Hi all, I tried hosting my own lemmy instance to take some of the load off lemmy.world, but a lot of the posts do not get synchronised to my instance. When they do, they never got more than a couple upvotes.

I get a lot of warnings in the logs that I’ve got an incoming connection not on my allowed hosts, of which I’ve put “lemmy.world” and “lemmy.ml

Does self hosting like this actually reduce the load on lemmy.world and the fediverse? And how can I fix the issue I’m having?

34 points

upvotes are all over the place, posts being out of sync is normal too right now. growing pains.

permalink
report
reply
22 points
*

“Allowed Hosts” is white listing btw. You should leave it blank if you want more than just lemmy.world and lemmy.ml

And I wouldn’t say it reduces the load on those sites. It would kind of add to them in a way if you post from your instance or sub from your instance solo. If it’s just you on your instance, it’s barely a blip. May save them some photo hosting if you post.

SOME of the out of sync upvotes/comments are fixed in 0.18.1

permalink
report
reply
2 points

It would kind of add to them in a way if you post from your instance or sub from your instance solo

Is this actually true? As far as I understand it, by far the biggest overhead is users browsing. The fewer users you have actually hitting the frontend, the better.

permalink
report
parent
reply
7 points

The devs were saying that browse load was the major issue a few weeks ago, but more instances have been stood up since then and it does seem like replication is getting a bit creaky. I don’t think replication load is flatlining the CPUs of big instances, but it does seem to be reaching some kind of scaling limit that is non-trivial to tune around.

The optimal is definitely the goldilocks zone of ~100 to ~1000 active users. Whether single-user instances are a net win or a net loss is still pretty unclear to me, and if they become a net-loss it will manifest as federation issues of the sort described here, but it’s pretty hard to tell whether those issues are misconfigs on the tiny instances, misconfigs on certain big instances, temporary scaling issues that will be quickly fixed, or hard problems that will limit the size of the network for a while.

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points
*

If the bigger instance has to push/pull in data from you personal communities because they sub to it, then yes. 1 person not using your front end isn’t going to change much.

permalink
report
parent
reply
11 points

Leave allowed hosts blank! Otherwise you’ll only get content from those instances.

Also you will only get posts from communities with at least one subscriber on your instance, and only new posts and comments from the moment you subscribe, or if someone interacts with an older post/comment

permalink
report
reply
8 points

You won’t get much old data when you first start subscribing to new communities from your instance. You’ll only get new content. When you add a community you’ll get 20 recent topics with no comments or upvotes. As new content comes in you’ll pick up all of it. At least one member of your instance needs to subscribe to a community to begin syncing with that community. To solve the lack of content on my personal instance, I made a bot that subscribed to the top 300 communities with more than 1000 subscribers. After a day or so I now have tons of content… I may stick the bot script on a weekly cronjob to keep my instance synced with the largest communities.

permalink
report
reply
1 point

Can you share that? Would love to use it for our instance. Previously was subbing to stuff manually to populate our small instance and it was a pain.

permalink
report
parent
reply
2 points
*

It’s not great, but here it is: https://github.com/ducksdotdev/LemmySubscriber/tree/main … I’ll revisit the app sometime this week/weekend to make it better. Although, I believe there are a couple other scripts in the wild that do the same task and include their own method for crawling.

edit: https://github.com/Fmstrat/lcs – looks like this is a better one than what I did if you want something different.

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

Awesome thank you! Sorry delayed reply had a busy day

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

I can share it, but right now I have it grabbing the latest artifact from the lemmy-exporter which looks like as of June 3rd they stopped updating their repo with the export artifact. Meaning, I need to implement some sort of crawler myself or use a different method for generating the list of communities.

I can share the code with this caveat if you want to use it anyway/try and change it yourself. It is written in Golang… will post back in a bit with a github repo. need to set it up

permalink
report
parent
reply
6 points

As someone said don’t set allowed hosts, leave it blank. Only use the blacklist (I recommend blocking exploding heads).

What version are you running?

permalink
report
reply
7 points

it was me… i said that :)

permalink
report
parent
reply
5 points

I ran the 0.18.1-rc3 branch off dockerhub

Didn’t know allowed hosts allowed all when it’s blank. Might give it another shot

permalink
report
parent
reply

Selfhosted

!selfhosted@lemmy.world

Create post

A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don’t control.

Rules:

  1. Be civil: we’re here to support and learn from one another. Insults won’t be tolerated. Flame wars are frowned upon.

  2. No spam posting.

  3. Posts have to be centered around self-hosting. There are other communities for discussing hardware or home computing. If it’s not obvious why your post topic revolves around selfhosting, please include details to make it clear.

  4. Don’t duplicate the full text of your blog or github here. Just post the link for folks to click.

  5. Submission headline should match the article title (don’t cherry-pick information from the title to fit your agenda).

  6. No trolling.

Resources:

Any issues on the community? Report it using the report flag.

Questions? DM the mods!

Community stats

  • 3.6K

    Monthly active users

  • 3.3K

    Posts

  • 71K

    Comments