Introduction
Discord is a video, voice, and text communication platform that allows bots to perform automated tasks based on user commands. This article explains how to run a Discord.js bot and host it on a Debian 11 cloud server at Rcs.
1. Create a Discord Application
Go to the Discord Developer Portal and log in.
Click the New Application button.
Enter an application name and click Create.
Select the Bot tab from the Settings menu.
Click Add Bot then click Yes, do it!.
Click Copy to copy your bot's token to the clipboard. Save a copy to use later in this guide.
2. Install Prerequisites
Deploy a Rcs Debian 11 cloud server Instance.
Log in as root
3. Install Dependencies
Install Node.js, a javascript runtime that is required for Discord.js.
# apt-get install nodejs -y
Install Node Version Manager (nvm), which is used to update Node.js. For example:
# wget -qO- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvm-sh/nvm/v0.38.0/install.sh | bash
Note: Please see NVM's GitHub repository and use the command for the latest NVM version.
Reboot the server.
# reboot
Reconnect to the SSH session.
Verify the nvm installation:
# command -v nvm
It should return:
nvm
Update Node.js to the latest version:
# nvm install node
4. Create the Discord Bot
Switch to your home directory.
# cd ~
Create a project folder.
# mkdir discord-bot
Switch to the project folder.
# cd discord-bot
Initialize your Node.js project.
# npm init
Answer the questions. Leave the defaults unless you need to change them.
Check the contents of your
package.json
file:# cat package.json
It should return something like this:
{ "name": "discord-bot", "version": "1.0.0", "description": "A Discord.js bot on Debian 11", "main": "index.js", "scripts": { "test": "echo \"Error: no test specified\" && exit 1" }, "author": "", "license": "ISC" }
For this guide, you need to install the Discord.js library using npm. As you add capabilities to your bot, look for other useful libraries on the npm website.
Install the Discord.js library.
# npm install discord.js --save
The
--save
flag adds the library as a dependency in yourpackage.json
file.Create a file named
index.js
.# nano index.js
Paste this sample code to your
index.js
file. Replace<YOUR BOT TOKEN>
with the token you saved in section 1.const { Client, Intents } = require('discord.js'); const client = new Client({ intents: [Intents.FLAGS.GUILDS, Intents.FLAGS.GUILD_MESSAGES] }); client.on('message', message => { if (message.content === 'hello') { message.channel.send('Hello World~!'); } if (message.content === 'testbot') { message.channel.send("Hi! I'm up and Running~!"); } if (message.content === 'ping') { message.channel.send('Pong~!'); } }) client.once('ready', () => { console.log('The Discord Bot is Ready!'); }) client.login('<YOUR-BOT-TOKEN>')
The Discord bot should respond to commands
hello
,testbot
, andping
.Save and exit the file.
4. Run the Discord Bot
Your Discord bot stops running when you exit the SSH session. To keep the bot running full-time, use Tmux or PM2.
Option 1: Run the Bot with Tmux
Follow this guide to install tmux.
Create a tmux session.
# tmux new -s DiscordBot
Change to the Discord bot project directory.
# cd ~/discord-bot
Start the bot.
# node index.js
It should return:
The Discord Bot is Ready!
To stop the Discord Bot, press CTRL + C
Option 2: Run the Bot with PM2
PM2 is a daemon process manager that will help you manage and keep your application running.
Install the PM2 process manager to manage your bot.
# npm install pm2 -g
Change to the Discord bot project directory.
# cd ~/discord-bot
Start the Bot.
# pm2 start index.js
Verify if the bot is online.
# pm2 logs
It should return:
0|index | The Discord Bot is Ready!
To exit the log, press CTRL + C
Common PM2 Commands
Make sure you are in the ~/discord-bot
directory, then use these commands to control your bot.
List all PM2 processes:
# pm2 list
Stop the Discord bot:
# pm2 stop index.js
Restart the Discord bot:
# pm2 restart index.js
5. Invite the Bot to a Discord Server
Go to the Discord Developer Portal and log in.
Click the Application that you have created.
Navigate to the OAuth2 Tab from the Settings menu.
In the Scopes Section, select bot.
In the Bot Permissions Section, select Administrator. This gives the bot an Administrator Role from the Discord Server.
Click the Copy Button to copy the generated invite link.
Open the invite link on your browser.
Select the Discord server to add the bot to then click Continue.
Authorize the bot and complete the CAPTCHA.
The Discord bot is now up and running.
More Information
To learn more about Discord bots, please see these resources: