Just in case anyone is using their account here to post to off-instance communities: those posts and comments seem to have a very high failure rate. There is a lot of activity and accounts on this instance. This is to raise awareness, not to pull people away or break up the lemmyverse. Quite the opposite really: there is a technical problem on this instance that might be preventing the lemmyverse from functioning as it should.

  • clueless_stoner@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Hello there! Your post is not really a question and it breaks our first rule. Please be more careful while posting next time.

  • SolidGrue@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Lemmy.world and some others have held back on the 0.18.0 back end update because the admin did not want to forego this Captcha integration, which broke in 0.18.0. Version 0.18.1 is expected to release soon, and address the regression with Captcha.

    The new version also reduces its reliance on websockete, which should address a number of other quality-of-life problems on this instance, such as the random post bug (and hopefully the 404s/JSON errors I’ve been getting all afternoon).

    Hopefully just a few more days and we’ll be back to rights.

    • BrikoX@vlemmy.net
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      1 year ago

      The new version also reduces its reliance on websockete

      From my understaind it’s not a reduction, but a complete repalcement.

    • mashhitmyself@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      I don’t think it’s a version issue. It could be, but testing I’ve done says otherwise. There’s plenty of 0.17.4 instances that, despite other bugs, have no problem sending and receiving updates from other instances. I hope you’re right. I don’t run the instance so testing reveals mostly speculation.

      • ShittyKopper [they/them]@lemmy.w.on-t.work
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        1 year ago

        There’s plenty of 0.17.4 instances that, despite other bugs, have no problem sending and receiving updates from other instances.

        It’s probably because of the absolute scale of dot world. This is what happens when you try to centralize ActivityPub, especially an implementation like Lemmy which did not previously have any of the scaling challenges the likes of Mastodon had before.

        Everyone should’ve told people to pick different instances (there are STILL new guides written where step 1 is to “just register on dot world” [or shitjustworks, which isn’t any better, really]) and admin should’ve locked registrations after 10-15k, maybe 20k users MAX, yet y’all got too greedy. Good fucking luck dealing with the aftermath.

        I should probably go to bed, I’m getting grumpy.

        • acupofcoffee@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          In my opinion, we need to somehow solve the community centralization issue first. MultiCommunities, or some way to aggregate the dozens of large-ish groups like “news, technology, etc” and be able to subscribe to all of them in one fell swoop would allow people to spread out to other instances much more reliably.

          I’ve brought this up as a suggestion elsewhere. People seem annoyed at the lemmy vs kbin idea of “communities vs magazines”. Maybe everything is changed to “communities” and “magazines” are officially adopted as community-maintained mega-lists of common communities.

          An example. There’s a bunch of car manufacturers. Sure, maybe I could just select the “Honda” community on every instance I can find, or instead I subscribe to the magazine called “Honda” which auto-subscribes me to every single Honda community in the list… or even the magazine called “Cars” which would include all manufacturers and cars communities.

          Then there could be a Magazine view for that Magazine which would allow all posts from those communities to be aggregated in one place.

          Just spitballing ideas.

          • mashhitmyself@lemmy.worldOP
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            1 year ago

            That is an issue for sure, but probably better addressed at the ActivityPub level? IMO, an instance should be limited to a single community.

            • acupofcoffee@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              Yes, this would be a change to the underlying protocol. I think it’s definitely worth discussing how this problem can be solved by people who maintain ActivityPub. IMHO the Lemmy and kbin developers should also be a part of these discussions as well.

  • Sunrosa@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    What do you think is causing the failures? How are you seeing the fact that it’s failing?

    • mashhitmyself@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Like you mentioned afterward. Comments and posts just plain failing to land on any other instance. Also I run an instance for testing and can see incoming connections. lemmy.world fails at a protocol level, not at the application level. It’s a, IMHO, bandwidth issue. Hopefully the admin is aware and wants to fix it. I’d say he has a responsibility, but he doesn’t. lol.

    • mashhitmyself@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      It’s a known issue, but if you look at the issues, the reason for it is “could be lots of things.” Relying on a FOSS project to fix the problems of the community is kind of naive. If the admins don’t step up then I’ve no sympathy for them when the whole thing crumbles.

      • mashhitmyself@lemmy.worldOP
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        1 year ago

        Why did this get downvoted? Something being an “issue” on GitHub is about as meaningless as something can be. Unengaged developers are usually the result of unengaged users. I’m saying IF your admin (not that they did,) submitted an issue and then is just sitting back and waiting, that’s shitty.

