servers. Your server might have anti-bot protection resulting in not being supported by Openkore.

OpenKore requires the following information about the Ragnarok Online server before it can initialize and login:

There are detailed instructions on collecting server information with WPE or Wireshark. This kind of packet analyze isn't anything special for OpenKore or Ragnarok Online, so it's up to you to get the tools and ways to do it which work for you. It's up to you as well what to do with any so-called "protection" in your server's client that may get in the way.

There may be problems determining version and master_version if your server's protocol has some kind of encryption. In that case, merely determining these values won't even help, the main issue is dealing with that encryption.

WPE (Winsock Packet Editor)

1. Download WPE and extract it.

  • Before downloading, make a sure to disable your anti-virus as it can mark WPE as a virus and delete it. Download at your risk, we will not be resposabilized if your computer crashes.
  • You will need some programs to extract it, the common ones are WinRAR and 7zip.

2. Open your ragnarok but don't login yet! Leave it on the login screen and open WPE.

3. At WPE's window, click on Target Programs button.

Targetyc.png

4. A window will open, search for the server's executable and double-click it.

File:clickrag.png
Note. Some servers "hide" their executables by renaming it (like from xxxRO.exe to xxxx.dll or xxxxx.bin), so don't worry if the executable isn't a .exe one.

5. In the WPE's window, click on Play button.

File:play.png

6. Switch to your Ragnarok's window, put and try to login.

Note. Valid login information are not needed.

7. Back to WPE's window, click on Stop button

File:stopjw.png

8. A window will open with recorded data. One of the packets sent to the server would be login packet which usually contains the server's version, master_version, IP and port - write them down because they are going to be used later. The packets will be different on each server, possible login packets may start with 64 00 or 02 B0. Other packets (such as 18-byte-long 02 04) may be sent before login packet.

File:inforb.png
Legend:
  1. version (displayed as 4-byte unsigned number in little-endian, in hex)
  2. IP (as is)
  3. port (as is)
  4. master version (displayed as 1-byte unsigned number, in hex)

9. See Converting Hexadecimal to Decimal numbers to convert the master_version and version before configuring Kore.

Wireshark

1. Download and install Wireshark.

2. Open your ragnarok but don't login yet! Leave it on the login screen and open Wireshark.

3. At Wireshark's window, go to Capture > Options on the upper menu or press Ctrl + K.

Capiture.png

4. In the top right box, select the interface that will be used to capture on. If there isn't any specific interface to use, select the one whose IP address is equal to the your ip address or is not unknown. Alternatively you can try all of them and use the one that records the packets. Set the others settings like the images bellow:

Interface.PNG

5. Click on Start button and go back to the Ragnarok window and login.

Note. Valid information are not needed.

6. Back to Wireshark and click on Stop button.

File:stop.png

7. In Wireshark main window, you can see the TCP segments that were captured. Fill in the packet filter, but what to fill in depends on the username you used to login.

Enter this in the "Filter" text box:
eth contains "xxxxxx" or eth contains xxxxxx
Replace xxxxxx with the username that was used to login and press enter. In the example bellow, username was Mushroom.
File:filter.png

8. There will be only one entry now, click on it to show some information about it. This is where the IP and port is stored.

File:ip.png
Write down the IP and port.

9. On the entry again, right-click on it and go to Follow TCP Stream.

File:tcp.png

10. A new window will open, in the bottom left, select Hex Dump.

File:hex.png

11. These are the login packets. Take a look at it and write down the packets that contains the version and master version numbers. They are marked on the image bellow.

File:packets.png
  • version displayed as 4-byte unsigned number in little-endian, in hex
  • master version displayed as 1-byte unsigned number, in hex

12. See Converting Hexadecimal to Decimal numbers to convert the master_version and version before configuring Kore.

Converting Hexadecimal to Decimal numbers

Master_version and server version collected from the login packets are in hexadecimal number (base-16) and Kore expects a decimal number (base-10), so converting those numbers are needed before Kore can read them.

Converting can be made using Windows' calculator or any other site that has a hex to dec calculator.

1. Open Windows calculator Start > Accessories > Calculator.

File:calc.PNG

2. Go to View on the upper menu and click on Scientific.

File:sci.PNG

3. Check the circle beside Hex.

File:hexa.PNG

4. On the calculator, type the number that you got for master_version and version. In the example, master_version hexadecimal number is 10.

