orders

Command: orders

Manage manager orders.

Usage

orders orders list

Shows the list of previously exported orders, including the orders library.

orders export <name>

Saves all the current manager orders in a file.

orders import <name>

Imports the specified manager orders. Note this adds to your current set of manager orders. It will not clear the orders that already exist.

orders clear

Deletes all manager orders in the current embark.

orders sort

Sorts current manager orders by repeat frequency so repeating orders don’t prevent one-time orders from ever being completed. The sorting order is: one-time orders first, then yearly, seasonally, monthly, and finally, daily.

You can keep your orders automatically sorted by adding the following command to your onMapLoad.init file:

repeat -name orders-sort -time 1 -timeUnits days -command [ orders sort ]

Exported orders are saved in the dfhack-config/orders directory, where you can view, edit, and delete them, if desired.

Examples

orders export myorders

Export the current manager orders to a file named dfhack-config/orders/myorders.json.

orders import library/basic

Import manager orders from the library that keep your fort stocked with basic essentials.

The orders library

DFHack comes with a library of useful manager orders that are ready for import:

library/basic

This collection of orders handles basic fort necessities:

  • prepared meals and food products (and by-products like oil)

  • booze/mead

  • thread/cloth/dye

  • pots/jugs/buckets/mugs

  • bags of leather, cloth, silk, and yarn

  • crafts and totems from otherwise unusable by-products

  • mechanisms/cages

  • splints/crutches

  • lye/soap

  • ash/potash

  • beds/wheelbarrows/minecarts

  • scrolls

You should import it as soon as you have enough dwarves to perform the tasks. Right after the first migration wave is usually a good time.

library/furnace

This collection creates basic items that require heat. It is separated out from library/basic to give players the opportunity to set up magma furnaces first in order to save resources. It handles:

  • charcoal (including smelting of bituminous coal and lignite)

  • pearlash

  • sand

  • green/clear/crystal glass

  • adamantine processing

  • item melting

Orders are missing for plaster powder until DF Bug 11803 is fixed.

library/military

This collection adds high-volume smelting jobs for military-grade metal ores and produces weapons and armor:

  • leather backpacks/waterskins/cloaks/quivers/armor

  • bone/wooden bolts

  • smelting for platinum, silver, steel, bronze, bismuth bronze, and copper (and their dependencies)

  • bronze/bismuth bronze/copper bolts

  • platinum/silver/steel/iron/bismuth bronze/bronze/copper weapons and armor, with checks to ensure only the best available materials are being used

If you set a stockpile to take weapons and armor of less than masterwork quality and turn on automelt (like what Dreamfort provides on its industry level), these orders will automatically upgrade your military equipment to masterwork. Make sure you have a lot of fuel (or magma forges and furnaces) before you turn automelt on, though!

This file should only be imported, of course, if you need to equip a military.

library/smelting

This collection adds smelting jobs for all ores. It includes handling the ores already managed by library/military, but has lower limits. This ensures all ores will be covered if a player imports library/smelting but not library/military, but the higher-volume library/military orders will take priority if both are imported.

library/rockstock

This collection of orders keeps a small stock of all types of rock furniture. This allows you to do ad-hoc furnishings of guildhalls, libraries, temples, or other rooms with buildingplan and your masons will make sure there is always stock on hand to fulfill the plans.

library/glassstock

Similar to library/rockstock above, this collection keeps a small stock of all types of glass furniture. If you have a functioning glass industry, this is more sustainable than library/rockstock since you can never run out of sand. If you have plenty of rock and just want the variety, you can import both library/rockstock and library/glassstock to get a mixture of rock and glass furnishings in your fort.

There are a few items that library/glassstock produces that library/rockstock does not, since there are some items that can not be made out of rock, for example:

  • tubes and corkscrews for building magma-safe screw pumps

  • windows

  • terrariums (as an alternative to wooden cages)