        • WxFisch@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          That isn’t at all what is happening, the world admin team has been very engaged with the project on GitHub with a ton of back and forth and various code pushes to fix the captcha pullback that’s in 0.18. The issue you are seeing is known and the belief is it should get better with the update to 0.18.1 that the devs have said is coming in the next few days. It seems to be partly due to the size of the world instance and the problems with web sockets. You’re likely being downvoted for appearing to be authoritative about this and blaming the world admin team (it’s more than a single person) when they know this is a symptom and have a plan they think will fix it that a little more digging into the history of why they’ve chosen to forgo the 0.18.0 update would have answered your questions.

          • mashhitmyself@lemmy.worldOP
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            1 year ago

            I was meaning to be authoritative, and I am low-key blaming the admin team. I grant them the benefit of the doubt though. I still don’t think it has anything to do with the 0.18.0 upgrade.

            EDIT: I don’t care what the admin team does, how loyal or dedicated they are, or anything like that. I just want the reddit alternative to not suck.

    • mashhitmyself@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Correct. I am not testing with any of those instances. You shouldn’t expect that to work at all, but I guess some users might not know.

  • lml@remy.city
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    1 year ago

    This is the problem we are having with fast growth on a few select communities. The largest servers are being bogged down simply because the software has not been tuned for these large types of instances yet. ActivityPub works best (in it’s current state) by spreading users over smaller/medium sized instances. Folks need to take a look at other instances (and I agree it is hard to find them for a newcomer). You can look at https://fedidb.org/ to look at instances that have been indexed running kbin, lemmy, and other software.

    Joining a smaller instance means that your server is not being bogged down by tens of thousands of other users trying to pull updates at the same time. You can still see the content from other instances, and in many cases it is more reliable because your smaller instance actually has the resources to handle pulling in the posts you want to see. In the future I am sure instances like lemmy.world will be able to handle the traffic smoothly, but for now the best way to ensure stability is to join a smaller instance.

    (Plug for my instance: https://remy.city, a general purpose Kbin instance. I set it up for personal use but anyone is free to join me in using it. I have defederated from the more alt-right communities like lemmygrad and exploding-heads, and from lemmynsfw.com because of content hosting concerns. I’m open to suggestions on others.)

  • Tenthrow@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    So I’ve been thinking of spinning up a personal instance. I have the tech chops for most projects like this in a small scale but are there any reasons why I shouldn’t use Lemmy in that way?

    • mashhitmyself@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Do it. Be super aware of how federation works though. The more stuff your users subscribe to the more network traffic you will need to accommodate.

      • Tired8281@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Is there any use to spinning up an instance, only allowing say 10 people max, then just keep it updated and let it run, to take the load of those ten people off the bigger instances? Is that too small time to be useful? I have pretty weak upload.

        • lml@remy.city
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          1 year ago

          I think that would be worth it, yeah. Of course if you are hosting it on your home network there will be some added security concerns (and that might make it better to only allow signups to friends/friends of friends/etc). The way I see it is that some instances are going to host the largest communities, and therefore those instances are going to need to handle all of the incoming/outgoing updates to posts in those communities. Right now they can’t do that reliably and push updates out to all of their users’ devices.

          So in the long run I think having small/medium instances (say a couple hundred, not tens of thousands of users) will be the way to grow. These smaller communities can push updates to their smaller user count reliably, and then have more resources to handle federated content coming in and going out. I think scaling for the incoming/outgoing federation requests would be easier than for direct user activity. Federation stuff can be queued and then spread over time, but user requests cannot be.

    • mashhitmyself@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Incoming works 98%, outgoing is more like 30-50%. Lemmy.world is a one-way lemmy-vacuum. Just the way the fediverse was meant to be. lol

      • smolgumball@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Yeah this is so bizarre. Is it possible that sh.itjust.works is having trouble receiving, or is it confirmed that lemmy.world is dropping the ball on outgoing notifications?

        • mashhitmyself@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 year ago

          Look. I’m not pointing fingers, but I know a thing or two and I can say with a high degree of certainty it is lemmy.world. :) Does the admin care? Do the users? Who knows. I just thought it was important information to have.

          The silent failures are what actually miff me the most. Like to an uneducated user, everything is just working fine, but in reality they are stuck in lemmy.world.

    • mashhitmyself@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Hilarious. This comment doesn’t show on sh.itjust.works, which makes total sense. lemmy.world is responsible for sending it to other federated servers. Maybe kbin > lemmy right now?

    • mashhitmyself@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Fair enough. Keep in mind, being popular doesn’t magically bestow the knowledge, resources, or willingness to handle issues.

      • lml@remy.city
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        1 year ago

        Good point. Nothing against the larger instance owners of course. If my little instance got super popular somehow (like being recommended in guides on how to join lemmy/kbin), and thousands of users got in per day, I could see issues happening just like this. I don’t know the ins and outs of tuning this software for performance at scale, and I know I couldn’t learn it fast enough if my instance faced very fast growth like lemmy.world has.

        I think admins are going to need to turn registrations off periodically, as they scale their hardware (and their knowledge) to run it for more users effectively.