File:type.PNG

5. Check the circle beside Dec.

File:dec.PNG

6. After checking, the number shown should automatically be converted from hexadecimal to decimal.

File:done.PNG
You must convert master_version and version.

Configuring Openkore

OpenKore reads server information from a file named servers.txt. The file is on tables folder.

If your server is not listed in the file, then add a new entry. If your server is already listed, then modify the existing entry.

Syntax

[<server name>]
ip <number/host>
port <number>
version <number>
master_version <number> 
serverType <serverType name>
serverEncoding <encoding>
charBlockSize <number>
addTableFolders <folder path>

# following options are optional
private <boolean> 
recvpackets <file name>
chatLangCode <boolean>
storageEncryptKey <encrypt key>
field_<location> <filename>
clientHash <hex string>
captcha <boolean>

gameGuard <number>

secureLogin <boolean>
secureLogin_type <type>
secureLogin_requestCode <hex string>
secureLogin_account <boolean>

paddedPackets <boolean>
paddedPackets_attackID <packet switches>
paddedPackets_skillUseID <packet switches>

masterLogin_packet <packet switch>

dead <boolean>
dead_message <any text>
title <any text>


Required

[<server name>]
The name of the server that you want to bot. The name must be between [ ].
Developers: avoid changing existing server names, it disrupts configurations. Instead use title option if you need to change displayed title for a server.
ip <number/host>
Server's login IP.
port <number>
Server's login port number.
version <number>
Server's version (converted from hex to decimal).
master_version <number>
Server's master_version (converted from hex to decimal).
serverType
Development.pngThe following documentation describes a feature that was greatly changed in SVN trunk (latest development version) since the last release.
It may work differently or not be available if you're using 2.0.7 or any older version.
Server's type. Each official server has its own serverType, private servers must use kRO serverTypes according to executables dates.
serverEncoding <encoding>
Character encoding.
charBlockSize <value>
Length (in bytes) of data block describing each of your characters in the packet with character list (received_characters) on character selection screen.

Correct value for a server may be not supported by a specific serverType or not supported at all, so merely trying values mentioned here may not be enough.

charBlockSize kRO date Kore version Notes
New charBlockSizes are being constantly introduced.
175 2020-10-07 6b369db HP and SP int64
155 (default) 2017-08-30 a6d3f87 exp int64
147 2014-10-22 df50355 walk_speed long
146 N/A 3aeba6a
145 2014-10-16 3001eab and 8fa8dfa iRO's Doram update
144 2011-10-25 876acab "rename char"
140 2011-09-28 876acab "change slot feature"
136 2011-01-11 b5b8e07 "robe"
132 2010-08-03 b5b8e07 "delete date"
128 daefa83 last_map 16 Bytes
124 3b07ffe bRO (bifröst update)
116 addabe5
112 9862177 Topic on the forum
108 9862177 Topic on the forum
106

Dates are for a reference with default Athena configuration only, any server can reconfigure that.

In Athena code base, function mmo_char_tobuf generates character blocks.

Development.pngImplementation of this feature is expected to become outdated with server updates.
As OpenKore is a free project, if you stumble upon such updates, you are expected to fix the problem and contribute your changes back. Usually, server supporters will do that, but there isn't any for random private servers, and some official ones may not always be covered.


addTableFolders <folder path>
Configures Kore to load tables file from the specified path (relative to the tables directory).
Used only when there is no --tables specified.
For english ones, you can use
addTableFolders translated/kRO_english
or
addTableFolders iRO

Optional

captcha <boolean>
Configure Kore to use the captcha 'protocol'.
chatLangCode <boolean>
Enables support for language codes (a pipe and two hexadecimal digits) in chat messages.


gameGuard <number>
Used for GameGuard and HackShield. See also: Poseidon.
private <boolean>
Set this option if Openkore connects to a wrong map-server IP. Usually for private servers.
recvpackets <file name.txt>
Configures file's name for recvpackets. See also: Packet Length Extractor.
masterLogin_packet <packet switch>
Overrides master login packet switch (but not its structure). Required for XKore 2 if it's different from 0064.

Example

[MushroomRO]
ip 127.0.0.1
port 6900
master_version 16
version 20
serverType kRO_RagexeRE_2010_01_26a
charBlockSize 108
serverEncoding Western
recvpackets mush-recvpackets.txt
addTableFolders iRO